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Recap / Star Trek S2 E22 "By Any Other Name"

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Original air date: February 24, 1968

It all starts when Kirk, Bones, Spock and two Red Shirts beam down to a planet to investigate a distress signal from a crashed ship. Turns out, it was just bait put out by the Kelvans who have decided this galaxy is suitable for colonization. Kirk tells them they're quite welcome to some of the galaxy's uninhabited planets. The Federation might even be willing to aid them. However, the Kelvans do not settle, they conquer. And now they're going back to the Andromeda galaxy to tell everyone the wonderful news! Oh, and they'll be needing the starship Enterprise to get there. The trip should only take 300 years, more or less.

By Any Other Tropes:

  • And I Must Scream : The neural neuralizer that the Kelvans use to freeze people in place shuts down all voluntary systems. They can still blink and presumably hear since Rojan continues to talk to them, but they can neither move or speak.
  • Becoming the Mask : The Kelvans pose as humans for practical purposes, but they become enamoured by the new senses their human bodies provide them with. Kirk uses this to his advantage.
  • Black Dude Dies First : Averted. The cute girl gets crushed to dust while the black Red Shirt is spared.
  • Blatant Lies : Spock asks Rojan if he's jealous that Kelinda spends time alone with Kirk. "Of course not!" Rojan answers, obviously aggravated.
  • Blue-and-Orange Morality : The Kelvans have apparently rejected pretty much damn near everything to focus on intellectual pursuits. Including emotion and senses, but they still have notions of honor and duty.
  • Buffy Speak : By the time Scotty gets down to one of his last, last secret supplies of hooch, he's so sloshed that the only description he can come up with for it is "green".
  • Can Only Move the Eyes : The effects of the Kelvan stunning device used in the beginning.
  • A reference is made to Spock's method of escape from Eminiar VII in "A Taste Of Armageddon".
  • The episode "Where No Man Has Gone Before" is not only referenced, they use Stock Footage from it (though the remastered version uses all-new effects shots). The Kelvans ran into the barrier on their way into this galaxy, which is why there's only five of them, and why they need the Enterprise in the first place (their ship got smashed). The Enterprise , meanwhile, gets through it a hell of a lot better than last time - not even a single exploding console.
  • Crazy Jealous Guy : Rojan becomes increasingly jealous of Kelinda spending time with Kirk. His jealousy gets so bad that he demands that she stay away from Kirk under the threat that Kirk will be neutralized if she doesn’t. He also starts a physical fight with Kirk after seeing him and Kelinda kissing.
  • Drinking Contest : Scotty manages to drink a Kelvan under the table. Then he takes away the passed-out Kelvan's magic belt buckle, planning to get it to Captain Kirk... right after he takes a little nap.
  • Easily Forgiven : Justified. Kirk is willing to overlook how the Kelvans hijacked his ship, and how one of them killed one of his crew members, in order to talk them into peaceful settlement like he'd tried to at the beginning of the episode. Why justified? Well, you try telling Sufficiently Advanced Aliens that they're on trial for first degree murder.
  • The Empire : The Kelvan Empire. Rojan implies they've got several species under their thumb... er, tentacles. Problem is, their home in Andromeda's getting a little too radioactive, so the solution is to spread out to other galaxies. And then conquer them.
  • Food Pills : Kelvans insist this is a more efficient method of nutrition, until they try real food.
  • Forgotten Phlebotinum : For the journey to Andromeda, the Kelvans make upgrades that allow the Enterprise to travel safely at many times her previous top speed. The upgrades are still in place at the end of the episode, but they're never referred to again.
  • A Form You Are Comfortable With : Spock describes the Kelvans' true forms as being very Cthulhu-like.
  • Genre Savvy : Kelinda has studied human literature, and as a result she can tell that Kirk is trying to seduce her! However, she welcomes his advances.
  • Go to Your Room! : Rojan orders a frustrated and angry Hanar to confine himself to his quarters.
  • Good Old Fisticuffs : Rojan is so angry to find Kelinda with Kirk that he lets himself be drawn into a fistfight, even when Kirk dares him to just use his paralyzer. This proves to be the last straw that convinces him that he can't control the physical and emotional responses that come with taking human form.
  • Green-Eyed Monster : Rojan can't stand it when Kelinda is with Kirk.
  • Human Aliens : The Kelvans have taken on human "shells" which, to all appearances, look and function like ours. And saves on the effects budget.
  • Humanity Ensues : The more time Kelvans spend as humans, the more human-like they become.
  • Intoxication Ensues : The crew takes advantage of the Kelvans' unfamiliarity with their new human bodies to employ two variations: Scotty drinks one of them under the table, while Bones tricks another into taking stimulant injections until he starts acting like a hyperactive child who just washed down a bag of candy with a pot of espresso.
  • Leitmotif : Bagpipes for Scotty.
  • Literary Allusion Title : Kirk quotes a line from Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet to Kelinda, who is fascinated by flowers. "That which we call a rose by any other name would smell as sweet."
  • Literally Shattered Lives : Rojan smashes Yeoman Thompson as a way of intimidating Kirk into letting him have the Enterprise .
  • Love Makes You Stupid : Rojan completely forgot he had a belt buckle that could freeze people or turn them into crushable blocks when he saw Kirk kissing Kelinda and attacked him with his bare hands. Kirk even points it out; he's too angry to think straight, and was already overstimulated before this .
