Star Trek: The Original Series creator Gene Roddenberry took the idea of a ship patrolling the Pacific Ocean with a multiracial crew –which was his first proposal for TV series – and transformed it into a spaceship with a multiracial crew and one alien. That change created a shift in what a weekly series could be, and Leonard Nimoy's Mr. Spock was at the center of it all and became extremely popular among the fans of the show – leading to a kind of Spockmania.
Spock the Vulcan
Of course, Spock was a Vulcan, and it would not be that he was just standing out among the human crew. Gene wanted Spock to be an outsider who would view the human machinations on the ship in a different way. Spock originally was conceived as a Martian character with red skin who ate through a panel in his stomach, but writer Samuel A. Peeples suggested making Spock half-human to create an internal conflict in the character, which ended up working to Gene's advantage.
Spock became a Vulcan with pointy ears, but unlike Spock in the first pilot who smiled when he saw flowers on a planet, Gene borrowed characteristics from the first pilot's character Number One (Majel Barrett), making him calm and reserved. He would also be extremely logical, which became a major factor in the way Spock viewed humans and the galaxy they inhabited, and he would exhibit no emotions and never crack a smile.
Vulcan People and Culture
Once the decision was made to make Spock a Vulcan, Gene understood that would necessitate a whole other world to create. Spock would bring with him his culture and its traditions, so he was more than just the character who appeared in the two pilots with no back story.
Spock would come from the planet Vulcan (named after the Roman god of fire). Gene was worried about his initial idea about making him a Martian – he believed that humans would land on Mars sooner rather than later and that would ruin the mystique of the character. Now with a distant home planet chosen, they had to create a population that would live on that planet and possibly interact with Spock.
There was some worry about Spock's pointed ears looking Satanic – and Nimoy didn't like wearing them at first – but Gene insisted on Nimoy using them. Spock would be almost like a walking computer, be always logical, and quite stoic in how he viewed the things humans did. The rest of his brothers and sisters on Vulcan would be the same.
Logic Over Emotions and More
The way Roddenberry developed the Vulcan society was that they were once an extremely violent people. They fought terrible wars that almost brought them to ruin. To save themselves from destruction, they turned to the teachings of the philosopher Surak – they basically had to suppress all emotions by embracing logic. This saved their civilization.
The species would also have to be different biologically. Gene decided that they would have green blood (with copper the main component). Leonard Nimoy gave suggestions for the nerve pinch (Vulcans wanted to avoid violence), the Vulcan salute "Live Long and Prosper" accompanied with a split-fingered hand gesture (from his Jewish faith), and the mind-meld technique. Thus, Nimoy had a significant contribution in helping to define the Vulcan race.
Appearances in TOS
Vulcans other than Spock appeared four times during the original series.
1. "Amok Time" (Season 2, Episode 1)
The second season premiere features an agitated Spock acting nothing like a Vulcan. Spock reveals to Captain Kirk (William Shatner) and Dr. McCoy (DeForest Kelley) that he's experiencing pon farr, a condition every male Vulcan experiences that means he must mate or die.
Kirk directs the crew of the U.S.S. Enterprise to set course for the planet Vulcan (which we see for the first time). Under a blood red sky, we meet Spock's betrothed T'Pring (Arlene Martell), Stonn (Lawrence Montaigne), and Vulcan's legendary leader T'Pau (Celia Lovsky). With Kirk acting as best man, there will be a marriage ceremony, but with T'Pring wanting the full-blooded Stonn over Spock as a mate, things are not going as planned.
2. "Mirror, Mirror" (Season 2, Episode 4)
One of my favorite episodes, Kirk, McCoy, Mr. Scott (James Doohan), and Uhura (Nichelle Nichols) get switched with their evil counterparts from another universe during a transporter malfunction. It's a great episode, especially with the good Spock trying to deal with evil Kirk, and good Kirk dealing with a slightly evil Spock.
While technically, there are two Spocks in this episode, there is also another Vulcan who appears as a bodyguard (Russ Peek) for evil Kirk (who is actually our good Captain Kirk). It's a minor appearance, but it is memorable.
3. "Journey to Babel" (Season 2, Episode 10)
The Enterprise has been chosen for a very important diplomatic mission bringing ambassadors to the planet of Babel for a peace conference. Two of the passengers happen to be Spock's parents – the Vulcan Sarek (Mark Lenard) and his human wife Amanda (Jane Wyatt).
This episode highlights the strained relationship between Spock and his father, who didn't want him to join Starfleet. It also shows aspects of Sarek and Amanda's marriage and interaction with Spock and his mother. This episode and the first one of this season are crucial for a better understanding of Spock. It also gives us more information about how suppressing emotions is necessary for Vulcans.
4. "The Savage Curtain" (Season 3, Episode 22)
This episode is notable because Gene co-wrote it. Here we see Kirk and Spock working along with their personal heroes. For Kirk it is Abraham Lincoln (Lee Bergere) and for Spock it is the great Vulcan philosopher Surak (Barry Atwater) – they are not the actual historical people but facsimiles created using all available data about them.
Their opponents are Earth villain Colonel Phillip Green (Phillip Pine), Klingon warload Kahless (Bob Herron), torturer of humans Zora (Carol Daniel DeMent), and Genghis Khan (Nathan Jung). It is a battle of good verses evil set up by the highly advanced rock people called Excalbians. While the episode has a lot of action, it also provides us with a chance to see how Kirk and Spock interact with their heroes. It is especially important to see how Spock works with Surak, whose philosophy basically saved the Vulcan race from self destructing.
The Vulcans and First Contact
Vulcans were monitoring Earth – and other planets as well – in order to detect the level of technology on the planet. April 5, 2063, is called First Contact Day because that is when the Vulcans first came to Earth and revealed themselves.
This happened because Zefram Cochrane built and piloted a ship called the Phoenix, and during its first flight Cochrane broke the warp barrier, with his ship achieving warp speed (meaning faster than the speed of light).
The crew of the Vulcan survey ship T'Plana-Hath monitored Cochrane's flight, and they believed that Cochrane's accomplishment qualified for first contact with Earthlings. The Vulcan ship landed in Boseman, Montana, after following the warp signature left by Cochrane's ship.
Cochrane watched as the ship landed and a robed Vulcan departed the ship and greeted him with the split-fingered Vulcan salute. This was the first contact on Earth with people from outer space. This moment inextricably linked the people of Vulcan with Earth and opened the door for a whole new era of space exploration for humanity.
Cochrane (Glenn Corbett) appears in Star Trek: TOS in "Metamorphosis" (Season 2, Episode 2) when Kirk, Spock, and McCoy find the long assumed dead Cochrane living on a planet after crashing there over 100 years before. A gaseous being called the Companion has helped him stay young all these years.
Cochrane can also be seen in Star Trek: First Contact which is a The Next Generation film that includes the scene when First Contact occurs (see the video below).
I had intended to include the Klingons and Romulans in this article, but I found myself writing so much about the Vulcans, so that I couldn't do them just here. I have decided to write about them in my next post.
Until next time, Live Long and Prosper!
Please check out this video depicting the scene of First Contact!










































