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| See Also |
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Journey to Where Con Report (here at Metaforms)
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|
| 24 |
What |
Number of
episodes
in each of the two broadcast seasons.
|
|
| 48 |
What |
Number of
episodes
in the two broadcast seasons.
|
|
| 49 |
What |
Number of
episodes if the short
"Message from Moonbase Alpha"
is considered canon.
|
|
| 50 |
What |
Approximate length, in minutes, of S19
episodes.
At least two Y1 episodes were 50.5 minutes,
including starting and end titles.
Have not checked length of other episodes.
|
|
| 297 |
What |
A population figure cited at the beginning of
"The Metamorph" (Y2).
See Population at Psychon.
|
|
| 298 |
What |
A population figure cited in "Devil's Planet" (Y2).
See Population at Entra.
|
|
| 300 |
What |
A round number figure for the approximate
population of Alpha in the series.
Approximate age of the Exiles from Golos,
due in part to a form of
suspended animation.
|
|
| 301 |
What |
Lower bound to the
population of
Alpha at Arkadia,
before Luke and Anna desert.
(Helena refers to there being "over 300" people.)
See Population at Arkadia
|
|
| 311 |
What |
A population figure cited in
"Breakaway",
and perhaps representing the population of
MBA after a few mysterious deaths,
but shortly before the Breakaway event.
See Population at the Breakaway.
|
|
| 1314 |
Real |
June: Battle of Bannockburn in British Isles,
Scots defeat an English army in this battle.
Referenced in JTW.
|
|
| 1339 |
Story |
JTW:
John,
Alan, and
Helena end up in
Scotland, New Year's Eve (old calendar,
presumably -- Spring?), 1339.
|
|
| 1918 |
Real |
June 10: Barry Morse born.
|
|
| 1937 |
Real |
10/09: Brian Blessed born (according to IMDB).
|
|
| 1939 |
Real |
07/29: Hildegard Neil born (according to IMDB). She played
Elizia in
"Devil's Planet" and is the wife of
Brian Blessed
|
|
| 1969 |
When |
Apollo 11 (first manned moon landing).
|
|
| 1973 |
Real |
Filming began in November (according to The Catacombs).
Much of Y1
soundtrack made.
|
|
| 1974 |
Real |
Most of Year One filmed.
|
|
| 1975 |
Real |
Filming of Y1 finished in February
(according to The Catacombs).
Fall(?): Y1 is first broadcast.
|
|
| 1976 |
Real |
All of Year Two filmed.
Fall(?): Y2 is first broadcast.
Compilation movie "Spazio 1999" (first of these)
December: ComLoC publishing starts.
|
|
| 1977 |
Real |
End of main broadcast run of the series, in most places.
|
|
| 1978 |
Real |
Compilation movie "Destination Moonbase Alpha"
July 28-30: First
Space: 1999 Convention in the world is held in
Columbus, Ohio, United States.
Cosmoconnection 4 is produced.
|
|
| 1979 |
Real |
Compilation movie "Alien Attack"
|
|
| 1982 |
Real |
Compilation movie "Journey Through the Black Sun"
Compilation movie "Cosmic Princess" (last of these)
|
|
| 1984 |
Real |
April: Barry Gray died.
|
|
| 1985 |
Story |
(Verify:) Fictional
Voyager 1
mission launched (as noted in
"Voyager's Return").
|
|
| 1986 |
Story |
Uranus mission launched. Crew hit a proton storm
that nearly causes their break-up,
but they end up on a planet they call
Ultima Thule, where they settle,
where they find
immortality -- at a price.
Situationally-implied
time dilation or
time warp to either the
Thuleans or
Alphans,
since the former have been there for 880 years.
(DOD)
|
|
| 1987 |
Story |
Dorfman perfects an artificial heart. (COTM)
|
|
| 1990 |
Story |
Dorfman perfects an artificial heart.
(COTM)
The wayward Uranus mission crashes on
Ultima Thule? See
Time Warp in DOD.
|
|
| 1992 |
Real |
Fall: Sci-Fi Channel began re-running S19.
|
|
| 1993 |
Real |
01/25: Nick Sayer starts a mailing list at quack.sac.ca.us
(by July 1995, the domain becomes quack.kfu.com).
10/14: Someone uploads several pictures to
ftp.sunet.se,
an FTP site in Sweden.
The pictures could still be found in December 2007.
|
|
| 1994 |
Story |
Prof. Victor Bergman discovers planet Ultra.
Astro 7 mission lost after arriving at Jupiter,
"five years" before events in
MOLAD (year is thus approximate).
The crew, including
Lee Russell.
|
|
| 1995 |
Real |
Command Conference convention took place in
Norwalk, a suburb of Los Angeles, California, United States.
At this point, the following online resources exist
for Space: 1999:
the Swedish FTP site,
Nick's webpage,
a South African site,
and perhaps one or two more.
The Law of Indirection,
fan fiction by David Welle
(also Editor of this KB) is released,
initially offline (in print form).
|
|
| 1996 |
Story |
March 9 (?): Upcoming Ultra Probe to be captained by
Tony Cellini.
June 6: Ultra Probe mission launched from the
interplanetary space station, at 1200.
A star mission comprising a mothership and four
Swifts was launched, led by
Captain Michaels.
There was a communication break,
and the mission lost, until years later when the drifting
Moon ran across
one of the Swifts (and later the mothership)
near and on Planet D, ~1150
DAB.
|
| Real |
January: the Cyber Museum begins forming.
January: Space: 1999 Metaforms (this website)
appears on the Web, though it is initially named
'Some Space: 1999 Information' for its first 12 months.
December: Space: 1999 Cybrary appeared on the Web.
December: an Internet WebRing named the
"Ring Around the Moon" emerges, linking 12 sites initially,
later (some point in or before 2000) up to 44.
|
|
| 1997 |
Story |
February? (approx?): Ultra Probe mission reaches Ultra.
August? (approx?): Ultra Probe survivor
Tony Cellini
makes it back to Moonbase Alpha.
|
| Real |
February: The mailing list is moved to buffnet.net;
then known as the Space: 1999 Internet Mailing list,
or Online Alpha for short. Adds a digest and spam blocking.
November: The extensive "Episode by Episode"
discussion on Online Alpha begins.
The Transfer,
fan fiction by
David Welle
(Disclosure: who is also Editor of this KB) is released.
|
|
| 1998 |
Story |
Boston Red Sox win World Series 4-3 against
St. Louis Cardinals,
according to Dr. Logan. (J2W)
Last time they won befire
"all competitive sports were banned in the year
2026."
|
| Real |
Year One soundtrack released by Fanderson.
April: The Catacombs website opens.
November: The extensive "Episode by Episode"
discussion on Online Alpha concludes.
|
|
| 1999 |
Story |
September 9: Aside from flashbacks,
the point in time when the events in the series began.
September 13: the
Breakaway event.
September 15: the International Lunar Finance Committee (ILFC)
was to have met regarding the Meta Signal and the Meta Probe.
|
| Real |
August: Space: 1999 Net forms out of several websites,
including the Cyber Museum, Catacombs, Metaforms,
two fan fiction sites, and more,
using the existing space1999.net domain name
previously used by the Cyber Museum alone.
September 10-13: Breakaway convention took place in
Los Angeles, California, United States.
Includes world premiere of
MFMBA,
produced a little earlier in the year.
September 25-26:
Spazio 1999: Il Giorno del Distacco
convention.
|
|
| 2000 |
Story |
The apparent timeframe of "Voyager's Return",
given 1985 is mentioned as being fifteen years before --
assuming Victor wasn't rounding a little.
|
| Real |
January 14: The Cybrary shuts down most sections.
July: The Online Alpha mailing list, numbering 244 members,
is moved to eGroups, adding polls, file repositories, etc.
July(?): Main Mission: 2000 convention took place in Manhattan
borough of New York City, New York, United States.
|
|
| 2001 |
Real |
January: What remains of the Space: 1999 Cybrary
permanently leaves the Web.
|
|
| 2002 |
Real |
Resurrection, by William Latham,
the first S19 novel published by
Powys Media.
First officially licensed novel since
1970's?
July: Tony Anholt (played
Tony Verdeschi) passes away.
|
|
| 2003 |
Real |
The Forsaken, by John Kenneth Muir,
published by Powys Media.
|
|
| 2005 |
Real |
Eternity Unbound, by William Latham,
published by
Powys Media.
Survival, by Brian Ball,
published by Powys Media.
09/13: Eagle Transporter Forum opens?
|
|
| 2006 |
Real |
Space: 1999 Year Two (The Omnibus),
by Michael Butterworth,
published by Powys Media.
|
|
| 2007 |
Real |
Six Universe, a
fan fiction
series is released in stages by its author,
MGK.
"The Eagle" --
fan fiction by David Welle
(Disclosure: also Editor of this KB) -- is released.
|
|
| 2008 |
Real |
Feb. 02: Barry Morse passes away at age 89.
Apr. 03: Johnny Byrne passes away.
Jul....: Another Con, Another Place (Canada).
Jul. 20: Space: 2099 site officially opens.
|
|
| 2009 |
Real |
????: (Unverified:) Derek Wadsworth dies?
Apr-Jun: Bridge Two (long fanfic novel) released.
July: Abridged version of Bridge Two released.
Dec. 18: Eagle Transporter Forum closes to read-only state for "indefinite period."
|
|
| 2010 |
Real |
July: Journey to Where convention planned.
|
|
| 2026 |
Story |
All competitve sports banned on
Earth,
according to Dr. Logan. (J2W)
|
|
| 2074 |
Story |
Approximate earliest arrival of the
Kaldorian ship (the one which visited
the Moon) was to reach
Earth.
It is possible that
time dilation
(what already may have occured on Alpha)
may have delayed this somewhat beyond 2074.
Note: Some fans speculate this is how the Earth of
2120 is able to remotely find and
contact Alpha, that the Kaldorians
supplied key information.
If so, that would set an approximate range of arrival of 2074-2120.
One fan (CR?) on
Eagle Transporter forum has speculated that
Carla may be a daughter of a Kaldorian, which if true,
would probably constrain the arrival range to more like ~2074-2094.
|
|
| 2099 |
Story |
Start of alternate timeline in
Space: 2099.
|
|
| 2120 |
Story |
Year on
Earth when
Texas City
on Earth makes contact with
Alpha to attempt to transport the
Alphans to Earth.
Time dialation has been occurring during
the Moon's journey.
(J2W)
|
|
| 2870 |
Story |
The year (by Earth calendar) it is for the
Thuleans when the
Alphans arrive.
Either one group or the other went through a
time warp.
It is the original Uranus mission members who are
alive (and apparently
immortal) there,
having been there for 880 years (implying since
1990 by their calendar).
|
|
Alan Carter |
a.k.a. |
Captain Carter
|
| Summary |
Chief Eagle
pilot of
Moonbase Alpha,
and the third-in-command of the base after the
Breakaway event.
|
| Details |
Expert Eagle pilot, and the go-to pilot in many
missions.
Is an
officer, based on frequent inclusion in
command conferences
or other key discussions, and on
his having temporary command
of Alpha on at least one occasions where the commander and his
second-in-command (Paul or Tony)
were off-base or out of commission
(thus, Alan is third-in-command).
Attends command conferences
in at least the following (probably very incomplete list):
"Earthbound".
Called by first or last name roughly equally.
Generally a genial person, very well-liked,
but also military as well.
Willing and ready to go into combat (Eagle, hand-to-hand, etc.).
His actions are usually sensible on such occasions,
but left to his own devices,
is known to sometimes has a
"shoot first and ask questions later"
tendency.
From Australia.
Good with children:
Jackie Crawford (who is, unbeknownst to everyone,
Jarak in disguise --
"Alpha Child");
Etrec (in
MOA).
Plays soccer or rugby? (check "Archanon" and/or BOW1)
Likes to sing. (in
JTW and
MOA, at least).
Suffered a number of crashes,
all(?) apparently due to non-pilot causes.
Displays intense loyalty towards Alpha and the Commander
(perhaps another personality/military-based trait?),
usually a strength, but (verify:) occasionally a drawback when
it goes to the point of blindness.
Perhaps the sole direct and surviving human witness of the
flaring of the Breakaway explosion
from early, individual, "small"-scale explosions
through chain reaction into massive nuclear brilliance.
Even from high orbit, he has to put up his hand to shield his eyes.
Rather than turning away from the Moon when he
arguably perhaps had a chance to do so and escape to
Earth,
he stays with the Moon and tries to make contact
with Alpha, repeatedly, until successful,
then lands on Alpha.
Whether or not he could have made a successful
return to Earth if he turned at the start of
Breakaway is not known,
but it apparently did not enter his mind to try.
His grandfather was a footballer who played in a major game
where Australia beat Great Britain in 1963.
Alan has the game ball, signed by Harrison,
a friend of Alan's grandfather.
|
| Injured |
RATM: Knocked unconscious after
Eagle 3 is hit by a
force field generated by Tritonian probe.
Eagle 3 crashes on the Moon.
His co-pilot, Donovan, is killed.
MOA: stunned by apparent
force field around the chamber holding
Pasc and
Etrec.
In pain, falls unconscious, comes to on site
with no apparent after-effects.
