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Trek guest actors in maybe surprising roles

My Amazon Fire tablet is recommending a made for tv movie called 'SST: Death Flight'. A look at the cast list shows that Barbara Anderson and Brock Peters along with future 'Q' John de Lancie all make appearances.
I sort of dimly recall that that movie existed, but I don't think I ever saw it. The cast appears to be pretty heavy on "actors who used to have an important series role but that money's running out and they're now looking for work". It's like it wanted to be Airport or The Towering Inferno, but on a TV budget.

A very early appearance for de Lancie -- per IMDb, it's his 3rd professional credit.
 
Was Whit Bissell just born looking old? I couldn't sleep this morning, so I was flipping through the channels, and I came across the 1948 movie 'He Walked By Night', and there was Whit Bissell as a dealer in stolen electronic goods; and in a small role as a detective helping investigate the case, Jack Webb.
 
Was Whit Bissell just born looking old? I couldn't sleep this morning, so I was flipping through the channels, and I came across the 1948 movie 'He Walked By Night', and there was Whit Bissell as a dealer in stolen electronic goods; and in a small role as a detective helping investigate the case, Jack Webb.
Two things I noticed, looking at his list of credits:
1. He didn't start appearing in films until he was in his 30s. He'd been a stage actor before that, but we don't have the screencaps to show what he looked like when he was really young.
2. He'd started going gray by his late 30s / early 40s, which probably helps color one's impression of his age.
 
Was just watching The Man in the Grey Flannel Suit (1956), and encountered DeForest Kelley playing - of all things - an Army medic who tries to tell Gregory Peck his wounded comrade was dead.
 
Creature Features is airing a made for tv movie entitled 'Weekend of Terror' from 1970, staring Jane Wyatt as Mother Superior, as well as Robert Conrad and Lee Majors.
 
Creature Features is airing a made for tv movie entitled 'Weekend of Terror' from 1970, staring Jane Wyatt as Mother Superior, as well as Robert Conrad and Lee Majors.
I never heard of that one. I notice it was directed by Jud Taylor, who directed five third-season episodes. And I like Carol Lynley from The Poseidon Adventure.
 
I never heard of that one. I notice it was directed by Jud Taylor, who directed five third-season episodes. And I like Carol Lynley from The Poseidon Adventure.
Carol Lynley has one of those sweet faces that just makes my heart melt.

That's who that was! I couldn't place her. She was much better as an actress in the role of an ex-nun than as the part she played in The Poseidon Adventure.
 
That's who that was! I couldn't place her. She was much better as an actress in the role of an ex-nun than as the part she played in The Poseidon Adventure.
Fun fact: Carol Lynley couldn't do her own singing in The Poseidon Adventure, so she lip-synced to a playback track by Renee Armand. Renee showed up for the recording session looking very hip in white hotpants, fashion boots, and an orange turtleneck. And she was easily beautiful enough to be a movie star herself. The film's costume designer saw her, probably on the lot at some point, and closely copied the outfit for Lynley in the movie.

Imagine how flattered Armand must have felt when she went to the theater, and there was Carol Lynley not just singing with Renee's voice, but wearing her clothes! Like, "I've been Single White Femaled!"

Renee's exquisite vocals for the movie are on the (out of print) La La Land edition of The Poseidon Adventure soundtrack.

Also, Star Trek. This post is about Star Trek. :whistle: Um, give me a second. Okay: John Crawford (Commissioner Ferris, The Galileo Seven) played the Chief Engineer in The Poseidon Adventure. He was also on Lost in Space, The Time Tunnel, Land of the Giants, Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, The Invisible Man, The Bionic Woman, The Incredible Hulk, and Knight Rider. Because he was on every TV show they had in those days.
 
Just saw Whit Bissel in a 1956 episode of Science Fiction Theater titled "Doctor Robot." He actually looked young! :D
 
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It's Whit week!! I just watched the very first episode of Route 66 (1960), and there was Whit as a shopkeeper in a small rural town with a dark secret. Oddly enough, Guy Raymond, who was the bartender in Trouble with Tribbles, was also in the episode as a ferry captain.
Also present, what the heck, was Kier Dullea as a troubled teen.
 
