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The only unknown actor from TOS...

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What about Isis and Sylvia? I think they were the same animal actor, in cat form.

So did the cat get paid more than the actress since the cat had "speaking" lines?

I jest...just one of those days :)

(But I did like when Isis the cat was on Seven's back meowing at him while he was trying to disarm the rocket :mallory:
 
Who cares about all that BS?

I'm sad for you that you're so hostile to new information. But this is not a private conversation between the two of us. This is a public board and this thread may be read by hundreds of people, some of whom may very well be interested in that information.
Count me as one of those who enjoys learning new things. I learned a few new things while reading this thread. One is that some posters are very grouchy and not open to learning new things... very un-Vulcan of them.:vulcan:
 
There is no record of who played Isis the cat as a Human.

According to various sources, Isis was portrayed by Victoria Vetri.

here is some info on her.
Arrest

Victoria Vetri (legally Victoria Rathgeb) had been charged with attempted murder after she allegedly shot her husband from close range inside the Hollywood apartment that they share after an argument on Saturday, October 16, 2010.[5] Vetri was arrested the same day by the Los Angeles Police Department’s Hollywood Division and has remained jailed since then on $1.53 million bail, which the judge refused to reduce. In Jan 2011 she was denied a reduction of the charge of attempted murder and was ordered to stand trial on this charge.[6]
In September 2011, Vetri pled no contest to a reduced charge of attempted voluntary manslaughter and was sentenced to nine years in state prison
 
What about Isis and Sylvia? I think they were the same animal actor, in cat form.

So did the cat get paid more than the actress since the cat had "speaking" lines?

I jest...just one of those days :)

(But I did like when Isis the cat was on Seven's back meowing at him while he was trying to disarm the rocket :mallory:


No kidding, I read that the little dog that played Toto in Wizard of Oz got paid more than the Munchkins, I think with that much screen time on Robert Lansing's back meowing must have been compensated. I'm sure the cat would have made more than the woman that sat there speechless and nearly motionless for a second. And animal actors are frequently billed, so I'm a little suprised the cat wasn't in either episode.

Regarding small speaking parts that aren't billed, an actor can ask not to be billed, especially if that actor doesn't want that on their resume. And Star Trek might have been the kind of show someone didn't want to admit working on, at the time.
 
There is no record of who played Isis the cat as a Human.

According to various sources, Isis was portrayed by Victoria Vetri.

here is some info on her.
Arrest

Victoria Vetri (legally Victoria Rathgeb) had been charged with attempted murder after she allegedly shot her husband from close range inside the Hollywood apartment that they share after an argument on Saturday, October 16, 2010.[5] Vetri was arrested the same day by the Los Angeles Police Department’s Hollywood Division and has remained jailed since then on $1.53 million bail, which the judge refused to reduce. In Jan 2011 she was denied a reduction of the charge of attempted murder and was ordered to stand trial on this charge.[6]
In September 2011, Vetri pled no contest to a reduced charge of attempted voluntary manslaughter and was sentenced to nine years in state prison

That's neat, but the link from where you got it would be even neater, and... what does any of that info have to do with the question of whether Victoria Vetri played Isis's human form? Anything at all?
 
Marsden wrote:
Regarding small speaking parts that aren't billed, an actor can ask not to be billed, especially if that actor doesn't want that on their resume. And Star Trek might have been the kind of show someone didn't want to admit working on, at the time.

___________________________________________________


Sometimes actors do that, but every actor that went unbilled on TOS were unknowns and the parts were a line or two. So it wasn't a case of a established actor not wanting to be credited for a sci-fi show.
 
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What about the uncredited faceless crew woman in "Charlie X"? Does moaning count?
 
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What about the ucredited faceless crew woman in "Charlie X"? Does moaning count?


That was king of hit and miss on TOS, the transporter operator in "That Which.." had no lines, (he moaned when he died) and got billing as did the guy who moaned when Karidian stabbed him in "Conscience.." (in the play)

But perhaps the 'faceless woman' actually had her moans dubbed over in post by someone else (or a 'stock moan' was on tape LOL) and therefore didn't get credit.