Later, choked and struck unconscious by Pasc, in
TechLab 3.
|
| See Also |
Alan and... (romance)
Cast
|
|
| Alan and... |
Intro |
Alan Carter and relationships
(or potential relationships)
of romantic interest (at any level).
The List is in roughly chronographic order.
|
| List |
Jeanie: a girlfriend left behind on
Earth (per
BOW2).
Regina Kesslann (yes and no)
Tanya:
only evidenced by one episode ("The Last Sunset")?
Makes initial passes at "Diana Morris" and "Louisa" in
BOW1?
Sandra?
Sahala:
"You are very easy to be with, and you are kind."
Alan is the only one to give Sahala a chance
after Sahala has shot
Maya.
"She has gotten to me"?
They share two kisses at the end of the episode.
|
|
Alan and Regina |
Intro |
Alan and
Regina Kesslann^ as a couple / non-couple
in two different timelines.
|
| Details |
Their
alternates (in
ATAP) were married,
but she was left a widow about five years before dying herself.
On the main-timeline Alpha, however,
Regina and Alan have no relationship;
but her memories/perception are suddenly crossed
after the one reality splits into two,
and she throws herself into his arms twice,
frantic and having to be rendered
unconscious by Helena the first time,
and dying in Alan's arms the second time.
|
|
Alan and Sandra |
Intro |
Alan and
Sandra as
a potential couple.
|
| Examples |
"The Full Circle":
Alan perhaps shows some possible hints of interest in Sandra.
Nothing major, but enough to make her glance at Paul,
like: Don't worry, I don't think he's serious,
and even if so, I'm not interested.
This interpretation may be a stretch on the editor's part,
but the editor is not the only one who has noticed a seeming
bit of interest on Alan's part.
Even if so, it is just a hint.
However, aside from that, once on Retha,
and Sandra is kidnapped by cavepeople,
Alan is very much keen on rescuing her,
and upon tracking her down and finding she's about to be
killed by a cavewoman, aims his laser to kill the cavewoman,
but himself is stunned by John,
who knows the cavewoman is actually a regressed Helena.
|
|
Alan in Temporary Command |
Intro |
Example(s) where
Alan is in
temporary command.
|
| Examples |
OMOH (515 DAB):
not actually shown in command (?), but presumably was, given
John and
Tony off were base (as were
Helena and
Maya) and on
Vega.
NANE (1095 DAB):
Given command by
Cmdr. Koenig
before he,
Tony,
Helena,
Maya, and
Magus board
Eagle 4 to explore
New Earth.
When the Eagle simply vanishes from the pad,
Alan decides it must be on the planet,
and subsequently makes two unsuccessful attempts --
prevented remotely by Magus -- at a rescue (in
Eagle 1).
"Space Warp" (1807 DAB):
When John and Tony are left on
the other side of a space warp from
the Moon,
Alan is in charge,
and is confronted by damage repair
and the sudden appearance of a rampaging creature
he soon orders to be
"kill[ed] on sight" --
only to quickly change his order when he is alerted by
Helena that the creature is an ill and delusional
Maya.
He and Helena then work together to limit --
as best as they can --
and eventually capture Maya.
He also decides to send out an Refueling Eagle
partway back along the Moon's route,
in case John and Tony make it through the warp,
in which case they'll need refueling to get the
rest of the way back to Alpha.
|
|
Alan's Missions |
Intro |
A partial List of missions in which
Alan participated,
split by season.
He is almost always the Eagle pilot,
though some cases where he is not may be noted.
|
| Year One |
"Breakaway":
"Black Sun": piloting the lifeboat Eagle.
"Alpha Child"(?): against the alien ships arriving?
"The Last Sunset": two missions?
"Collision Course"
"Death's Other Dominion"
"The Full Circle"
"War Games"
"The Last Enemy":
tries to launch in defense of Alpha, but the
Satazius is blocking this;
later is able to launch to assess damage to the
same alien ship.
"The Internal Machine"
"Mission of the Darians"
"Dragon's Domain"
TOA
|
| Year Two |
"The Metamorph"
"The Exiles" (?)
"All that Glisters"
"Journey to Where": not an Eagle flight,
but as one of the three sent first to
Earth.
"New Adam New Eve": attempts a rescue mission, but blocked by
Magus.
"The AB Chrysalis"
"Seed of Destruction":
first trip to the asteroid.
"Bringers of Wonder" (both parts):
believes he is on a "pilot ship" to Earth,
but is actually flying an Eagle,
being controlled by aliens.
"The Immunity Syndrome"
|
|
Alan's Occasional Shoot First Tendency |
Intro |
Alan Carter,
when left to his own devices in strange or high-stress situations,
has an occasional "shoot first and ask questions later" tendency,
either in direct or indirect actions.
In other cases, where he is not on his own,
but is asked an opinion, it may come out with
the same tone as well, in some cases.
|
| Comments |
Note, however Alan's apparent military background
(rank: Captain),
where quick decisions away from -- or too short a time for --
command feedback can become inevitable at times,
so the trait could be from a combination of factors,
including training.
Such a tendency can be needed in many intense circumstances,
yet can make for some "rough edges" at times, however,
when he is on his own or thrust into a leadership role.
|
| Examples |
"The Full Circle": wants to shoot John(?)/caveman,
but his aim is deflected by Victor hitting his arm.
"The Full Circle" (again):
wants to shoot (to kill) a cavewoman as she aims to kill Sandra,
but is stunned by John after the latter is warned (by Victor)
that "Carter's down there with a ray gun."
What Alan did not know is that the cavewoman is actually
Helena.
"Space Brain" pre-emption discussion.
"Space Warp": while
he is in temporary command,
a rampaging alien creature suddenly appears on Alpha,
seemingly from nowhere.
Alan orders it to be "kill[ed] on sight",
only to be warned by Helena that the
creature is an ill and delusional
Maya.
He changes his order moments before she confronts security guards,
and otherwise handles the crisis calmly.
|
| Counter |
"Dorzak":
Alan is willing to give Sahala a chance,
despite several reasons not to, starting with...:
Sahala, seemingly unprovoked,
attacks Maya on sight.
Even though Alan's loyalty is to Maya,
(speculation follows)
perhaps he (unconsciously?) recognizes a reflection
of his own tendencies, and believes there just has
to be some reason Sahala felt she had to
staser Maya on sight.
Yet Alan's loyalties are clear,
for when Sahala later attacks a guard and grabs his stun gun,
sets it to kill, and points it (mainly) at Maya,
Alan strips the gun from her hand,
and gives her a rather stern look as she is taken away.
Yet he still continues to support her otherwise,
and Sahala is later proven correct (regarding Dorzak, not Maya).
|
| See Also |
Pre-Emptive Strikes
|
|
A Year in the Life! |
Intro |
Novella-length series of twenty very short stories by
Terry S. Bowers with focus on the
development of John and Helena's relationship over
Year One.
|
| Statements |
Some of the short stories were published at earlier points in time.
|
| Stories |
"A Beginning"
"The Next Step"
"Time"
"Home
"Realization"
"Hope and Reality"
"Interlude"
"The Truth"
"Between the Sunsets"
"Warmth"
"Starlight"
"Not Yet Time"
"Prelude"
"Knowledge"
"Rumors"
"The Lady's Favor"
"Choices and Changes"
"Milestone"
"Trust"
"Anniversary"
|
|
| Aarchon |
Who |
Chief Justifier of the
Federated Worlds of Sidon.
Played by Alex Scott.
|
| Episodes |
"Voyager's Return"
|
| Warnings |
The name of Aarchon
is not to be confused with the title
of the leader --
The Archon --
of a different alien people
(the Dorcons).
Neither is to be confused with the aliens called
Archanons.
|
|
The AB Chrysalis |
a.k.a. |
AB Chrysalis
The A B Chrysalis (e.g. on DVD from A&E)
ABC
TABC
|
| Definition |
11th
episode of
second season,
35th overall.
Written by Tony Barwick (who also wrote
OMOH).
Directed by
Kevin Connor.
|
|
| AC |
See Alan Carter |
| ACAP |
See Another Con, Another Place |
|
| Acts of Reparation |
See Enigma |
| Aestheria |
See Atheria |
|
| Aleksandr |
See Tanya Aleksandr |
|
| Alex Scott |
Who |
Guest actor who played
Aarchon in
"Voyager's Return".
|
|
| The Alien |
Definition |
Fan fiction by
Ariana.
Y2 based, released in 2003, rated PG.
Maya, Tony.
|
| Summary |
"A very wary Tony stands guard over Alpha's new arrival."
(space1999fanfiction).
|
| Links |
S19FF
|
|
| Alien |
Categories |
Alien Peoples
Alien Technology
Alien-Built Spaceships
Aliens in Moonbase Alpha
Alien Writing
|
|
Alien Peoples |
Intro |
List of sentient
alien peoples/races/species
seen or referenced in the series. Some
visited/invaded/lived on Alpha,
some were encountered in space,
and some were only referenced.
|
| Named |
Archanons
("the Peacebringers" according
Pasc):
"borderline human norm" according to Helena.
Atherians (from
"Collision Course")
Croms (sp?), inhabitants of
Crom II:
referenced in
MOA.
Crotons (from
"Dorzak"):
nearly overwhelmed by
Psychons led by
Dorzak;
but the Crotons gained the upper hand.
Darians: (what is their original planet?)
Dorcons
Ellnans (or are they now Entrans?):
from Ellna, but that planet's sentient people have died,
leaving only survivors on Entra.
Golosians
Kaldorians ("Earthbound")
Kalthons: unseen, original form unknown
Pinvithian (sp?): for example,
Taybor.
Pirians: extinct, not seen, form unknown
Progrons ("End of Eternity"): immortal humanoids.
Psychons:
humanoid, with metamorphic abilities and unusual eyebrows;
genetic compatibility with humans uncertain.
One becomes an Alphan.
Sidons ("Voyager's Return")
Sunims (sp?)
Tritonians: form unknown, planet
destroyed some time before (from
RATM)
Vegans
Zennites: humanoid, with varying skin colors
(e.g. silver, gold); psychic.
|
| Unnamed? |
The aliens from
Bringers of Wonder:
giant, slow-moving, psychic blobs.
chlorine breathers from
"AB Chrysalis":
human(oid) in shape, but breath
Cl and spend
part of their lifecycle in chrysalid form.
beings "mutilated" by genetic experiments of
Magus: original form and name unknown?
species of energy being known by the example in
"Immunity Syndrome"
Jarak's people: true form unknown?
Jarak and his splinter faction
tried to hide from pursuers by taking over forms of
Alphans.
aliens from
"War Games":
humanoid, but apparently not human;
with somewhat large heads.
|
| Unclear |
Arkadians: ancestors of at least some Earth humans?
Luke and Anna claim more.
Extinct on their original world of Arkadia.
Whatever
Lee Russell has become --
or perhaps more accurately,
whatever this mirror image (in a manner of speaking) actually is?
Space Brain
|
|
Aliens in Moonbase Alpha |
Intro |
Despite a number of
alien encounters,
there were only some where
aliens actually entered
Moonbase Alpha.
This entry only counts actual presence of the individual(s).
It does not count the various other beings Maya transformed into.
|
| Year One |
Kaldorians: Five survivors, including
Captain Zantor,
were temporary guests of the Alphans.
Capt. Zantor ended up becoming a hostage of
Commissioner Simmonds.
Servant of the Guardian of Piri (actually an android)
Alien energy being in "Force of Life"
(its whole being was present).
Jarak and Rena: tried to replace Alphans with own people.
Balor of Progron: asked for
sanctuary but soon
displayed his psychotically murderous nature
and was blown out an airlock.
Dione:
demanded sanctuary, was reluctantly granted it;
but it was a ruse on her part.
|
| Year Two |
Maya: a
Psychon who
became a permanent resident
Alphan.
Cantar and Zova
Zamara
Taybor
Pasc,
Etrec, and later
Maurna, all
Archanons.
The first dies on Alpha.
Magus
Kalthon crystaline "reflection" of Koenig
Alien robot creature in "Beta Cloud"
Aliens in
"Bringers of Wonder"
Sahala, Yesta: the latter dies on Alpha.
Dorzak (another
Psychon)
Dorcons:
Consul Varda and several of her guards,
as a small tactical invasion/strike force.
|
| Notes |
Vindrus is a borderline case, not counted here;
though the Editor may reconsider at a later point.
|
| Conclusions |
Some were guests:
Kaldorians, Crotons, Taybor.
The latter two were guests after some Alphan hesitation.
One Croton ended up becoming a prisoner for a time,
after attacking an Alphan.
The Taybor betrayed his welcome by kidnapping Maya.
One became a permanent resident
(welcomed even before she
stepped foot on Alpha): Maya.
Three more could have potentially
become residents if they had not
other, hostile plans in mind:
Balor, Dione, Dorzak.
Another group (Exiles) asked for all (53) of them
to settle on Alpha, but were initially refused,
until an agreement was made, which the two
initially awakened Exiles betrayed.
Others were outright invaders:
Servant, Jarak and Rena, Zamara, Kalthon crystal being,
Beta Cloud robot, BOW aliens, Dorcons.
A few of these were in initially friendly guise.
|
|
Alien Technology |
Intro |
List of various forms of alien
technology seen in the series.
