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Interesting minor Enterprise crewmembers

And Paul Carr went on to be killed and killed and killed, as a guest star in series after series. :lol: It was like his trademark.

On The Six Million Dollar Man, Paul Carr played a criminal's henchman. Instead of getting killed himself, he accidentally kills his boss, Malachi Throne. This was in "The Bionic Woman, Part 2."
 
And Paul Carr went on to be killed and killed and killed, as a guest star in series after series. :lol: It was like his trademark.
He was the Sean Bean of the Sixties and Seventies.
lifted in the air and violently shaken by Gene Roddenberry,
I wonder how many people realize Gene Roddenberry was 6'4" in an era when the average adult man was 5'7".
 
Which minor (not one of the seven main characters, Rand, or Chapel) should have appeared in more episodes?
I could have watched Lt. Palmer in more than 2 eps.

He was the Sean Bean of the Sixties and Seventies.
Or the Elisha Cook, Jr. -- from the 1930s through the early '60s, as soon as you saw his face, you knew his character had a poor chance of still being alive by the time "THE END" appeared on the screen.
 
The redshirt who died and came back but was never featured, definitely.

Memory Alpha claims there are several, if you do not accept that the same actors may have been portraying multiple red-shirts. I think that we need to just accept that there is some kind of error in dialogue and that Leslie did not die in the episode "Obession."

On that note, it might have been nice to have him in that episode in the place of Rizzo, and just let him live.

(Dr. Dehner). I would have liked her as the permanent doctor instead of McCoy.

In my view, she was the ship's counselor, and Kirk just never replaced her. It sort helps balance with the fact that TNG has a command crew structure with offical ship's counselors, but TOS does not. Of course, on the other hand, outside of Project Pathfinder it is hard to find a communications officer in the TNG-era.
 
MA says her role was originally written for Uhura (same position). Pity there weren't any personality/personal information lines written (one that made sense in context, not just random infodrops.)
When you asked "Which minor (not one of the seven main characters, Rand, or Chapel) should have appeared in more episodes?" I didn't get the sense that an already-established backstory was a prerequisite.
 
Sulu and Uhura interacted on a personal level with characters who might be close enough to call them by their first names a lot less. Christine and Janice developed close relationships with their bosses, that of boss and assistant, someone to rely on regularly.
 
Sulu and Uhura could certainly have interacted with each other (in non-MIRROR MIRROR ways) and revealed their first names in the process. But they didn't appear to exist until 1982ish, and I believe they were first used in a TREK II ''biographies'' tie-in book. That's why Rand calls Sulu Sulu in MAN TRAP and Chapel calls Uhura Uhura in THE CHANGELING.
 
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"Yes?...What century?...10:00?...I'll be there."
 
I just wanted Bill Blackburn to have one spoken line.

the-empath-br-022.jpg


At least Roger Holloway got to say “Aye, sir.” in the last TOS episode.

turnabout-intruder-br-566.jpg

Agreed on Billy B. How about in response to asking "Lt. Hadley" to find out what a "heater" was?

Hey, that's a good security formation up there in that pic. If only they had tried that at the door to Khan's quarters, but then I guess the episode would have been too short.
 
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