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| 1 |
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The Cage
Captain Pike leads the Enterprise to Talos IV in search of survivors of a crashed ship, but the distress call is merely an illusion created by the Talosians, who want to breed a new race of humans to inhabit their dying planet. |
2 |
 |
Where No Man Has Gone Before
After the Enterprise crosses through an energy barrier at the edge of the Galaxy, Lt. Gary Mitchell and Dr. Elizabeth Dehner gain super-human powers that threaten the survival of the rest of the ships crew. |
3 |
 |
The Corbomite Maneuver
In an uncharted part of space, an alien ship's commander threatens destruction of the Enterprise. Captain Kirk calls the alien's bluff with a bluff of his own, threatening to destroy the alien with use of a fictitious substance, Corbomite. |
| 4 |
 |
Mudd's Women
After rescuing Harry Mudd (alias Leo Walsh) and his cargo of three beautiful women, the Enterprise desperately needs new dilithium crystals. Procuring the crucial crystals becomes complicated by the presence of the women. |
5 |
 |
The Enemy Within
A transporter malfunction creates two very different Captain Kirks. Scotty must fix the transporter in order to restore Kirk to his normal self, and to save several crew members, including Sulu, from freezing on the planet below. |
6 |
 |
The Man Trap
The Enterprise brings supplies to Robert and Nancy Crater on planet M-113, but soon crew members turn up dead. The culprit is a salt-sucking, shape-shifting creature, the last of its kind, who poses as Nancy. |
| 7 |
 |
The Naked Time
A highly contagious disease spreads throughout the Enterprise, causing crew members to behave irrationally and irresponsibly. Kirk and Spock must fight the effects of the disease, and with Scotty's help, save the ship from total destruction. |
8 |
 |
Charlie X
After spending 14 years alone on the planet Thasus, Charlie Evans is brought aboard the Enterprise. He soon finds it difficult to adapt to living again with humans. and his hidden powers soon threaten the ship and the entire crew. |
9 |
 |
Balance of Terror
While the Enterprise patrols the Neutral Zone, a Federation outpost is destroyed by a Romulan ship capable of cloaking itself.
Captain Kirk tracks and disables the Romulan ship, but surrender is not an option. The Romulans destroy themselves. |
| 10 |
 |
What Are Little Girls Made Of?
Dr. Roger Korby, Nurse Chapel's long-lost fiance, is found alive on planet Exo Ill, or so it seems. Captain Kirk soon discovers Korby living among androids and later finds out that the real Korby is dead. This Korby is an android, too. |
11 |
 |
Dagger of the Mind
The Enterprise delivers supplies to a penal colony on Tantalus V, where Captain Kirk soon discovers that Dr. Tristan Adams has developed a dangerous and deadly device, the neural neutralizer. |
12 |
 |
Miri
Kirk, Spock, McCoy and Rand beam down to an Earth-like planet where survivors of a life-prolongation experiment are dying when they reach puberty. The landing party soon becomes infected, and McCoy must find an antidote before they all die. |
| 13 |
 |
The Conscience of the King
While visiting planet Q, Captain Kirk believes that actor Anton Karidian is really Kodos The Executioner, who once murdered thousands, including part of Kirk's family. Meanwhile, Kirk begins to fall in love with Karidian's daughter. |
14 |
 |
The Galileo Seven
The Galileo Seven crash lands, and its crew must battle giant creatures to stay alive. After repairs are made and the shuttlecraft gains a temporary orbit, Spock takes a huge calculated risk. |
15 |
 |
Court-Martial
Captain Kirk is charged with the murder of Ben Finney, but it turns out to be a hoax perpetrated by Finney, who has become jealous of Kirk's success. Finney has reprogrammed the ship's computers in order to implicate Kirk. |
| 16 |
 |
The Menagerie, Parts I & II
Spock risks his career and his life in an effort to return his former captain, Christopher Pike, now disfigured and paralyzed, to Talos IV, where the Talosians power of illusion can reunite a youthful and healthy Pike with the beautiful Vina. |
17 |
 |
Shore Leave
Captain Kirk arranges shore leave for the Enterprise crew, but the seemingly peaceful setting turns into a venue of nightmares and death. However, it's all part of synthesized entertainment for the planet's visitors. None of it is real. |
18 |
 |
The Squire of Gothos
The Enterprise is trapped in orbit around an uncharted planet, where the crew is tormented by the powerful but childish Trelane. Two energy beings, Trelanes parents, soon show up and put a stop to the mayhem and madness. |
| 19 |
 |
Arena
The Metrons lure Captain Kirk into a battle to the death with the reptilian Gorn commander, and the loser's ship will also be destroyed. Kirk prevails, but he refuses to finish off the Gorn. Impressed, the Metrons spare both vessels. |
20 |
 |
The Alternative Factor
After a moment of "non-existence," Captain Kirk finds Lazarus, the man (or men) responsible. Lazarus and his anti-matter alter ego must be stopped from destroying both universes. |
21 |
 |
Tomorrow is Yesterday