Alphans do have versions
(probably comparatively primitive)
of some of these sorts of technology,
but do not have many of them.
Alphans probably do obtain a few
examples (mostly damaged) of a few of these,
as noted below.
|
| List |
Android: several examples masquerading as Vegan people in
OMOH;
Servant of the Guardian of Piri.
Atomic Dispersal
(Magus)
Biological Computer (excluding androids):
one (sole?) example was
Psyche.
Computers (non-biological): various
(Note: Alphans have some too).
Decomposing to atomic level (same as Atomic Dispersal?):
Tritonians (in
RATM) are able
to decompose objects to their constituent atoms
and move them, not as instantaneously as others.
Force fields
(Note: Alphans have some too).
Holographic Projection (various)
Hypnotizing via device (e.g.
Taybor against Maya).
Hyperdrive(?), an interstellar drive (Taybor)
Immobilizing ability that made Alphans
stand stock still.
Jammers
Lasers? (humans have too)
Light Decelerator
(the source of the
abilities of Magus)
Magnetic Field Cocoon (Magus)
memory-enhancing devices that
Taybor scatters around Alpha.
(NAME????)
Meson Converter: multiple purposes
(Dorcons)
Missiles (something humans had back on
Earth):
could some slight missile fragments have survived
the explosion of the missiles?
near-instantaneous transportation
(Earth also develops this via neutrinos(?))
Neuro-Pulsonic Jammer,
of which Alpha probably ends up keeping one or two examples.
Photon Drive: a propulsion system on the
Croton ship.
Pods (more missile-like than ship-like):
53 pods holding Exiles;
2 pods remain on Alpha (1 slightly damaged);
remaining 51 pushed back on original course.
robots: one example in "The Beta Cloud" (which after it was deactivated was presumably studied by the Alphans)
space warp detector? ("Space Warp")
Kept by Alphans.
Spaceships (various), several of which are
destroyed on or near the Moon.
Staser
Stasis Chamber
(covered with what was assumed to be a force field) that
Pasc and
Etrec were put in,
along with its controlling "power unit" (in
MOA).
The chamber was badly damaged.
The power/control unit was retrieved intact.
Unknown what became of either technology.
Suspended Animation (various)
other means (if not named earlier)
of interfering with Alphan systems
such as computers or Eagles,
such as seen in:
"The Last Enemy".
means of suppressing Psychon metamorphic abilities,
including being able to force reversion.
|
| See Also |
Aliens
|
|
Alien Writing |
Intro |
Cases where
alien letters/symbols/words (i.e. writing)
was seen. Some unclear cases may be included (with a question mark).
|
| Examples |
"Space Brain":
the title being sends these symbols in a rapid
stream which causes a hyper-interlacing pages to
appear on Alphan commscreens.
At first, it is puzzling,
and they do not discern the intent immediately.
EOE:
The three very complex-looking block(?) symbols
on the outside of both the inner and outer airlock doors to
Balor's cell on an asteroid.
Flammon
The patterns(?) on
Pasc's
headband and maybe even clothing?
|
|
Alien-Built Spaceships |
Intro |
A List of
spaceship types designed by aliens.
This list does not include count alien missiles or small/simple
probe ships.
|
| List |
The Satazius:
a collosal Bethan warship;
destroyed on the Moon, near
Moonbase Alpha.
An unnamed Deltan warship:
destroyed on the Moon, near Alpha.
Kaldorian ship flown by
Captain Zantor.
Gwent
Various alien spaceships in two
spaceship graveyards,
one accumulated in space by the Dragon,
one accumulated on
Psychon by
Mentor.
The Daria. Called a ship. (from
MOTD)
Mentor's spaceship:
sometimes hidden, via artificial
molecular transformation,
as a rock formation or turned into a ball of light.
Presumably destroyed with Psychon.
Sidon spaceships (3):
all destroyed while approaching the Moon, by
Voyager 1.
Jarak's splinter people's ships (4):
all destroyed on or near the Moon.
("Alpha Child")
The massive spaceship persuing those in the prior point above.
Later, an image of this spaceship is
apparently pulled from the Alphans'
minds by the aliens in
"War Games" --
along with images of the
human-built Hawks.
Arra's spaceship
Archanon ship
The Menon: a Betanon Scout Cruiser
previously flown by Captain Duro,
but now a damaged derelict;
towed to Alpha.
The Croton ship.
Dorcon probe ship.
The Dorcon flagship, destroyed near the Moon.
|
|
All that Glisters |
a.k.a. |
ATG
|
| Definition |
The 4th episode of Y2,
28th overall.
Written by Keith Miles
(his only episode).
Directed by Ray Austin.
|
| Timeframe |
563? Remote scanners remotely pick up signs of milgonite.
565: Helena quotes this in her log (voiceover)
at the beginning of the episode.
It is not clear how long from the
point of her recording, to the landing.
Once landed, all action takes place in a little over three hours.
|
| Summary |
Milgonite, needed for the life support system,
is detected on a planet by Alphan scanners.
Eagle 4,
piloted by
Alan Carter and
John Koenig, with
Tony Verdeschi,
Helena Russell,
Maya, and
Dave Reilly,
heads there, but instead of Milgonite,
a mysterious rock formation is discovered.
A piece is carved out,
but soon kills Tony, only for it to be
discovered he is not dead,
but taken over by what turns out to be the living rock.
|
|
| Allan |
See Tony Allan |
| Alpha |
See Moonbase Alpha |
|
Alpha Child |
a.k.a. |
Fiocco azzurro su Alpha (Italian)
|
| Definition |
The tenth episode of Y1
of the series.
Written by Christopher Penfold.
Directed by Ray Austin.
|
| Summary |
The first child born on
Moonbase Alpha,
Jackie Crawford,
abruptly grows from a baby to the equivalent of a five-year-old,
shocking everyone.
Many are still welcoming,
while his mother, Sue Crawford,
rejects him,
and Commander Koenig grows suspicious.
The child himself starts showing some sinister signs
almost completely out of sight of others.
While something is approaching Alpha,
Jackie transforms again,
this time into an adult,
clearly alien,
who calls himself Jarak.
Alien spaceships arrive,
Jarak kills Sue Crawford,
and another alien, Rena,
takes over Sue's form.
They drive the rest of the Alphans towards death,
so the beings in the spaceships can take over Alphan form,
to hide from pursuers;
but just as this is happening,
an alien warship appears and destroys the four spaceships
of Jarak's people.
Jarak and Rena attempt to plead
sanctuary,
but the alien warship creates an energy beam
that drives Jarak and Rena out
and restores Sue Crawford and her baby.
|
| Details |
A statement is made that
life support
is precarious.
Sole, and brief, appearances of
Joan Conway.
|
| Links |
Episode Guide
at the Catacombs.
Transcript
at The Catacombs.
|
|
Alpha Facilities |
Intro |
List of facilities of Alpha that were mentioned
(in written or verbal form) and/or shown.
|
| List |
Main Mission
Command Center
Protein Production Unit ("Seed of Destruction")
Protein Stores
Nuclear Generating Areas (4? -- one damaged or destroyed) / Reactors
Eagle Pads
Eagle Hangars
Water Recycling Plant
Hydroponics
Solarium (2?)
Restaurants
Power Distribution (stations?)
Supply Depots
Observation Room
Living Quarters
Medical Center
Weapons Section?
Gymnasium
|
| See Also |
Alpha Facilities Chart in Hallway
|
|
Alpha Facilities Chart in Hallway |
Intro |
In
"Seed of Destruction",
in the scene fragment just before and after
Maya transforms into Cranston,
near the Observation Room,
she is standing by a chart of Alpha locations by base
region and/or level.
This was located at a hallway junction,
where the wall curves from one hallway into the one to the right.
The locations the Editor was able to discern are Listed below
in mixed case (they were listed in ALLCAPS in the episode).
The chart seems to have levels as columns and
facilities
(listed below) as rows, with radial slices of Alpha
color-coded.
|
| List |
Power Distribution
Reconnaisance Section
Reactors
Restaurants
Sola(?) Energy Plant
Solarium 1
Supply Depots
Security
Solarium 2
Travel Tube Depots
Technical & Engineering
|
| Notes |
The same or similar chart is seen in at least one
Y1 episodes (maybe
RATM?) as well,
but from too far away to discern any particular words.
Same for
"The Metamorph".
|
|
| Alpha Moonbase |
See Moonbase Alpha |
|
Alpha Observed |
Intro |
At various times, it is found aliens have been observing
Moonbase Alpha and/or
the Alphans
for some amount of time prior to an encounter.
This does not include occasions where
the Moon is observed for
some hours or days before the encounter,
but implication of a much longer period of time,
or where an alien sits and watches from close by
for some time before revealing his/her presence.
|
| Examples |
"The Last Sunset" (Y1):
the people native to Ariel
"have been watching the progress of your
world since the beginning of time."
The "world" is presumably
Earth,
but the clear implication is they've
been watching the Moon as well.
"The Taybor" (Y2):
Taybor has been "scanning" them for
"some little time," enough to know who
(e.g. -- and by how he calls them)
Commander Koenig,
Doctor Russell,
Mister Verdeschi, and
Maya are.
He also transfers
several objects into Alpha just before
he finally brings his ship into view.
NANE:
Magus has
"been monitoring [the Alphans] for a long time"
and has
"worked out the pair bonding in great detail"
regarding the four Alphans
(John, Helena, Tony, and Maya)
he previously invited and trapped on the surface.
He shows a lot of knowledge about Earth and
claims to be several names familiar from Earth history.
|
|
Alphan Technology |
Intro |
A List of various forms of technology the
Alphans had at their disposal at some point.
|
| List |
Various vehicles.
Various weapons.
Various scanners, many hand-held.
A large,
technological base extrapolated from mid-1970's technology,
meant to display an interpretation of late 20th Century,
early 21st Century technology.
This point will probably be expanded into specifics
at a later time. (EXPAND)
The Bergman Shield,
a type of force field.
Computers
Commlocks (hand-held communications devices)
Artificial gravity, for MBA
and Eagles,
but not elsewhere on the Moon's surface.
Other scientific advances made on Alpha after Breakaway.
Alien technology
they were able to salvage or obtain from alien wrecks,
or by other means, as well as any from Maya.
No specific point was made on this in the series,
yet devices of alien origin did appear at later time.
Artificial hearts
|
|
Alphan Vehicles |
Intro |
A List of vehicles the Alphans had. |
| List |
Numerous Eagle spaceships
Travel Tube intra-moonbase rapid transit system
Moonbuggy (used on
the Moon and sometimes on planets)
Laser tanks (converted from another purpose?)
Re-Entry Glider
Voyager 1 (briefly)
|
|
Alphan Weaponry |
Intro |
A list of weaponry available for use by
the Alphans in
defending themselves on base or on missions.
The list is in order of presumed power.
|
| List |
Stun Gun
Laser rifle
Eagle laser
Laser batteries
Nuclear devices
|
|
| "Alphans" |
Meanings |
The personnel/residents of Moonbase Alpha
as seen in the series and related works.
Fans of the series.
|
|
| Alphans |
a.k.a. |
"Creatures of the Moon" (as called by the
Servant of the Guardian of Piri)
|
| Definition |
The people of Moonbase Alpha
after Breakaway.
Initially, all are Terran humans born on
Earth
but separated from that world upon the Moon's Breakaway.
After Breakaway, Jackie Crawford was born on base.
Some time after that, Maya,
a Psychon humanoid,
joined the Alphan people.
|
| Notes |
The term "Alphan" apparently did not emerge until after
Breakaway,
when ~300 humans were essentially cut off from the Terran homeworld,
and were thus no longer really representatives
of Earth but of their own adrift planetoid,
and thus gained their own increasingly distinct identity.
|
|
| Alternate |
a.k.a. |
parallel universe (for reality/timeline)
doppelganger (for character)
|
| Definition |
A word often used in this KB to refer to
alternate realities/timelines,
and/or the characters who "reside" in them.
This page lists canon (e.g. ATAP)
and may list some non-canon alternates,
the latter from books
and/or fan fiction
where alternates are clearly defined.
|
| Details |
Technically, it can be argued that all non-canon sources
are alternates, but the Editor will make page will only call them
alternates if they is some sufficiently
strong difference(s) from canon and/or the main timeline.
This may often be done at the Editor's discretion,
which the Editor freely admits is subjective.
If you run across details mentioning non-canon sources,
please feel free to consider all of them alternates
if you prefer.
|
|
| Anderson |
Definition |
Surname of two producers of the series.
They were married since 1962 (IMDb),
but divorced between (?) filming of
Y1 and
Y2.
|
| List |
Gerry Anderson: executive producer.
Sylvia Anderson: producer of Y1.
|
|
Annette Fraser |
a.k.a. |
Annie
|
| Summary |
Woman in Service Section,
seen standing at computer walls in
Command Center.
Married to Bill Fraser two months prior to the
Psychon encounter.
|
| Details |
Faints in shock at capture of
Bill by
Mentor,
recovers quickly and then wishes to leave Medical Center.
Reacts strongly when she finds out about
Directive Four,
but finds some strength to watch that Eagle's approach to Psychon.
Wears a yellow
sleeve (Service).
