Monday, March 24, 2014

TWITrek Character Insight No. 89: Galloway

This is the latest installment in a series of "Character Insight" articles regarding the rich history of characters in the Star Trek universe.  An audio version will appear on the This Week in Trek podcast, available for direct download here.
--------------------
Welcome back to Character Insight!  This week, we profile Galloway, the first true redshirt from TOS to be profiled on this segment.
 
 

Although we profiled a time agent who was able to warp time and space to escape death last week, Galloway has stronger resurrection powers apparently. He is one of a handful of characters who dies and then reappears later without explanation. But then again, as a redshirt, he's probably just destined to die once again on an away mission.

Galloway serves as a Lieutenant assigned to the operations division as a security officer on board the Enterprise. In addition to guarding the leadership of the crew on away missions, he frequently appears in the transporter room to operate the transporter. At least in those episodes he's not subject to the usual abuse a redshirt takes. That also helps him survive longer than most other redshirts who appear on the show and regularly go on away missions.

That abuse includes contracting a viral infection that drives the crew crazy on one mission, being absorbed into the body of an alien, and eventual death on Omega IV from another captain. Apparently vaporization by phaser beam is not permanent, though, as he appears again in two more episodes after passing away in The Omega Glory episode.

In one of these episodes, he was credited as a different character Johnson, but he clearly plays Galloway in Turnabout Intruder. In fact, he receives more speaking lines in that latter episode than he did before his death. Our quote of the week comes from this episode:
Galloway: "You're asking me to violate the captain's orders."
Spock: "He is not the captain."
Galloway: "You're as mad as she is. You're to leave here at once. I follow orders."
Spock: "Certainly, Lieutenant. We all must do our duty."
The James Blish adaptations explain away the death and resurrection issue by having a different redshirt get vaporized, but this is a fun oversight for watchers of the entire series to catch and chuckle at. After all, there's only so many extras around for a 1960's television show.

David L. Ross played Lieutenant Galloway. He only has six credits as an actor, but he does appear in a memorable role as a reporter in Rocky II in 1979. He has since enjoyed married life outside Hollywood over the past three decades while raising four children.

Speaking of movies, don't forget to help vote for the upcoming list of best Trek movie villains over at strawpoll.me/1175936. You can help craft Character Insight!

Monday, March 17, 2014

TWITrek Character Insight No. 88: Daniels

This is the latest installment in a series of "Character Insight" articles regarding the rich history of characters in the Star Trek universe.  An audio version will appear on the This Week in Trek podcast, available for direct download here.
--------------------
Welcome back to Character Insight!  This week, we profile Daniels, the recurring character from Enterprise.
 
 

Daniels is a temporal agent who travels through time frequently to achieve missions related to the Temporal Cold War. Although the parts of the Cold War that viewers can see are limited thanks to seeing things from Archer's perspective, the storylines involving Daniels reveals that time is a tapestry in which many different threads come together (and can be torn asunder when desired by bad actors). Daniels is one of only four recurring characters to appear in all four seasons of Enterprise.


Daniels appears as a regular crewman initially, as he infiltrates the crew to prepare for the appearance of Silik, the antagonist leader of the Suliban Cabal. His first three episodes focus on this ongoing battle through time with Silik, highlighted by being stuck in the 31st Century with Captain Archer. However, they escape with some engineering ingenuity and some 22nd Century technology.

Once the Xindi become a regular threat, Daniels appears on multiple occasions to try and convince Archer that he should not commit suicide to stop the Xindi. Daniels explains that Archer is critical to the formation of the Federation, and the Federation is what stops the Sphere Builders, a race that bribes the Xindi to destroy Earth before the Federation is formed.  If this sounds familiar, it is because this is just like how the Borg tried to travel in time to stop Earth from making First Contact.


Of course, then Enterprise totally jumps the temporal shark and pits Archer's crew against some aliens aligned with the Nazis. Yes, the Nazis again...it's a wonder Lincoln didn't get shot too.

Although the stories related to the Cold War can be hard to follow, Daniels is a fun conduit to show that time is yet another dimension to conquer and control. His character has helped spawn a series of books called Department of Temporal Investigations, for those who enjoy this time travel stuff.

The Quote of the Week is from "Azati Prime"
Temporal Agent Daniels: If you destroy their weapon, they will only build another. You are the only one who can convince them of what I have told you. It is crucial to history that you do not sacrifice yourself.
Captain Jonathan Archer: My concern is with preventing the deaths of billions of people. If that's a problem for history, then history will have to suffer!

Matt Winston played Daniels, and he has appeared in great movies like Fight Club, AI, and Little Miss Sunshine.