  • The Main Characters Do Everything : A justified example. The Kelvans reduce all "non-essential" crew members to ceramic blocks; "non-essential" turns out to mean everyone barring Kirk, Spock, Bones, and Scotty, and thus it naturally falls to these four to regain control of the ship. Furthermore, due to these characters' high ranks and vital functions note  Kirk is the ship's captain (useful for communication between the Kelvans and the Enterprise crew), Spock is both First Officer and Chief Science Officer (same as Kirk plus useful for identifying/dealing with any scientific phenomena the ship may encounter), Bones is Chief Medical Officer (necessary for any medical emergencies), and Scotty is Chief Engineer (needed for any potential repairs to the ship) it makes perfect sense the Kelvans would deem them "essential" relative to the rest of the crew.
  • Manly Tears : A half-drunk Scotty sheds them when he realizes he has to sacrifice his rare bottle of aged whiskey to save the ship. Keep in mind, he earlier had no qualms about taking everyone's life including his own to keep the Kelvans from accomplishing their objectives. Liquor is Serious Business . The tears turn into Tears of Joy when that bottle manages to get the Kelvan under the table. A proud Scotty kisses the bottle. Scotty: We did it, you and me! Right under the table!
  • Men Are the Expendable Gender : Subverted when Yeoman Thompson takes one for the team.
  • The Milky Way Is the Only Way : Not only will the journey to Andromeda take several hundred years, there is also an energy barrier surrounding the Milky Way and blocking the way out that the Enterprise barely manages to cross.
  • A Mind Is a Terrible Thing to Read : When Spock glimpses into the Kelvan's minds, he feels a surge of mental pain from their incredibly complex thoughts.
  • Neutral Female : When Kirk and Rojan get into a brawl, Kelinda stands around looking helpless, even though she's armed with a paralysis ray that could easily bring the fight to a halt. Given that she's a Kelvan woman overstimulated by Kirk's romance, she's no doubt still processing the new emotional experience of being fought over (physically included).
  • No-Sell : In order to get out of their cell, Kirk judo-chops Kelinda. After they get caught seconds later, she just casually strolls on past and takes her stuff back.
  • "Not So Different" Remark : Rojan says to Kirk, "I think we're somewhat alike, captain." Because Rojan is the leader of his crew, and he recognizes that Kirk suffers when his crew suffers.
  • Objectshifting : Aliens from the Andromeda Galaxy have a device that can change people into a small geometric solid. The resulting solids can be easily crushed, killing the original person.
  • Orgasmically Delicious : Bones remarks that if one of the Kelvans enjoys his food much more, he'll need a diet.
  • Playing Sick : Spock puts himself into a trance to make the Kelvans think he needs to go to sick bay.
  • Real Men Wear Pink : Or real aliens in the form of men.
  • Red Shirt : Yeoman Thompson is the only female redshirt during TOS's run (a "redskirt")— the only other female Enterprise crewmembers to die on-screen were Lt. Tracy from "Wolf in the Fold" and Lt. Galway from "The Deadly Years", but they both wore a blue uniform rather than a red one.
  • The trip is said to take 300 years. Still, going at warp 11 for any length of time is bound to turn anyone into chunky salsa.
  • That said, the trip being several million light years is an acknowledgement that even for Sufficiently Advanced Aliens, travelling to the next galaxy is gonna take a hell of a long time. Space is big.
  • The energy barrier that surrounds the Milky Way. Just attempt to guess the requirements to envelop an entire galaxy (and probably at least part of its halo).
  • Sense Freak : Kirk's plan to wrest control of the ship relies on driving the Kelvans to distraction by bombarding them with physical and emotional sensations they don't know how to handle.
  • Sick Captive Scam : After Kirk, Spock and Doctor McCoy are imprisoned by the Kelvans, Spock places himself in a trance in order to appear to be ill. McCoy tells the Kelvans that Spock needs to be taken to the Enterprise in order to be cured, and they fall for it.
  • Smart People Play Chess : Spock screws with Rojan's new and unfamiliar tendency toward emotion while beating him at chess.
  • The Spock : The Kelvans fit this trope better than Spock himself, as he quickly surmises, although assuming human form makes them capable of emotion.
  • Starfish Aliens : What the Kelvans are in their true forms, as Spock glimpses briefly. Apparently they're giant squidlike things with a hundred arms, each of which they can control on independent tasks simultaneously. That'd be a strain even on a modern CGI budget, never mind Trek's (at least, not without looking seriously goofy). They also have no concept of love, food, drink, or the like, having given all of it up in favor of intellectual pursuits.
  • Stock Footage : The Enterprise returns to the galactic barrier, seen in the second pilot, "Where No Man Has Gone Before". All footage of the barrier is recycled from the earlier installment.
  • Suicide Mission : At first, they consider blowing up the ship rather than letting the Kelvans have it, but Kirk insists on taking a third option.
  • Through His Stomach : The Kelvans are offered food and drink to make them more amenable.
  • Title Drop : When Kelinda is fascinated by flowers on the planet's surface, Kirk mumbles, "a rose by any other name." He then explains that this is a quote from the great human poet William Shakespeare .
  • Two of Your Earth Minutes : The Kelvans' planned voyage should take only "300 of your years." Are Earth time periods common knowledge across multiple galaxies?
  • What Is This Thing You Call "Love"? : And flowers? And food? And booze? And drugs? The Kelvans are unused to human sensations.
  • What Ever Happened To The Mouse : We never actually get a chance to see what happens to Scotty and Tomar after Kirk makes peace with the Kelvans.
  • Kirk would to escape from a desperate situation. Of course, he "apologizes" later.
  • Rojan kills Yeoman Thompson, a rare female Red Shirt .