Long, blond hair.
|
| Stories |
"The Metamorph"
|
| Links |
Screencaps and brief sound clips
elsewhere here at Metaforms.
|
|
Another Con, Another Place |
a.k.a. |
ACAP
|
| Definition |
A convention which took place in July 2008 in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. |
| Details |
July 18-20, 2008
Noted officially as a "relaxacon"
Scheduled, arranged phone calls to three of the actors
|
| Links |
Official Site
|
|
Another Time, Another Place |
a.k.a. |
ATAP (common in discussion)
#1f (Editor's non-official episode counter)
|
| Definition |
The 6th
episode of the series.
Written by
Johnny Byrne.
Directed by
David Tomblin.
Main guest artists/stars: Judy Geeson.
|
| Summary |
Split of
the Moon,
Alpha, and
Alphans.
The dopplegangers (alternates)
are encountered shortly later in the episode;
they have experienced considerably more time,
and have settled on an
Earth
otherwise devoid of human life.
|
| Details |
Alternate Earth as well?
|
| Links |
Episode by Episode discussion.
Episode Guide at The Catacombs.
|
|
| Anthony Verdeschi |
See Tony Verdeschi |
|
Anton Gorski |
a.k.a. |
Commander Gorski
|
| Who |
The eighth
commander of
Moonbase Alpha.
|
| Details |
Was in command of Moonbase Alpha at least as early as 1996 (according to
DD).
According to
Prof. Bergman,
Gorski was not relaying much of
Dr. Russell's findings to
Earth just prior to
Breakaway,
and is thus partially responsible for a cover-up.
Relieved of command of MBA late in the evening of Sept. 9, 1999,
with Cmdr. Koenig directly succeeding him.
Koenig was later known to be the ninth commander (cited in
"War Games"),
thus making Gorski the eighth.
Is "very flexible" -- implying he's politically nimble enough
to find himself another role (in the ILC?).
Likes to grow plants -- or at least has some supplies for
such that he left behind when leaving Alpha.
Cmdr. Koenig later finds and uses
at least part of the supplies.
(All as referenced in
"Dragon's Domain").
|
| Episodes |
"Breakaway" (seen briefly, mentioned a few times)
"Dragon's Domain" (not seen? mentioned a few times, first name given)
|
|
| Apollo 11 |
a.k.a. |
A11
|
| Definition |
Name of the real-life mission which landed human beings
on the Moon for the first time.
The lander portion was named The Eagle,
so it seems the Eagle fleet
was named after this lander.
|
|
| Archanons |
Who |
Alien people,
known as "The Peacebringers" but
who are sometimes infected with a
virus known as the Killing Sickness,
for how it turns its victims into killers.
The Archanons mark a
Flammon symbol to the forehead
to indicate when the danger is emerging.
|
| Details |
"The Peacebringers" name is claimed by
Pasc,
and apparently of "legends" known to
Psychons as well.
"Borderline human norm" according to
Dr. Russell.
Cannot lose much blood, and this in fact prevents them
from treating the disease, as they know the cure but
it involves this process.
Use a
flammon symbol.
Unverified: Hairstyles, clothes, and makeup
resemble ancient Mesopotamian.
As pronounced by Pasc,
the 'ch' sound in "Archanon" is drawn out, thick, rather
than an abrupt 'k' sound (i.e. not pronounced like "Arkanon").
Most Alphans, however, go with the simpler "Arkanon" sound
when saying the word.
|
| Examples |
Pasc:
apparent commander of a peacebringing mission to
Earth, infected with the Killing Sickness,
and is left in a stasis chamber.
Lyra:
his wife, who takes command after killing breaks out.
Etrec:
their son, who also has to be left in a stasis chamber
due to the Killing Sickness infecting along the male line.
Maurna: descendent of Lyra's line,
who comes to Alpha after the Archanons become
aware Pasc and Etrec's stasis chamber has been opened.
Lok (mentioned): killed by Pasc.
Kerak (mentioned): ditto.
|
| Speculation |
Did an even earlier visit by Archanons inspire
the ancient Mesopotamians?
The "thousand years" that is mentioned regarding
Pasc does not add up to this,
but it is unclear how that number was reached
(or if Archanon years are much longer),
so perhaps Pasc's team itself was there
thousands (plural) of years ago?
Or perhaps there is no connection at all,
or misinterpretation of the clothing and hair styles.
Are they just another race familiar with the
Flammon symbol from other sources,
or are they the source? It seems more likely
they are just familiar with it. See
Flammon
for more detail and speculation.
|
| Episodes |
"The Mark of Archanon"
|
|
| Archon |
Definition |
Title of the Supreme Leader of the
Dorcon Empire.
Called "The Archon" in reference.
|
| Examples |
Otherwise unnamed Archon,
played by Patrick Troughton.
Attempted to secure
"immortality" via
a organ transplant from an unwilling Maya,
who his Consul, Varda, captured from Alpha.
On the surgical table, before surgery began,
the Archon was killed by his nephew, Malic,
who coveted the throne and the chance of immortality.
Malic promptly claimed the title,
but lived for only a very brief time afterwards....
He proceeded to shoot Varda after Koenig convinced
Varda of Malic's guilt in killing the former Archon.
As Varda collapsed, a stray shot from her weapon
damaged the Meson Converter,
which led to the destruction
of the Dorcon flagship,
presumably with Malic on board.
|
| Episodes |
"The Dorcons"
|
| Warnings |
The Archon is not to be confused with an individual,
named Aarchon,
of a different alien people.
Neither is to be confused with the aliens called
Archanons.
|
|
| Area B7 |
See Nuclear Waste Storage |
| Area One |
See Nuclear Waste Storage |
| Area Two |
See Nuclear Waste Storage |
|
| Arra |
a.k.a. |
Arra, Queen of Atheria
|
| Who |
Queen of a people who have been expecting the
Alphans for
"millions of years" and who herself has been
"waiting a long time to meet"
John Koenig,
is overseeing the final stages leading up to
Mutation of her people to a new, utterly different,
and then immutable form via trying to ensure her planet,
Atheria touches
the Moon.
|
| Details |
Veiled in black initially,
before showing her aged yet regal face and white hair.
Either she, or someone unseen of her people,
flies a large spaceship which "swallows" Koenig's Eagle,
leading to their meeting.
On her ship, sits on a throne (the prop is seen again
in somewhat different forms at least twice more).
The ship appears rather dusty and full of cobwebs,
showing the ship's age and apparent disuse,
as if her people (or at least her,
if this is her flagship) have not been active in
space for awhile (involved in final pre-Mutation preparations?).
Ability to hear and transmit thoughts,
as well as the "unthinking calculations" of
Main Computer.
|
| Episodes |
"Collision Course"
|
| Links |
Character study
of Arra by same author as this KB.
|
|
Artifical Heart |
Who |
Prof. Victor Bergman,
apparently from some point before
Breakaway.
Michelle Osgood,
starting from some point near or just after 1196
DAB.
|
| Notes |
Victor's artificial heart is noted as being a bit
slow to respond to physiological stimuli.
Victor's is drained of power at least once (in
"Infernal Machine")
and restarted with 3000 volts.
Medical Section has several failed attempts getting
one working for Michelle before finally getting
some tiranium and being able to get it working,
after which it was implanted in her.
It is unclear if the two are of the same type.
Dorfmann(sp?) is mentioned in one case?
|
|
| Astro 7 |
Summary |
Mission that
Lee Russell
was on when the mission was lost in
1994,
only for a "reflection" of him to appear on a planet dubbed
Terra Nova.
|
| Links |
Jim Stolfa Astro 7 Images (CGI Conceptualization)
|
|
| ATAP |
See "Another Time, Another Place" |
|
| Atheria |
a.k.a. |
Aestheria: ITC promotional material misspelling,
sometimes repeated elsewhere as a result.
Astheria: another mistaken version midway between
the Aesteria mistake and the intended Atheria.
|
| Summary |
Planet
which is discovered to be on a
collision course with the
Moon.
The homeworld of
Arra, Queen of Atheria,
and her (otherwise unseen) people.
Atheria disappears at the moment of contact with the Moon,
as it(?) and her people "mutate" to another form.
|
| Details |
Alphans briefly consider
evacuating to the far side of the planet from
where the lunar collision would occur.
|
| Episodes |
"Collision Course"
|
| See Also |
Planets Destroyed or Vanished
|
|
Atomic Dispersal |
Definition |
A process
Maya concludes
Magus has used on
Eagle 4
to make it appear to vanish in front of her,
John,
Helena, and
Tony (on
New Earth, in
"New Adam New Eve").
|
| Notes |
The Eagle re-formed shortly after
Magus
was trapped away from the light needed
to power his technology.
|
| Quotes |
Maya (referring to vanished Eagle):
"it's still there somewhere,
only... only he's exerting some power to disperse its particles.
Like... powder dissolving in a liquid."
|
|
| Austin |
See Episodes Directed by Ray Austin |
|
| Australia |
Intro |
A country
of origin for at least one
Alphan,
as stated or strongly implied.
|
| Who |
Alan Carter, as stated by him in
"Dorzak"
(and strongly implied through series previously).
Andy "Bluey" Johnson? (maybe not, apparently
the term "Bluey" can be Australian slang/nickname
for someone with red hair, which Johnson has)
|
|
| B2 |
See Bridge Two |
| B4 |
See Bridge Four |
|
Barry Gray |
Who |
Composer (and conductor?) of the
score/soundtrack for Y1.
|
| Details |
Born in Blackburn, Lancashire, United Kingdom.
Composed the music for many
Gerry Anderson series.
Died in April 1984.
|
|
Barry Morse |
Who |
Actor who played
Prof. Victor Bergman in the
first season.
|
| Details |
Born 1918/06/10 in London.
Married Sydney Sturgess in 1939.
They were married 60 years until she
died of Parkinsons disease in 1999.
Extensive acting in radio, television, movies, and stage.
Had great appreciation for the plays of George Bernard Shaw.
Best known roles arguably
Lt. Gerard in The Fugitive in the mid-1960's, and
Victor Bergman in Space: 1999 in the mid-1970's.
Supported various charitable organizations,
including for research into cure for Parkinsons disease.
Attended Breakaway 1999 convention in Los Angeles,
and together with Barbara Bain put on a play.
In fact, he was a frequent guest of honor at S19 cons,
including ones in the U.S. in
1982, 1986, 1989, 1997, 1999, 2000, and 2001.
At some of them (e.g. 1997, 1999, 2000), he staged a play,
"Merely Players" at least twice,
and "Love Letters" at least once.
He always had a lot of stories to tell from his experiences
over many decades on stage, television, and radio.
Voiced of the audiobook version of the
Powys Media novel
Resurrection,
which has a planned release of 2010/05/07.
Died 2008/02/02 (age 89).
|
| Notes |
This Space: 1999 Knowledgebase page
is dedicated in memory
of Barry Morse. See the
KB intro page.
|
| See Also |
Cast
|
| Links |
Official Website
Eagle Forum memorial thread
In Memorium by fans
Obituary in Globe and Mail (Canada)
Obituary in The Independent (U.K.)
New York Times obit (interviews Robert Wood)
CNN obit (misspelled the character name, which was Lt. Gerard, not Girard)
Obituary at The Guardian (Guardian Unlimited Arts) website
|
|
| Bartlett |
See Jack Bartlett |
|
Beautiful Friendship |
Statement |
A phrase
Maya used to describe her
relationship with
Tony, at least at one point.
|
| Stories |
"A Matter of Balance"
(Y2, ~1702+ DAB).
She uses this (see Quotes) with him, in the presence of others,
but with no further definition or description,
while expressing no interest in spoiling it.
This was in a semi-humorous context,
but was an apparently honest description, however cryptic.
|
| Quotes |
Maya, after refusing Tony's latest brew:
"No thanks, I'd hate to ruin a beautiful friendship."
|
|
| Benes |
See Sandra Benes |
|
| Ben Vincent |
a.k.a. |
Dr. Ben Vincent
|
| Who |
An Alphan
doctor who is first seen in Y2.
|
| Details |
"Space Warp": He and Helena debate/argue treatment for
Maya while she is in another, injured form and not reverting.
Perhaps grew up, lived, or vacationed in California,
or is at least a fan of that state,
based on a response in
BOW2.
|
|
| Bernard |
See Eric Bernard |
|
| Betha |
Definition |
One of two planets around a single star that
the Moon passed.
|
| Episodes |
"The Last Enemy"
|
| Details |
From the perspective of the Alphans,
Betha was on the left-hand side of its sun.
A mostly blue and blue-green shaded world,
with some black patches.
At least one Bethan installation is located in a
a rugged and semi-barren area.
The Alphans quickly determine it is inhabited,
then detect the approach of a collosal gunship
they later find out is named the
Satazius.
In a constant and long-standing state of war with
Delta,
which is on the other side of their common star.
|
|
Betha vs. Delta |
Intro |
Two planets,
Betha and
Delta,
which have been in a constant and long-standing
state of war with each other,
with at least sporadic, opportunistic battles.
|
| Details |
Their war is complicated by the planets being on opposite
sides of their common star.
Previously tried to use an asteroid as a platform
for missile-bearing gunships, but the asteroids were
"too small" (?) for that purpose.