After traveling back to 20th century Earth, the Enterprise mistakenly disrupts the proper historical timeline when a U.S. Air Force plane is destroyed and its pilot is beamed on board. Kirk and crew must find a way to restore the timeline. |
| 22 |
 |
The Return of the Archons
While investigating the disappearance of the long-lost U.S.S. Archon, Captain Kirk and crew soon discover the inhabitants of planet Beta III are controlled by Landru, a computer. Kirk and Spock destroy Landru and restore freedom to the people. |
23 |
 |
A Taste of Armageddon
The Enterprise becomes entangled in a senseless, centuries-old war between Eminiar VII and Vendikar. The war is played out on computers but the casualties are real. Kirk and Spock stop the killing and help the two worlds establish peace. |
24 |
 |
Space Seed
The Enterprise comes across the sleeper ship S.S. Botany Bay, and awakens its crew, including Khan, a genetically-engineered super-human from the late 20th century. Khan tries, but ultimately fails, to take control of the Enterprise. |
| 25 |
 |
This Side of Paradise
While visiting Omicron Ceti III, the crew of the Enterprise, including Spock, becomes affected by spores that cause happiness, laziness and irresponsibility. Captain Kirk fights the effects of the spores, and saves the enterprise and its crew. |
26 |
 |
The Devil in the Dark
The Enterprise crew investigates the murders of miners on Janus VI. Kirk and Spock soon discover that the miners have unknowingly been destroying eggs of the Horta, an intelligent, silicon-based life form that moves easily through solid rock. |
27 |
 |
Errand of Mercy
The Enterprise is sent to Organia, but the Klingons arrive and try to take control of the planet. As the rivaling factions prepare for war, the native Organians reveal themselves as all-powerful energy beings who neutralize the visitors weapons. |
| 28 |
 |
The City on the Edge of Forever
A deranged McCoy jumps through the Guardian of Forever and unknowingly alters history. Kirk and Spock must find McCoy and restore history, but their mission comes at a steep price: ensuring Edith Keeler's death. |
29 |
 |
Operation—Annihilate!
After amoeba-like parasites attack Deneva and kill Kirk's brother Sam, the Enterprise crew must find a way to annihilate the creatures.
After being attacked, Spock serves as a test subject and suffers temporary blindness en route to a cure. |
30 |
 |
Catspaw
The Enterprise and its crew encounter a sorcerer named Korob and a witch named Sylvia. Korob's transmuter holds the secret to their powers, and when Captain Kirk destroys it, the
aliens perish. |
| 31 |
 |
Metamorphosis
Kirk, Spock, McCoy and an ailing Nancy Hedford meet Zefram Cochrane, discoverer of warp drive. Cochrane has been kept alive by a mysterious cloud creature, who offers Hedford her only chance of survival, too. |
32 |
 |
Friday's Child
Kirk, Spock and McCoy attempt to negotiate a treaty with the inhabitants of Capella IV, but the Klingons get there first. McCoy helps to save the life of Eleen, who soon gives birth to the planet's new leader. |
33 |
 |
Who Mourns for Adonais?
The Enterprise and its crew encounter the god Apollo, who quickly falls in love with Lt. Palamas. As Palamas distracts Apollo, the Enterprise destroys his temple, the source of his power. |
| 34 |
 |
Amok Time
Spock must return to his home planet, Vulcan, to mate with T'Pring, his wife, T'Pring unexpectedly chooses Kirk as her champion, and he must fight Spock to the death. McCoy injects Kirk with a tri-ox compound that simulates his death. |
35 |
 |
The Doomsday Machine
A gigantic alien weapon cripples the starship Constellation and leaves all of its crew dead, except for Commodore Decker. Kirk and the Enterprise crew, along with Decker, stop the doomsday machine, but not before Decker sacrifices himself. |
36 |
 |
Wolf in the Fold
While taking shore leave on Argelius II, Scotty is accused of murdering a dancer and then the wife of Prefect Jaris. But the real murderer is Redjac, aka Jack the Ripper, who can take control of any person or even the ship's computer. |
| 37 |
 |
The Changeling
After beaming aboard the space probe Nomad, whose mission is now to annihilate all imperfect life forms, Captain Kirk must find a way to destroy the probe before it wipes out the Enterprise and its crew. |
38 |
 |
The Apple
The Enterprise and crew investigate strange phenomena on Gamma Trianguli VI, where an alien machine, Vaal, has been ruling over a primitive humanoid race. After Vaal is destroyed, the aliens are free to rule themselves. |
39 |
 |
Mirror, Mirror
During an ion storm, Kirk, McCoy, Scotty and Uhura are beamed aboard a different kind of Enterprise in a savage mirror universe. The foursome must find a way back to their own universe before time runs out, |
| 40 |
 |
The Deadly Years
Kirk, Spock, McCoy, Scotty and Chekov are exposed to radiation that causes all but Chekov to age rapidly. While Commodore Stocker takes control of the Enterprise, Dr. Wallace finds a cure and returns the group to normal. |
41 |
 |
I, Mudd
After the android Norman takes over the Enterprise, Captain Kirk finds none other than Harry Mudd at the center of another misguided plot. Kirk and Spock defeat and reprogram the androids, and then leave Mudd among them. |