Video Example(s):

"it's green".

Scotty has been drinking unknown green stuff since his days at the original Enterprise.

Example of: Continuity Nod

  • Star Trek S2 E21 "Patterns of Force"
  • Recap/Star Trek: The Original Series
  • Star Trek S2 E23 "The Omega Glory"

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star trek s2 e22 cast

Star Trek: The Original Series

By Any Other Name

Cast & crew.

Warren Stevens

Barbara Bouchet

Stewart Moss

Majel Barrett

Nurse Christine Chapel

Robert Fortier

Information

© 2009 CBS Corp. All Rights Reserved.

TOS Season 2

  • View history

The second season of Star Trek: The Original Series was produced and filmed from May 1967 to January 1968 by Desilu (and later Paramount Television ). It began airing in the fall season on NBC , running new episodes from 15 September 1967 to 29 March 1968, and continuing in repeats until the premiere of TOS Season 3 in the fall of 1968. In the United Kingdom, the season premiered on the ITV network on Sunday, 5 September 1982 , and ended on Sunday, 27 February 1983 .

  • 3.2.1 Uncredited crew
  • 4.1 See also
  • 5 External links

Episodes [ ]

Summary [ ].

This season saw Ensign Pavel Chekov added to the regular bridge crew. Although his first appearance in " Catspaw " had him operating the science station, " Friday's Child " established him as the ship's primary navigator.

Following their introduction near the end of the previous season, the Klingons were established as major adversaries, appearing in three episodes, " Friday's Child ", " The Trouble with Tribbles ", and " A Private Little War ". The second of those would turn out to be one of the show's most popular and influential episodes, introducing Koloth and the Tribbles , who reappeared on Deep Space 9 , with other characters reappearing in the Star Trek: The Animated Series episode " More Tribbles, More Troubles ". The Romulans also made a brief reappearance in " The Deadly Years " while Harry Mudd returned for a second tussle with the USS Enterprise crew in the comedic episode " I, Mudd ". " Mirror, Mirror " saw Kirk and company paying a first visit to the mirror universe which also later featured prominently on Deep Space 9 and Star Trek: Discovery .

The show began to explore the rest of the Federation , with the Enterprise making its first trip to Vulcan as Spock underwent Pon farr in " Amok Time ". " Journey to Babel " saw the Enterprise transporting representatives of the Vulcans , Andorians , and Tellarites to a conference to admit the Coridanites to the Federation, among them Spock's father Sarek . " Obsession " provided an insight into Kirk's early Starfleet career, revealing some of the details of his tour of duty on the USS Farragut .

