Star Trek Saturday: Season 1; Episode 3: “Where No Man Has Gone Before”
Matt | July 4, 2009 | 2:00 pm
After the Enterprise attempts to cross the Great Barrier at the edge of the galaxy, crew members Gary Mitchell and Elizabeth Dehner develop “godlike” psychic powers which threaten the safety of the crew.
Wikipedia notes: “Where No Man Has Gone Before” is the second pilot episode of the television series Star Trek (later known as Star Trek: The Original Series). It was produced in 1965 after the first pilot, “The Cage”, had been rejected by NBC. The episode was eventually broadcast third in sequence on September 22, 1966, and was re-aired on April 20, 1967.
“Where No Man Has Gone Before” was written by Samuel A. Peeples, directed by James Goldstone, and filmed in July 1965. It was the first episode of Star Trek to feature William Shatner as Captain James Kirk. James Doohan and George Takei played Scotty and Sulu, respectively, for the first time. In the episode, the Starship Enterprise journeys to the edge of the galaxy, where two crew members develop dangerous psychic powers. The episode’s title was adopted as the final phrase in the opening credits’ voice-over that famously characterizes the Star Trek series, and has entered popular culture.
The episode’s name is the first usage of the phrase “Where No Man Has Gone Before” in Star Trek. The phrase would be incorporated into the opening credits sequence in following episodes, as part of the famous “Space: The Final Frontier…” speech given by Captain Kirk.
The phrase would also be used (with “man” changed to the gender-neutral “one,”), in the credits voice-over of Star Trek: The Next Generation.
Kirk’s middle initial is given as “R.” in “Where No Man Has Gone Before” and is seen clearly on the gravestone fashioned by Mitchell for Kirk; subsequent episodes use “James T. Kirk”, and Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country later made official the middle name “Tiberius” (used previously in “Bem”, an episode from the animated series). Various suggestions have been made to explain this discrepancy; Michael Jan Friedman’s My Brother’s Keeper trilogy speculates this results from an in-joke between Mitchell and Kirk. Roddenberry cited human error on Mitchell’s part. Peter David’s novel, Q-Squared, placed the events of this episode in a parallel universe in which, among other differences, Kirk’s middle initial was indeed R.
Many changes to the Enterprise bridge were made after this episode was produced. Among these were a new forward viewscreen and an updated helm/navigation console. Also, the positions of the helmsman and navigator were swapped (in this episode, the navigator sat on the port side of the console, and the helm officer was to starboard. In the regular series, the opposite was the case). When production of the series proper began, it was also decided to introduce a new uniform design for the Enterprise crew, although in the first regular episode produced, The Corbomite Maneuver, some characters, such as Uhura, are shown wearing the uniform style of Where No Man Has Gone Before. Adjustments to Spock’s make-up were also made, specifically to the angle of his eyebrows, refinement of his haircut and tempering of the overall greenish-yellow cast of his skin.
Spock also makes reference to his ancestor marrying a human when in a later episode, his mother was introduced as a human.
In this episode the helm and navigation station console was used for the transporter room console. In future episodes a dedicated station would be built with the iconic sliding controls and centrally located, hooded beam-down coordinate selection screen.
The sickbay in this episode uses conventional sheets on the beds; later episodes used the more “futuristic” metallic weave materials. The “bio-probe”, located under the medical monitor panel, pointed to and monitored the physiological functions of the patient. It was a simple rod, later replaced with the more detailed, internally-lit acrylic set piece.
The phaser rifle prop only appears in this episode.