42 |
 |
The Trouble With Tribbles
Called to Space Station K-7 to protect a shipment of grain from the Klingons, Captain Kirk finds tribbles to be an even greater threat, as they eat through the grain, which has been poisoned by the Klingons. |
| 43 |
 |
Bread and Circuses
In search of the missing S.S. Beagle, Kirk, Spock and McCoy discover that Merrick, the ship's captain, now lives on a planet which thrives on televised gladiator matches. Kirk, Spock and McCoy must fight their way to freedom. |
44 |
 |
Journey to Babel
Murder and mystery engulf the Enterprise, as it ferries numerous dignitaries, including Spock's parents, to an important interplanetary conference. Spocks father, Sarek, becomes deathly ill, and only Spock's Vulcan blood can save him. |
45 |
 |
A Private Little War
While visiting his friend Tyree, Captain Kirk is attacked by a poisonous Mugato. Tyree's wife Nona cures Kirk, but she also causes him to fall in love with her. Her endgame is securing modern weapons, but the plan backfires, and she is killed. |
| 46 |
 |
The Gamesters of Triskelion
Kirk, Uhura and Chekov find themselves on the planet Triskelion, where gladiators fight for the amusement of the Providers, three disembodied brains. Kirk makes a wager with the Providers, with his ship and crew at stake, and he prevails. |
47 |
 |
Obsession
As a lieutenant aboard the starship Farragut 11 years earlier, Kirk witnessed the deaths of half his shipmates by a mysterious cloud creature that absorbed its victims' red blood cells. Now, Kirk becomes obsessed with killing the creature. |
48 |
 |
The Immunity Syndrome
A gigantic, amoeba-like creature destroys an entire solar system, and the Enterprise investigates. Kirk and Spock formulate a plan to destroy the creature by detonating an anti-matter charge into its nucleus. |
| 49 |
 |
A Piece of the Action
A hundred years after the U.S.S. Horizon visited Sigma lotia I, the Enterprise and crew arrive to find the planet's culture patterned after a book left behind by that last Federation ship: "Chicago Mobs of the Twenties"! |
50 |
 |
By Any Other Name
A band of Kelvans assume human form and take over the Enterprise. After most of the ship's crew are transformed into chemical blocks, Kirk, Spock, McCoy and Scotty defeat the aliens by using their newfound human instincts against them. |
51 |
 |
Return to Tomorrow
Sargon, Thalassa and Henoch are the last [of] an alien civilization. With permission, they temporarily use the bodies of Kirk, Spock and Dr. Muthall. Henoch soon formulates his own sinister plan, wanting to remain permanently in Spock's body. |
| 52 |
 |
Patterns of Force
The Enterprise arrives at the planet Ekos, where Federation observer John Gill has inadvertently helped create a Nazi state. Kirk and Spock assist the underground movement, and help overthrow Melakon, mastermind of the Nazi empire. |
53 |
 |
The Ultimate Computer
Dr. Richard Daystrom's M-5 computer, designed to reduce starship crews and eliminate starship captains, is tested by the Enterprise during Federation war games. The test fails when the M-5 responds with deadly force. |
54 |
 |
The Omega Glory
Kirk, Spock and McCoy discover that starship Exeter captain Ronald Tracey now lives on Omega IV among its primitive factions, the Yangs and Kohms. Tracey has violated the Prime Directive, and Kirk must undo the damage done by Tracey. |
| 55 |
 |
Assignment: Earth
The Enterprise travels back to 1968 Earth, where the crew encounters the mysterious Gary Seven. A secret agent sent by benevolent aliens to prevent a third world war on Earth, Seven must convince Captain Kirk of his intentions. |
56 |
 |
Spectre of the Gun
The Enterprise is sent to make peaceful contact with the Melkotians, but Kirk and his landing party soon find themselves trapped within a surreal re-enactment of the showdown at the O.K. Corral. |
57 |
 |
Elaan of Troyius
While transporting the petulant Elaan, the Dohlman of Elas, to Troyius, the Enterprise comes under attack by the Klingons. It's all part of an elaborate plot engineered by her bodyguard Kryton, who nearly succeeds in destroying the ship. |
| 58 |
 |
The Paradise Syndrome
Stranded on a strange planet and with no memory of his real life, Captain Kirk joins a tribe of indigenous people and begins a new life as its medicine chief. Meanwhile, the Enterprise returns, saves the planet from imminent destruction, and rescues Kirk. |
59 |
 |
The Enterprise Incident
Kirk and Spock perpetrate an elaborate ruse against the Romulans, with Spock pretending to kill an insane Kirk with the fictitious Vulcan "death grip." The ruse enables Kirk to steal the Romulans' cloaking device. |
60 |
 |
And the Children Shall Lead
Kirk, Spock and McCoy discover a team of scientists has committed suicide, but their children remain strangely unaffected. The evil Gorgon is responsible, as he manipulates the children. Kirk reveals the true nature of the alien and defeats him. |
| 61 |
 |
Spock's Brain
An alien woman beams aboard the Enterprise and mysteriously steals Spock's brain. Kirk and crew find Spock's brain on a distant planet, and McCoy uses an advanced alien technology to restore the brain to Spock's body. |
62 |
 |
Is There In Truth No Beauty?