Although most episodes centered around the triumvirate of Kirk , Spock, and McCoy , the other regular crewmembers began to appear more. After first commanding the ship in " The Return of the Archons ", Scotty was firmly established as the Enterprise 's third-in-command, with episodes like " Friday's Child ", " The Apple ", and " Bread and Circuses " giving screen time to his command. He was also given a spotlight in " Wolf in the Fold ", in which he was accused of a series of murders. Chekov and Uhura were given a chance to accompany Kirk on an away mission in " The Gamesters of Triskelion " and Chekov also had a prominent role, and an opportunity for romance, in " The Apple ". Sulu , on the other hand, was absent from nine consecutive episodes in the middle of the season, the result of a film George Takei was working on over-running.

The Enterprise visited several planets based on Earth history, either by coincidence or as a result of Human visitors, such as Ancient Rome (" Bread and Circuses "), Chicago gangsters (" A Piece of the Action "), Nazi Germany (" Patterns of Force ") and the American Constitution (" The Omega Glory "). There were other surprising encounters with Zefram Cochrane , the father of warp technology (" Metamorphosis "), the Greek god Apollo (" Who Mourns for Adonais? ") and a giant space amoeba (" The Immunity Syndrome ").

The show continued Gene Roddenberry 's original idea of political fables, with two episodes identified as providing somewhat opposing commentary on the Vietnam War. " A Private Little War " saw the Federation and the Klingons supporting opposing sides in a civil war, with Kirk talking of the need to maintain the balance of power, while " The Omega Glory " saw Kirk telling a race based around the American Constitution that the values of liberty and freedom of belief also applied to their enemies.

The season closed with " Assignment: Earth ", a back door pilot for a proposed spin-off series which saw Kirk and Spock encountering Gary Seven , a man employed by mysterious aliens to watch over 20th century Earth.

Credits [ ]

