Planet of the Slave Girls

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Planet of the Slave Girls
Season 1, Episodes 3 & 4
Air date September 27, 1979
Teleplay by Steve Greenberg
Aubrey Solomon
Anne Collins
Story by Steve Greenberg
Aubrey Solomon
Directed by Michael Caffey
Episode guide
Previous
Awakening
Next
Vegas in Space

"Planet of the Slave Girls" is the third and fourth episodes of the 1st season of Buck Rogers in the 25th Century.

Synopsis

The majority of Earth's Defense Directorate pilot corps becomes incapacitated after consuming poisoned food discs. Capt. William "Buck" Rogers, Col. Wilma Deering, Maj. Duke Danton and Maj. Fields fly to the distant planet of the food's origin, Vistula, returning Governor Tabor Saroyan's son there to recover. While on the planet Vistula, they find that Kaleel has been building up a mass of brainwashed followers alongside a fleet of Scorpion fighters in secret, planning to use them against Earth's weakened defense forces in order to conquer the Earth. With Earth's defense force now heavily outnumbered 10-to-1, Rogers decides that he must destroy the attack fleet and rescue Deering, who has become trapped in Kaleel's mountain fortress.

Plot

His father is Tabor Saroyan, the governor of Vistula. I suppose I should notify him personally.
Just how serious is his condition?
It's his nerves controlling his voluntary muscles and motor coordination. They're deteriorating, just like all the others.
Others?
Yes. The Computer Council has ordered that a definitive statement to the general public not be made just yet. But so far here in New Chicago, 25,000 case have been reported.
When did all this start?
Three days ago, while you and Buck were gone. And another thing: this disease, or whatever it is, has cropped up in other cities on Earth, but here in New Chicago it's much, much worse... You see, what the Computer Council is trying to keep secret is its effect on our defense squadrons, for they've been hardest hit of all.

  • Capt. William "Buck" Rogers and Col. Wilma Deering perform a training flight run in a Thunderfighter, call sign Earth Recon One, returning to Earth via Stargate 4. Rogers feels disoriented after exiting the space warp, and Deering notes that it is a normal reaction to those who've experienced the space warping for the first time.
  • After exiting, they come across a pirate attack on a Thunderfighter referenced as Scout Three. Its pilot, a young man named Regis Saroyan, is scared and sick. Over the distress channel, Rogers hears Scout Three's call for assistance.
  • Scout Three's leader, Maj. Duke Danton, admonishes Saroyan for lagging behind and instructs him to engage in evasive maneuvers while the rest of the Scout squadron loops back for him.
  • From Earth Recon One, Rogers shares his belief that Scout Three won't make it, and Deering agrees with the assessment. Between Rogers' piloting skills and Deering's shooting, they are able to fend off the attack, saving Saroyan at Danton's chagrin. Rogers surveys Scout Three's damage, noting that he sustained a hit on his starboard side.
  • After Danton and Rogers get into a verbal tit-for-tat, Danton challenges Rogers to repeat his statements regarding "Funk & Wagnalls" face-to-face in New Chicago's flight bay. Rogers agrees while Deering, recognizing the voice, smirks silently.
  • The pilots make their landings, and Danton grills Saroyan, who is clearly clammy and feverish. Rogers is quick to note this, and catches Saroyan before he face-plants into the hangar floor.
  • After Saroyan is taken away to the Directorate clinic, Danton identifies Rogers as being the one who interfered with a Directorate training mission. Before they get further into it, Deering arrives. Danton corrects himself after calling her by her first name, and in the ensuing conversation she confirms that Rogers had her permission to interfere
