And the Children Shall Lead

"And the Children Shall Lead"
Star Trek: The Original Series episode
Episode no. Season 3
Episode 4
Directed by Marvin Chomsky
Written by Edward J. Lakso
Featured music George Duning
Cinematography by Jerry Finnerman
Production code 060
Original air date October 11, 1968 (1968-10-11)
Guest appearance(s)
  • Melvin Belli - Gorgan
  • Caesar Belli - Steve
  • Craig Hundley - Tommy Starnes
  • James Wellman
  • Pamelyn Ferdin - Mary
  • Mark Robert Brown - Don
  • Brian Tochi - Ray
  • Lou Elias - 1st Technician
  • Jay D. Jones - 2nd Technician
  • Paul Baxley - Security Guard
  • Dick Dial - Security Guard
  • Eddie Paskey - Lt. Leslie
  • Frank da Vinci - Transporter Operator
  • William Blackburn - Lt. Hadley
  • Roger Holloway - Lt. Lemli

"And the Children Shall Lead" is a third season episode of the original science fiction television series, Star Trek, and was broadcast October 11, 1968. It is episode #59, production #60, written by Edward J. Lakso and directed by Marvin Chomsky.

In this episode, on a distant planet, Kirk, Spock and McCoy find a scientific team dead, and their children who, unknown to the crew, have great powers at their disposal.

Plot

Intercepting a distress call, the USS Enterprise arrives at the planet Triacus. Captain Kirk, Dr. McCoy, and First Officer Spock beam down to investigate just in time to witness the death of Professor Starnes, the leader of a scientific expedition. The other members of the expedition, apart from their five seemingly unconcerned children, seem to have died at their own hands.

The crew bring the children back to the Enterprise, where McCoy evaluates them and determines that they are suffering lacunar amnesia, unaware of what happened to their parents and unable to grieve. However, when left unattended in one of the ship's rooms, the children chant an invocation and summon a glowing humanoid apparition named Gorgan, who advises them to take control of the crew and spurs them on by saying, "As you believe, so shall you do, so shall you do." At Gorgan's direction, the eldest child, Tommy, uses mental powers to trick the crew into steering the ship towards Marcus XII while presenting illusions that make them think they are still in orbit above Triacus.

Upon reviewing troublesome expedition film recorded by Starnes, Spock, McCoy, and Kirk return to the bridge to find the children and Gorgan fully in control of the crew. Unable to break their hold on the crew, Spock observes that the children are merely possessed by Gorgan, who must be the evil embodiment of an ancient group of space-warring marauders released by Starnes's archaeological survey.

Believing they can break the hold Gorgan has on the children, Spock plays back footage showing the children happy with their parents, who are then shown to be dead. As the children realize what has happened, they break down emotionally and Gorgan's appearance begins to deteriorate. With the children's powers gone, the crew regains control and Kirk orders a course for Starbase 4 while they take care to comfort the children.

Production

In an interview with Sondra Marshak, published in Star Trek Lives (written by Marshak, Jacqueline Lichtenberg, and Joan Winston), Leonard Nimoy explained that when he complained about the script to producer Fred Freiberger, Freiberger said, "This script is going to be what 'Miri' should have been". Nimoy objected, calling "Miri" a beautiful, well-acted story, and felt that Freiberger's comments were as much as saying, "'Miri' was a piece of trash".

Child actor Craig Hundley, who played Tommy, would go on to become a composer and inventor under the name Craig Huxley. His Blaster Beam, an 18-foot long aluminum bar strung with piano wire and played using artillery shells, would appear on Jerry Goldsmith's soundtrack for the first Star Trek film, as well as James Horner's Star Trek II and Star Trek III soundtracks. Huxley also composed the piece "Genesis Project" for the "Project Genesis" briefing video in Star Trek II.

Ferdin (who played Mary) and Tochi (who played Ray) would later reunite on Space Academy, a short-lived series that aired from 1977-1979 on CBS.

Reception

While the general fan consensus was that this was one of the poorer third season episodes, and that Captain Kirk's "brusque, exaggeratedly authoritarian and at times unmistakably hostile attitude" towards the titular children undermined both the moral and the plot, Richard Keller of TV Squad listed Gorgan as the tenth scariest television character.[1]

References

  1. Keller, Richard (October 24, 2008). "All-time scariest TV characters". TV Squad. Retrieved March 13, 2012.

External links

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