  • William Shatner as James T. Kirk
  • Leonard Nimoy as Mr. Spock
  • DeForest Kelley as Dr. McCoy
  • Majel Barrett as Christine Chapel
  • James Doohan as Scott
  • George Takei as Sulu
  • Nichelle Nichols as Uhura
  • Walter Koenig as Chekov
  • See : TOS Season 2 performers
  • " Catspaw "
  • " Friday's Child "
  • " Amok Time "
  • " Wolf in the Fold "
  • " The Apple "
  • " The Deadly Years "
  • " The Trouble with Tribbles "
  • " Journey to Babel "
  • " The Immunity Syndrome "
  • " Metamorphosis "
  • " Bread and Circuses "
  • " Obsession "
  • " Return to Tomorrow "
  • " Who Mourns for Adonais? "
  • " The Doomsday Machine "
  • " The Changeling "
  • " Mirror, Mirror "
  • " I, Mudd "
  • " A Private Little War "
  • " By Any Other Name "
  • " Assignment: Earth "
  • " The Gamesters of Triskelion "
  • " A Piece of the Action "
  • " Patterns of Force "
  • " The Omega Glory "
  • " The Ultimate Computer "
  • " Bread and Circuses " (co-wrote)
  • " A Piece of the Action " (teleplay)
  • " By Any Other Name " (teleplay)
  • " By Any Other Name " (teleplay / story)
  • " A Piece of the Action " (teleplay / story)
  • " A Private Little War " (teleplay)
  • " Assignment: Earth " (story)
  • " A Private Little War " (story)
  • " Assignment: Earth " (teleplay / story)
  • Gene Roddenberry
  • Gene L. Coon (" Catspaw " – " Bread and Circuses ")
  • John Meredyth Lucas (" Journey to Babel " – " The Omega Glory ")
  • Gene Roddenberry (" Assignment: Earth ")
  • Robert H. Justman
  • D.C. Fontana
  • Edward K. Milkis
  • Richard Carter (" Assignment: Earth ")
  • Alexander Courage
  • Gerald Fried (" Catspaw ", " Friday's Child ", " Amok Time ", " Wolf in the Fold ", " The Apple ", " Journey to Babel ", " A Private Little War ")
  • George Duning (" Metamorphosis ", " Return to Tomorrow ", " Patterns of Force ")
  • Fred Steiner (" Who Mourns for Adonais? ", " The Changeling ", " Mirror, Mirror ", " The Deadly Years ", " The Immunity Syndrome ", " By Any Other Name ", " The Ultimate Computer ")
  • Sol Kaplan (" The Doomsday Machine ", " The Deadly Years ", " Obsession ", " The Immunity Syndrome ", " The Ultimate Computer ")
  • Samuel Matlovsky (" I, Mudd ")
  • Jerry Fielding (" The Trouble with Tribbles ")
  • Jerry Finnerman (" Catspaw " – " A Piece of the Action "; " Return to Tomorrow " – " Assignment: Earth ")
  • Keith Smith (" By Any Other Name ")
  • Rolland M. Brooks (" Catspaw " – " Amok Time ")
  • Walter M. Jefferies
  • Bruce Schoengarth (" Catspaw ", " Who Mourns for Adonais? ", " Wolf in the Fold ", " Mirror, Mirror ", " The Trouble with Tribbles ")
  • James D. Ballas , ACE (" Metamorphosis ", " Amok Time ", " The Apple ", " Journey to Babel ", " The Gamesters of Triskelion ", " By Any Other Name ")
  • Fabien Tordjmann (" Friday's Child ", " The Changeling ", " Bread and Circuses ", " Obsession ", " A Piece of the Action ", " Patterns of Force ")
  • Donald R. Rode (" The Doomsday Machine ", " The Deadly Years ", " A Private Little War ", " The Immunity Syndrome ", " Return to Tomorrow ", " Assignment: Earth ")
  • John W. Hanley (" The Ultimate Computer ")
  • Bill Brame (" The Omega Glory ")
  • Gregg Peters
  • Rusty Meek (" Catspaw ", " Friday's Child ", " Amok Time ", " Wolf in the Fold ", " The Apple ", " The Deadly Years ", " The Trouble with Tribbles ", " Journey to Babel ", " Obsession ", " The Immunity Syndrome ", " By Any Other Name ", " Patterns of Force ", " The Omega Glory ")
  • Elliot Schick (" Metamorphosis ", " Who Mourns for Adonais? ", " The Doomsday Machine ", " The Changeling ", " Mirror, Mirror ")
  • Phil Rawlins (" Bread and Circuses ", " A Private Little War ", " The Gamesters of Triskelion ", " A Piece of the Action ", " Return to Tomorrow ", " The Ultimate Computer ", " Assignment: Earth ")
  • Joseph J. Stone (" Catspaw " – " I, Mudd ")
  • John M. Dwyer (" The Trouble with Tribbles " – " Assignment: Earth ")
  • William Ware Theiss (" The Doomsday Machine " – " Assignment: Earth ")
  • Westheimer Company (" Catspaw ", " Metamorphosis ", " Amok Time ", " The Changeling ", " The Apple ", " The Deadly Years ", " Journey to Babel ", " Obsession ", " A Piece of the Action ", " Patterns of Force ")
  • Vanderveer Photo Effects (" Friday's Child ", " Wolf in the Fold ", " Mirror, Mirror ", " Bread and Circuses ", " A Private Little War ", " The Immunity Syndrome ", " Return to Tomorrow ", " Assignment: Earth ")
  • Effects Unlimited (" Who Mourns for Adonais? ")
  • Cinema Research (" The Doomsday Machine ", " The Gamesters of Triskelion ", " The Omega Glory ")
  • Howard A. Anderson Co. (" The Trouble with Tribbles ", " By Any Other Name ", " The Ultimate Computer ")
  • Douglas H. Grindstaff
  • Jim Henrikson
  • Elden E. Ruberg , CAS (" Catspaw " – " Patterns of Force "; " Assignment: Earth ")
  • Gordon L. Day , CAS (" The Ultimate Computer ", " The Omega Glory ")
  • Carl W. Daniels
  • George A. Rutter
  • Joseph D'Agosta
  • Glen Glenn Sound Co. (" Friday's Child " – " Assignment: Earth ")
  • Fred B. Phillips , SMA
  • Jean Austin (" Catspaw " – " Who Mourns for Adonais? ")
  • Pat Westmore (" Amok Time " – " Assignment: Earth ")
  • George H. Merhoff
  • George Rader
  • Irving A. Feinberg
  • Ken Harvey (" The Deadly Years ", " Bread and Circuses " – " The Omega Glory ")
  • Herbert F. Solow (" Catspaw " – " The Omega Glory ")

Uncredited crew [ ]

  • John Chambers – Special Makeup Effects Designer & Creator (" Assignment: Earth ")
  • Arch Dalzell – Director of Photography (" Who Mourns for Adonais? ")
  • Richard C. Datin – Model Maker (" The Trouble with Tribbles ")
  • Kellam de Forest – Researcher
  • Linwood G. Dunn – Visual Effects Cinematographer
  • Richard Edlund – The Companion effects artist (" Metamorphosis ")
  • Al Francis – Camera Operator
  • Al Jacoby – Assistant Property Master
  • John Jefferies – Set Designer
  • Joseph R. Jennings – Assistant Art Director
  • Barry Mason – Visual Effects (" Assignment: Earth ")
  • Mike May – Props
  • Bill McGovern – Clapper/Loader
  • Tiger Shapiro – Second Assistant Director
  • Charles Washburn – Second Assistant Director
  • Andrea Weaver – Women's Costumer

