Difference between revisions of "Tomorrow is Yesterday (Episode)"
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|style="width:48%;text-align:right;"|[[Spencer, Jim|Jim Spencer]] | |style="width:48%;text-align:right;"|[[Spencer, Jim|Jim Spencer]] |
Revision as of 18:53, 6 February 2022
Series | Star Trek |
Season | 1 |
Episode | 19 |
Production Number | 21 |
Release Date | 26 Jan 1967 |
Advertising |
Stardate 3113.2: The Enterprise is thrown back to 20th century Earth.
After an encounter with the gravitational forces of a "black star," the Enterprise is hurled backward in time to the twentieth century. Flying over Nebraska, the starship is sighted and classified as a UFO, and Air Force pilot Captain John Christopher photographs the Enterprise with his jet's wing cameras. When his jet is accidentally destroyed by the starship's tractor beam, he is transported aboard. After first deciding that it would not alter history if Christopher never returned to Earth, Spock then discovers that Captain Sean Geoffrey Christopher, the pilot's as-yet-unborn son, will lead an important expedition into space.
This leaves Kirk and crew with three large problems: retrieving the film that shows the Enterprise in Earth's atmosphere; getting the pilot back where he belongs; and returning to their own time without changing history. After Sulu, Kirk, and Spock surreptitiously obtain the film, Scotty duplicates the "slingshot effect" responsible for their temporal displacement. Christopher is returned to his jet, and the Enterprise returns home.
Image Gallery
magnetic tape data storage
transporter reintegration
Related Data
Credits
Starring
William Shatner
Also Starring
Leonard Nimoy as Mr. Spock
Directed by
Michael O'Herlihy
Written by
D.C. Fontana
Produced by
Gene L. Coon
Executive Producer
Gene Roddenberry
Created by
Gene Roddenberry
Associate Producer
Robert H. Justman
Script Consultant
Steven W. Carabatsos
Also Starring
Roger Perry as Major Christopher
Featuring
DeForest Kelley as Dr. McCoy
Hal Lynch as Air Police Sergeant
Richard Merrifield as Technician
John Winston as Transporter Chief
and
Ed Peck as Col. Fellini
with
James Doohan | … | as Scott |
George Takei | … | as Sulu |
Nichelle Nichols | … | as Uhura |
Mark Dempsey | … | as Air Force Captain |
Jim Spencer | … | as Air Policeman |
Sherri Townsend | … | as Crew Woman |
Music Composed and Conducted by
Alexander Courage
Director of Photography
Jerry Finnerman
Art Directors
Rolland M. Brooks
and
Walter M. Jefferies
Film Editor
Bruce Schoengarth
Assistant to the Producer
Edward K. Milkis
Assistant Director
Michael S. Glick
Set Decorator
Marvin March
Costumes Created by
William Theiss
Post Production Executive
Bill Heath
Music Editor
Jim Henrikson
Sound Editor
Douglas H. Grindstaff
Sound Mixer
Jack F. Lilly
Photographic Effects
Westheimer Company
Script Supervisor
Billy Vernon
Music Consultant
Wilbur Hatch
Music Coordinator
Julian Davidson
Special Effects
Jim Rugg
Property Master
Irving A. Feinberg
Gaffer
George H. Merhoff
Head Grip
George Rader
Production Supervisor
Bernard A. Widin
Makeup Artist
Fred B. Phillips, S.M.A.
Hair Styles by
Virginia Darcy, C.H.S.
Wardrobe Mistress
Margaret Makau
Casting
Joseph D'Agosta
Sound
Glen Glenn Sound Co.
A Desilu Production
In Association with
Norway Corporation
Executive in Charge of Production
Herbert F. Solow