  • After Deering formally introduces Rogers to the chagrined Danton, the conversation switches the subject to Rogers' status as a member of the Defense Directorate. Deering makes the suggestion that Rogers head up one of Danton's defense-technique training sessions, and after Danton becomes incredulous at the suggestion, Deering's tone shifts: she orders Danton to introduce Rogers to his class, so that he may instruct them on 20th century battle strategy.
  • After Deering is told Regis Saroyan's name by Danton, she leaves. Further exacerbating the tension, Rogers stops Deering after he reminds her of drinks at his place at 1900 hours, she replies jocularly in the affirmative: "You know something, Buck Rogers? I'll be there."
  • Rogers leaves the flight hangar after sharing a final, rhetorical question: "She's some kind of woman, isn't she?" Frustrated at being emasculated, Danton slaps a boom needle of Saroyan's fighter.
  • Deering and Dr. Elias Huer visit a feverish and delirious Regis Saroyan in his medical room. Huer shares with her that Saroyan's father, Tabor Saroyan, is the governor of Vistula and notes that he'll contact the governor personally regarding his son's condition. Deering learns that other persons have been affected over the course of the last three days that Deering and Rogers were gone. Over 25,000 people in New Chicago have been affected, including cases cropping up in other cities. Most of all, the Computer Council has held off on a public announcement due to the more damning fact: the sickness has hit the Defense Directorate's pilot corps the hardest out of any other group.
  • After Deering asks if the sickness might be a deliberate action from an unknown party, Huer brings her to the Science Directorate, introducing her to Dr. Mallory, his assistant Stella Warden and the ambuquad Carl. A haughty Carl retorts that it also finds Huer "less than memorable," obliquely noting that Huer introduced them last.
  • Mallory reveals that, while an antidote to the poison has not been found, they have found the source of the poison, and have devised a means to test for it. To Huer's surprise, the source of the poison are food discs, consumed daily by millions of Terrans. Deering questions how such a thing is possible, as food production and distribution is highly regulated by the Food Directorate to prevent such things, and Mallory does not have an answer for that. The poisoned individuals, while not deceased and thus have a modicum of health, have not fully recovered.
  • An exuberantly optimistic Mallory notes that with Carl's help they'll be able to find a remedy and return the pilots to full functioning ability in no time.
Dr. Theopolis: "Two grown men fighting. How disgusting."
  • Meanwhile, Rogers lectures a class of Defense Directorate cadets, noting the use of football in battle strategies. Danton comedically eggs Rogers on while his own cadets giggle and display incredulous immaturity during the lecture. Despite Rogers approach, the lecture degrades into a physical altercation that upheaves the lecture room, following examples of "sacking the quarterback," "clipping" and other types of tackles.
  • Summoned by the commotion that could be heard in an adjoining corridor, Dr. Theopolis and Twiki make their way into the room to see Danton have the final word—dismissing his cadets after ordering them to report to the hangar at 0800 the next morning—after tackling Rogers and forcing him into a rack of helmets, pinning Rogers underneath its bulk.
  • After Danton and his cadets disperse, Dr. Theopolis reacts to the display: "Two grown men fighting. How disgusting." As Rogers extricates himself from under the rack, he meekly explains that he was giving a demonstration.

