Star Trek: Phase II
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Star Trek: Phase II | |
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The Phase II Enterprise. |
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Format | Science fiction |
Created by | Gene Roddenberry |
Starring | William Shatner (planned) DeForest Kelley (planned) |
Country of origin | USA |
Production | |
Running time | 50 mins (planned) |
Broadcast | |
Original airing | Never Aired |
Star Trek: Phase II was a planned television series based on the characters of Gene Roddenberry's Star Trek. It was set to air in early 1978 on a proposed Paramount Television Service (a precursor of sorts to what would become UPN). The series was to follow the adventures of the Enterprise crew on a second five-year mission after the completion of the first series.[1]
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[edit] Conception and abandonment
Several attempts at a Star Trek motion picture were made in the 1970s, including Gene Roddenberry's 1975 treatment The God Thing, and a later attempt called Planet of the Titans, which proceeded to script stage to be abandoned in 1977. It was decided instead to create a new Star Trek television series, for a new national television network to be owned by Paramount. This was announced on June 17, 1977 with a projected start date of February 1978.[2]
Pre-production work started, with sets built, several television grade models (including the Enterprise herself and many of the pilot episode's models) made, deals made to bring back most of the original series cast, and several actors cast. It was planned to use the original series uniforms. Principal photography had not started, but test footage had been shot. Story writing had proceeded to twelve scripts, enough for a half-season.
The proposed Paramount Television Service folded. The planned pilot episode entitled "In Thy Image",[3] following the success of the science fiction movies Star Wars and Close Encounters of the Third Kind, became instead a theatrical movie, Star Trek: The Motion Picture.
[edit] Cast and characters
The series was planned to have included William Shatner and DeForest Kelley reprising their roles as James T. Kirk and Leonard McCoy. Conspicuous by his absence was Leonard Nimoy, who declined to return due to a marketing issue over the Spock character and obligations to the play Equus, although early scripts included him. Nimoy turned down an offer to appear in two of every eleven episodes.[2] Scotty, Uhura, Sulu, and Pavel Chekov were all to return, with promotions to Lieutenant Commander for Uhura and Sulu, and to Lieutenant for Chekov. Chekov would have been chief of security. The character of Christine Chapel would also return, having become a doctor since the original series, in which she was a nurse. Phase II would also have marked the return of Janice Rand back to the Enterprise.
[edit] New characters
The series would have included several new characters, such as Commander Willard 'Will' Decker, the Executive Officer, (possibly introduced to eventually replace Kirk, as William Shatner was only signed for 13 episodes), Lieutenant Ilia, and the Vulcan Lieutenant Xon.
[edit] Lieutenant Xon
According to the series Bible, Xon was to be a full Vulcan, unlike Spock, and fresh out of the Academy at 22. Doctor McCoy was to have been protective about him. The character of Xon did not appear in The Motion Picture, although David Gautreaux had been cast in the role. When Leonard Nimoy finally agreed to reprise Spock, his Vulcan replacement as Science Officer became Commander Sonak, and appeared briefly in the film; after only a few lines of dialogue, he was killed in a transporter accident. This was to preserve Xon, and the actor who had so carefully developed him, for a possible future production. David Gautreaux made a cameo appearance in the movie as a human, Epsilon 9's Commander Branch.[4]
The concept of the brilliant young Vulcan scientist, Xon, almost survived into a later movie. One premise developed as a possible sequel to the first movie included a male Vulcan called Doctor Savik.[5] A variation of that name, Saavik, was later given to a female Vulcan when elements of several premises were combined for Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan.
[edit] Commander Willard "Will" Decker
Decker is established in the show as coming from a long-line of Starfleet officers. The early script notes that he was the son of Commodore Matthew Decker, who had featured in "The Doomsday Machine" (an episode of the original television series), and would "command some landing parties", anticipating the TNG situation where the first officer usually took down away teams.
[edit] Lieutenant Ilia
Ilia, a Deltan, is established as an empath. Both the Decker and Ilia characters appear in The Motion Picture, although neither of them survive it. The Motion Picture establishes that Decker and Ilia had a pre-existing relationship. Persis Khambatta was cast as Ilia for Phase II and was carried over onto the film, but Decker remained uncast until after the film project officially began. The TNG characters William T. Riker and Deanna Troi are derived from Decker and Ilia.
A number of screen-test shots of Persis Khambatta in Ilia makeup were taken, as well as footage of costume tests.
