Elaan of Troyius

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Star Trek: TOS episode
"Elaan of Troyius"
Image:STElaan.jpg
Elaan casts a spell on Kirk,
Elaan of Troyius.
Episode no. 68
Prod. code 057
Airdate December 20, 1968
Writer(s) John Meredyth Lucas
Director John Meredyth Lucas
Guest star(s) France Nuyen
Jay Robinson
Tony Young (actor)
Lee Duncan
Victor Brandt
K.L. Smith
Dick Durock
Charles Beck
Eddie Paskey
Frank da Vinci
William Blackburn
Roger Holloway
Year 2268
Stardate 4372.5
Episode chronology
Previous "The Empath"
Next "Whom Gods Destroy"

"Elaan of Troyius" is a third season episode of Star Trek: The Original Series, and was broadcast December 20, 1968. It is episode #68, production #57, and was written and directed by John Meredyth Lucas.

Overview: Captain Kirk hosts a spoiled princess, who must bring peace to a star system at war.

[edit] Plot

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

On stardate 4372.5, the starship USS Enterprise arrives at the planet Troyius, the outermost world in the Tellun System, to pick up Petri, a green-skinned, white haired Troyian ambassador. He is then taken to Elas, the innermost planet to pick up the Dohlmen Elaan, a beautiful but very demanding young woman who is apparently the supreme ruler of Elas.

Both planets are in a border area between the Federation and the Klingon Empire and but are at war with each other. It is hoped that the marriage of the Troyian and Elasian leaders will bring peace to the system and sway their leanings toward the Federation, over the Klingon Empire. It is obvious that Elaan is reluctant to be her enemy's bride, cursing that the arrangement was decided on by the Council of Elas in cooperation with the Troyian leader. Petri's job is to try to civilize Elaan, who is spoiled and arrogant, to the posh and noble ways of the Troyians.

Not long after Elaan's arrival, a Klingon vessel is detected entering the Tellun system, which avoids all communication hails from the Enterprise. Captain Kirk is then summoned to Elaan's quarters where he finds Ambassador Petri has been stabbed by Elaan. The ambassador is rushed to sickbay where he refuses to have anymore dealings with the girl, and threatens to advise his leader not to marry her. The job of straightening her out now falls to Kirk.

While in sickbay, Nurse Chapel asks why Elasian women are so prized in spite of their savagery. Petri explains that if the tears of an Elasian female touch a man's skin, they will be enraptured to her forever. (It is not clear whether this is in fact the case for the Troyian leader.) Elaan does not take kindly to being "civilized", and also tries to stab Kirk, but he manages to overpower her and she begins to cry, worried by the fact that nobody likes her. Kirk embraces her and tries to comfort her, but then he is overcome by her mystical tears.

Meanwhile, one of the engineering crew is killed by Kryton, an Elasian bodyguard, who is secretly working for the Klingons. Kryton sabotages some of the Enterprise's systems and tries to contact the Klingon ship, but commits suicide before he can be interrogated. Elaan explains that Kryton was from a noble family and had loved her. The arranged marriage had infuriated him, and he sold out to the Klingons, probably hoping to disrupt the alliance so that he could marry Elaan.

Elaan tries to use her new power over Kirk to do her bidding. She suggests that he destroy the Troyian planet, but his ethics and willpower are still stronger than her influence. He orders Dr. McCoy to work on an antidote to counteract the power of her tears. Elaan is impressed by Kirk's resolve, and begins to treat him as a loving equal, obeying him when he asks her to go to sickbay (the safest part of the ship). Meanwhile, Mr. Scott discovers Kryton's sabotage and takes the ship off main power. He reports Kryton had damaged the dilithium crystals, making it impossible to go to warp speeds or use weapons lest the ship be destroyed.

Scotty and Mr. Spock work feverishly to repair the damage as the Klingon ship takes up an attack position. There is little they can do about the threat without dilithium crystals. Kirk, still under the influence of Elaan's tears, manages to pull himself together, and bluff the Klingons into thinking the Enterprise is fully operational, and they hold back.

In sickbay, the Troyian ambassador once again approaches Elaan with the royal gifts, a wedding dress and a necklace of large, roughly cut gemstones, saying that they symbolize hope for peace. Elaan accepts, and subsequently appears on the bridge wearing the gifts. Spock detects strange energy readings from her necklace. Elaan is puzzled, because to her the jewels are common stones -- the necklace is of little monetary value in her world. Spock discovers the "common stones" are crude dilithium crystals. Scotty quickly commandeers the jewelry and rushes it to engineering where he restores the crystals in the ship's matter reactor. Power returns to the Enterprise just before the Klingons attack and they are driven off.

A much changed Elaan is delivered safely to Troyius. Before she departs, Elaan gives Kirk her knife as a memento of their encounter, explaining Troyan women do not wear such things.

Spoilers end here.

[edit] Trivia

  • This episode marks, in production order, the first time a Klingon vessel is seen on-screen (barring a brief glimpse in "A Private Little War"). However, the model was also used to represent Romulan vessels in "The Enterprise Incident" (after a technological exchange between the two empires), which in final transmission order was broadcast before this episode.
  • Jay Robinson, playing Petrie, appears to have based his character on Franklin Pangborn's series of fussy, somewhat effeminate minor officials and functionaries.
  • This episode was originally scripted to debut the ship's new recreation room set, and the scenes were actually filmed. However, they were cut from the final airing broadcast, but numerous frames of the scenes have surfaced in recent years [1]. These frames have been verified as being authentic, and had the scenes aired we would have learned not only that Spock took second place on his Vulcan Lyre in an "all-Vulcan music competition", but that his father, Sarek, took first. Also, Uhura asks Spock if he could teach her how to play the Vulcan Lyre, to which Spock agrees but expresses his doubts as to Uhura - or any human's - ability to master the Lyre's mathematically-intensive operating concepts. The most shocking implication occurs when Spock implies that the difficulty lies in the fact that only Vulcans "have natural rhythm" - a revelation that no doubt would have raised a few eyebrows, considering to whom Spock was talking.
  • The music written for this episode, particularly the love themes between Kirk and Elaan, would be frequently heard throughout the rest of the third season.
  • Costume designer William Theiss outdid himself with Elaan's costumes in this episode; guest star France Nuyen wears four different costume changes, tying Barbara Anderson (Lenore) in "The Conscience of the King." All of her outfits are eyebrow-raising: the purple halter top, the silver flowered thing on black mesh, the orange dress, and the blue wedding gown with no sides. Kryton's armor was constructed out of red and orange plastic place mats.

[edit] External links

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Last produced:
"Spectre of the Gun"
Star Trek: TOS episodes
Season 3
Next produced:
"The Paradise Syndrome"
Last transmitted:
"The Empath"
Next transmitted:
"Whom Gods Destroy"