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While on the planet Gamma Hydra IV, Captain Kirk (William Shatner), Mr. Spock (Leonard Nimoy), Dr. McCoy (DeForest Kelley), and Scotty (James Doohan) are infected with an unknown disease that causes rapid aging. The only member of the party unaffected is Chekov (Walter Koenig), who becomes McCoy's guinea pig while searching for a cure back on the
Enterprise. A nifty idea with some poignant overtones, the story by David P. Harmon startles a viewer with the sight of these familiar folks rapidly graying, wrinkling, weakening, and suffering memory loss. At the same time, Harmon is careful to age each character as a unique individual, as in real life. Kirk slows down more than the longer- lived Spock, while McCoy remains mentally keen if physically brittle. As for poor Scotty, well...the dramatic subtext in "The Deadly Years" concerns the perennial conflict over when and how to decide that someone has become too old to carry out crucial responsibilities. In that sense, this episode feels constantly relevant and uniquely entertaining: Let's just say that some of these actors play "old" a little better than others. (Director Joseph Pevney has reported that there was a lot of conflict over who was stealing old-guy moves from whom.) With all this going on, one might not notice that guest star Charles Drake is a truly familiar face, having appeared in such classic films as
The Maltese Falcon and
Now, Voyager.
--Tom Keogh
From the Back Cover
A landing party from the
Enterprise becomes ill with a fatal aging disease. Chekov is the only one unaffectd. Spock and McCoy search for a remedy using him as a "guinea pig".
TREK TRIVIA
Makeup artist Fred B. Phillips worked wonders aging the cast for this episode; twenty years later, makeup artist Michael Westmore used stills from this episode to assist him in aging DeForest Kelley for the premiere episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation.
Charles Drake (Commodore Stocker) can be seen in such movie classics as The Maltese Falcon and Now, Voyager.