The A.V. Club posted an article on 15 Horror films turning 50 this year, one of them being an anthology movie called 'From Beyond The Grave', where one of the segments stars David Warner.
What should air on MoviesTV today? That same movie with David Warner.
David Warner's segment involves him buying a cursed antique mirror with a demon trapped inside who requires human sacrifice in order to be released from the mirror.
 
In The Munsters episode "Follow That Munster," Herman tries to get a job at a detective agency. The boss of the place is Ken Lynch.
 
Well, "Borderlands" is a ton of mindless colorful fun, and what the heck, Cate Blanchett and crew stop at Vasquez rocks to change a tire.

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Over the last two nights I watched a couple episodes of The Outer Limits from 1964, "I, Robot" with Leonard Nimoy and "Cold Hands, Warm Heart" with William Shatner. They aired on September 26th and November 14th respectively.

Nimoy plays a reporter who is covering a sentient robot accused of murdering its creator. He also helps get an attorney to defend the robot in the subsequent hearing. John Hoyt appears as a witness at the hearing, so he worked with Nimoy a couple of times that year. When the episode was remade in the 90s, Nimoy played the lawyer. (Nimoy's son Adam directed the remake.)

In Shatner's episode, he plays an astronaut who's just returned from a mission to Venus and begins feeling cold all the time. Malachi Throne plays Shatner's doctor who's at a loss to explain what's happening to him. Star Trek III's James B. Sikking plays a botanist, and Lawrence Montaigne appears as a construction worker (I missed Montaigne in the episode, but he is credited.) At one point Shatner's character gives a speech to his wife about traveling to new worlds to find new life, and his next planned mission is to Mars as a part of "Project Vulcan." :lol:

It made me realize how common it must've been for jobbing actors in the 60s to constantly run into each other on different jobs as they went from one series to another. And of course on November 24th's episode of The Man From U.N.C.L.E., Shatner and Nimoy would work together for the first time in "The Project Strigas Affair."
 
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Over the last two nights I watched a couple episodes of The Outer Limits from 1964, "I, Robot" with Leonard Nimoy and "Cold Hands, Warm Heart" with William Shatner. They aired on September 26th and November 14th respectively.

Nimoy plays a reporter who is covering a sentient robot accused of murdering its creator. He also helps get an attorney to defend the robot in the subsequent hearing. John Hoyt appears as a witness at the hearing, so he worked with Nimoy a couple of times that year. When the episode was remade in the 90s, Nimoy played the lawyer. (Nimoy's son Adam directed the remake.)

In Shatner's episode, he plays an astronaut who's just returned from a mission to Venus and begins feeling cold all the time. Malachi Throne plays Shatner's doctor who's at a loss to explain what's happening to him. Star Trek III's James B. Sikking plays a botanist, and Lawrence Montaigne appears as a construction worker (I missed Montaigne in the episode, but he is credited.) At one point Shatner's character gives a speech to his wife about traveling to new worlds to find new life, and his next planned mission is to Mars as a part of "Project Vulcan." :lol:

It made me realize how common it must've been for jobbing actors in the 60s to constantly run into each other on different jobs as they went from one series to another. And of course on November 24th's episode of The Man From U.N.C.L.E., Shatner and Nimoy would work together for the first time in "The Project Strigas Affair."
If you go back in the thread, I posted screen grabs from those eps. Marianna Hill was also in I, Robot. Malachi Throne is also in Cold Hands...
 
Star Trek III's James B. Sikking plays a botanist, and Lawrence Montaigne appears as a construction worker (I missed Montaigne in the episode, but he is credited.)

It made me realize how common it must've been for jobbing actors in the 60s to constantly run into each other on different jobs as they went from one series to another.
It also happens quite a bit when directors serve as their own casting agents. Or they seem to.Charles Napier alone was a good-luck charm for at least two American directors.

And Sikking conversed with Sally Kellerman in another of his OUTER LIMITS roles.
 
Ron Ely, tv's Tarzan, passed away the other day.
I watched the Doc Savage trailer, and I swear that Mark Lenard is the narrator, but I can't prove it, and there's nothing listed in his IMDB credits.
 
Watching Wonder Woman on H&I while building a model this morning. The episode was "Judgement from Outer Space, and we got a few Trek alumni is this one. Kurt Kasnar was a Nazi officer, and both Vic Perrin and Janet McLachlan were righteous aliens sitting in judgement of Earth.
 
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