The Moon crossing through provides a ready-made gun platform, and a
new battle ensues.
All five Bethans seen,
including a Commander and military leader, were female.
The sole Deltan seen, a military leader, is male.
|
| Speculation |
Is Betha a world run by women and Delta one run by men?
There are too few people of either planet, especially Delta,
who are seen in the episode, so it is difficult to draw conclusions;
but (speaking story-wise)
perhaps they had common origins at one point,
but took different paths on the two planets.
There is no stated evidence about this,
just the visual points mentioned here, except....
An early script was named "The Second Sex"
(according to The Catacombs episode transcript).
Perhaps earlier scripts had more of a battle of the sexes
theme that was lessened later -- but the Editor does not know.
The meaning of what was on the screen is difficult to gauge.
|
| Episodes |
"The Last Enemy"
|
| Quotes |
Dione, in response to a question from
Helena:
"We have always been at war"
|
|
Betha vs. Delta: Battle of the Wandering Moon |
Intro |
Details of a battle, centered on the
Moon, between
Betha and
Delta, in their
long-running war.
Presented in this entry as being in three stages.
"Round 1" is mentioned in the episode;
the others are separated by the Editor.
This entry's title -- "Battle of the Wandering Moon" --
is one given by the Editor as an entry title only;
it was not uttered in the episode
(though Dione did use the phrase "wandering moon").
|
| Round 1 |
The Bethans realize the traveling Moon,
wandering through the star system common
to them and their enemies,
will make an excellent gun platform,
away from the sun that interferes with
other battles in the war.
They plan a pre-emptive strike, and launch the gunship
Satazius to the Moon,
suppress Alphan defenses, lands,
and carries out that strike against Delta.
Delta launches a missile attack towards the origin
of the Bethan attack, missiles on random trajectories near Alpha.
One strikes the Satazius, knocking it out.
An escape craft leaves the Satazius,
and still without communication, lands on Launch Pad 10.
Koenig decides to bring it down to the hangar,
to find out more about what is going on.
On board is Dione, the commander of the
Satazius, who says she is the sole survivor of her ship.
She demands
sanctuary.
This is initially denied,
but she talks her way into it.
While she is talking with the command staff,
even offering to send Bethan reinforcements to
"protect Alpha" (disbelieved by Koenig),
a Deltan gunship approaches Alpha, lands nearby,
and launches an attack against Delta.
Betha then launches missiles towards the Moon.
The first volley strikes but does not knock out the Deltan gunship.
Dione tries to charm and wile John,
even offering to let the Alphans settle on the planet.
He is not convinced, and seems a little repelled by her
attempts at charm, though he plays along a little.
The Deltan gunship starts firing missiles again.
Betha launches another missile,
which scores a direct hit on the Deltan ship, destroying it.
|
| Ceasefire |
Now "back to square one" with the Bethan ship knocked out
and the Deltan one destroyed,
John decides to try negotiating a cease fire,
which Dione appears surprised at.
Victor whispers to John (and Helena)
they only need about four hours of time
before the Moon is likely out of range and of no use to either side.
Kano establishes contact with the Deltan Supreme Commander,
Talos.
Koenig convinces Talos to put the request before their Praesidium.
Dione, using Kano's equipment, makes contact with
Chief Commissioner of Bethan Defence, Theia.
She agrees to a cease fire and to discuss terms.
A Deltan term is that it be policed, and Koenig offers to do so.
Talos also wants to launch a second gunship of theirs
into orbit around their planet,
just in case the cease fire breaks down.
The Alphans discuss Dione's offer of settlement on Betha further.
John thinks it does need to be discussed,
but Helena and Victor are arguing against it.
|
| Round 2 |
Dione disappears from quarters,
transported to her escape craft,
which returns to the damaged Satazius,
puzzling the Alphans.
The Satazius re-activates and launches a new attack on Delta.
It was playing possum, having waited for a nearby missile
strike and activating carefully-prepared charges on Satazius
for some controlled damage to give the appearance of being
knocked out, and gain time for a new attack when there would
not be enough time for the Deltans to bring a new gunship to
the Moon.
Talos feels Koenig broke his word.
The cease fire is ended.
Talos indicates the gunship and Alpha will be destroyed,
then demands the coordinates of the Bethan gunship,
and threatens to bombard Alpha at intervals until
the gunship is destroyed or its coordinates are given up.
To prevent the latter, Dione threatens a direct strike
on Alpha by her gunship.
Deltan missiles are launched, hitting Alpha and doing damage.
Koenig contacts Dione and indicates he is coming out to the Satazius,
seemingly looking (to Alphan and Bethan alike) that he is abandoning
Alpha. When Victor breaks the signal,
Koenig tells the Alphans it is a ruse,
says that Technical should prepare for action.
The Satazius launches more missiles at Delta.
A moonbuggy carrying Koenig drives towards the Satazius,
Koenig trying to convince her to stop the attack.
She has no interest in letting him on board,
but does otherwise seem a little concerned about his well-being.
Delta launches more missiles towards Alpha.
While those are in flight, the Satazius
launches more missiles at Delta,
continuing the bombardment she hopes
will knock out the rest of their defenses.
Koenig pleads, for the last time, for Dione to stop firing.
The Satazius continues firing.
While Dione again indicates Koenig will not be allowed aboard,
the moonbuggy get underneath an overhanging part of the gunship,
where the Bethan guns cannot fire.
The moonbuggy's passenger's helmet falls off,
but there is no one inside.
It is an Alphan ruse, and Koenig is speaking from his office in Alpha.
The moonbuggy is carrying a powerful weapon,
which explodes, destroying the Bethan gunship.
Alpha contacts Delta to indicate the ship is destroyed,
and contacts Talos to request the Deltan missiles still on
approach to be auto-destroyed, which is done.
The battle is over.
|
| Conclusions |
The Deltan gunship is destroyed with its entire crew.
The Bethan gunship Satazius is destroyed with its entire crew,
including Dione.
The two alien gunships become additional
alien wrecks on the
Moon.
The Deltan ship's missile battery is
later converted to a housing for an
Alphan laser(?).
Numerous exchanges of missiles,
often more than one of each of these:
Satazius to Delta, Delta to the Moon, and Betha to the Moon.
Numerous missiles hit all targets,
Delta, Satazius, Deltan gunship, Alpha,
the Moon in general, and Betha.
Parts of Alpha are damaged.
Among Alphans, five cases of middle ear damage,
but fortunately no fatalities.
Alphans lose a moonbuggy and spacesuit,
both used in the Alphan's sole direct
(and apparently the only truly decisive)
strike in the whole battle.
|
|
| Bethan Gunship |
See Satazius |
|
Bill Fraser |
Summary |
Eagle
pilot,
operative seen several times at consoles in
Command Center,
married to
Annette Fraser,
who is apparently another operative.
|
| Details |
Survived
Psychon after being in first Eagle (namely
Eagle 1) captured by
Mentor.
Wears a red sleeve,
perhaps hinting at prior,
unseen (to the viewer) duties in
Main Mission.
In "AB Chrysalis",
he starts the episode at a
Command Center console.
Not adept with setting up electrical systems.
("Beta Cloud")
|
| Episodes |
"The Metamorph":
exploring for minerals in
Eagle 1;
captured by Mentor of Psychon.
His co-pilot eventually dies there on
Psychon.
Returns to Alpha on
Eagle 4.
"The Taybor":
sent out in a Moonbuggy with another Alphan
to look for any sign of
Taybor's ship after Taybor takes
John for an unannounced trip into hyperspace.
The two in the moonbuggy have to flee for their lives
when Taybor's ship starts returning into its previous location.
"The Mark of Archanon"?
"Brian the Brain"
"The AB Chrysalis" (?)
"A Matter of Balance"
"The Beta Cloud": one of the few unaffected by illness,
aides Tony, Maya, and Sandra. Injured?
"Devil's Planet"
"Immunity Syndrome":
flies an Eagle carrying the Re-Entry Glider to the planet.
|
| See Also |
Cast
|
|
| Biosphere IV |
Summary |
An presumably non-canonical part of MBA
posited by Alpha Technical Data Center diagrams.
Basically a nature reserve.
|
|
| Birds |
Intro |
Birds were seen a number of times in the series. Some were
molecular transformations of
Maya, but Others were seen as well.
|
| Maya |
Dove:
"Metamorph" (for fast movement) and
"Dorcons" (attempt to flee that was blocked).
Kestrel: "Metamorph" (escape attempt), and twice in
"Luton" (search, obtain water).
Parrot:
OMOH (copies one already on Vega).
Owl:
NANE (survey).
|
| Others |
Parrots:
MOLAD,
OMOH.
Dove(s) seen at least once in a cage on Alpha (in
Recreation Center in
MOA at least).
|
| See Also |
Maya's Transforms (by Lifeform)
|
|
| "Black Sun" |
Meanings |
Title of an episode.
Reference to the central feature of that episode (see prior point),
a spatial object sometimes called that in the 1970's,
but more commonly known nowadays as a black hole.
(Curiosity: A song, unrelated to S19,
was titled both ways: "Black Hole Sun")
|
|
| Black Sun |
Intro |
3rd
episode of the
first season.
Written by David Weir (his only episode).
Directed by Lee H. Katzin,
who also directed
"Breakaway" (his only two episodes).
|
| Summary |
After finding an erratic asteroid, the Moon
changes course, drawn towards an unusual astronomical phenomenon.
An Eagle is sent, but it and its pilot are sucked in.
They realize they are dealing with a black sun,
and have little time.
A modified Bergman Shield is set up and demonstrated;
but among the
officers,
there is little hope it will really help.
A lifeboat Eagle
is launched in the opposite direction.
Alphans share what they think may be final moments, then inside,
find themselves undergoing a strange and wonderful experience,
inc. talking with something they find difficult to classify.
They survive, do not recall what happened inside,
and discovered the survival ship has appeared above them too.
|
| Details |
Eagle 1,
with Mike Ryan as pilot
(apparently the sole occupant) are
sucked into the Black Sun, and are
lost.
He does not reappear later
(like the lifeboat Eagle did),
so he perhaps died.
The influence of the Black Sun is drawing Alpha power,
and the base becomes
cooler.
At one point, Victor clears frost off a window.
Victor gets receives an electrical jolt;
Helena feels his mechanical heart saves his life.
Computer put on Essential Services Program (minimum capacity).
Paul Morrow is
on watch at least once.
Also, he puts David Kano on watch at one point.
Alpha News Service is broadcasting some updates,
but eventually shuts down.
|
| Quotes |
Mike Ryan (regarding the title object):
"It's round... it's huge... it's black. Boy, is it black."
Helena Russell (regarding new Bergman Shield): "It's ingenious."
Victor Bergman (in response): "It's insane."
David Kano: "Alpha cannot survive without Computer."
John Koenig (in response): "Is that a fact?"
Victor to John, regarding their "extraordinary" survival:
"Oh, I don't know exactly....
I, I, I, I'm a scientist,
I don't know anything about God;
but, no, ah... a sort of... 'cosmic intelligence'
is what I've got in mind."
Victor to John: "Sixty year old brandy.
I've been saving it for ten years.
Just waiting for a proper occasion to celebrate.
Well, not everybody might think this was a celebration;
but it is to me."
John to Victor, starting a toast: "To everything that might have been."
Victor to John, finishing the toast: "To everything that was."
Tanya: "Paul. Mind if I share the music with you?"
|
| Links |
EXE discussion
|
|
Black Sun Lifeboat Eagle |
a.k.a. |
survival ship
|
| Intro |
Lists the personnel and bit of personal politics regarding
the lifeboat Eagle in sent in the opposite direction from the
Black Sun.
|
| Quotes |
Alan Carter: "Well, I should be one of those six, Commander. Because if anyone could get them somewhere... I can."
John Koenig: "It's been fuelled, and equipped with supplies to carry six persons; three men and three women."
John Koenig: "I've instructed Central Computer to select the people most likely, in every way, to ensure the survival of mankind in space."
John Koenig: "This list is final."
John Koenig: "If you're careful you have supplies enough for five weeks. If there's anything out there that can help you, then together..you'll find it. If not..."
|
| Men |
Astronaut Alan Carter
Flight Engineer George Osgood
Communications Controller Toshiro Fujita
|
| Women |
Doctor Helena Russell
Data Analyst Sandra Benes
Professor Angela Robinson (Service Section)
|
| Details |
Alan seems upset about the lifeboat Eagle (see first of Quotes)
and that he is not aboard; but he soon finds out he
is on the list.
Helena seems upset that John will not be onboard.
Victor tries to indicate to her that John would have never gone.
She argues with John that she can be replaced by Dr. Bob Mathias
(Note: doctor-doctor exchange, though in her haste (?),
she apparently does not consider the change to the
male/female balance).
He indicates it is not the time the time for a noble gesture,
she argues she's not being noble, swallows her next words,
then says it's her life.
In the end, it is that group that leaves on the Eagle,
in the opposite direction from the black sun.
When the Moon plunges into the black sun,
effects similar to what the Alphans on base experience.
