This episode has Shatner at his best/worst, are there any cast memories recorded, what anyone else thought of Shatner wandering about shouting and emoting more than usual?
Any cast memories of "Turnabout Intruder"
6th day of XMe$$ said:
Shatner was sick with the flu for half the episode.
Captain Robert April said:
As for other recollections of that last week of filming, I suggest Joan Winston's essay in the Bantam publication, "Star Trek Lives!" If memory serves, the title is, "Chopped Chicken Liver Will Only Get You So Far, or, My Week On The Star Trek Set".
UnknownSample said:
I saw Shatner on... Mike Douglas? He seemed to be "promoting" the new episode, and joked around about the gender switch... he may have mock-filed his nails, I can't remember.
EnsignHarper said:
I never heard the 'CBS wanting ST for a Season Four' story before. Would Roddenberry have come back full time? Would CBS have programmed a MI/ST night?
They COULD have done it w/o Nimoy - just cast a 'young hot Vulcan' type, just like GR was going to do for Phase Two. Even though the Spockies would have revolted, the publicity would be priceless! Besides, if properly done, Spock would be just memory by the middle of the season.
Noel Given said:
EnsignHarper said:
I never heard the 'CBS wanting ST for a Season Four' story before. Would Roddenberry have come back full time? Would CBS have programmed a MI/ST night?
They COULD have done it w/o Nimoy - just cast a 'young hot Vulcan' type, just like GR was going to do for Phase Two. Even though the Spockies would have revolted, the publicity would be priceless! Besides, if properly done, Spock would be just memory by the middle of the season.
CBS was debating at that time. A year earlier, they actually wanted a season 4 of Lost In Space but Guy Williams (who played 'John Robinson') was VERY unhappy that the show had become the 'Dr. Smith, Wil Robinson, Robot' show and he and te others who were told they'd be the focus of the show when it started, had had enough and didn't want to continue.
It's possible CBS saw the early demographics from Nielson - they were a 'new' aspect of ratings in 1969; (NBC didn't look at them closely until after they axed Star Trek), and perhaps CBS considered thge 18-49 demo appeal attractive.
Lost In Space had been Wednesdays at 7:30 pm from the 1965/66 through the 1967/68 seasons, according to Wikipedia's roster of network programming. Of course, it didn't air in 1968/69 or 1969/70; CBS's Wednesday 7:30 show in 1969/70 was The Glen Campbell Goodtime Hour, feeding into The Beverly Hillbillies. (Both of those were top-20 programs in the ratings.)Captain Robert April said:
What timeslot did LIS have? It might just have been worth it to switch to the Tiffany Network.
While that may well be so, Guy Williams and June Lockhart were the "money stars" of the show. Hell, Dr. Smith wasn't even IN the original pilot...he was an afterthought! It's hard to believe the "Will & Robot" show would have done as well as the "Will & Robot & Dr. Smith" show.DS9Sega said:
^^^That's debateable. It's also been reported that Allen torpedoed a 4th season of Lost In Space when the studio cut the budget (as part of a across the board cost cutting in the wave of the 44 million dollar fiasco that was Cleopatra).
The Squire of Gothos said:
This episode has Shatner at his best/worst, are there any cast memories recorded
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