If you like crazy and perfectly accurate—or as near as possible—check out Fact Trek (plug).Or he's a crazy time traveler who wants to be as perfectly accurate as possible. Also: I'm in.
If you like crazy and perfectly accurate—or as near as possible—check out Fact Trek (plug).Or he's a crazy time traveler who wants to be as perfectly accurate as possible. Also: I'm in.
Didn't he claim that Abraham Lincoln was his personal hero, which was why he was Kirk's hero in "The Savage Curtain?" Or is that my memory playing tricks on me? (Come to think of it, he wouldn't have had much involvement in "Curtain," would he?)
According to He Shall Not Be Named in his book, Gene provided roughly the first half before abandoning it, leaving the rest to Arthur Singer
- Roddenberry's original story outline dated 8 May 1968 featured Socrates visiting the Enterprise along with Abraham Lincoln, and then participating in the fight on the planet surface. In this version, Surak was called "Lvov" and the "good" team also featured the recreation of a "1970s flower power guru" named "Pon". The "evil" team consisted of "Mr. Green", a late-20th century Earth dictator, Adolf Hitler and Attila the Hun among others. (These Are the Voyages: TOS Season Three, pp. 592-594)
- Similarly to "Bread and Circuses", Roddenberry originally intended this episode to be in part a sour commentary on present-day network television. The Excalbians use their staged "dramas" of recreated figures confronting each other as a means of entertainment and education for their population, who all became dependent upon these "stage plays" as their sole means of gaining knowledge and entertain themselves. In Arthur Heinemann's later script version and Fred Freiberger and Arthur Singer's staff rewrites this angle was mostly abandoned, except for a few lines such as Yarnek claiming that "countless who live on that planet are watching". (These Are the Voyages: TOS Season Three, p. 594)
If only I could go back in time and give my 8-year-old self a couple hundred bucks to buy as many sets of film clips as that would cover. I'd love to have those today.
If you like crazy and perfectly accurate—or as near as possible—check out Fact Trek (plug).
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