Gary Mitchell (Star Trek)

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Gary Mitchell
Gary Mitchell, played by Gary Lockwood, eyeing the main viewscreen as he pilots the Enterprise toward an energy field near the galaxy's edge
Gary Mitchell, played by Gary Lockwood, eyeing the main viewscreen as he pilots the Enterprise toward an energy field near the galaxy's edge
Species: Human
Gender: male
Home planet: Earth
Affiliation: Starfleet
Posting: USS Enterprise
Position: Navigator
Rank: Lieutenant commander
Portrayed by: Gary Lockwood

Lieutenant Commander Gary Mitchell was a Starfleet officer serving aboard the USS Enterprise as helmsman (and, it is speculated, her first officer). Portrayed by actor Gary Lockwood, the character appeared in one episode Where No Man Has Gone Before. Mitchell also appeared in some non-canonical Star Trek novels.


Contents

[edit] Fictional Biography

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

Where No Man Has Gone Before establishes Mitchell as one of Captain James T. Kirk's oldest and best friends. During the episode, he and Dr. Elizabeth Dehner, a psychiatrist recently assigned to the Enterprise, suffer effects of an energy field encountered by the ship near the outer rim of the galaxy. While the field killed several crew members, it endowed Mitchell and Dehner -- the former immediately, the latter after a time delay -- with psi-kinetic powers that grow exponentially with the passage of time. Eventually Mitchell's powers become almost godlike.

The change also affects Mitchell's personality, and as his powers grow, he develops megalomania, finally considering himself a god and demanding worship from his fellow crew members. This puts the ship in grave danger; the log of another vessel from years earlier reported a similar occurrence among its crew members, together with the fact that its captain self-destructed the ship in order to contain the threat.

Fearing for the safety of civilization, Kirk, under pressure from Mr. Spock (who advises Kirk to kill Mitchell outright), decides to maroon the navigator on an unpopulated planet used as a fuel depot. But before the Enterprise can depart, Mitchell kills a fellow officer and runs away with Dehner, who by now is also beginning to develop psi-kinetic power. Tracking the two would-be gods, Kirk encounters Dehner and tries to reason with her. Dehner, her humanity fading but still alive, realizes how dangerous Mitchell can become as she sees him torturing Kirk. She tries to stop Mitchell, and he retaliates, killing her with his powers, but not before she manages to weaken him. During the battle, Mitchell has tried to overawe Kirk, even presenting him with a freshly dug grave with a filled-out headstone. Eventually Kirk kills Mitchell by causing a landslide to crush and bury him in the grave that he intended for Kirk.

In recording the fact of the two officers' deaths, Kirk officially notes that Mitchell, in addition to Dehner, gave his life in performance of his duty. "I want his record to end that way," Kirk explains to Spock. "He didn't ask for what happened to him." The legendary relationship that Kirk and Spock develop may be seen, speculatively, to date from around this time, with Kirk noticeably thawing toward Spock at the end of the episode that marks the passing of the man who until now has been the captain's best friend.

[edit] Trivia

  • In Peter David's non-canon novel Q-Squared, it is said that Q was inadvertently responsible for Mitchell's transformation, as Q had been thrown back in time and trapped within the galactic barrier.
  • In "Where No Man Has Gone Before", Mitchell's sole onscreen appearance, the positions of navigator and helmsman were opposite of what they were on the regular series (in this episode, the navigator sat on the port side and the helm officer sat on the starboard side of the console. In the regular series, it was the other way around). Based on onscreen dialogue, and Mitchell's duties on the bridge, it is apparent that he is the helm officer, not the navigator.
  • It is unknown whether Mitchell will appear in the upcoming film Star Trek XI, which is set around the time of "Where No Man Has Gone Before"[citation needed].

[edit] Other Media

[edit] Novels

Gary Mitchell figured prominently in the novel Strangers From the Sky, giving us much more insight into his character and his friendship with Kirk. Gary seemed to know odd, miscellaneous facts. Gary, Dr. Dehner, Lee Kelso, Spock and Kirk were inadvertently moved to the 21st Century by Parneb, an Earthman endowed with great powers, a "magician". These events took place just weeks before the Enterprise was sent to investigate the edge of the galaxy.

[edit] Comics

Gary Mitchell is featured as one of the villains in the first Star Trek/X-Men crossover. In this story, Mitchell creates a rift in space and time, through which the X-Men and villains Proteus and Deathbird enter the Star Trek universe during the timeframe of the first series. Proteus has similar reality-warping powers to Mitchell, but must travel from body to body to survive. (His power deteriorates the host body, eventually killing it.) However, Proteus was able to merge with the corpse of Gary Mitchell, which did not deteriorate.


[edit] External links