That's why I stick to 'spoken lines' in my count, because clearly everybody who coughed, choked, fainted and did stuff like that isn't really an actor (whether of not they may have held a SAG card)

What's kind of interesting is that there are about 6 or 7 actors who spoke lines on TOS and never had another single acting credit. If you were to thrown in everybody who moaned or winced--you'd have a lot of one-shot 'actors' who can at least say, "I was on Star Trek!"
 
Regarding small speaking parts that aren't billed, an actor can ask not to be billed, especially if that actor doesn't want that on their resume. And Star Trek might have been the kind of show someone didn't want to admit working on, at the time.

Not the kind of show? It was nominated for Emmys every year it was on the air. It was the number one reason people were buying color television sets in 1967. Critical reaction may have been mixed and its ratings may never have been great, but I think it was seen as a pretty prestigious show compared to other SFTV of the day.

Besides, the only people who might choose to go uncredited for the reason you state are people with enough prominence and reputation to be damaged in the first place. Yet all the big-name actors who appeared on ST did get credited. The few uncredited actors are bit players, people who would've needed all the screen credits and publicity they could get in order to advance their careers. I can't see people like that refusing credit for anything less embarrassing than a porn film. (Yes, Judson Scott went uncredited in TWOK, but I gather that was due more to his agent's bad judgment than his. I guess it's possible some actors or their agents could make such a decision, but it would be a pretty bad decision.)
 
Regarding small speaking parts that aren't billed, an actor can ask not to be billed, especially if that actor doesn't want that on their resume. And Star Trek might have been the kind of show someone didn't want to admit working on, at the time.

Not the kind of show? It was nominated for Emmys every year it was on the air. It was the number one reason people were buying color television sets in 1967. Critical reaction may have been mixed and its ratings may never have been great, but I think it was seen as a pretty prestigious show compared to other SFTV of the day.

Besides, the only people who might choose to go uncredited for the reason you state are people with enough prominence and reputation to be damaged in the first place. Yet all the big-name actors who appeared on ST did get credited. The few uncredited actors are bit players, people who would've needed all the screen credits and publicity they could get in order to advance their careers. I can't see people like that refusing credit for anything less embarrassing than a porn film.

So why did Grainger Hines refuse a credit on TNG?
 
Regarding small speaking parts that aren't billed, an actor can ask not to be billed, especially if that actor doesn't want that on their resume. And Star Trek might have been the kind of show someone didn't want to admit working on, at the time.

Not the kind of show? It was nominated for Emmys every year it was on the air. It was the number one reason people were buying color television sets in 1967. Critical reaction may have been mixed and its ratings may never have been great, but I think it was seen as a pretty prestigious show compared to other SFTV of the day.

Besides, the only people who might choose to go uncredited for the reason you state are people with enough prominence and reputation to be damaged in the first place. Yet all the big-name actors who appeared on ST did get credited. The few uncredited actors are bit players, people who would've needed all the screen credits and publicity they could get in order to advance their careers. I can't see people like that refusing credit for anything less embarrassing than a porn film. (Yes, Judson Scott went uncredited in TWOK, but I gather that was due more to his agent's bad judgment than his. I guess it's possible some actors or their agents could make such a decision, but it would be a pretty bad decision.)


Whaaa? I agree with every word!


Star Trek was not a show that actors were ashamed to be on. Literally scores of quality character actors appeared on it.


And Grainger Hines? 25 years later, on TNG?

Wow, that's really relevant.

He gave a crappy, unprofessional performance and effort--they were forced to dub his lines and then he (probably along with his agent) deemed it wise to keep off his resume.

By the way Christpher--you were actually quoting Marsden. LOL.

There was a glitch when I quoted him and it got credited to me. Wonder if you would have been so quick to rebut his comment?
 
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Regarding small speaking parts that aren't billed, an actor can ask not to be billed, especially if that actor doesn't want that on their resume. And Star Trek might have been the kind of show someone didn't want to admit working on, at the time.