So, you must ready yourselves, my friends! Your moment is at hand! No longer shall you live in a Sea of Stone, while others reap the benefits of our world's lush glory! No longer shall you work to feed the people of distant planets while your own sons and daughters go hungry! Soon you will descend upon the Earth like meteors, like fire, and consume them with the flames of your righteous anger. The only ones who can stop us are those enemies among us. Those who are weak and faithless. Those who do not believe, those who attack me out of fear and jealousy. These are our enemies. Every moment you tolerate their presence among us is a moment lost for you, and your children, and your children's children!

 — Kaleel fires up his crowd of sycophantic nomads in the Sea of Stone, Buck Rogers in the 25th Century's "Planet of the Slave Girls"
  • In the evening, Dr. Mallory tells Stella Warden that Carl is running a nitrogen breakdown of the poison sample, and while they wait for the results he will go off to take a break. Warden supports this and agrees to watch Carl's readouts in the interim. After Mallory leaves, Warden plants a device inside of one of Carl's compartments, which begins its overload.
  • After Warden leaves the premises, Carl calls out for help, and Mallory quickly returns to Carl as he smolders and sparks like a Roman candle. "Too late. Good bye, Mallory." Carl explodes, leaving behind a scorched, smoldering hulk.
  • In Rogers' apartment, Col. Wilma Deering and William "Buck" Rogers engage in a judo lesson. After being flipped over Deering's back and landing on an unpadded floor, Deering quips that she probably shouldn't have asked Rogers to teach her judo so soon after "teaching" 20th century battle strategy. Both laugh and then make their way to Rogers' living room area, where Deering comes across a picture of a woman and asks about her. Before he can explain further, a message comes in and he stiffly walks to the other side of the room, picking up the call from Dr. Elias Huer.
  • Huer asks after Deering, who he understands is there, and they are summoned to Dr. Mallory's lab.
  • Huer consoles a despondent Mallory as Deering and Rogers arrive, with Deering seeing Carl's burned-out hulk. Huer explains the situation, as well as Warden's disappearance, and notes that the sabotage has left the Earth "next to defenseless indefinitely." Huer notes that Rogers should excuse himself, as he is not a formal part of the Defense Directorate, and Rogers obliges -- still overhearing the subsequent conversation (as both Deering and Huer intend) regarding the subsequent discovery of all food discs meant for Directorate housing were contaminated, and that all of the contaminated food discs (regardless of where they had been finally processed) all came from Vistula.
  • Rogers offers his help, much to Huer's mock surprise, noting that an Earth in the 25th century is better than no Earth at all. Huer then answers Rogers' question about Vistula, noting that it is the source of Earth's vegetable protein. As they leave Mallory's lab, Huer continues to explain the importance of Vistula to Earth.
  • En route back to Vistula in a stolen Defense Directorate Thunderfighter, Warden uses her subspace radio to radio Vistula Two, the mountain headquarters of Kaleel. Seated in the center command console of the aforementioned headquarters, Galen responds and Warden tells him to communicate the good news to Kaleel regarding the status of the Defense Directorate.
  • In a large cave-like chamber, a white-robed Kaleel preaches to a congregation of nomads, espousing that their time to strike the Earth is soon at hand and that they will pillage the Earth with a righteous fury. He reiterates that Earth and other planets have plundered their resources, while letting the workers and their children–who endlessly toil to make food for other worlds–go hungry.
Kaleel to Leila's husband: "If your heart is good and true, you shall live."
  • As Galen arrives, Kaleel's sermon turns into outing unbelievers. A man casts furtive glances to his wife, Leila, who is fully enthralled with Kaleel. His concern is warranted as Leila publicly declares that her husband speaks ill of Kaleel, sharing his belief in the "dead of night" that Kaleel is the one selling them as slaves and pocketing the money for himself. She feels that her husband is fearful of the future and selfish.
  • The outed husband begins to flee, but others in his congregation quickly capture him. Kaleel's hands, now glowing red, angrily declares that the unbeliever not be harmed. As Kaleel makes his way into the congregation towards the unbeliever, he explains that his hands are alight in the Touch of Truth, and are a Kiss of God that will determine the unbeliever's true motivations: "If your heart is good and true, you shall live."
  • Kaleel's finger then touches the fearful, protesting and still-writhing unbeliever, who subsequently dies.
  • Amid a rising choir of congregants who chant Kaleel's name, he basks in their adulation and rushes back to the stage. A tearful Leila dismisses her husband's death, and adds her voice to the choir.
  • Kaleel enters the command center with Galen in tow, the chanting continuing outside. He orders two of his sycophants that no one is to leave the hall, and that he will address the congregation in a half-hour.
  • Galen briefs Kaleel on Warden's report regarding the condition of the Defense Directorate's pilots. Galen is pleased, and notes that they need to cut off its head, Dr. Huer. Galen replies that Warden has arranged Huer's death.
  • At night, Huer, Deering and Rogers stroll through a small arboretum, while black-clad assassin deploys their assassin's boomerang and layers on a liquid that smokes as it is applied to the blade.
  • Rogers asks why the governor of Vistula would poison his own son, and Huer surmises that Saroyan may very well be unawares of the situation. Deering advocates that they must go to Vistula to investigate, leading both Huer and Deering to ideate calling Saroyan and sending his son back home to Vistula to recuperate with a Directorate honor guard, even though Huer loathes the idea of sending one given the Directorate's depleted pilot corps.
  • Rogers becomes intensely suspicious throughout the stretch of discussion, and sights the assassin's whirring boomerang, which the trio duck. He tells Deering and Huer to stay down, while Rogers crouches down in an action pose, slowly crossing the arboretum in order to sight their attacker.

Saroyan's son has arrived. The governor has prepared a banquet for the co-pilots who escorted him here.
The fool has been so helpful to us, he deserves to have a good time. Just so he remains totally ignorant of what's happening right under his nose.
He might not. Dr. Huer survived the attempt on his life.
[Kaleel turns heel, surprised] What?
It could very well be he knows the poisoned food comes from Vistula and he's sent these people here as spies.
Well, if they're staying at the Statehouse, we needn't worry. Should they stray too near the fire, we'll simply see that it... engulfs them.

