Kamdan wrote: ↑Sat Jul 01, 2023 9:09 am
The assault Rand’s character endured in Enemy was extremely daring for 60’s audiences at that time and is really an uncomfortable moment in this series. You take a causal viewer who only knows Star Trek from The Trouble with Tribbles and show them that scene and you’ll certainly get a reaction out of them. Whitney’s performance when she’s confessing what happen is what makes it so memorable to those who watched it.
I agree with this assessment; in
"The Enemy Within", Whitney's performance in the scene where she's trying to explain that Kirk assaulted her was extremely powerful for two reasons: one, the
what she was revealing was extremely disturbing, especially if you knew anyone who ever suffered from that kind of assault. Two, viewers were hearing her say this about THE hero of the series, our strong good-guy Kirk. By this point in the episode,
we knew about the transporter accident, but it was still incredibly distressing to hear anyone accuse him of such a barbaric act. That makes Whitney's TOS performance stand head and shoulders above her turn as the spiteful, jealous moll to King Tut.
It’s a shame that the solution to dealing with her character was to just write her out of the series and not attempt to develop her into a more administrative role, with her rank as the captain’s yeoman. That’s mainly at the fault of the staff of the show who had a very narrow viewpoint, thinking that just seeing someone like Rand or even Nichelle Nichols as Uhura was enough. Along with your after mentioned drinking problem Whitney dealt with, there was also an alleged sexual assault from a staff member that Whitney suffered from that led to her termination from the show.
Whitney has said she believed her alcoholism was the reason she was fired, as opposed to Roddenberry, et al., claiming Rand was written out to allow Kirk to have more romantic encounters with other women. If Whitney is to be taken at her word, then there was really no way she was going to endure a very ambitious, very demanding weekly TV series while dealing with alcoholism, a disease which only grows in its severity over time. One way or the other, she was going to end up cut from
Star Trek.
Its no surprise that addiction crushes careers;
Bewitched's Dick York (Darrin #1) suffered a serious back injury while shooting 1959's
They Came to Cordura, and was on painkillers until he quit cold-turkey in the 1970s. His back pain was so horrendous that he was constantly on and increasing his use of drugs while shooting
Bewitched, often "out of it" during production. Once his back caused him to be taken to the hospital (after missing several episodes of the show), he asked producer Bill Asher if he would not mind if he called it quits. He knew he was not going to survive the addiction, pain and the grind of weekly TV production, so he bowed out, opening the door for Dick Sargent (actually, the 1st choice for the Darrin part).
The point being addiction ultimately ruins a life to the degree that no amount of TV production write-around and accommodating schedules would allow Whitney to continue as a recurring character.
About Gorshin: you know, I love his Riddler as much as anyone, but TOS' Commissioner Bele was a stunning, breakout performance for Gorshin, which should have been his ticket to take on other serious roles. Bele goes from uncompromising racist hunter of Lokai, to switching on his "reasonable" representative of Cheron act, then making astoundingly racist, slurred "ape" comments about humankind's theories regarding their origin. The episode was excellent in having both men state their views in ways some might see as reasonable (within limits), yet Bele's position was merely a mask that peeled off when his hatred for Lokai and his people resurfaced.
In 1969, next to no one ever expected Frank "The Riddler" Gorshin to be capable of delivering such a dark, vile character to the screen, but he knocked it out of the park.
Over the decades of watching
"Let That Be Your Last Battlefield" I did not think of The Riddler or
Batman while watching the TOS episode, and that's the mark of a versatile actor. That said, Gorshin's stronger performance was on
Star Trek.