The Enterprise and crew find themselves in an unknown void at the edge of the Galaxy, and Kolos, the non-corporeal Medusan ambassador, helps them back. The ambassador mentally links with Spock, who nearly goes insane during the process. |
63 |
 |
The Empath
A seemingly routine mission takes an unexpected turn when Kirk, Spock and McCoy find themselves, along with an empath named Gem, part of a lethal series of experiments conducted by the alien Vians. |
| 64 |
 |
The Tholian Web
The Enterprise discovers the Defiant adrift in space and its crew dead. The ship then dissolves, and Kirk with it. Meanwhile, the Enterprise comes under attack by Tholians. Spock must find a way to retrieve his captain and escape the aliens. |
65 |
 |
For the World Is Hollow and I Have Touched the Sky
A giant, hollow asteroid houses the descendants of the Fabrini civilization, and the Enterprise crew must find a way to keep it from colliding with Daran V. Meanwhile, McCoy falls in love with the priestess Natira. |
66 |
 |
Day of the Dove
An unknown energy being pits the crew of the Enterprise against the crew of the Klingon ship led by Kang. When Kang ultimately realizes that the energy being is his true enemy, the fighting ends, and the energy being departs. |
| 67 |
 |
Plato's Stepchildren
Kirk, Spock and McCoy beam down to Platonius to provide medical assistance to Parmen, who uses his telekinetic powers in abusive ways against the landing party. Kirk soon learns the secret of Parmen's power, and defeats him at his own game. |
68 |
 |
Wink of an Eye
The hyper-accelerated Scalosians take control of the Enterprise in an effort to use its crew as mates, since they cannot reproduce among themselves. Kirk and Spock become hyper-accelerated, and find a way to thwart the Scalosian plot. |
69 |
 |
That Which Survives
After Kirk and others beam down to a planet, a woman appears aboard their ship and kills some of the crew. The Enterprise is suddenly 1,000 light years away, and Spock and Scotty must find a way back to save the landing party. |
| 70 |
 |
Let That Be Your Last Battlefield
The Enterprise becomes a battleground between two seemingly identical aliens from the same planet. Both are half black/half white, but Bele is black on his right and Lokai on his left. The difference is enough for them to destroy each other. |
71 |
 |
Whom Gods Destroy
Kirk and Spock deliver medicine to a mental asylum, but their routine mission is upended by Garth, an insane inmate who plots to take control of the Enterprise. Despite posing as Kirk, Garth fails to get away with his diabolical scheme. |
72 |
 |
The Mark of Gideon
Captain Kirk beams down to Gideon, where he is tricked into believing he's still on the Enterprise, only this fake version of the ship is deserted, except for a beautiful young woman named Odona. |
| 73 |
 |
The Lights of Zetar
En route to Memory Alpha, the Enterprise encounters a strange energy that begins to affect various crew members, including Lt. Mira Romaine, The energy soon takes over Romaine's body, and Scotty, in love with her, risks his life to save hers. |
74 |
 |
The Cloud Minders
Kirk, Spock and McCoy find themselves in the middle of a battle between the inhabitants of a cloud city and miners on the planet's surface. After McCoy makes a key discovery, the two factions find a peaceful resolution to their differences. |
75 |
 |
The Way To Eden
A band of space hippies, led by former scientist Dr. Sevrin, are brought aboard the Enterprise. The young rebels soon hijack the Enterprise en route to the planet Eden, which proves to be anything but a paradise, and Sevrin dies from a poisonous fruit. |
| 76 |
 |
Requiem for Methuselah
