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"The Menagerie" was positively received and won a Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation. [1] It was the only multi-part episode produced for the original series. Multi-part episodes would become far more common in later Star Trek series.
The Menagerie, part 1: crewman no no as bridge engineer, he witnesses Spock's arrest 13 The Conscience of the King: crewman yes no as helmsman, without rank insignia: 14 Balance of Terror: Mr. Leslie no no as bridge engineer 15 Shore Leave: Mr. Leslie no no as helmsman in opening prologue only 16 The Galileo Seven: crewman no no
Recurring/Guest Cast: Grace Lee Whitney: Janice Rand: R: A: A: A: John Winston: Kyle Recurring [b] A: Jim Goodwin John Farrell G: Grant Woods Kelowitz G: Michael ...
The original series pilot, "The Cage", was released to home video in 1986, consisting of black-and-white workprint footage combined with color footage from the season-one, two-part episode "The Menagerie" with a run time of 73 minutes. In 1988, the excised color footage was found and the full-color version of the episode debuted on television ...
Much of the original footage from "The Cage" was later incorporated into the season 1 two-part episode "The Menagerie" (1966); however, "The Cage" was first released to the public on VHS in 1986, with a special introduction by Gene Roddenberry, as a hybrid of the color footage that was used in "The Menagerie" and black and white footage which ...
At some point prior to the two-part episode "The Menagerie", set in the year 2267, Pike is promoted to fleet captain. He is severely injured while rescuing several cadets from a baffle plate rupture on board a J-class training vessel, the delta ray radiation leaving him paralyzed, unable to speak, badly scarred, and using a brainwave-operated ...
[1] [2] Footage from "The Cage" featuring the character was reused in the two-part story "The Menagerie" in 1966, establishing Pike and Number One as members of a previous crew of the Enterprise and part of the Star Trek canon; Barrett herself, who would become the wife of Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry, would portray a number of unrelated ...
Her work as a guest actor on several drama television series included a role as Yeoman J. M. Colt in the 1964 Star Trek pilot episode, "The Cage" (from which scenes featuring Goodwin were later incorporated into the first season two-part episode "The Menagerie"), [3] and Mannix ("A Question Of Midnight"). [4] [5] She also played roles in some ...