Background information [ ]

  • There were some "upgrades" to bridge equipment made at the start of this season (most notably the helm console), but these changes aren't always visible because first-season footage was used in many bridge scenes. You can recognize this footage when you see the viewing screen and the back of Sulu's head – the navigator isn't shown because Walter Koenig hadn't signed on when this footage was filmed. The black viewer or scope at Spock's library computer station was replaced with a gray one (that came with a knob on the left side). A similar scope was added to Scott's engineering station.
  • For the second season, the production budget per episode was around US$185,000, slightly less than Season 1.
  • Lawrence Montaigne , who played Stonn in " Amok Time ", and Mark Lenard were both being considered as possible replacements for Leonard Nimoy prior to the beginning of the second season if contract negotiations had fallen through. [1] [2] Nimoy's agent had asked for Nimoy's salary to be increased from US$1,250 per episode during the first season to US$9,000 for the second season. Eventually a compromise figure of US$2,500 per episode was reached and Nimoy signed on for the second season. ( Inside Star Trek: The Real Story , pp. 317-324)
  • Dr. McCoy's sickbay gained a lab this season. The back bulkhead of said lab appears to be one of the bulkheads of the SS Botany Bay from " Space Seed ".
  • A new expanded engineering set was built, including a small set called "Emergency Manual Monitor" built on stilts that looked down onto the engineering set.
  • A completely new auxiliary control set was also built.
  • In the second season more emphasis was put on the supporting characters (especially Scotty and Chekov), but the show didn't feature scenes of every-day activity around lower decks of the ship anymore as it did in the first season.
  • Beginning with Season 2, the episode titles and credits were in the same font as the series title. Also, DeForest Kelley 's and Gene Roddenberry 's names were added to the opening credits.
  • Also, during the opening credits, the Enterprise fly-by and the planet that the Enterprise orbited were different from that of Season 1.
  • Walter Koenig joined the main cast as the Russian navigator Pavel Chekov .
  • The theme music for the series was slightly re-arranged this season, with Loulie Jean Norman supplying vocal accompaniment.
  • Season 2 was a period of behind-the-scenes transition from Desilu to Paramount production. On 15 February 1967 , Gulf+Western's purchase of Desilu was announced. It was commemorated with a ribbon-cutting ceremony on 26 July . Gulf+Western executives were known to have signed off on production of the then-upcoming Season 2 of Star Trek , as they would have been financially obligated to continue its production after the sale. Therefore, Season 2 technically began filming as a Desilu/Gulf+Western co-production. (Sanders, Coyne Steven and Tom Gilbert. Desilu: The Story of Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz . HarperCollins. 1994. 297-298) However, the December 1967 intra-company merger between Paramount Pictures and Desilu caused later episodes of the season to be labeled "a Paramount production". Episodes throughout the season thus have a variety of different ownership claims. TOS : " Journey to Babel " is a simple "Desilu production" under just the Desilu logo, while the later " A Piece of the Action " displays the Desilu logo, but a Paramount Pictures Corporation copyright.
  • " Mirror, Mirror " was the first to be filmed after the late July ribbon-cutting on the Gulf+Western/Desilu merger, but no episode of the season began filming prior to the February merger announcement.
  • Gene L. Coon remained the producer, but he was replaced mid-season by John Meredyth Lucas .
  • D.C. Fontana , who took the position of story editor near the end of season one, remained in this capacity during the second season.
  • However, after the departure of Rolland M. Brooks (the last episode he worked on was " Amok Time "), Walter M. Jefferies remained the series' sole art director.
  • Most of the seasons' episodes were helmed by one of three prominent directors, Joseph Pevney , Marc Daniels and Ralph Senensky . Assistant director Gregg Peters was promoted to unit production manager.
  • Andrea Weaver became the women's costumer for the series at the time " Catspaw " begins production. She would remain with the show throughout the remainder of the season and half of TOS Season 3 .
  • The first season and " Catspaw ", " Metamorphosis ", " Friday's Child ", and " Amok Time " did not use a copyright until 1978 so starting with " Who Mourns for Adonais? ", all of the episodes have the correct copyright date to them at the end of each episode.