The Eagle fades out, and at some point after the Moon
comes out the other side, the Eagle appears above it.
|
| Comments |
Alan's points (first point in Details above)
seem out of character. It was probably not
intended to sound whiney, yet does.
|
|
| Blessed |
See Brian Blessed |
|
| BM |
See Barry Morse |
| Bob Brooks |
See Episode Directors |
| Bob Kellett |
See Episodes Directed by Bob Kellett |
|
| Books |
Intro |
Various Space: 1999 books have been written.
This entry lists some as category links to more details listings,
some as Categories without further information yet,
and some may be just lists of miscellaneous
(as yet uncategorized) Titles.
|
| Categories |
Novelizations and Original Novels
Annuals: produced for a few years in the 1970's
Picture Books (e.g. the rare item sometimes referred to as the Japanese Picture Book)
|
| Titles |
The Making of Space: 1999 by Tim Heald (1976, Ballantine)
The Future Is Fantastic by Robert E. Wood (2001, Trafford)
UFO / Space: 1999 by Chris Drake (1994, ITC and Boxtree)
|
| See Also |
Merchandise
|
|
| BOW |
See "Bringers of Wonder" |
|
Brain or Mind Damage |
Intro |
List of individuals or groups who suffered significant,
permanent, or fatal brain/mind damage.
Concussions or painful mind probes are not counted
in this entry.
|
| List |
Several (~9?) astronauts in the time leading up to
Breakaway.
Most or all are fatalities (could be kept alive,
but only by machines, otherwise completely dead,
and are eventually unhooked).
Regina Kesslann^. Fatality (in two realities).
Ted Clifford: attacked by the Tritonian probe,
some parts of his brain are expanded, others destroyed.
Fatality.
Ray Torens: most of mind is drained by
Psyche,
Mentor's
biological computer, under the latter's instruction/control.
What remains of Ray is forced to work in the mines.
This does not kill him directly,
but he dies when the mine ceiling collapses
during the final destruction of
Psychon.
Carolyn Powell: in losing a face-off of wills against
John Koenig while she is displaying
strong telepathic/telekinetic abilities,
under the influence of the Lambda Variant,
she loses, her rage is turned back on herself (?),
and her mind is wiped to the point she is like a child,
and will have to learn everything again.
This is apparently mental damage more than brain damage?
Tony Verdeschi: mind damage, driven mad by the
"Immunity Syndrome" Being, later healed by the same being.
|
| See Also |
Mind Control
|
|
| "Breakaway" |
Meanings |
The Breakaway event.
Title of the first episode of the series.
Title of the first
novelization,
which included the first four
episodes.
Name of a Space: 1999
convention in
Los Angeles, California, United States,
on September 10-13, 1999 (Friday-Monday).
|
|
Breakaway (book) |
Summary |
Novelization of the first four episodes of the series.
Novelized by E.C. Tubb.
Order of Episodes listed below is as novelized.
|
| Episodes |
"Breakaway"
"Matter of Life and Death"
"Ring Around the Moon"
"Black Sun"
|
|
Breakaway (episode) |
Intro |
The pilot/premiere
episode of the series.
Written by George Bellak (his only episode).
Directed by Lee H. Katzin.
|
| Summary |
A series of mysterious illnesses and deaths on
Moonbase Alpha
prompts a new Commander,
John Koenig to be posted there,
to oversee determining what the "virus" is.
Radiation in one of the
nuclear disposal areas is suspected,
but none is being found, even while preparations continue for the
Meta Probe. However, more astronauts are dying,
and a new kind of radiation is suspected.
Area One suddenly goes up in a moderate firestorm,
prompting Koenig to declare an emergency.
They attempt to break up and disperse Area Two,
which is 140x more massive, but it is futile.
A far more massive explosion ensues, which propels the
Moon
out of orbit and into interstellar space
(an event called Breakaway).
Koenig decides a direct return to Earth is riskier
than trying to survive on the Moon with an essentially intact base,
and into deep space they fly, already with hopes of finding a planet.
|
| Timeframe |
Starts on 1999/09/09.
Ends on 1999/09/13.
|
| Plot |
Radiation check
of Nuclear Waste Disposal Area Two
finds no signs of radiation, but
Nordstrom goes mad, and gets himself killed.
Meanwhile,
John Koenig is being ferried to Alpha on
Eagle 2.
In flight, he receives a call from
Commissioner Simmonds,
final approval for his posting as
Commander.
Spacefarer 9 has gotten the first good photos of
Meta.
Eagle 2 arrives at Alpha, greeted by
Prof. Victor Bergman,
who informs John the illness situation is much worse
than John has been led to believe, and that it is not a virus.
It looks like radiation, but none has been found so far.
The problem could affect the launch of the Meta Probe,
which has no margin for error given Meta is only going to be in
range for a short time.
Cmdr. Gorski
has been refusing to allow
Dr. Helena Russell to report her findings.
Victor advises John to meet Helena.
She too believes it is not a virus,
and reports it is a form of brain damage
and they're not going to recover.
She reports the ninth man died that morning,
out of eleven cases. All of the nine worked at Area Two,
but two Meta Probe astronauts are sick.
She cannot guarantee the backup crew will remain fit,
since they may have been exposed to the unknown factor.
The two currently dying are Eric and Frank.
John meets with
Capt. Alan Carter,
regarding the possibility of using
the backup crew ready for the Meta Probe.
Koenig calls Simmonds, and succeeds at getting a temporary
halt in nuclear shipments, and speaks bluntly about the pilots,
wondering why Simmonds lied to him,
and finds out it is because of an upcoming
International Lunar Finance Committee meeting regarding
the Meta Signal and Meta Probe,
and that the true news would rattle the ILFC.
John and Victor visit Area Two
for more direct radiation checks,
but they are negative, casting doubt on Helena.
Their pilot, Collins, goes crazy with the same illness,
and they scuffle with him and eventually prevail.
Koenig orders Ouma to search for correlations between flight patterns
and those who have suffered problems.
Meanwhile, Frank Warren has died at 13:28.
Eric Sparkman is brain dead (as reported by computer);
Dr. Russell removes him from life support.
Koenig breaks the news to Carter, and tells him
to forget the Meta Probe, until conclusions can be made.
Ouma discovers there were blank-outs in the automated records
of Eagle flights as Collins (and others?) pass over
Navigation Beacon Delta on the farside, near or at Area One.
Various astronauts passed by that way in flight/training patterns.
Controller Paul Morrow has
Data Analyst Sandra Benes run some checks,
and she reports a steep rise in heat at Area One,
still without other radiation.
Their cameras are quickly burned out.
John checks Area One for readings, in an Eagle,
which suffers disruption from an expanding magnetic field,
and crashes not far away.
Area One goes up in what Victor soon calls
a magnetic subsurface firestorm, a new phenomenon.
Paul remotely controls an Eagle to check out Area Two.
It displays no magnetic disturbances initially,
then a violent surge which disrupts the Eagle, crashing it.
Realizing Area Two amounts to
"the biggest bomb man's ever made",
Koenig issues Emergency Code Alpha One to Simmonds,
which prompts the latter to come to Alpha in
Eagle 1 (VIP pod)
after Koenig did not respond to further queries.
Heat is starting to rise in Area Two now,
which is 140x larger than Area One.
Simmonds asks whether it would burn itself out like Area One,
but question is moot, because it is so large the entire Moon is in
effect sitting on top of it.
Victor suggests breaking the pile to disperse it,
but warns time is limited.
Soon, all of Alpha's Eagles are committed.
Carter is ordered to take Eagle 1 up into orbit to observe.
Magnetic levels, fluctuating earlier, are starting to hold steady,
and an optimistic Simmonds is going to send a communiqué.
Koenig is not so optimistic.
Just then, Area Two starts exploding, leading a series of blasts
culminating in a critical reaction and a massive explosion
which in a minutes-long burn, acts as a giant engine,
pushing the Moon out of orbit, causing damage,
throwing people about, and pinning them to the floor.
Carter is in pursuit,
calling out to an initially-unresponsive Alpha,
though Main Mission can hear his description of the event. See
Breakaway Event for detail.
Carter makes it to the base, while damage reports start coming in,
and a check of
Master Computer over
Contingency Plan Exodus
results in information on too many indefinite variables
to plot a return course. "Human Decision Required."
John makes the decision to remain on Alpha,
where they can sustain themselves,
rather than a highly unlikely return to Earth.
Alpha picks up a signal, with an image,
from the Mars Satellite, then later a news report from GTV,
which mentions earthquake damage there.
Earth doubts the 311 on MBA survived.
Space Dock was also hurled out of orbit.
Alpha loses that transmission,
only to pick up the Meta Signal,
which gives them some hope of settlement.
|
| Details |
The voice of the
Eagle 2 pilot is that of the actor Shane Rimmer,
who also played Kelly in "Space Brain."
It is not clear if it is intended as the same character
(the Editor would have to review Kelly's Alpha role).
On Eagle 2, a woman walks into the passenger pod with coffee
for the commander, seemingly echoing a similar scene from
the movie "2001: A Space Odyssey" (one interesting contrast
is that the woman in S19 can walk comfortably in artificial gravity,
while the one in "2001" needed Velcro-style(?) slippers in zero-G.
Victor hands John a commlock on the latter's arrival on Alpha
(scheduled 2335 Lunar Time).
It seems commlocks are specific (or specifically programmed) to Alpha.
There are implications Victor had not planned on being on
Alpha up through 09/09, but got "caught up" (apparently
with investigating the "virus infection").
John obviously knows Victor very well, as well as Benjamin Ouma,
Paul Morrow, a Main Mission
operative (?) named Michael,
but not Tanya Aleksandr, who introduces herself.
The first meeting of John and Helena is somewhat fractious,
her probably not trusting him much after the
prior commander didn't listen to her,
and though he tries to break the ice,
isn't entirely successful.
The illness causes tissue disruptions (seen often in the face)
and often clouding of at least one eye, like a sudden cataract.
The isolation ward is bathed in blue light (reason unknown?).
When John talks to Alan for the first time in this episode,
a hangar is visible behind them.
Visible
to the right are 4 Eagles with their side facing
and 3 Eagles facing forward even further back,
with 1 facing forward in the middle,
1 being ferried in the foreground,
at least 4 side facing on the left, and at least
2 facing forward in the left back.
That totals at least 15, though more might be obscured
or have been missed by the Editor.
Area Two had a newer Centigrade(?) containment system
than Area One.
To break up the pile,
Eagles are being converted to the Winch pod and sent out,
with six of them arriving in the area initially.
They set to work, uncovering individual containment units and
pulling out canisters, with a magnetic device hanging from
the winch, lifting out containers and flying them at some distance,
where they are released. Detailed directions are coming from Paul.
Some Eagles have to return due to disruptions to their equipment.
|
| Notes |
An earlier version of the script had several early names:
"Zero G", "The Void Ahead", and "Turning Point".
Used with other episode(s) into two
compilation movies in 1976 and 1982.
In 2010, audio tapes of some cut scenes of this episode surfaced,
and were posted to YouTube, with transcripts and commentary
at the Catacombs. See Links.
"The Void Ahead" also became the name of the
Space: 2099 version of the episode in 2008.
|
| See Also |
Breakaway Quotations
Pre-Breakaway Population
Breakaway Population
|
| Threads |
Dec. 1997: Episode by Episode discussion
|
| Links |
Breakaway Lost Scenes (at The Catacombs)
|
|
Breakaway: Helena and Victor Visit Area Two |
Intro |
Details of the first scene of the
"Breakaway" episode.
|
| Details |
On the "Dark" (far) side of the Moon, on Sept 9th 1999,
a radiation check is going to be run at
Nuclear Waste Disposal Area Two.
Jim Nordstrom and
Steiner, approach a laser barrier and temporarily
turn one segment off to enter the area.
They are being overseen by
Professor Bergman and
Doctor Russell, who are in the
Monitoring Depot.
In the meantime,
Eagle 14 is unloading more canisters nearby.
Nordstrom or Steiner is using a
hand-held Geiger Counter,
which finds no sign of extra radiation.
Nordstrom goes mad, attacking Steiner and trying to escape Area Two,
running into the laser barrier and damaging his helmet against a rock.
He dies (implied by the scene but verified later).
|
| Notes |
Meanwhile,
John Koenig is approaching the
Moon in
Eagle 2.
|
|
Breakaway: John and Victor Visit Area Two |
Intro |
Details of a scene partway through the
"Breakaway" episode.
|
| Details |
Cmdr. Koenig has himself and
Prof. Bergman shuttled to Area Two.
As they chat in the passenger pod, their pilot,
Collins, passes Area One, using the nearby
Navigation Beacon Delta as a turning point.
Collins starts looking slightly twitchy at that point.
They arrive at Area Two at the same time as a moonbuggy.
The three from the Eagle arrive in the Monitoring Depot,
while those in the Moonbuggy,
Jackson and
Ellis,
start the new radiation checks.
There are no signs of problems, casting doubts on
Russell's theory of some form of radition sickness.
When they are about to leave, Collins goes crazy,
trying to get out of the post by busting a window,
and scuffling with John and Victor until a
security guard arrives,
who also scuffles. The latter's stun gun flies across the room,
and Koenig(?) picks it up and stuns Collins.
The three(?) drag Collins out of the immediate room and close
the door, just seconds before the compromised window explodes,
exposing that room to cold vacuum.
|
|
Breakaway (quotes) |
Intro |
Key quotes from the
"Breakaway" episode.
