My Trek of the Stars, Part 3: Mudd’s Women
Guest Starring: Roger C. Carmel, Karen Steele, Maggie Thrett, Susan Denberg, Jim Goodwin
First, the Lowdown: The
So, there’s the
Kirk isn’t a total dick, though, and has the
The commander is a smarmy gent who calls himself Leo Walsh and seems none too affected by the loss of his ship. The remaining people on board his ship however, are three women who look like they’re ready for their gig as backup dancers for Tom Jones at the Flamingo. Of course, this being a television show made in the sixties, whenever a beautiful woman in soft focus appears on screen, you can expect most of the male cast members to act like someone slipped Thorazine into their coffee.
Kirk demands to see Walsh and company in his cabin to get some explanation for his actions, and of course he also has a similar reaction as his crewmates to the young lovelies that saunter into his office. Fortunately Kirk is able to conceal his hard-on because he’s sitting at his desk, and informs Walsh that both he and his crew are under charges. Walsh corrects Kirk, on his terminology – the female cohorts aren’t exactly crew, but “cargo”. That’s much like saying that your young 20-year old trophy wife isn’t so much a spouse as “furniture.” Kirk confines the group to quarters until he can figure out what to do with them – or more to the point, how to do it to them discreetly.
But the
In the meantime, Walsh has been prepping his “female units” for the upcoming ship’s hearing – insisting the girls answer all questions truthfully, but not allow themselves to be medically examined. Then again, Walsh could’ve explained to the rest of the crew that his girls only speak Sexy and the crew probably would’ve bought it.
The ship’s hearing is convened, and Walsh explains that his main profession is in the “wiving” of settlers. (For more information on how you at home can profit from this wholesome entrepreneurial venture, merely look up “white slavery” on the inter-webs for a free quick-start guide!) Each of the ladies left an environment where their social prospects were limited or non-existent, and decided to seek their fortunes in the arms of an anonymous stranger. Suddenly those Russian & Filipino bride orders don’t seem so bad anymore. However, the interrogation is assisted by the ship’s computer, and as anyone who has watched 1960’s sci-fi can tell you, computers can smell out a lie like a fart in a taxi cab. The computer calls bullshit on Leo Walsh’s name and reputation. Turns out that the man calling himself Leo Walsh with a smarmy Irish brogue is actually Harcourt Fenton Mudd, who speaks with an accent that sounds like a looser version of Charles Winchester from M.A.S.H. Mudd’s reputation is about as sullied as a Republican senatorial page after a weekend “togetherness retreat” – having been arrested many times on theft and smuggling charges. Kirk has heard enough and decides to foist Mudd off on the proper authorities and let them deal with it. But at that moment, the final lithium crystal gives up the ghost, forcing the
So whilst the
But it’s not all wheeling and dealing as Harry’s girls soon start to resemble a soccer mom the morning after a marguerita bender. After quickly rifling through his quarters, he finds a pill box containing the ladies’ “medicine” – which transforms them back into the Rubenesque strippers they previously were.
The miners arrive onboard the
Down on Rigel, the miners have decided to throw a mixer for Mudd’s women, even though Kirk is becoming increasingly aware of the possibility of his ship dropping out of the sky like a defective Macy’s Day Parade balloon. Eve is getting increasingly sickened by the prospect of being auctioned off like a foreclosed crack house and runs outside into a raging sandstorm. Childress goes off after her, leaving Kirk to contemplate the horrors of unprotected reentry into a planet’s atmosphere.
Childress finally finds Eve and drags her back to his squalid hovel, and passes out from exhaustion. (Dragging a showgirl around ain’t no easy task.) Hours later, Childress is awakened to the smell of Eve cooking, and is disturbed by the fact that she’s only been in his place for two hours and already she’s picked up the clothes off his floor. Meanwhile, Kirk and company have been scanning for Eve’s location up in the
Things to look for in this episode:
The soundtrack: Whenever one of Mudd’s chicas enters the frame, the score makes it appear like you’re going to see them in their pasties soon. I’m surprised there wasn’t a brassiere flung at a crewman’s head.
Harcourt Fenton Mudd: He’s supposed to be this pirate/pimp, but in reality he acts like the boorish antagonist out of one of Oscar Wilde’s comedies.
What is McCoy not today? Capable of forming complete sentences in the presence of a woman. That’s not what they meant by “bedside manner,” Herr Doktor.
And what about Spock? Spock has his usual “not-completely human” half-smirk on his face. I guess the human male’s inability to think straight with an erection is the height of Vulcan comedy.
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