 — Stella Warden and Kaleel discuss Regis Saroyan's arrival and Tabor Saroyan's subsequent banquet for the Defense Directorate honor guard, Buck Rogers in the 25th Century's "Awakening"
  • William "Buck" Rogers makes himself a target to their hidden assailant and their boomerang, resulting in the boomerang planting itself into a tree's trunk. The defeated assassin flees as Dr. Elias Huer and Col. Wilma Deering approach the damaged tree trunk, fortunate that they survived the encounter.
  • In the morning, a sick suited Regis Saroyan is conveyed to Rogers' and Deering's Thunderfighter, where they are met by Dr. Huer just after Deering explains the purpose of Saroyan's suit. Twiki and Theopolis arrive after being told by Huer that Governor Tabor Saroyan is expecting their arrival at Vistula.
  • Twiki presents two contamination detector wrist bands that he spent the night assembling, which will allow them to not only detect the poison but also doubles as radio directional finders.
  • Huer introduces the two Defense Directorate officers who will round out the honor guard: Maj. Fields and Maj. Duke Danton, the latter being a person that Huer wryly notes as Rogers having "bumped into" previously. Danton's displeasure is palpable.
  • The fighters launch and head to the Stargate to make their way to Vistula; Deering and Rogers discuss Danton, and Deering reveals a prior relationship between herself and Danton, to which Rogers notes that "some things never change."
  • Danton announces that they're coming up on Vistula, and have been cleared for landing. Deering remarks at some of the sights of Vistula as they make their landing approach, including the Sea of Stone amongst the verdant and lush nature of the planet.
  • Kaleel paces around his control center when Stella Warden reports on Regis Saroyan's arrival. Kaleel is pleased, and says that they'll allow Regis' father to throw their banquet, because the "fool has been so helpful" to Kaleel and his effort. Warden informs him that Huer survived the attempt on his life, but Kaleel, while momentarily aghast, says that they needn't worry as long as they stay at the Governor's Statehouse.
  • The Directorate honor guard is at the banquet, sitting at a uniquely designed dining table, where Governor Saroyan discusses his joy at the festivities and at his son's return. When asked about the source of the illness, Deering coyly notes that they're investigating the source of the "virus," and that by the time they leave there Dr. Huer will be able to relay additional information to him. Governor Saroyan notes that he won't let them leave until they've had three days of "absolutely royal treatment."
  • Julio eyes Deering after she tells him that they'd enjoy seeing the production facilities, while Regis Saroyan only asks for water from their server, Ryma, as he is still unwell.
  • Meanwhile, Governor Saroyan tells his guests that it isn't often that visitors from his home world come to his planet, aside from "boring" systems analysts and the "dreadful" inspectors dispatched by the Food Directorate. He feels chagrined at that, feeling that he's proven himself after three successive appointments to the role.
  • Nothing the hesitation of his guests at partaking in the feast before them, he encourages them to eat up, seeing as it isn't everyday that a full meal is brought in from a place that, according to Julio, is called Dionysin. Julio heavily notes that the "expense has been budgeted in the governor's salary," particularly as Saroyan himself complains about soy products and notes that he has all of his food brought in from off-Vistula sources. Comforted by this fact for reasons that elude Saroyan, the guests partake in the feast while the conversation segues into the use of human labor instead of mobile service modules.
  • A philosophical argument ensues, with Rogers aghast at the use of slave labor from the Sea of Stone's denizens, even though Saroyan notes that they are sold by one of their own people: Kaleel.
  • Ryma is enthralled by this display of support for her people while pouring Rogers' wine, but spills it on him due to this distraction. Saroyan admonishes her and threatens to put her back to the fields as a common laborer, while Rogers protests, saying that people are not machines. Regis Saroyan pipes up, noting that he's told his father something similar in the past. The mood at the banquet grows chilly.
  • That evening, Ryma is outside of Rogers' guest quarters while she is observed by a toga-wearing statehouse worker, noting this she presses on the center door panel and the door opens.
  • Rogers is bathing in a large bath, with his back turned and singing Frank Sinatra's "Strangers in the Night" to himself. Ryma turns on a nearby music player, alerting Rogers to her presence but is unsurprised at it: "My singing was that bad?"
  • Ryma kneels at the stairs to the bath, and whispers that she needs to talk to him, and uses the music to obfuscate their conversation out of an expressed concern of being eavesdropped by her own people. After thanking him, she notes that Saroyan is a fool, and that the only one with any sense in that family is the son, Regis, who has tried to help the nomads for years. Rogers quickly surmises that Ryma has a "crush" on Regis, and she informs him about her brother's suspicions and death relating to the events at Processing Plant 347, in addition to the fact that her own people is under Kaleel's spell. She imparts to him that, along with a few others, she immune and is part of a small resistance to Kaleel.
  • Rogers leaves by the window, after Ryma tells him that she's "to be his" for the night and that he himself has a "reputation to uphold" as well, welcoming her to stay in the quarters while he's gone.
  • Rogers makes his way to 347 and, after a tussle, finds that the poisoning is transferred by the food packaging. He escapes with little fanfare.
  • Held by the toga-wearing worker, Ryma is interrogated by Julio, who surmises that she's told Rogers about her brother and the processing plant. Julio orders her to be brought to the shuttle port to take the transport scheduled to leave for the mountain at dawn, but Deering follows and attempts to free her when they reach the banquet hall. While she finds the unlocking mechanism, Julio arrives with a weapon in hand, and declares that Kaleel would be happy to answer any questions she'd have, and expects that she'd reciprocate to such an inquiry as well, before stunning them.