Some quotes adapted from
The Catacombs.
|
| Quotes |
Simmonds to in-transit
John Koenig:
"... your job is to put man on
Meta."
Victor Bergman to arriving John:
"Things are far more serious than I suspect you've been told."
Victor to John, about
Dr. Helena Russell:
"Commander Gorski
refused to let her report any of her findings."
Koenig: "Simmonds, why did you lie to me?"
Simmonds, in reply: "You mean those men are no better?"
Koenig, in response: "No. They're no better.
They're not going to get any better and you know it."
Koenig to
Alan Carter: "You were told lies.
They died of an illness no one can understand.
Earth Command wanted you to think it was a temporary set back."
Koenig, thinking to himself about Meta mission:
A giant leap for mankind.
It's beginning to look like a stumble in the dark.
Koenig to Russell, in Medical Center, after his Eagle crashed in Area One:
"Well, I told you there was nothing wrong with me,
I walked away form it, there's no damage."
Russell, in reply: "Commander....
That is not the kind of damage I'm looking for. [....]
We're looking for answers, Commander. Not heroes."
Koenig, in response: "I didn't know you cared."
Victor, to John and Alan:
"I think we're facing a new effect,
arising from the atomic waste deposited here over the years.
Magnetic energy outputs of unprecedented violence."
John, to
Controller Paul Morrow,
after a remote-controlled Eagle crashes in Area Two
due to a magnetic surge:
"Paul. Contact Commissioner Simmonds immediately.
Pass Emergency Code Alpha One."
Then to Helena:
"You were right, Doctor. It was radiation. Magnetic radiation.
Now we're sitting on the biggest bomb man's ever made."
Simmonds, prematurely optimistic about breaking up Area Two pile:
"Well done. Now, I have to issue a communiqué sooner or later.
Well, it'll give us more time to consider our next move.
You see, John--"
Koenig, interrupting:
"I see men risking their lives to avert disaster -- total disaster.
Now, wake up, Commissioner.
If this goes wrong there won't be anybody to issue a communiqué.
There will be no survivors."
Paul, immediately after the above:
"Commander! It's going up!"
Alan, to Alpha:
"The Moon is going out of the Earth's orbit. That explosion...
it has pushed us out of the Earth's orbit."
Paul: "Can we make it back to Earth?"
Main Computer,
after listing various negative factors:
"Human Decision Required"
John: "As you know, our Moon has been blasted out of orbit.
We have been completely cut off from planet Earth.
As we are, we have power, environment,
and therefore, the possibility of survival.
If we should try to improvise a return to Earth,
without travel plots, without full resources,
it is my belief that we would fail.
Therefore, in my judgement, we do not try."
Koenig: "September Thirteen, Nineteen Ninety-Nine.
Meta signals increasing. Yes, maybe there."
|
|
Breakaway (event) |
Summary |
The catastrophic event on September 13, 1999
which propelled the Moon out of
Earth orbit and
into the galaxy and beyond, carrying
Moonbase Alpha
and its 300+ personnel.
|
| Details |
Area One already blew itself out in a magnetic subsurface firestorm.
Area Two is starting to show precursor signs of a similar event,
but it is 140x the size, and fear is of a far more disastrous event.
The Alphans are, at Victor's suggestion,
trying to break up the concentrated pile of nuclear waste at
Area Two, which itself continues to show some signs but is
holding somewhat steady.
Abruptly, electrical discharges start shooting out,
and a series of explosions begin, which proceed over the course
of 20 seconds to involve Area Two and beyond,
killing at least four pilots in two Eagles.
The explosions go critical, creating a single,
far more massive explosion which in a minutes-long burn
acts like a massive nuclear engine and proceeds to propel the
Moon out of orbit, causing moonquakes (and earthquakes),
throwing people about and then pinning them to the floor.
Alan Carter, previously ordered to observe proceedings from orbit,
sees much of this. He is perhaps pulled along with the Moon,
but also has to struggle to keep up,
even as he calls Alpha, with more and more concern
as they do not respond initially,
while also reporting on the effects.
Alpha's artificial gravity (AG) is able to start compensating
when the Breakaway acceleration slows to 3G.
|
| Timing |
(Starts at 40m30s mark in the A&E copy of the episode.
All times shown below are relative to that point.
Timing reflects what is literally shown on screen,
which may or may not reflect "true" timing.
The Editor will use it as if it is the "true" timing, however.)
0m00s: Area Two starts "going up."
0m08s: an Eagle, struck by electromagnetic discharges, explodes.
0m14s: Koenig starts ordering an abort to the Area Two mission. Paul starts relaying the order.
0m17s: the "immediately" in Paul's "... return to base immediately...."
0m23s: first true non-Eagle explosion at Area Two.
0m28s: early stages of forming blasts catches up with another Eagle.
0m30s: blasts reach the Area Two Monitoring Depot.
0m42s: blasts already visible as a very bright spot on the Moon's limb from Alan's perspective.
0m44s: blasts abruptly go critical into one massive blast that forces Alan, in space, to shield his eyes.
0m48s: false dawn of huge blast rises above Alpha's horizon.
0m49s: moonquakes hit Alpha.
0m50s: Paul orders all sections to be sealed.
0m52s: Quake causes damage, starts hurling people about.
1m04s: Moon visibly starting to leave Earth orbit.
1m10s: People pinned to the floors.
1m27s: Victor realizes, "We're moving!"
1m39s: Meta Probe and an Eagle thrown from their lunar orbit space dock.
1m43s: That space dock explodes.
1m48s: Carter being pulled along and/or pursuing the Moon.
1m52s: Carter starts trying to raise Alpha.
2m02s: Carter reports to Alpha that the Moon is leaving orbit.
2m18s: Koenig starts struggling over to a console.
2m25s: Earth already shrinking behind the Moon.
3m22s: Koenig contacts Carter.
3m30s: Koenig reports there are (still) tremendous G-forces.
3m36s: Koenig reports they seem to be decelerating.
3m45s: People are able to start picking themselves up.
3m58s: Main power returns as people get to their feet.
4m04s: Victor reports they're down to 3G's and that artificial gravity is compensating.
|
| Conclusions |
The first true explosion isn't until 0m23s.
It doesn't go critical and turn into the truely massive explosion until 0m44s.
Once that happens though, the Moon is accelerating for at least 3m20s,
until the 3G point, and presumably for at least several more seconds.
|
| Speculation |
Acceleration may have still been occurring after the 4m04s mark,
but was apparently fast declining and likely didn't last much longer.
The human body can take up to about
(needs verification) 7-10G before falling unconscious.
If AG was having a subtractive effect during this crisis,
Breakaway acceleration could have been as high as 10-13G(?).
Other pilots helping break up
Area Two were running cycles between Area Two itself
and drop-off points away from the immediate area,
and were probably not all in the immediate Area itself.
If the others immediately started fleeing then,
or even on sight of the first blasts,
perhaps they had time to escape before the blasts went critical.
That close to the Moon, they probably got pulled along.
If most or all of the others did not escape,
that would have been a huge hit to
Reconnaissance Section
at the start of their journey.
The lunar space dock is destroyed.
Another space dock was hurled out of Earth orbit,
apparently leaving Earth unable to mount any rescue attempt
(the Alphans have already concluded they themselves cannot
make a return attempt).
|
| Statements |
The Editor considers there to be "only" four
Verifiable Losses due to the
Breakaway event, namely the four pilots
mentioned at 08 and 28 seconds.
|
| Results |
Moon with 300+ people propelled out of Earth orbit
and the solar system altogether.
At least four pilots dead in at least two destroyed Eagles.
A space dock in lunar orbit is destroyed,
presumably with loss of life.
The Meta Probe and other Eagle, docked there,
were hurled away moments before (perhaps destroyed too?).
The abrupt movement of the Moon out of orbit
triggers earthquakes along the San Andreas faults in the
United States,
and in Yugoslavia and southern France,
causing "enormous damage to life and property."
Some damage to Moonbase Alpha.
Simmonds sustains a head laceration.
Lew (not Picard) is knocked unconscious in Main Mission.
Almost everyone was hurled about,
presumably causing at least bruising in many.
All (except Carter) were pinned to the ground for a time.
All prior relationships with people still on Earth were
permanently severed.
Note: There were some illusionary get-togethers in
"Bringers of Wonder".
Everything else that follows within the
Space: 1999 series.
|
| Episodes |
"Breakaway"
|
| Threads |
Dec. 1995: Why No Collision With Earth?
|
|
Breakaway: The Convention |
a.k.a. |
SpaceCon XIII
Breakaway Con
Breakaway Convention
Breakaway 1999 (?)
Breakaway '99 (?)
Breakaway: The Con. (this KB only?)
|
| Definition |
Name of a Space: 1999
convention
which occurred in the United States
over four days in September 1999.
|
| Timeframe |
1999/09/10 - 1999/09/13 (Friday thru Monday) |
| Location |
Culver City (Los Angeles suburb), California, United States |
| Statements |
This is one of two conventions known to have taken place in
September 1999, the month of the fictional
Breakaway event
(this one including the day itself),
the other being
Spazio 1999: Il Giorno del Distacco
(in Italy).
|
| Comments |
Considering many attendees were arriving the prior day,
it could be said that many were there 09/09 - 09/13,
the same days as portrayed in the pilot episode of the series.
|
| Links |
Breakaway Convention
(here at Metaforms; also links to other sites).
|
|
Brian Blessed |
Who |
An actor who played two guest Roles in the series. |
| Details |
Born in
1937.
Husband of
Hildegarde Neil, who played
Elizia in
"Devil's Planet"
Some non-S19 (Other) roles are listed here as well.
|
| Roles |
Cabot Rowland (in
DOD in
Y1)
Mentor (in
"The Metamorph" in
Y2
|
| Other |
1973: "Arthur of the Britons" (as Mark of Cornwall)
1976: "I, Claudius" (as Augustus)
1980: "Flash Gordon" (as Vultan)
1991: "Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves" (as Lord Locksley)
|
| See Also |
Multiple Roles
|
|
Bridges and Anchorages |
Disclosure |
The author of the story series described in this entry
is the same person as the Editor of this Knowledgebase.
|
| Definition |
A series of released and proposed
fan fiction
written or planned by
David Welle.
Information is very briefly summarized,
and status marks are simplified;
more detailed listings for most
(some titles are brand-new or recently renamed)
are at the Editor's own fan fiction information page
(see Links below).
Lengths on unreleased stories are estimates only.
|
| Table |
|
Title | Timeframe | Len | Status |
| After | D.A.B. | Before |
Y 1 |
Damage Assessment | Breakaway | 0001-001? | | short | ideas |
| Eagle Aerie Alpha | Earthbnd | | | novella | started |
| We Need a New... | Spc Brn | | | short | ideas |
| Bridge One | TOA | 0314-0342 | Mtamrph | novella | ideas |
|
Mentor of a Doomed World (Character Study) | short | Release |
Y 2 |
Bridge Two | Mtamrph | 0343-0403 | Exiles | novel | Release |
| Whose Orders? | Exiles | 0414-0425 | | novella | Release |
| Dance of the Flammon | 0440-0453 | OMOH | novella | drafted |
| Music to the Ears (?) | in 700's | J2W | short | started |
| The Law of Indirection | 1040-1044 | NANE | novel | Release |
| (unnamed/Y2SS3) | later within Y2 | short | ideas |
| The Eagle | MOB | 1770-1772 | | short | Release |
| Lessons on the Fly | near end of Y2 | short | ideas |
Y 3 |
Bridge Three | Dorcons | 2410-24?? | | novella | started |
| The Transfer | | 2510-2534 | | novel | Release |
| Bridge Four | | 2534-???? | | novel | started |
| The Frontier (?) | | | | novella | ideas |
| Of Mutation and Metamorphosis | novella | ideas |
|
| Statements |
The framework behind these stories was begun and sketched
to a large degree in the mid-1990s,
with two of the stories being written at that time,
and the series resumed again and expanded starting in 2007.
|
| Links |
More detailed
Fan Fiction page,
though some titles above have not been listed there yet.
|
|
| Bridge One |
Summary |
In-progress
fan fiction
novella spanning the gap between
Y1 and
Y2.
|
|
| Bridge Two |
a.k.a. |
B2
|
| Disclosure |
The author of the story described in this entry
is the same person as the Editor of this Knowledgebase.
|
| Definition |
Fan fiction novel spanning the gap between
"The Metamorph"
and "The Exiles" episodes of Y2.
Part of the Bridges and Anchorages
fanfic series being written.
First part released on 2009/04/25.
Fourth/last part released on 2009/06/23.
Abridged version released on 2009/07/03.
|
| Intro |
This story spans the two-month gap between
"The Metamorph" (day 342+) and "The Exiles" (day 403),
during which the people of Moonbase Alpha have to make
an unexpected welcome to Maya, Daughter of Mentor.
The Alphans had just survived a brutal and
deadly attack from her father,
and Maya herself had strange and
possibly dangerous powers of body and mind.
While striken with grief and confusion about
the death of her father and her world,
trying to alternately bury her past and start
coming to terms with it,
she has to deal with a present filled with aliens
who are a bewildering mixture of caring,
fear, gratitude, anger, and resentment.