On a medical mission, Kirk, Spock and McCoy meet Flint, aka da Vinci, Brahms and Methuselah, who is now more than 6,000 years old. Kirk falls in love with Flint's companion Rayna, an android, but the emotional tug-of war destrovs her. |
77 |
 |
The Savage Curtain
Along with Abe Lincoln and Surak, Kirk and Spock are drawn into a deadly battle against Kahless, Col. Green, Genghis Khan and Zora, purely for amusement of the rock-like Excalbians, who threaten to destroy the Enterprise if they refuse to fight. |
78 |
 |
All Our Yesterdays
Kirk, Spock and McCoy beam down to Sarpeidon, where they soon become trapped in the past. Meanwhile, the planet's sun is about to go nova, and the trio must return to the present, and eventually to the Enterprise, in order to survive. |
| 79 |
 |
Turnabout Intruder
Dr. Janice Lester uses an alien devise [sic] that enables her to switch bodies with Captain Kirk and assume command of the Enterprise. Spock uses the Vulcan mind meld to uncover Lester's plot and help reverse the body-mind exchange. |
80 |
 |
Checklist 1 |
81 |
 |
Checklist 2 |
| 1 |
 |
The Cage |
2 |
 |
Where No Man Has Gone Before |
3 |
 |
The Corbomite Maneuver |
| 4 |
 |
Mudd's Women |
5 |
 |
The Enemy Within |
6 |
 |
The Man Trap |
| 7 |
 |
The Naked Time |
8 |
 |
Charlie X |
9 |
 |
Balance of Terror |
| 10 |
 |
What Are Little Girls Made Of? |
11 |
 |
Dagger of the Mind |
12 |
 |
Miri |
| 13 |
 |
The Conscience of the King |
14 |
 |
The Galileo Seven |
15 |
 |
Court-Martial |
| 16 |
 |
The Menagerie, Parts I & II |
17 |
 |
Shore Leave |
18 |
 |
The Squire of Gothos |
| 19 |
 |
Arena |
20 |
 |
The Alternative Factor |
21 |
 |
Tomorrow is Yesterday |
| 22 |
 |
The Return of the Archons |
23 |
 |
A Taste of Armageddon |
24 |
 |
Space Seed |
| 25 |
 |
This Side of Paradise |
26 |
 |
The Devil in the Dark |
27 |
 |
Errand of Mercy |
| 28 |
 |
The City on the Edge of Forever |
29 |
 |
Operation—Annihilate! |
30 |
 |
Catspaw |
| 31 |
 |
Metamorphosis |
32 |
 |
Friday's Child |
33 |
 |
Who Mourns for Adonais? |
| 34 |
 |
Amok Time |
35 |
 |
The Doomsday Machine |
36 |
 |
Wolf in the Fold |
| 37 |
 |
The Changeling |
38 |
 |
The Apple |
39 |
 |
Mirror, Mirror |
| 40 |
 |
The Deadly Years |
41 |
 |
I, Mudd |
42 |
 |
The Trouble With Tribbles |
| 43 |
 |
Bread and Circuses |
44 |
 |
Journey to Babel |
45 |
 |
A Private Little War |
| 46 |
 |
The Gamesters of Triskelion |
47 |
 |
Obsession |
48 |
 |
The Immunity Syndrome |
| 49 |
 |
A Piece of the Action |
50 |
 |
By Any Other Name |
51 |
 |
Return to Tomorrow |
| 52 |
 |
Patterns of Force |
53 |
 |
The Ultimate Computer |
54 |
 |
The Omega Glory |
| 55 |
 |
Assignment: Earth |
56 |
 |
Spectre of the Gun |
57 |
 |
Elaan of Troyius |
| 58 |
 |
The Paradise Syndrome |
59 |
 |
The Enterprise Incident |
60 |
 |
And the Children Shall Lead |
| 61 |
 |
Spock's Brain |
62 |
 |
Is There In Truth No Beauty? |
63 |
 |
The Empath |
| 64 |
 |
The Tholian Web |
65 |
 |
For the World Is Hollow and I Have Touched the Sky |
66 |
 |
Day of the Dove |
| 67 |
 |
Plato's Stepchildren |
68 |
 |
Wink of an Eye |
69 |
 |
That Which Survives |
| 70 |
 |
Let That Be Your Last Battlefield |
71 |
 |
Whom Gods Destroy |
72 |
 |
The Mark of Gideon |
| 73 |
 |
The Lights of Zetar |
74 |
 |
The Cloud Minders |
75 |
 |
The Way To Eden |
| 76 |
 |
Requiem for Methuselah |
77 |
 |
The Savage Curtain |
78 |
 |
All Our Yesterdays |
| 79 |
 |
Turnabout Intruder |
80 |
 |
Checklist 1 |
81 |
 |
Checklist 2 |
| T19 |
 |
Theo Marcuse
as Korob
in "Catspaw"
b. 2nd August 1920
d.
29th November 1967 |
T20 |
 |
Glenn Corbett
as Zefram Cochrane
in "Metamorphosis"
b. 17th August 1933
d.
16th January 1993 |
T21 |
 |
Celia Lovsky
as T' Pau
in "Amok Time"
b. 21st February 1897
d.
12th October 1979 |
| T22 |
 |
Pilar Seurat
as Sybo
in "Wolf in the Fold"
b. 25th July 1938
d.