  • Notes

    "Planet of the Slave Girls, Part II" title card on the syndicated version of the episode.
    • Originally aired as a 120-minute episode, but has been formatted as two 60-minute episodes in most subsequent re-airings for scheduling reasons. While many guides list it as a two-parter, its initial airing and release on DVD as one double-length episode should make this the official recognition.
    • In the scenes where Dr. Elias Huer and Col. Wilma Deering visit Regis Saroyan, and later when they make their way to Dr. Mallory's lab, Deering is wearing a gold wrist watch on her left wrist, over her uniform's sleeve. This fleeting appearance of the 20th century-looking timepiece is never explained, particularly as it is distinctly out-of-place with her entire uniform. It suggests that this is either a costuming error, or part of a sub-plot that was either reshot or discarded during production.
    • Ardala's launch is re-used as the shuttle heading to Kaleel's fortress in the Sea of Stone.
    • The Galactica shuttle makes its first appearance in Buck Rogers in the 25th Century, although it is by accident as it is inferred that this is the craft piloted by Maj. Duke Danton and Capt. William "Buck" Rogers in pursuit of Deering's abductors—although that craft is later revealed to be the two-seater Thunderfighter.

    Analysis

    Questions

    Quotes

    Duke Danton and William "Buck" Rogers

    If you call that interference, there's something wrong with your Funk & Wagnalls.
    I don't know what you mean by that, but how'd you like to repeat that in the flight hangar?
    I'd love to.


    So you're Buck Rogers, huh?
    Since the day I was born.
    Danton addresses Deering, who is standing next to Rogers.
    I beg your pardon, Colonel, but, uh, he's no captain.
    That's not quite true, Duke. While Buck has formally declined to join the Defense Directorate, he does help us out on occasion.
    Danton addresses Rogers.
    "Declined to join"? Now, why would a big, brave hotshot like yourself do something like that?
    [Rogers replies matter-of-factly] I didn't think I'd like the company.


    Well, we'd better get on our survival gear on.
    Yeah. Otherwise, we'll look like a couple of brown-and-serve rolls at sunset.

     — Duke Danton and William "Buck" Rogers after being forced down into the Sea of Stone by a power leech, (BR25: "Planet of the Slave Girls")


    This thing itches like crazy.
    Take it off if you don't mind getting third-degree sunburn.
    You probably feel right at home wearing yours.
    That's right.
    I've seen pictures of people and how they dressed in your time.
    Yeah, well, your half-baked 25th-century historians got things so messed up, they don't know the difference between a cowboy and a traffic cop.

     — Duke Danton and William "Buck" Rogers head towards Kaleel's fortress, following the signal from Wilma Deering's contamination detector, discussing their golden-colored survival suits, (BR25: "Planet of the Slave Girls")

    Brigadier Gordon and William "Buck" Rogers

    Hey, nice double-teaming over there, whoever you are.
    Gordon's the name. Thanks.
    Have we met, Gordon?
    I don't think so, Captain. We're from different times.