Not the kind of show? It was nominated for Emmys every year it was on the air. It was the number one reason people were buying color television sets in 1967. Critical reaction may have been mixed and its ratings may never have been great, but I think it was seen as a pretty prestigious show compared to other SFTV of the day.

Besides, the only people who might choose to go uncredited for the reason you state are people with enough prominence and reputation to be damaged in the first place. Yet all the big-name actors who appeared on ST did get credited. The few uncredited actors are bit players, people who would've needed all the screen credits and publicity they could get in order to advance their careers. I can't see people like that refusing credit for anything less embarrassing than a porn film. (Yes, Judson Scott went uncredited in TWOK, but I gather that was due more to his agent's bad judgment than his. I guess it's possible some actors or their agents could make such a decision, but it would be a pretty bad decision.)





And Grainger Hines? 25 years later, on TNG?

Wow, that's really relevant.:rolleyes:

He gave a crappy, unprofessional performance and effort--they were forced to dub his lines and then he (probably along with his agent) deemed it wise to keep off his resume.

Didn't need the rolleyes, but thanks for the information. :techman:

Didn't realise that he was dubbed. Actually it's obvious that he's dubbed, but I thought he had looped his own lines.
 
^^Yeah, sorry about the eyes.


Very few name actors hav EVER not taken billing on Trek.

Whoopi Goldberg--not because she was ashamed, but I think her $ rate would have been hign if she took billing, so she went unbilled and they paid her a nominal fee.

Judson Scott as was stated, because his agent was inept.


Madge Sinclair in "Voyage Home" don't know why--surely she didn't think Trek 4 was 'beneath her'

Rene' Aberjonois in Trek 6, because his part was originally cut and then when they restored it, they didn't change the credits.
 
There was a glitch when I quoted him and it got credited to me. Wonder if you would have been so quick to rebut his comment?

Of course I would have been. You seem to have taken our minor disagreement personally, but I haven't. After all, we're strangers, so why should it be personal? It's just about getting the facts straight to me.
 
There was a glitch when I quoted him and it got credited to me. Wonder if you would have been so quick to rebut his comment?

Of course I would have been. You seem to have taken our minor disagreement personally, but I haven't. After all, we're strangers, so why should it be personal? It's just about getting the facts straight to me.


Cool. I'm glad most of us can see that TOS was never a show that anyone was ashamed to act in.

A few actors, such as Terri Garr got tired of answering questions about her minor guest shot 20 years later and refused to talk about it. probably a little self conscious of her early work as some actors are.

I also hate the myth of TOS as a 'low budget show'--TOS was NOT a low budget show.

It was simply that showing new worlds, matte paintings, costumes, ships, sets and props on what was a good budget was hard to do.

Unlike a Bonanza or Gunsmoke where every week the guest actors were wearing the same guns, the same outfits, riding the same horses, standing on the same sets as the guests from the previous week.
 
The ones I have seen for TOS haven't identified background performers. They just list the number of extras needed for each scene.
 
But wasn't someone charged with the responsibility of making sure that the same actress returned each day? How would that get done, if her name wasn't written down anywhere? Hers was really a non-speaking part, as we've apparently established. And she returned, how many days to shoot the whole episode?
 
When an extra has specific movements--but no lines--they are known as "special business extras" and get paid a little more.

They are TWO actors in TOS who had speaking lines that are TRULY unknown..................


The guard at the gangsters door in "Piece of.." who replies to the the other guard's remark, "Cute kid."

He replies,--"Sure is."

The other is the morg guard in "Spock's brain", who says,--"Yes mistress." in reply to Kara(?) telling him to watch Kirk and co.


If you guys know who these two might be--I'll really appreciate the help!

They are the last 2 of the 'onscreen speaking parts' (out of exactly 400) that I have charted.

I obviously count 'Gem' as an actor and not an extra because she is clearly the focal point of the story and could never be seen as an extra.

The two extras in Spock's Brain would be Pete Kellett and Sid Haig I believe! Think it was Kellett who said yes Mistress! Kellett was in Mirror, Mirror, and also Day of The Dove as a Klingon no less, who shouts "Stand and fight you coward!"
JB
 
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