See also [ ]

  • TOS Season 2 performers
  • TOS Season 2 UK VHS
  • TOS Season 2 DVD
  • TOS-R Season 2 DVD
  • TOS Season 2 Blu-ray

External links [ ]

  • Star Trek: The Original Series season 2 at Memory Beta , the wiki for licensed Star Trek works
  • The Original Series Season 2 episode reviews  at Ex Astris Scientia
  • 1 Abdullah bin al-Hussein

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Star Trek: Voyager – Season 2, Episode 22

Where to watch, star trek: voyager — season 2, episode 22.

Watch Star Trek: Voyager — Season 2, Episode 22 with a subscription on Paramount+, or buy it on Fandango at Home, Prime Video, Apple TV.

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Cast & crew.

Kate Mulgrew

Capt. Kathryn Janeway

Robert Beltran

Roxann Dawson

B'Elanna Torres

Robert Duncan McNeill

Jennifer Lien

Ethan Phillips

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Star Trek: Enterprise (TV Series)

Cogenitor (2003), full cast & crew.

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  2. "By Any Other Name" (S2:E22) Star Trek: The Original Series Screencaps

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  3. "Shades Of Gray" (S2:E22) Star Trek: The Next Generation Screencaps

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  4. "By Any Other Name" (S2:E22) Star Trek: The Original Series Screencaps

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  5. "By Any Other Name" s2 e22 Star Trek TOS 1968 Leonard Nimoy Spock First

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  1. A Captain's Log S03E22-Leslie Hoffman-Star Trek stuntwoman, career coordinating colossal memoriesP2

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  4. Star Trek: Enterprise (TV series) the cast from 2001/05 to 2022 Then and now

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COMMENTS

  1. "Star Trek" By Any Other Name (TV Episode 1968)

    By Any Other Name: Directed by Marc Daniels. With William Shatner, Leonard Nimoy, DeForest Kelley, Warren Stevens. Galactic alien scouts capture the Enterprise for a return voyage and a prelude to invasion. Kirk's one advantage - they're not used to their adopted human form.

  2. Star Trek: Season 2

    Cast & Crew; Translations; Changes; Media Backdrops 2; Videos Login to Add a Video; Fandom Discussions Overview; General 425; Content Issues 8; Share Share Link; Facebook; Tweet; 2x22. By Any Other Name (1968) ← Back to episode. Patterns of Force (2x21) The Omega Glory (2x23) Season ...

  3. "Star Trek" By Any Other Name (TV Episode 1968)

    "Star Trek" By Any Other Name (TV Episode 1968) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more. Menu. ... STAR TREK THE ORIGINAL SERIES SEASON 2 (1967) (8.2/10) a list of 26 titles created 19 Aug 2012 See all related lists » Share this ...

  4. By Any Other Name

    "By Any Other Name" is the 22nd episode of the second season of the American science fiction television series Star Trek. Written by D.C. Fontana and Jerome Bixby (based on Bixby's story) and directed by Marc Daniels, it was first broadcast February 23, 1968.. In the episode, beings from another galaxy commandeer the Enterprise in an attempt to return home.

  5. Star Trek: Season 2, Episode 22

    Watch Star Trek — Season 2, Episode 22 with a subscription on Paramount+, or buy it on Fandango at Home, Prime Video, Apple TV. A band of hostile aliens from the Andromeda galaxy uses a distress ...

  6. "Star Trek: Voyager" Innocence (TV Episode 1996)

    Innocence: Directed by James L. Conway. With Kate Mulgrew, Robert Beltran, Roxann Dawson, Jennifer Lien. Tuvok crashes on a planet where he finds some children who know that they are all going to die.

  7. Star Trek: The Original Series season 2

    season 2. The second season of the American science fiction television series Star Trek, premiered on NBC on September 15, 1967 and concluded on March 29, 1968. It consisted of twenty-six episodes. It features William Shatner as Captain James T. Kirk, Leonard Nimoy as Spock and DeForest Kelley as Leonard McCoy .

  8. Star Trek S2 E22 "By Any Other Name" / Recap

    Recap /. Star Trek S2 E22 "By Any Other Name". There is no situation so dire that it can't be solved by Kirk making out with space babes. Original air date: February 24, 1968. It all starts when Kirk, Bones, Spock and two Red Shirts beam down to a planet to investigate a distress signal from a crashed ship. Turns out, it was just bait put out ...

  9. By Any Other Name

    By Any Other Name. View in iTunes. Available on Paramount+, Prime Video, iTunes. S2 E22: Extra-galactic beings commandeer the Enterprise in an attempt to return home. Sci-Fi Feb 23, 1968 48 min. TV-PG. Starring Warren Stevens, Barbara Bouchet, Stewart Moss.

