I'm sorry, but I can't buy that's not a real cleft on the Isis actress' chin. Why would they bother taking the time to give her a fake chin cleft for such a brief shot? It's not like chin clefts are particularly catlike.
This theory would also explain why there is no documentation regarding who played Isis. Babcock's name would already be on the cast list, the payroll, etc. Heck, she'd already be listed as playing Isis (for the voice work).
Remember, we only really have one shot of Isis's face, heavily made-up and tilted slightly downward.
Hmmm. The chin cleft is a lot more subtle in this shot, but I still don't think she looks much like Babcock. Sorry, Greg.No, we don't. Follow the links in my post, or look at the TrekCore index page I got them from. There are three distinct angles on Isis in the scene -- a long shot from the front, a close-up from the same angle, and a fairly wide profile view that ends with her turning her face toward the camera.
So it's not about the person, it's about the information. Inaccurate information in a reference or documentary text will propagate forever unless it's challenged and corrected.
Babcock took home $200 for 1 day of work on February 15, 1967 for her "Assignment: Earth" voice work, well after photography had wrapped. Filming a live action role would have meant an extra day of work several weeks prior; it's unlikely she would have done this for free or that it would have not been reflected on the cast sheet.
No, we don't. There are three distinct angles on Isis in the scene -- a long shot from the front, a close-up from the same angle, and a fairly wide profile view that ends with her turning her face toward the camera.
Babcock took home $200 for 1 day of work on February 15, 1967 for her "Assignment: Earth" voice work, well after photography had wrapped. Filming a live action role would have meant an extra day of work several weeks prior; it's unlikely she would have done this for free or that it would have not been reflected on the cast sheet.
Hold on: Allan Asherman's The Star Trek Compendium (first edition) says something different:
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I don't think Barbara Babcock played Human Isis, but your date is off.
Also, I wonder why "A:E" had a split filming schedule, assuming the book is right.
The voice over work was recorded after filming had wrapped. Asherman is wrong about the filming schedule; the episode was shot in early January and it wrapped on January 10, 1968.
Babcock took home $200 for 1 day of work on February 15, 1967 for her "Assignment: Earth" voice work, well after photography had wrapped. Filming a live action role would have meant an extra day of work several weeks prior; it's unlikely she would have done this for free or that it would have not been reflected on the cast sheet.
The latter being in reference to the former, for clarity's sake.Okay. It's just that you had it as 1967, which was clearly a typo.
Okay. It's just that you had it as 1967, which was clearly a typo.
Plus, I imagine there would have been a costume fitting, etc., since it looks like a Theiss creation and not something they found in the wardrobe department. But maybe he was able to generate something close enough they were able to pin the actress into on the day of the shoot...This shouldn't be that difficult. Somebody must have gotten paid for that shot. Even extras get paychecks.
By moving the writer and director credits up to the opening of Act 1.Interesting piece. I posted a comment on it earlier, but I'll repeat the question here: How did they work out the disagreement with the Director's Guild in order to restore Roddenberry's creator credit in seasons 2-3 (and TAS)? Indeed, all the later Trek series included creator credits in their opening titles, and I think most modern TV series in general do so as well.
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