     — Captain William Rogers and Brigadier Gordon during the Battle of Vistula, (BR25: "Planet of the Slave Girls")


    Gordon, where'd you learn to shoot like that?
    I've been doing that sort of thing since before you were born, Captain.
    [surprised] You think so, huh?
    Young man, I know so.

     — Captain William Rogers and Brigadier Gordon during the Battle of Vistula, (BR25: "Planet of the Slave Girls")

    Twiki and Dr. Theopolis

    Careful. Careful. The filament you're soldering is the precise weight and thickness as the one you're replacing. Be careful, Twiki. It was very difficult to make.
    Get off my back!
    I'm not on your back, Twiki. And please concentrate on what you're doing. If anything, I'm on your front, and I can't get off without your help. Where have you been coming up with such expressions?
    My good buddy, Buck.
    I should have known. It's hard to believe that Captain Rogers learned to speak on the same planet as the rest of us.

     — Dr. Theopolis and Twiki as they repair Carl, (BR25: "Planet of the Slave Girls")


    We're next, Twiki. [the launch channel's lights run towards them] Here we go.
    [hits the throttle] Geronimo!

     — Dr. Theopolis and Twiki take their first flight into a Thunderfighter (BR25: "Planet of the Slave Girls")


    [spotting an enemy fighter in his sights] Eat lead, sucker!
    Lead? What lead? Twiki, what are you talking about?

     — Twiki and Dr. Theopolis in a firefight during the Battle of Vistula, (BR25: "Planet of the Slave Girls")

    William "Buck" Rogers and Wilma Deering

    You ready?
    Mm-hmm.
    Deering flips Rogers over her shoulder
    How's that?
    Fine. Just fine.
    Not too hard?
    No. Oh, no.
    Maybe I shouldn't have asked you to teach me judo until you'd fully recover from teaching 20th-century battle strategy.

    Other Quotes

    I'm in danger! Assistance! Assistance! Danger. I am in danger. Assistance! Somebody come! Please! [Dr. Mallory arrives] Too late. Goodbye, Mallory. [Carl explodes]

     — Carl attempts to attract attention after Stella Warden plants an explosive device inside of Carl, (BR25: "Planet of the Slave Girls")


    Hey, creep, I bet you wear that mask 'cause your face looks like it's been through a meteor shower!

     — William "Buck" Rogers as he and Duke Danton fight off nomads following their crash-landing in the Sea of Stone, (BR25: "Planet of the Slave Girls")


    If you're listening, Kaleel, the three of us would just like to say we didn't care much for the sauna.
    That's Rogers!
    Ah, Stella. You're so beautiful when you're angry.

     — William "Buck" Rogers after escaping from the pit, (BR25: "Planet of the Slave Girls")

    Cast

    *Gil Gerard as Capt. William "Buck" Rogers

    *Directed by Michael Caffey

  • Teleplay by Steve Greenberg, Aubrey Solomon and Anne Collins
  • Story by Steve Greenberg and Aubrey Solomon
  • Produced by Jock Gaynor, Medora Heilbron, Bruce Lansbury, Glen A. Larson, David J. O'Connell and David G. Phinney
  • Music by Johnny Harris
  • Cinematography by Ben Colman
  • Film Editors - Michael Berman and Leon Ortiz-Gil
  • Casting - Phil Benjamin
  • Art Directors - Fred Luff III and Paul Peters
  • Set Decorators - Victor Hugo and Frank Lombardo
  • Costume Designer - Sal Anthony

  • *Harker Wade - Unit Production Manager

    *Bob Bender - First Assistant Director

  • Gerald T. Olson - Second Assistant Director

  • *Jerry Allen - Model Builder

  • Ted Wilson - Carpenter (uncredited)

  • *Earl Crain, Jr. - Sound

  • Dick Wahrman - Sound Effects Editor

  • *Chuck Arrigo - Special Effects Coordinator (uncredited)

    *Peter Anderson - Visual Effects Supervisor: Universal Hartland

  • David M. Garber - Miniature Effects
  • Wayne Smith - Miniature Effects

  • *Bob Bralver - Stunts (uncredited)

    *Gary Armstrong - Assistant Camera

  • Kenneth Hale - First Assistant Camera

  • *Johnny Harris - Composer: Theme Music (uncredited)

  • Stu Phillips - Composer: Theme Music (uncredited)

  • *Alan Brennert - Story Editor

  • Anne Collins - Story Consultant
  • Related Subjects


    References

    External links