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==Early career==
 
==Early career==
Lester's early career included a period of service in [[Starfleet]]. She spent a [[Earth measurements#year|year]] alongside [[James T. Kirk]] and they became romantically involved. The lack of opportunities for a [[female|woman]] to [[commanding officer|command]] a [[starship]], struck both Lester and Kirk as unfair, but she became embittered by the career barrier. Their relationship soured to a point where Kirk felt she was punishing him for her circumstances. Years later, Kirk said "''we'd have killed each other''" if they had stayed together. Lester recalled that Kirk walked out on her "''when it became serious''".
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Lester's early career included a period of service in [[Starfleet]]. She spent a [[Earth measurements#year|year]] alongside [[James T. Kirk]] and they became romantically involved. The lack of opportunities for a [[female|woman]] to [[commanding officer|command]] a [[starship]] struck both Lester and Kirk as unfair, but she became embittered by the career barrier. Their relationship soured to a point where Kirk felt she was punishing him for her circumstances. Years later, Kirk said "''we'd have killed each other''" if they had stayed together. Lester recalled that Kirk walked out on her "''when it became serious''".
   
 
Lester abandoned her career in [[space]], but continued to study every detail of a starship's operation. She nursed powerful resentments for the femininity that stood in her way, and for the masculinity that served Kirk so well.
 
Lester abandoned her career in [[space]], but continued to study every detail of a starship's operation. She nursed powerful resentments for the femininity that stood in her way, and for the masculinity that served Kirk so well.
   
 
[[Image:Life-energy_transfer-Camus_II.jpg|thumb|Life-energy transfer]]
 
[[Image:Life-energy_transfer-Camus_II.jpg|thumb|Life-energy transfer]]
By [[2269]], Lester was the leader of an expedition to [[Camus II]], exploring the ancient remnants of an advanced civilization. Among the ruins, she discovered a sophisticated mechanism still in working order. The device was capable of [[life-energy transfer]] – the exchange of one being's complete personality and [[memory]] with another's. Her plans to use the device herself required several [[month]]s of preparation. The expedition's incompetent [[doctor|physician]], Dr. [[Arthur Coleman]], bore an unrequited love for Lester. Together, they [[death|killed]] the expedition's entire staff by quietly exposing them to [[celebium]] [[radiation]]. The mysterious deaths announced by a [[distress call]] were meant to attract the attention of a starship, and the [[USS Enterprise (NCC-1701)|USS ''Enterprise'' (NCC-1701)]] answered the call on [[stardate]] 5928.5.
+
By [[2269]], Lester was the leader of an expedition to [[Camus II]], exploring the ancient remnants of an advanced civilization. Among the ruins, she discovered a sophisticated mechanism still in working order. The device was capable of [[life-energy transfer]] – the exchange of one being's complete personality and [[memory]] with another's. Her plans to use the device herself required several [[month]]s of preparation. The expedition's incompetent [[doctor|physician]], Dr. [[Arthur Coleman]], bore an unrequited love for Lester. Together, they [[death|killed]] the expedition's entire staff by quietly exposing them to [[celebium]] [[radiation]]. The mysterious deaths announced by a [[distress call]] were meant to attract the attention of a starship, and the [[USS Enterprise (NCC-1701)|USS ''Enterprise'' (NCC-1701)]] answered the call on [[stardate]] 5928.5.
   
 
==Captain "Kirk"==
 
==Captain "Kirk"==

Revision as of 04:25, 29 March 2007

File:JaniceLester.jpg

Dr. Janice Lester in 2269.

Doctor Janice Lester was a Human scientist of the Federation in the 23rd century.

Early career

Lester's early career included a period of service in Starfleet. She spent a year alongside James T. Kirk and they became romantically involved. The lack of opportunities for a woman to command a starship struck both Lester and Kirk as unfair, but she became embittered by the career barrier. Their relationship soured to a point where Kirk felt she was punishing him for her circumstances. Years later, Kirk said "we'd have killed each other" if they had stayed together. Lester recalled that Kirk walked out on her "when it became serious".

Lester abandoned her career in space, but continued to study every detail of a starship's operation. She nursed powerful resentments for the femininity that stood in her way, and for the masculinity that served Kirk so well.

File:Life-energy transfer-Camus II.jpg

Life-energy transfer

By 2269, Lester was the leader of an expedition to Camus II, exploring the ancient remnants of an advanced civilization. Among the ruins, she discovered a sophisticated mechanism still in working order. The device was capable of life-energy transfer – the exchange of one being's complete personality and memory with another's. Her plans to use the device herself required several months of preparation. The expedition's incompetent physician, Dr. Arthur Coleman, bore an unrequited love for Lester. Together, they killed the expedition's entire staff by quietly exposing them to celebium radiation. The mysterious deaths announced by a distress call were meant to attract the attention of a starship, and the USS Enterprise (NCC-1701) answered the call on stardate 5928.5.

Captain "Kirk"

File:JaniceKirk.jpg

In James T. Kirk's body.

Kirk arrived at Lester's bedside, where she appeared to be near death. Not expecting danger, Kirk was easily ensnared. Lester activated the life-energy transfer device, a was immediately thrilled by her possession of Kirk's body. The transfer would eventually return the exchanged persona to its original body, as long as both remained alive. Drugged and disoriented within Lester's body, Kirk was easy prey, but Lester's spontaneous gloating monologue prevented her from strangling Kirk before Dr. Leonard McCoy arrived.

Lester eagerly boarded the Enterprise as the Captain, satisfied to finally have the command she felt was rightfully hers. Kirk was still a liability as long as he remained alive in sickbay, but the exclusive care of Dr. Coleman kept Kirk isolated from the crew.

Lester's attempt to emulate a Captain's behavior was marginally successful at first, but her composure degraded at any hint of scrutiny from the officers familiar with Kirk. Dr. McCoy soon challenged the Captain's mental health, and insisted on tests that ultimately proved negative for any illness. Mr. Spock discovered the truth of the situation through a brief Mind meld with the imprisoned "Janice Lester", but their attempted escape was halted by Security officers ignorant of the Captain's strange new behavior.

"Captain" Lester convened a court martial, charging Spock with mutiny. Whatever support Lester believed she had, it all but evaporated during her farcical prosecution and hysterical closing rant. Once Lester announced the impending execution of Spock, the Enterprise crew was on the verge of actual mutiny.

Symptoms of the waning personality transfer forced Lester to make a final attempt to kill Kirk. The two touched in a brief struggle, and the misplaced personalities returned to their proper bodies. Broken, incoherent, and sobbing in her complete failure, Janice took her accomplice Coleman's arm for support in her slow march to sickbay under McCoy's care. (TOS: "Turnabout Intruder")

Background

Janice Lester was played by actress Sandra Smith and William Shatner.

Lester's remark to Kirk, that his world of Starfleet captains did not admit women to their ranks, implies the Starfleet culture of the 2260s was more sexist than its 22nd or 24th century counterparts. An interpretation offered by the Star Trek Chronology suggests Lester's comment referred to Kirk's inability to maintain a relationship, due to his responsibilities as a starship captain. Gene Roddenberry, on the other hand, has gone on record as stating that the line was purely sexist.

Interestingly, it seems that by the 2280s, the bias against women commanding starships had been corrected. In the early scenes of Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home, a woman is shown to be in command of the Miranda class USS Saratoga.