[edit] Episodes
Two scripts for the series ("The Child", "Devil's Due") were rewritten for use in Star Trek: The Next Generation.
Several episodes of Star Trek: Phase II were scripted:
Episode | Writer | Description |
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"In Thy Image" | Harold Livingston Story by Alan Dean Foster |
The two-hour pilot that eventually became Star Trek: The Motion Picture. Alan Dean Foster's story outline was based on a premise written by Gene Roddenberry for Genesis 2, named "Robot's Return". A huge starship crosses the universe looking for its creator on Earth. |
"Tomorrow and the Stars" | Larry Alexander | During a Klingon attack, Kirk orders an emergency beamup and is transported to Pearl Harbor, Hawaii just before the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. The plot is similar to that of the 1980 film The Final Countdown. |
"Cassandra" | Theodore Sturgeon | The Enterprise mediates a dispute between two worlds over "The Monitor", while a clumsy ensign takes care of an infant alien who can foretell the future. Based on the story of Cassandra. |
"The Child" | Jaron Summers and Jon Povill | A being of light impregnates Ilia to experience life as a Deltan. The Enterprise's hull begins to fail as they come across a strange nebula. The idea for this episode was later used as the basis for a Next Generation episode of the same name. |
"Deadlock" | David Ambrose | While searching for a missing starship, the Enterprise is recalled to a Starbase to engage in a very strange war game. |
"Kitumba" | John Meredyth Lucas | The Enterprise is sent to the Klingon homeworld to help Ksia, the underage Klingon leader, stop his regent from making war on the Federation. This would have been a two-part episode. |
"Practice in Waking" | Richard Bach | The Enterprise comes across a sleeper ship where Decker, Scotty, and Sulu get trapped in a simulation of the 16th century witch burnings. |
"The Savage Syndrome" | Margaret Armen and Alfred Harris | While investigating an ancient starship, the Enterprise is hit with a blinding light which brainwashes the crew, reverting them to savages. A similar situation was featured in episode 15 of Space: 1999. |
"Are Unheard Melodies Sweet?" or "Home" | Worley Thorne | While searching for a missing starship, the Enterprise comes across a world in need of men. |
"Devil's Due" | William Douglas Lansford | The Enterprise has a first contact with the planet Neuterra just as a mythical creature, Komether, who was sold the planet in exchange for peace millennia earlier, appears. The idea for this episode was later used as the basis for a Next Generation episode of the same name. |
"Lord Bobby's Obsession" | Shimon Wincelberg | The Enterprise comes across a derelict Klingon Cruiser with one life form aboard - one Lord Bobby from Earth's late 19th century. |
"To Attain the All" | Norman Spinrad | The Enterprise gets caught in a solar system sized logic game where, if you win, you "attain the All," a huge repository of knowledge. |
"The War to End All Wars" | Arthur Bernard Lewis | Derived from part of a discarded script treatment about warring androids on the planet Shadir ("A War to End Wars" by Richard Bach), the Enterprise rescues a female android, Yra, whose planet's successful philosophy of "peace through war" has been corrupted by a leader named Plateous III. |
Several writers, including Shimon Wincelberg, Norman Spinrad, Theodore Sturgeon, Margaret Armen, and John Meredyth Lucas had written Star Trek episodes before. Worley Thorne would get story credit on, and wrote the teleplay for, the first season TNG episode "Justice".
[edit] Legacy
Although the series was never filmed and is thus not considered part of the Star Trek canon, several sources, such as the Star Trek Chronology, acknowledge the basic premise of the series, and have Kirk conduct another 5-year mission after the events of Star Trek: The Motion Picture.
Additionally, as a tribute to this unrealized series, the fan series Star Trek: New Voyages changed its name to Star Trek: Phase II on February 16, 2008.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Reeves-Stevens, Judith and Garfield. Star Trek: Phase II: The Lost Series. Pocket Books. ISBN 0-671-56839-6.
- ^ a b Joy, Nick. "The Human Adventure Begins...", Star Trek Magazine, Titan Magazines, January 2007.
- ^ Star Trek Phase 2: In Thy Image.
- ^ Sackett, Susan. The Making of Star Trek: The Motion Picture. Pocket Books. ISBN 0-671-79109-5.
- ^ Asherman, Allan. The Making of Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan. Pocket Books. ISBN 0-671-46182-6.
[edit] External links
- Star Trek: Phase II article at Memory Alpha, a Star Trek wiki
- Star Trek: Phase II at Science Fiction Buzz
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