Arlo said:
I don't know the financials involved (i.e. if Koenig and the other real actors were paid)
Nope.
but it seems to me the creators of NV could markedly improve things by soliciting serious unknown actors to play all the recurring roles.
Which defeats the purpose of doing them! The whole point is for a bunch of ST fans to act in their own episode. And to interact with a famous, professional guest star.
Hey, I was in "Starship Exeter: The Savage Empire" and had a ball, even though my part was filmed solo in Australia and posted off to the US to be edited into the main footage. But please tell me, what fun would
I get out of it if my character had been played by an out-of-work professional actor?
This would accomplish 3 things: 1) the episodes would benefit from much better acting 2) these struggling actors would reap some really good free publicity and 3) the creators would be freed up to concentrate more on the production as a whole.
Huh? How is appearing
for free good publicity for an actor? They did it for the fun of it - because it was Star Trek, a reunion with old friends and new with Star Trek connections, and a unique experience to work for enthusiastic fans. But the amateur producers don't
want to be "freed up". They are having a great time actually being
in the thing.
It'd be like me printing a Star Trek fanzine, but instead of writing the stories, drawing the art and typing and editing it, and printing/collating it, as per usual, I would find professional writers, artists, typists, editors and printers to do all the work for me. Totally defeats the purpose of publishing a fanzine.
Forbin said:
It's a bit disappointing to hear that Fontana doesn't care about continuity! Takes my esteem for her down a notch.
Because she took the opportunity to write a "What if...?" story? It was a unique opportunity to do a script that could never have been done on TOS, and a role Koenig could not have played in any official Star Trek.
Comics have been doing "What if...?" stories for decades!
And who said DC Fontana doesn't care about continuity? She wrote memos during TOS to maintain that Spock was - and would remain - an only child, and she fought valiantly to change Shatner's mind about Sybok in ST V, but her complaints fell on deaf ears. Admittedly, her memos were not canonical, but as story editor, she acted as a custodian for the integrity and uniqueness of the Spock character.
Her new story simply asks "What if...?"