2nd June 2001 |
T23 |
 |
Vic Perrin
as Tharn
in "Mirror, Mirror"
b. 26th April 1916
d.
4th July 1989 |
T24 |
 |
Charles Drake
as Commodore Stocker
in "The Deadly Years"
b. 2nd October 1917
d.
10th September 1994 |
| T25 |
 |
Stanley Adams
as Cyrano Jones
in "The Trouble with Tribbles"
b. 7th April 1915
d.
27th April 1977 |
T26 |
 |
Whit Bissell
as Mr. Lurry
in "The Trouble with Tribbles"
b. 25th October 1909
d.
5th March 1996 |
T27 |
 |
Logan Ramsey
as Claudius Marcus
in "Bread and Circuses"
b. 21st March 1921
d.
26th June 2000 |
| T28 |
 |
Mark Lenard
as Sarek
in "Journey to Babel"
b. 15th October 1924
d.
22nd November 1996 |
T29 |
 |
Jane Wyatt
as Amanda
in "Journey to Babel"
b. 12th August 1910
d.
20th October 2006 |
T30 |
 |
Michael Witney
as Tyree
in "A Private Little War"
b. 21st November 1931
d.
30th November 1983 |
| T31 |
 |
Angelique Pettyjohn
as Shahna
in "The Gamesters of Triskelion"
b. 11th March 1943
d.
14th February 1992 |
T32 |
 |
Richard Tatro
as Norman
in "I, Mudd"
b. 1st July 1939
d.
26th July 1991 |
T33 |
 |
Kay Elliot
as Stella Mudd
in "I, Mudd"
b. 14th May 1929
d.
3rd December 1982 |
| T34 |
 |
Victor Tayback
as Jojo Krako
in "A Piece of the Action"
b. 6th January 1930
d.
25th May 1990 |
T35 |
 |
David Brian
as John Gill
in "Patters of Force"
b. 5th August 1914
d.
15th July 1993 |
T36 |
 |
Robert Lansing
as Gary Seven
in "Assignment: Earth"
b. 5th June 1928
d.
23rd October 1994 |
| T37 |
 |
William Campbell
as Trelane
in "The Squire of Gothos"
b. 30th October 1923
d. 28 April 2011
Rittenhouse Rewards Card
Not inserted in packs |
|
| C1 |
 |
Anthropoid Ape
from "The Cage" |
C2 |
 |
Balok's Puppet
from "The Corbomite Maneuver" |
C3 |
 |
M-113 Creature
from "The Man Trap" |
| C4 |
 |
Ruk
from "What Are Little Girls Made Of?" |
C5 |
 |
Taurus II Anthropoid
from "The Galileo Seven" |
C6 |
 |
The Gorn
from "Arena" |
| C7 |
 |
The Horta
from "The Devil in the Dark" |
C8 |
 |
The Mugato
from "A Private Little War" |
C9 |
 |
Yarnek
from "The Savage Curtain" |
175
EP57.1 |
 |
"ELAAN OF TROYIUS"
Stardate 4372.5:
The Dohlman of Elas, a warlike beauty named Elaan, is aboard the Enterprise en route to Troyius. There, she is to marry the leader of that world in an effort to create a peace between their two planets. Elaan wants none of it, and stabs the Troyian ambassador, who was to teach her civilized manners. When Kirk is forced to step in as her instructor, the Dolman binds him to her with her tears – actually a powerful biochemical agent.
"Mr. Spock, the women on your planet are logical. That's the only planet in this galaxy that can make that claim."
— Captain Kirk |
176
EP57.2 |
 |
"ELAAN OF TROYIUS"
Stardate 4372.6:
Kryton, one of Elaan's body-guards, proves to be in league with the Klingons and sabotages the warp drive of the Enterprise. The attempt to destroy the ship fails, but the dilithium crystals are fused, rendering the Enterprise virtually helpless. During the Klingon attack, Kirk is distracted by his feelings for Elaan, emotions that the Dolman has deliberately roused in order to influence the commander of the powerful starship for her own purposes.
"it is of little value. They are common stones." — Elaan, referring to the gems in her necklace. "Common stones… Mr. Spock, do you think Scotty could make use of dilithium crystals?" — Captain Kirk |
177
EP57.3 |
 |
"ELAAN OF TROYIUS"
Stardate 4372.7:
The reason behind the Klingon attack on the Enterprise becomes clear when it is discovered that dilithium crystals are regarded as common stones in Elan's planetary system. The starship's warp engines are re-supplied with crystals from the Dolman's wedding necklace, and the Enterprise fights the Klingons into a forced retreat. The batte to save his ship releases Kirk from Elaan's thrall, and she concedes his loss with reluctant grace.
