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Despite being a modern show, Star Trek: Strange New Worlds serves as a prequel to Star Trek: The Original Series, highlighting the crew of theย Enterpriseย before Captain Kirk’s arrival. There are quite a few familiar faces, including Spock, with Ethan Peck taking over the role brilliantly played by Leonard Nimoy. Peck has big shoes to fill because Nimoy was one of the original cogs in the Star Trek machine, being one of the few things that carried over from Gene Roddenberry’s first pilot. Spock isn’t the only character in Strange New Worlds that has a connection to the Star Trek episode that never was, though.
Gene Roddenberry Originally Envisioned a Very Different Kind of Star Trek

Roddenberry’s original goal when creating Star Trek was to deliver a science fiction show that would challenge its audience. Rather than focusing on action and cheap gimmicks, the series would pose strong moral debates and teach lessons about inclusivity. Well, that idea didn’t work for NBC. After the company received the pilot episode, titled “The Cage,” and shot it down, Roddenberry went back to the drawing board. He removed Spock’s red skin and cut two major characters, Captain Pike and Number One, from the story altogether. However, he still liked them as characters and wanted to find a place for them once Star Trek found its footing.
In the two-part Season 1 episode, “The Menagerie,” Pike and Number One return via archival footage when Spock goes rogue in an effort to save his former captain. Despite NBC being initially against the characters, the reception to them was positive. With that in mind, Roddenberry found another role for Majel Barrett, who portrayed Number One in both “The Cage” and “The Menagerie,” casting her as Nurseย Christine Chapel, one of the medical personnel aboard the Enterprise who has a strong connection to Spock. Chapel appears in a good number of episodes, so much so that more recent entries in the franchise have been unable to ignore her.









