What Are Little Girls Made Of?
| "What Are Little Girls Made Of?" | |||
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| Star Trek: The Original Series episode | |||
![]() Andrea and Nurse Chapel |
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| Episode no. | Season 1 Episode 7 |
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| Directed by | James Goldstone | ||
| Written by | Robert Bloch | ||
| Original air date | October 20, 1966 | ||
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| Episode chronology | |||
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| List of Star Trek: The Original Series episodes | |||
"What Are Little Girls Made Of?" is episode seven of the first season of Star Trek: The Original Series. It was first broadcast October 20, 1966. It was repeated two months later, on December 22, 1966, and was the first episode of the series to be repeated on NBC. It was written by Robert Bloch and directed by James Goldstone. The title of the episode is taken from the fourth line of the 19th century nursery rhyme "What Are Little Boys Made Of?".
Overview: Nurse Chapel searches for her long lost fiancé, and uncovers his secret plan for galactic conquest.
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[edit] Plot
On stardate 2712.4, the USS Enterprise, under the command of Captain James T. Kirk, travels to the icy planet of Exo III to search for the exobiologist Dr. Roger Korby (played by Michael Strong). Korby is the fiancé of Dr. McCoy's temporary assistant, Nurse Christine Chapel, and is known as the "Louis Pasteur of archaeological medicine". Chapel has been searching for her missing lover for quite some time, and signed on to the Enterprise for just this reason.
At Korby's request, only Kirk and Chapel beam down. When Korby is not there to meet them, Kirk has two security guards beamed down, but they are quickly disposed of by a large humanoid in the caves. Matthews is pushed into a bottomless pit and Rayburn is suffocated. Kirk and Chapel find the doctor living in an underground complex of caves, left by an extinct race who once lived on Exo III. He refers to them only as "The Old Ones". Korby shows Kirk and Chapel machinery which is used to create androids. With the help of Ruk (who had killed the two red shirts moments before), a still functioning android left behind since the days of the Old Ones, Korby created more androids, one being a lovely woman he calls "Andrea".
Chapel recognizes Korby's aide Dr. Brown, but is surprised the man does not remember her. In reality, Brown is also an android created as a prototype for Korby's diabolical plan that will replace key personnel in the Federation with android duplicates under his control.
Korby keeps Chapel at his side, but imprisons Kirk, who is locked down naked by Ruk on a turntable in Korby's lab, and makes an exact android duplicate of him as a shocked Chapel observes. As the Kirk android is created, Kirk repeatedly says, "Mind your own business, Spock. I'm sick of your half-breed interference! Do you hear?" The new Kirk android is so like Kirk himself that it can fool even Chapel. The Kirk android even knows Kirk has a brother named George Samuel Kirk, whom only he calls "Sam".
Korby has the duplicate Kirk beamed aboard the Enterprise with orders to go to Minas V to begin the spread of android duplicates throughout the galaxy. Korby is convinced the duplicate Kirk will fool the Enterprise crew, but Spock realizes something is wrong. When Spock questions the Kirk android's orders, it repeats the insulting words Kirk had said during his replication. Spock then forms a security team and follows the Kirk android back down to Exo III to investigate what he is up to.
Meanwhile, the real Kirk, while being guarded by Ruk, convinces the android that his master Korby is a threat to his continued existence and must be destroyed. Bestirred, Ruk remembers that the same kind of clash between the Old Ones and the androids led to his civilization's demise centuries ago, and gradually concludes that under present circumstances, conflict is again inevitable. Korby enters and Ruk confronts him, but Korby destroys Ruk with a phaser. Shortly afterwards, in a struggle with Kirk, Korby gets his hand caught in a door. When the skin tears back, it reveals to Chapel's horror that he is also an android.
Believing it to be the original, Andrea destroys the duplicate Kirk with a phaser when "he" refuses to kiss her.
It is now revealed that Dr. Korby, when dying from severe frostbite, had transferred his mind to an android body so that he might live on. However, Kirk convinces Korby that he is nothing more than a machine and has lost his humanity forever. Chapel is also repelled by what her fiancé has done to himself and the insanity that was evidently the result of it. Realizing she loves Korby, Andrea kisses him and in despair, Korby fires Andrea's phaser between the embracing pair, destroying them both.
Spock arrives with the security force, but finds that the crisis has passed, since Kirk and Chapel are now safe. When Spock inquires about Dr. Korby's whereabouts, Kirk replies: "Dr. Korby was never here." In the end, Chapel decides to stay on with the Enterprise and finish out her tour of duty.
[edit] Production
The episode was written by Robert Bloch, but received rewrites during shooting by Gene Roddenberry, leaving the production two days behind schedule.[1] Reference to the works of H. P. Lovecraft was briefly made in Bloch's script, with its mention of "the Old Ones" and the look of the pyramid-shaped doors in the caverns.[2]
[edit] 40th Anniversary remastering
This episode was remastered in 2006 and aired October 6, 2007 as part of the remastered Original Series. It was preceded a week earlier by the remastered version of "The Man Trap" and followed a week later by the remastered version of "Dagger of the Mind". Aside from remastered video and audio, and the all-CGI animation of the USS Enterprise that is standard among the revisions, specific changes to this episode also include:
- The ice covered planet Exo III has been given a more accurate "icy" appearance.
- One of the cave establishing shots was modified.
[edit] Reception
Zack Handlen of The A.V. Club gave the episode a 'B+' rating, noting that the "repetitive plotting" took away any real sense of threat and that without Spock or McCoy to play off, Kirk's character is less interesting.[3]
[edit] References
- ^ Inside Star Trek The Real Story. June: Simon & Schuster. 1997. pp. 204. ISBN 0-671-00974-5.
- ^ Asherman, Allan; Allan Asherman (1989). The Star Trek Compendium. Titan Books. pp. 40–41. ISBN 1 85286 221 1.
- ^ Handlen, Zack (22 January 2009). ""What Are Little Girls Made Of?"/"Miri"". The A.V. Club. http://www.avclub.com/articles/what-are-little-girls-made-ofmiri,23520/. Retrieved 12 June 2009.
[edit] External links
| Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: What Are Little Girls Made Of? |
- What Are Little Girls Made Of? at StarTrek.com
- What Are Little Girls Made Of? at the Internet Movie Database
- "What Are Little Girls Made Of?" at TV.com
- What Are Little Girls Made Of? at Memory Alpha (a Star Trek wiki)
- What are Little Girls Made of? original script review
- What Are Little Girls Made Of? side-by-side comparisons before and after remastering
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