Visit to a Weird Planet
Fanfiction | |
---|---|
Title: | Visit to a Weird Planet |
Author(s): | Jean Lorrah and Willard F. Hunt |
Date(s): | September 1968 |
Length: | |
Genre(s): | gen |
Fandom(s): | Star Trek: TOS |
Relationship(s): | |
External Links: | online here[1] |
Click here for related articles on Fanlore. | |
Visit to a Weird Planet is a Star Trek: TOS story by Jean Lorrah and Willard F. Hunt. It has the subtitle: "or the Inside Story Behind the Antagonism of a Certain Network Toward a Certain Segment of the Population."
This story was originally in Spockanalia #3 and reprinted in Computer Playback #5. A sequel, "Visit to a Weird Planet Revisited" by Ruth Berman, appeared in Spockanalia 5.
Origin of the Title
The main title is a play on words, as it were, on "Visit to a Small Planet," a 1960 Paramount Pictures film which in turn was based on a 1955 play by Gore Vidal. [2] Leonard Nimoy starred in this play in 1968 (shortly before the end of the Star Trek series) at the Pheasant Run Playhouse in St. Charles, Illinois. See the playbill at Spock Hears from the Spock's Scribes #3.
Performed As a One-Act Play
This story was performed as a one-act play in 1976 at Star TreKon.
An Early RPF
This story is a very early known example of modern RPF, also known as a real world crossover. "Visit to a Weird Planet" sends Kirk, Spock and Bones back to the set of the filming of Star Trek. The three characters meet, among others, Gene Roddenberry. A copy of "Visit to a Weird Planet" as printed in Spockanalia was sent to Gene Roddenberry. He confirms in issue #3 that Spockanalia was "required reading" for him and all those in "the office." [3]
In 2017, Devra Langsam (publisher of Spockanalia) said: "It seemed like an obvious kind of idea. I had no idea that it was one of the first switch kind of stories. I never even thought of that, but it made such good sense that somebody should try it, and both of those stories [the second being: Visit to a Weird Planet Revisited] are very well written." [4]
Sample Pages
inside Spockanalia issue #3, Alicia Austin for "Visit to a Weird Planet"
Response/Reaction Fics
A direct "sequel" is Visit to a Weird Planet Revisited by Ruth Berman in Spockanalia #5. (The situation is reversed and the actors of Star Trek beam up to the real Enterprise. This story was later republished in the pro novel Star Trek: The New Voyages).
Similar Fanworks in Other Fandoms
- Visiting a Visit to a Weird Planet Revisited by Melanie Fletcher (Star Trek: TNG)
- Visit to the Weirdest Planet—Earth by Mercutio (Star Trek Voyager)
- Visit to a Weird 'Gate Address Revisited by Eleanor Rose aka User 4574. (Stargate SG-1)
- Visit to a Weird Island by callensensei (Gilligan's Island)
- Visit to a Weird Dungeon by Dementor Delta (Harry Potter)
- Visit to a Weird 'Verse, Re-revisited by CABridges (Firefly)
- Visit to a Small Airforce, a Hanover Street vignette by an unknown author in Facets #2
- Revisiting a Visit to a Weird Planet Revisited, or: 'Patrick, I Don't Think We're In L.A. Anymore...' by Melanie Miller-Fletcher (was at Trekiverse, but appears to be offline)
- Visit to a Weird Galaxy, a Star Wars story in Alderaani Imperative
- Revisiting a Visit to a Weird Planet Revisited, or: "Patrick, I Don't Think We're In L.A. Anymore..." by Melanie Miller-Fletcher
- Quantum Leap: A Visit to a Weird Planet by Lenora McCoy ("Both men are surprised when Al Calavicci and Dean Stockwell switch places, and Dean has to take over duties as Observer, while Al struggles with filming the episode "Dreams".") (links are here) (Quantum Leap) (1997)
title page from "Visit to a Weird Galaxy," a Star Wars story in Alderaani Imperative
A Brief Scuffle Over Copyright
In October 1996, the author of the story sent an urgent message out to alt.startrek.creative that someone has reposted the story to a website without permission.
"I have an alert for any of you who have had a story published in a Star Trek fanzine in the past thirty years. Check this website: http://tos-www.tos.net/services/I found "Visit to a Weird Planet" posted there, and wrote to remind the site owner, [email redacted], that he had not asked for my permission, and that he had omitted the copyright notice. I asked if he had received permission to reprint the story from Devra Langsam, the editor of Spockanalia, where the story originally appeared.
I got a snotty reply that he is one of the founders of the internet and has been on line for ten years, and I am a newbie and therefore have no right to tell him nettiquette. Because he found the story posted somewhere else without a copyright notice (and of course he did not say where he supposedly found it), he had the right to put it on his own site the same way, but he is now removing the story from the site.
Well, that's fine with me. But he has dozens of Trek stories posted. You may want to check the site and see if he has one of yours, and if he does, decide what you want to do about it.
Please feel free to distribute this message anywhere that fans who have had Star Trek stories published in fanzines, or who have edited fanzines, over the past thirty years may see it."
The copyright notice on later issues of Spockanalia read: "Copyright Sherna Burley and Devra Michele Langsam 1968. All rights assigned to the writers and artists responsible for the material. Brief, credited quotations are permitted; otherwise written permission of the writer/artist is required. In that case, it would be appreciated if Spockanalia were credited as the source, and two copies set to the editors."[5]
Reactions and Reviews
1993
I just received a mail with Visit to a Weird Planet. In case you don't know it it's a funny ST story (no slash!) about the characters ending up instead of the actors in the studio while they are taking a scene of the series. [6]
2013
The first RPF I came across was in Trek, back in the mid-70s - 'Visit to a Weird Planet', and its sequel, 'Visit to a Weird Planet Revisited' where the lead actors somehow ended up on the Enterprise having to cope with an emergency while the characters ended up in the studio, having to deal with the stress of acting who they really were. It wasn't really intrusive, the way later RPF went; basically it was harmless, but even so it made me a little uneasy. [7]
References
- ^ WayBack Archive link.
- ^ See "Visit to a Small Planet" at Wikipedia.
- ^ Also stated at Fanthropology
- ^ from Media Fandom Oral History Project Interview with Devra Langsam
- ^ Spockanalia #3, Fourth printing, August 1976.
- ^ from a fan on Virgule-L, quoted anonymously (Jun 23, 1993)
- ^ from a fan on Senad, quoted anonymously (17 Jan 2013)