  10. Star Trek: Voyager: Season 2

    Douglas Knapp. James L. Conway. Robert Lederman. Anthony Williams. Lisa Klink. Stardate: Unknown. When Tuvok crashes on a moon, he discovers three small children who believe they are about to die.

  11. TOS Season 2

    The second season of Star Trek: The Original Series was produced and filmed from May 1967 to January 1968 by Desilu (and later Paramount Television). It began airing in the fall season on NBC, running new episodes from 15 September 1967 to 29 March 1968, and continuing in repeats until the premiere of TOS Season 3 in the fall of 1968. In the United Kingdom, the season premiered on the ITV ...

  12. "Star Trek: Enterprise" Cogenitor (TV Episode 2003)

    Cogenitor: Directed by LeVar Burton. With Scott Bakula, John Billingsley, Jolene Blalock, Dominic Keating. Enterprise encounters a hyper-giant star. While there, they make first contact with the Vissians, a technologically sophisticated race with three genders. While making quick friends, and eagerly learning about the advanced technology, Trip gets curious about the Vissians third gender ...

  13. Star Trek: Season 2

    The crew of the Enterprise are held captive by an alien who turns out to be the Greek god Apollo.

  14. Watch Star Trek: The Original Series (Remastered) Season 2 Episode 22

    Star Trek; About; Back to video . Search ; Sign Up. Sign In; Shows ... TRY IT FREE . By Any Other Name. Help. S2 E22 50M TV-PG. Extra-galactic beings commandeer the Enterprise in an attempt to return home Watch Full Episodes . Full Episodes. Season 2. Season 1 ; Season 2 ; Season 3 ; SUBSCRIBE

  15. Star Trek: The Next Generation

    Watch Star Trek: The Next Generation — Season 2, Episode 22 with a subscription on Paramount+, or buy it on Vudu, Prime Video, Apple TV. Pulaski probes Riker's memory to save him from an ...

  16. Star Trek, The Original Series, S2 E22 "I, Mudd" (1967)

    Ted Mader has rewatched Star Trek: The Original Series, Season 2, Episode 22 "I, Mudd" (1967), as part of a Ted Trek 60s TV rewatch podcast series. Joined by...

  17. Innocence (Star Trek: Voyager)

    Tuvok's efforts fail as two of the children, Elani and Corin, vanish in the middle of the night. Captain Janeway and Paris take a shuttle down to the surface while being pursued by other Drayans, who do not wish the shuttle to sully the sacredness of the moon. Soon, a confrontation occurs between the aliens and the Voyager crew.

  18. "Star Trek: The Next Generation" Shades of Gray (TV Episode 1989 ...

    Shades of Gray: Directed by Rob Bowman. With Patrick Stewart, Jonathan Frakes, LeVar Burton, Michael Dorn. When Commander Riker comes down with a dangerous alien infection after an away mission, the only way to treat it may be through reliving his memories.

  19. Star Trek Season 2 Episodes

    S2 E26. Mar 29, 1968. The Enterprise goes back in time and discovers a mysterious stranger trying to interfere with 20th-century events. Every available episode for Season 2 of Star Trek on Paramount+.

  20. Star Trek: Voyager: Season 2, Episode 22

    Watch Star Trek: Voyager — Season 2, Episode 22 with a subscription on Paramount+, or buy it on Vudu, Prime Video, Apple TV. After crash-landing on a sacred haven, Tuvok attempts to save three ...

  21. Star Trek (TV Series 1966-1969)

    S2.E16 ∙ The Gamesters of Triskelion. Fri, Jan 5, 1968. Kirk, Uhura and Chekov are trapped on a planet where abducted aliens are enslaved and trained to perform as gladiators for the amusement of bored, faceless aliens. 7.0/10 (3.5K) Rate.

  22. Watch Star Trek: Enterprise Season 2 Episode 22: Cogenitor

    Cogenitor. Help. S2 E22 43M TV-PG. The Enterprise crew makes first contact with the Vissians, a species with three genders. When Trip meets one of the species' third gender, known as Cogenitor, he is disturbed to learn that all cogenitors are treated extremely poorly.

  23. "Star Trek: Enterprise" Cogenitor (TV Episode 2003)

    "Star Trek: Enterprise" Cogenitor (TV Episode 2003) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more. Menu. ... STAR TREK ENTERPRISE SEASON 2 (2002) (9.0/10) a list of 26 titles created 21 Jan 2013 Star Trek: Enterprise (Season 2) a list of 26 titles ...