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− | [[File:Nancy Darnell.jpg|thumb|The woman |
+ | [[File:Nancy Darnell.jpg|thumb|The woman Darnell met on Wrigley's planet]] |
− | '''Wrigley's Pleasure Planet''' was |
+ | '''Wrigley's Pleasure Planet''' was an [[inhabited planets|inhabited]] [[planet]]. |
− | [[Crewman]] [[Darnell]] compared [[Nancy Crater]] to |
+ | In the mid-[[23rd century]], [[Crewman]] [[Darnell]] met a girl on this planet. While on [[M-113]], this crewman compared [[Nancy Crater]] to this girl, before being rebuked by [[Doctor]] [[Leonard McCoy|McCoy]]. Neither realized "Nancy" was the [[M-113 creature]] in disguise; they were each seeing separate illusions of a woman's appearance. ({{TOS|The Man Trap}}) |
− | {{bginfo|Wrigley's Pleasure Planet was a reference to the slogan for Wrigley's [[chewing gum]] ("double your pleasure"). {{incite}}|The woman Darnell saw was played by [[Francine Pyne]].}} |
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+ | {{bginfo|Wrigley's Pleasure Planet was considered as a location for shore leave in the ''[[Star Trek: Enterprise]]'' episode {{e|Two Days and Two Nights}}, though it was decided that it sounded too Human and too well-known for what was supposed to be a relatively distant region, so it was replaced in the story with [[Risa]]. ([[Star Trek: Communicator issue 143|''Star Trek: Communicator'' issue 143]], p. 31)}} |
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+ | ==External link== |
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+ | * {{NCwiki}} |
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[[de:Wrigleys Vergnügungsplanet]] |
[[de:Wrigleys Vergnügungsplanet]] |
Revision as of 08:28, 30 March 2015
Wrigley's Pleasure Planet was an inhabited planet.
In the mid-23rd century, Crewman Darnell met a girl on this planet. While on M-113, this crewman compared Nancy Crater to this girl, before being rebuked by Doctor McCoy. Neither realized "Nancy" was the M-113 creature in disguise; they were each seeing separate illusions of a woman's appearance. (TOS: "The Man Trap")
Wrigley's Pleasure Planet was considered as a location for shore leave in the Star Trek: Enterprise episode "Two Days and Two Nights", though it was decided that it sounded too Human and too well-known for what was supposed to be a relatively distant region, so it was replaced in the story with Risa. (Star Trek: Communicator issue 143, p. 31)
External link
- Template:NCwiki