I'm liking both sides of the McCoy cigarette argument. Both sides are making good arguments. We may never know. 

I also tend to think the smoke was intentional. I'm curious if the actors were allowed to smoke on the set, especially during filming. OR if they had an area offset where people could light upI don't believe that for a second. The smoke had to be intentional. It was meant to be either cryogenic fog wafting up, or overheated circuitry in the operating machinery over Sarek's chest.
Or from the term "diabetes mellitus" (sugar (aka juvenile) diabetes)
I also tend to think the smoke was intentional. I'm curious if the actors were allowed to smoke on the set, especially during filming. OR if they had an area offset where people could light up
Bahb Justman took David Gerrold to task for showing smoke caused by the wee bairns in an early draft of "Tribbles." I doubt that anyone would have either appreciated a visibly smoking piece of advanced surgical equipment or taken the time and budget to rig an effect of such little significance (much like my comments: extremely little, ensign.)
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Also, sometimes cigarettes are incompletely snuffed out from time to time and continue to smolder. I watched the surgery scenes again last night and the smoke is visible only in one or to takes. Would Kelley take the opportunity to sneak a drag between takes when the ashtray was conveniently hidden? Who can know, but I think I would under the circumstances.
Leonard also smoked on set, now that I think of it. It was hard to watch Spock smoking (even though I knew it was between takes. )@GNDN18 posted a picture upthread of Kelley smoking on the bridge set, which unambiguously proves that at least one actor, the one in question no less, did smoke on one set at one time.
I suppose that scenario, or something resembling it, was possible. But that would seem very amateurish of Kelly and the director to behave in that way.These were pros. They weren't getting paid to be slackers.
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Emma Peel smoking while tied to a torture device? Sounds like heaven for those with certain fetishes!I've also seen pix of Diana Rigg having a smoke on set of The Avengers. Like, while tied to a torture device, between takes.
It's worth pointing out that in those days, it wasn't uncommon for actors to be able to smoke in character on a lot of shows.
There's something mounted on a wall of the transporter room, that you can see beside Scotty's head in this screencap:
http://tos.trekcore.com/hd/albums/3x22hd/thesavagecurtainhd0217.jpg
It's also visible beside Dickerson's head here:
http://tos.trekcore.com/hd/albums/3x22hd/thesavagecurtainhd0187.jpg
What is it? It looks sorta like the head to an old goose-neck viewer from the pilots, but not exactly. Is it a camera interface for the intercom? Or what?
Yes, it's one of the old pilot-era gooseneck viewers. No explanation has been offered why it's there. It's too high to really look into it. My hunch is that is was meant to be trained on the transporter chamber so that people, say, on the bridge could watch people beam in and out. We never saw that, but I can imagine dramatic scripting reasons why that might be valuable.There's something mounted on a wall of the transporter room, that you can see beside Scotty's head in this screencap:
http://tos.trekcore.com/hd/albums/3x22hd/thesavagecurtainhd0217.jpg
It's also visible beside Dickerson's head here:
http://tos.trekcore.com/hd/albums/3x22hd/thesavagecurtainhd0187.jpg
What is it? It looks sorta like the head to an old goose-neck viewer from the pilots, but not exactly. Is it a camera interface for the intercom? Or what?
Maybe the Valiant wasn't completely destroyed, after all. It would explain why the Eminians had Federation viewers and computers.Also used on Eminar VII:
http://tos.trekcore.com/gallery/albums/1x23/A_Taste_of_Armageddon_379.JPG
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