Speaking of movies, don't forget to help vote for the upcoming list of best Trek movie villains over at strawpoll.me/1175936. You can help craft Character Insight!

Monday, March 10, 2014

TWITrek Character Insight No. 87: Harry Mudd

This is the latest installment in a series of "Character Insight" articles regarding the rich history of characters in the Star Trek universe.  An audio version will appear on the This Week in Trek podcast, available for direct download here.
--------------------
Welcome back to Character Insight!  This week, we profile Harcourt Fenton Mudd, the notorious con artist from TOS.
 
 

Harry Mudd was devised as an alternative type of antagonist that 1960's audiences could readily understand compared to the Talosians of the pilot episode. A human grifter and con man who went into the business to run away from a nagging wife is a perfect fit for the original audience. Of course, the gifted writing of Stephen Kandel and the great acting job by Roger Carmel made the character an icon of original Star Trek.

The first time Mudd encounters the Enterprise, he is in the middle of conning some miners to buy beautiful women as wives, but the women turn out to be older haggard women with appearances masked by an illegal Venus drug. Mudd then flees a death sentence on another planet and ends up as a king of a planet of androids who want to study humanity in an effort to later enslave it. Later on, he is captured for defrauding thousands of buyers of a love potion crystal, although he later gives one to Nurse Chapel and it leads to a short romance between her and Spock. Basically, Mudd is always full of shenanigans.

Mudd allows for a look into the future of criminal justice, and it is clear that rehabilitation programs are what the show writers saw as the future. Mudd is the only recurring character who was played by the same actor in more than one live action TOS episode. Along with Khan, Mudd is also the only antagonist to go against Kirk and the Enterprise more than once. He's the Q of his day! That's also likely why he even got an Easter Egg mention on Star Trek Into Darkness: (Insert quote from Sulu about "the Mudd incident").

There was a third TOS episode written by Stephen Kandel featuring Mudd, but it never was filmed because Carmel was busy filming something else. This episode would have told the story of Mudd's escape from the android world with a cache of high-powered weapons and scientific equipment, which he then uses to bribe a group of pirates who end up clashing with Kirk's Enterprise.

The Quote of the Week is from "I, Mudd"
Harcourt Fenton Mudd: Now listen, Spock, you may be a wonderful science officer but, believe me, you couldn't sell fake patents to your mother!
Spock: I fail to understand why I should care to induce my mother to purchase falsified patents.

Roger Carmel played Mudd,and he played bit roles in many television shows from the 1960's through his death in 1986. His last credit was for Ducktales, of all things!

Speaking of movies, don't forget to help vote for the upcoming list of best Trek movie villains over at strawpoll.me/1175936. You can help craft Character Insight!

Monday, March 3, 2014

TWITrek Character Insight No. 86: Kashimuro Nozawa

This is the latest installment in a series of "Character Insight" articles regarding the rich history of characters in the Star Trek universe.  An audio version will appear on the This Week in Trek podcast, available for direct download here.
--------------------
Welcome back to Character Insight!  This week, we profile Ensign Kashimuro Nozawa, a recurring character from Voyager.
 
 

Nozawa is an operations division crewmember on Voyager, typically seen assisting with the security and engineering department personnel during the stranding in the Delta Quadrant. Nozawa was one of the original extra cast members who appeared in the Caretaker pilot episode, and that led to sixteen other appearances spaced through five seasons.

For many of these appearances, Nozawa is just another guy in the ranks, a face in the crowd, if you will. This means he is often seen talking with other crew members in the mess hall, on away missions, and on shore leave. Sometimes these anecdotes were funny scenes, like when B'Elenna walked in on him while he was undressed in his quarters during an encounter with an inversion field.

It wasn't all fun and games though, as the ensign takes a beating in some episodes. This includes being stunned by a rogue doctor while working the transporters, being called stinky by some Voth scientists, and suffering burns when a console exploded on the bridge where he was working

Until season 7, Nozawa was not given a full name. But during a two-part episode where Nozawa is brainwashed and captive with much of the crew on a Quarren planet, his name shows up on a computer display of the Quarrens.  This ensign is one of many important recurring faces on the ship, which is required to make it feel like the small stranded crew it is.  However, there are only so many stars for a show, which means we miss the opportunity to learn much about Kashimuro.

(No quote of the week)

John Tampoya played Nozawa, although he went uncredited during his appearances.  Other than one other TV pilot, Tampoya only ever played as an extra for many episodes of The Next Generation, Voyager, and the movie Generations.


Speaking of movies, don't forget to help vote for the upcoming list of best Trek movie villains over at strawpoll.me/1175936. You can help craft Character Insight!

Until next time, live long and prosper...