"The antidote to a woman of Elas, Doctor, is a starship. The Enterprise infected the captain long before the Dahlman did." — Mr. Spock |
C113
EP57.4 |
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CHARACTER LOG
"For a woman who is the Dohlman of an entire planet, Elaan behaved like a spoiled child. When I told her that her warrior culture should have taught her some discipline, she threw a knife at my back. It was a mistake to let my guard down then, and a mistake when I felt sorry for her when she cried. Her strategy was simple – she knew her tears would give her control over me. She must have thought if you can't beat them, make them join you'. And I almost did. But Elaan's hold on me was broken by another lady – named Enterprise."
— Captain Kirk |
C114
EP57.5 |
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CHARACTER LOG
"From a medical standpoint, the biochemistry of Elasian women's tears was an interesting curiosity. I mean, here was a scientific basis for a good, old-fashioned love potion. Unfortunately, my casual study turned serious when Jim was infected by Elaan. Nurse Chapel and I tested hundreds of chemical combinations trying to find the antidote. And when we finally found something that could work, wouldn't you know that Jim had already found his own cure – the Enterprise. I guess not even Elasian tears could beat that competition."
— Dr. McCoy |
P57
EP57.6 |
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PROFILES
ELAAN
The beautiful Elaan, the Dohlman of Elas, came aboard the U.S.S. enterprise en route to an arranged marriage to the ruler of Troyius. However, Elaan did not wish for the marriage and conspired to undermine it. She wounded the Troyian ambassador, Lord Petri, and then infected Captain Kirk with her tears, which made him fall in love with her. Despite her efforts to escape the arranged marriage, Elaan ultimately had to accept her fate and do her duty on behalf of her planet and its people. |
B113
EP57.7 |
 |
BEHIND-THE-SCENES
with Bob Justman, Associate Producer
My first draft teleplay memo asked: "Why do we need warp speed in order to fight the Klingon vessel? Wouldn't it be more to the point to have…our phasers and photon torpedos inoperable due to damage that we have sustained? | think it makes it even more gripping for the audience to know that all the Enterprise can do is to maneuver clumsily at sub-light speeds and not be able to do anything more than to attempt to keep its shields up." My suggestion was quickly approved. |
B114
EP57.8 |
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BEHIND-THE-SCENES
with Charles Washburn, 2nd Asst. Director
It was the morning of Wednesday, June 5, 1968 when I walked into the makeup room to confirm [that] France Nuyen (Elaan) had made her early makeup call and to take her breakfast order. With brief hellos to France and makeup man, Fred Philips, my rambling banter ended with "… the events of last night." They had no idea what I was talking about. She and Fred had gone to bed early the previous night and didn't hear the news or see a newspaper headline. When I explained that after his victory speech, presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy was shot and seriously wounded during an assassination attempt. With that mention, France leaped up out of her makeup chair and paced the length of the makeup room cursing and shouting. Fred and I just looked on, making no attempt to contain her. France and her then husband actor Robert Culp ("1 Spy") were Democrals and very active in civil rights activity at that time. France's performance that day never, for me, masked the hurt (and possibly hatred) for the events of last night. |
G57
EP57.9 |
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GOLD PLAQUE
CAST
William Shatner as Captain Kirk
Leonard Nimoy as Mr. Spock
DeForest Kelley as Dr. McCoy
James Doohan as Lt. Comdr. Scott
George Takei as Lt. Sulu
Nichelle Nichols as Lt. Uhura
Walter Koenig as Ensign Chekov
Majel Barrett as Nurse Chapel
France Nuyen as Elaan
Jay Robinson as Lord Petri
Tony Young as Kryton
Victor Brandt as Technician Watson
Lee Duncan as Crewman Evans |
| RL1 |
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U.S.S. Enterprise
?? |
RL2 |
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Shuttlecraft Galileo
The Galileo Seven |
RL3 |
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U.S.S. Enterprise
?? |
| RL4 |
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U.S.S. Enterprise
The Corbomite Maneuver |
RL5 |
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U.S.S. Enterprise
All Our Yesterdays |
RL6 |
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U.S.S. Enterprise
The Tholian Web |
| RL7 |
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U.S.S. Enterprise
?? |
RL8 |
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U.S.S. Enterprise
Miri |
RL9 |
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Galileo Seven Shuttlecraft
The Tholian Web |
| RL10 |
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Doomsday Machine
The Doomsday Machine
Case Topper
Not inserted in packs |
RL11 |
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Shuttlebay
??
Rittenhouse Rewards exclusive for 300 points
Not inserted in packs |
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| A200 |
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Leonard Nimoy
as Spock
in "Where No Man Has Gone Before"
© 2009
6 Case Incentive (not inserted in packs) |
A202 |
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Maggie Thrett
as Ruth Bonaventure
in "Mudd's Women"
© 2010 |
A214 |
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John Winston
as Lt. Kyle
in "The Immunity Syndrome"
© 2009 |
| A230 |
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George Takei
as Sulu
in "The Naked Time"
© 2009 |
A239 |
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Sheila Leighton
as Luma
in "Spock's Brain"
© 2009 |
A240 |
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Robert Sampson
as Sar 6
in "A Taste of Armageddon"
© 2009 |
| A243 |
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Judith McConnell
as Yeoman Tankris
in "Wolf in the Fold"
© 2009 |
A244 |
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Carol Shelyne
as Metron
in "Arena"
© 2009 |
A245 |
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Seamon Glass
as Benton
in "Mudd's Women"
© 2009 |
| A246 |
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Jerry Ayres
as Ensign Rizzo
in "Obsession"
© 2009 |
A247 |
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Max Kleven
as Achilles
in "Bread and Circuses"
© 2009 |
A248 |
 |
Nichelle Nichols
as Mirror Universe Uhura
in "Mirror, Mirror"
© 2009
3 Case Incentive (not inserted in packs) |
| A252 |
 |
Tom LeGarde
as Herman Series Android
in "I, Mudd"
© 2009 |
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The following cards were originally planned for this release but were subsequently postponed until a later release |
| A236 |
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Victor Brandt
as Watson
in "Elaan of Troyius" |
A242 |
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Arlene Martel
as T' Pring
in "Amok Time" |
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| DA1 |
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William Shatner & BarBara Luna
as Captain Kirk & Lt. Marlena Moreau
in "Mirror, Mirror"
© 2007 |
DA2 |
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Craig Huxley & Pamela Ferdyn
as Tommy Starnes & Mary Janowski
in "And the Children Shall Lead"
© 2007 |
DA3 |
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William Campbell & Michael Pataki
as Koloth & Korax
in "The Trouble With Tribbles"
© 2007 |
| DA6 |
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Leonard Nimoy & Majel Barrett
as Spock & Nurse Chapel
in "Amok Time"
© 2009 |
DA9 |
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Malachi Throne & Sean Kenney
as Commodore Mendez & Captain Pike
in "The Menagerie"
© 2009 |
DA10 |
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Sandra Smith & Harry Landers
as Janice Lester & Dr. Coleman
in "Turnabout Intruder"
© 2009 |
| DA11 |
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Richard Evans & William Wintersole
as Isak & Abrom
in "Patterns of Force"
© 2009 |
DA12 |
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Staphen Mines & Barbara Baldavin
as Lt. Tomlinson & Ensign Martine
in "Balance of Terror"
© 2009 |
DA13 |
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George Takei & Walter Koenig
as Lt. Sulu & Ensign Chekov
in "Turnabout Intruder"
© 2009 |
| DA15 |
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Andrea Dromm & Gary Lockwood
as Yeoman Smith & Gary Mitchell
in "Where No Man Has Gone Before"
© 2009 |
DA16 |
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William Schallert & Charlie Brill
as Nils Barris & Arne Darvin
in "The Trouble With Tribbles"
© 2009 |
DA17 |
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Joanne Linville & Jack Donner
as Romulan Commander & Subcommander Tal
in "The Enterprise Incident"
© 2009 |
| DA18 |
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Mark Robert Brown & Pamelyn Ferdin
as Don & Mary
in "And the Children Shall Lead"
© 2009 |
DA19 |
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Brian Tochi & Melvin Caesar Belli
as Ray & Steve
in "And the Children Shall Lead"
© 2009 |
DA23 |
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Warren Stevens & Stewart Moss
as Rojan & Hanar
in "By Any Other Name"
© 2009 |
The following cards were originally planned for this release but were subsequently postponed until a later release |
| DA5 |
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Leslie Shatner & Lisabeth Shatner
as Onlie Girls
in "Miri" |
DA22 |
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Bruce Hyde & Stewart Moss
as Lt. Kevin Riley & Joe Tormolen
in "The Naked Time" |
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| RL10 |
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Doomsday Machine |
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| RL11 |
 |
Shuttlebay |
T37 |
 |
William Campbell
as Trelane
in "The Squire of Gothos"
b. 30th October 1923
d. 28 April 2011 |
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| A248 |
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3 Case Incentive
Nichelle Nichols
as Mirror Universe Uhura
in "Mirror, Mirror"
© 2009
At least one of these was unsigned before being sealed in a card holder |
A200 |
 |
6 Case Incentive
Leonard Nimoy
as Spock
in "Where No Man Has Gone Before"
© 2009 |
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| - |
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Marked on outside |
| - |
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Not marked on outside |
| P1 |
 |
U.S.S. Enterprise
??
General distribution |
P2 |
 |
Shuttlecraft
The Galielo Seven
Non Sport Update Magazine (Vol. 21 No. 6) |
P3 |
 |
Shuttlecraft Exiting Shuttlebay
??
Binder exclusive |
| P4 |
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U.S.S. Constellation & The Doomsday Machine
The Doomsday Machine
Fall 2010 Philly Non-Sport Show Exclusive |
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| - |
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Sell sheet |
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