Some are welcoming; others want nothing to do with her.
One security officer is unsure of her,
and another man has to wrestle more losses than most,
perhaps finding a too-handy target in the alien's daughter.
The destruction of Psychon has altered the
course of Alpha in several ways,
and one of which brings them towards a looming threat,
to an ancient world, and to a danger they
think is one they once survived --
one Maya has difficulty convincing them is
potentially fatal this time, setting the unsure
Maya at odds with some of the others,
and propelling her into a role she had not expected.
|
| Links |
Link to story here on Metaforms
|
|
| Bridge Four |
a.k.a. |
B4
|
| Disclosure |
The author of the story described in this entry
is the same person as the Editor of this Knowledgebase.
|
| Definition |
In-progress
fan fiction novel, sequel to
The Transfer. Part of the
Bridges and Anchorages
fanfic series (being) written by
David Welle.
|
|
The Bringers of Wonder |
a.k.a. |
Bringers of Wonder
BOW
BoW
|
| Definition |
Generic name for the two-part episode
(i.e. two-episode story) in Y2.
Written by Terence Feely.
Directed by Tom Clegg.
|
| Statements |
This was the only two-episode story in the series.
|
| Episodes |
"The Bringers of Wonder (part 1)"
"The Bringers of Wonder (part 2)"
|
|
The Bringers of Wonder (part one) |
a.k.a. |
BOW1
|
| Definition |
The 17th episode, in production order, of Y2.
The 41st episode overall of the series.
First part of the two-episode
The Bringers of Wonder story.
|
| Summary |
A wild Eagle ride lands a delusional Koenig in Medical Center,
hooked up to a brain therapy device.
A Superswift approaches Alpha,
a mission from
Earth to rescue the Alphans,
with everyone on board being family and friends of
a number of Alphans. Yet they start doing strange things,
including trying to drive an Alphan into killing Koenig,
who survives the attempt and wakes up.
He sees the newcomers not as humans,
but as hideous aliens.
His reaction to them appears psychotic,
landing him back in Medical Center and in further peril,
while three Alphans launch towards Earth.
|
| Plot |
Commander Koenig becomes delusional
during an Eagle flight, eventually crashing his Eagle.
Dr. Russell hooks him up to a
cerebral wave machine.
A ship approaches, a Superswift, and it lands.
Guido Verdeschi, the
brother of
Tony Verdeschi, appears.
It is a mission from Earth to rescue the Alphans.
The ship reveals a number of family and friends of several Alphans.
They immediately start catching up, and planning for return,
yet... the newcomers start doing strange things....
One seems to control an Alphan into trying to kill
Koenig while the latter is still on the brain complex,
while another tries to block Dr. Vincent from realizing the danger.
John is saved, eventually wakes up, and is informed
of the good news, but when brought to
Command Center,
sees hideous alien creatures.
His reactions appear psychotic to everyone else,
and Helena is eventually driven to stunning him.
Clive Kander
also sees the aliens in true form,
on a recording,
but is driven to actions which lead to his death.
Soon after, a pilot ship is launched from the Superswift,
to return a first wave of what Tony thinks are randomly-chosen names,
but which are actually names put into his mind, of
Alan Carter and two nuclear physicists,
Ehrlich and
Bartlett.
John later awakes, tries unsuccessfully to convince
Tony that the Alphans are being manipulated,
and ends up sedated.
John later awakes in restraints,
while a huge, blob-like alien appears poised to kill him,
while other aliens are shown on the surface of the
Moon.
|
| Details |
Clive Kander is reviewing what
he recently filmed of Koenig's crashed Eagle and
the arrival of the Superswift's crew.
He sees hideous aliens, and reacts,
but is driven mad by Guido and Dr. Shaw,
which Kate reports to Maya, who is
on watch.
She, Tony, Alan, and others arrive and try to intervene,
which stretches Guido's and Shaw's ability to
"control all of them."
but Kander's actions lead to a fire that kills Kander.
|
| See Also |
The Bringers of Wonder (part two)
|
|
The Bringers of Wonder (part two) |
a.k.a. |
BOW2
|
| Definition |
The 18th episode, in production order, of Y2.
The 42st episode overall of the series.
Second part of the two-episode
The Bringers of Wonder story.
|
| Summary |
John survives another attempt on his life,
and convinces Maya he might be right.
She undergoes the same treatment as him,
and sees the aliens for what they are.
Transforming into one, she finds out they
intend to blow up a nearby waste dump and
feed off the energy, which will destroy Alpha.
Helena comes up with a way to snap the mind control,
but Alan and two others, setting up the nuclear trigger,
are still under alien influence,
but that is whittled down one still-affected Alphan at a time,
until the aliens are left with nothing, and fade away.
|
| Plot |
Helena and
Maya walk into Medical Center,
and what John sees as a hideous alien backs off and leaves the room.
The two women try to convince John,
while he tries to persuade Maya with logic.
He is partially successful,
enough that she is willing to try the cerebral complex.
Helena, with enough doubt growing too, applies it.
When Maya re-awakens, she sees the same aliens John does.
Meanwhile, the pilot ship lands,
those aboard thinking they are on
Earth,
but are actually at nuclear waste domes on the Moon.
John convinces Maya to
transform into an alien,
and she finds out they wish to force Alan and the
nuclear physicists to blow up the nearby dumps,
for the huge dose of radiation the aliens,
who are starving, need to survive.
This will destroy the Alphans.
John tries to get to an Eagle,
but is intercepted and stunned by Tony,
who returns him to Medical Center, leaving behind a guard.
Maya stuns the guard.
John awakens, and he and Helena discuss
how to quickly get the Alphans to see the danger.
White noise started from Command Center is the answer,
and it brings everyone out of the psychic influence,
to their horror at what they now see around them.
The aliens vanish from the base,
but now all are at the waste dump (Area B7),
concentrating on Carter's group.
John, Tony, and Maya fly in
Eagle 1
to intercept Carter and Ehrlich,
who are on their way to return a nuclear trigger to
Bartlett,
while Helena remains on Alpha to control things there.
Multiple steps by the whole command/officer team
whittle down the amount of control the
aliens have, the final confrontation being between
John and Alan, the former prevailing,
dooming the aliens,
who have some parting words (see Quotes)
before they and their ship disappear.
|
| Details |
Maya is eventually semi-convinced by logic on three main factors,
which either John suggests to her and/or she starts wondering about:
everyone being friends/family of Alphans;
details of Kander's death; and the likely
time dilation problem.
Carter, Ehrlich, and Bartlett think they have
landed in the New York City area,
have met up with their girlfriends or family,
have gone to a hotel or are at home,
are driving around in the woods in a dune buggy, etc.
All are images masking their real location
and what they are really doing.
Maya stuns the guard using a gun she retrieves from a drawer
in Medical Center.
Speculation: It is evidently there as a precaution,
perhaps after earlier incidents in Medical Center,
and is perhaps only known to
officers;
though why it is not remembered by Tony is not clear
(slipping his mind while under alien influence,
perhaps, especially since the alien's influence
is shown as limited, and may leave odd gaps?).
Applying the brain complex to everyone on Alpha would take too long,
but Helena thinks a sonic blast of white noise
could block the pathways in the brain the aliens are using.
This is a medical technique,
in the form of a data card,
but which in this case must be started from Command Center.
As John, Helena, and Maya advance towards CC
with the white noise card,
Helena and Maya are in the lead,
the latter with a stun gun.
A guard appears behind them,
but Koenig appears behind him and stuns the guard,
whose stun gun is found to be set on kill.
After Koenig is lowered to intercept the moonbuggy
(which Carter and Ehrlich see as a dune buggy
which is also carrying their girlfriends),
there is a fight, while Maya is lowered and then
transforms
into a vacuum-tolerating larren.
Carter escapes on the moonbuggy with the trigger
while Maya tends to Ehrlich, whom she/larren injured.
John pursues the moonbuggy on foot to the waste dome,
which has been sealed.
He uses the moonbuggy to break through,
which takes time.
Helena eventually has to knock out everyone else on Alpha,
using anaesthetic^ "contact gas,"
to block the aliens from obtaining psychic energy from
the 300 there.
Inside a waste dome, Koenig has to fight Bartlett.
After Helena knocks out the rest of the Alphans on base,
the aliens lose most control over Bartlett,
but force him to the sidelines while concentrating
their remaining mental energy on Carter.
John and Alan fights, until the former knocks out the latter
and removes the atomic trigger from the core, dooming the aliens.
The aliens have been using and extrapolating from happy memories,
as a means of manipulation, yet also as the sole
form of mercy they are intending to show the Alphans,
though they are like genius vultures in every other way.
See also Quotes below.
|
| Quotes |
Maya, after returning from a
metamorphic masquerading as an alien
(and having trouble reverting from its form):
"Don't ever ask me to do that again.
They have the minds of geniuses
and the instincts of vultures."
Alien (much later, after Koenig prevails):
"You are a truly primitive organism, Commander.
We could have given you an eternity of
happiness in an instant of time.
Now your life will be what the life of
your species has always been...
cruel and futile."
Koenig, in reply:
"It's better to live as your own man than
as a fool in someone else's dream."
|
| See Also |
The Bringers of Wonder (part one)
|
|
| Brooks |
See Episodes Directed by Bob Brooks |
|
| Byrne |
See Johnny Byrne |
|
Bubblegum Cards |
Intro |
At least one company (Donruss?) produced a set of bubblegum cards,
one being a set of 66 which had sometimes off-kilter captions.
|
| Links |
Space 1999 at Bubblegum-Cards.com
|
| See Also |
Merchandise
|
|
| Convention |
a.k.a. |
Con (common reference or even title fragment)
|
| Definition |
In the area of science fiction media,
a gathering of fans, frequently with one or more
guests of honor from the series of focus and/or
science fiction in general.
These are usually (always?) fan organized.
|
| Intro |
There have been various conventions in
(at least) Europe and North America
focused primarily on the series,
as well as some additional ones with a broader range
but still some S19 focus.
This KB primarily features the former in its entries,
though at least one entry also lists the latter.
Please see the See Also listings.
|
| Statements |
All SpaceCons through 1999 were organized by the
International Space: 1999 Alliance.
It is not clear if this organization exists anymore.
SpaceCons after 1999 have been organized by Ellen Lindow.
In subsequent Conventions... entries,
cons primarily focused on S19
(as best the Editor can determine) are marked in yellow,
cons more generalized around all Gerry Anderson series
(not present in all KB entries) are marked in green,
unknown situations are unmarked.
|
| See Also |
Conventions by Country and Year
Conventions by Country, State/Prov., and Year
Conventions by Year and Date
Conventions by Guest of Honor
|
| Links |
Conventions
(here at Metaforms; includes all details,
including all known Guests of Honor).
Space: 1999 Conventions (Catacombs)
|
|
Conventions by Country and Year |
Intro |
Partial list of
conventions
primary focused on Space: 1999, by country.
May include upcoming (i.e. planned) conventions.
|
| Table |
| Canada | 2008 | Another Con, Another Place | Calgary, Alberta |
| France | 1990 | Cosmos 1999 | Paris |
| 1993 | Cosmos 1999 | Lyon |
| 1995 | Cosmos 1999 | Lyon |
| 1998 | Cosmos 1999 | Lyon |
| Italy | 1999 | Il Giorno del Distacco | Monza |
| 2000 | Moonbound One | Modena |
| 2001 | Moonbound Two | Modena |
| 2002 | Moonbound III | Modena |
| 2003 | Moonbound III bis | Bologna |
| 2004 | Moonbound 2004 | Modena |
| 2004 | Moonbound 2004 bis | Modena |
| 2005 | Moonbound 2005 | Padenghe |
| 2006 | Moonbound 2006 | Padenghe |
| U.K. | 1987 | Space 1999 Minicon | Leeds |
| 1990 | Alphacon | Leeds |
| 1992 | Psycon | Manchester |
| U.S.A. | 1978 | SpaceCon I | Columbus, Ohio |
| 1979 | SpaceCon II | Pittsburgh, PA |
| 1980 | SpaceCon III | Columbus, Ohio |
| 1981 | SpaceCon IV | Atlanta, Georgia |
| 1982 | SpaceCon V | Springfield, MA |
| 1983 | SpaceCon VI | Cincinatti, Ohio |
| 1985 | SpaceCon VII | Arlington, VA |
| 1986 | SpaceCon VIII | Los Angeles, CA |
| 1987 | SpaceCon IX | Sandusky, Ohio |
| 1989 | SpaceCon X | Wapokeneta, OH |
| 1992 | SpaceCon XI | La Mirada, CA |
| 1995 | Command Conference | Norwalk, CA |
| 1997 | SpaceCon XII | Portland, Oregon |
| 1999 | Breakaway: The Convention | Culver City, CA |
| 2000 | Main Mission: 2000 | New York City | * |
| 2001 | Breakaway: 2001 | Tampa, Florida |
| 2003 | SpaceCon XV | Portland, Oregon |
| 2005 | Earthbound: 2005 | Tampa, Florida |
| 2010 | Journey to Where | Austin, Texas |
|
| * Notes |
Main Mission: 2000 took place in the New York City borough of Manhattan.
|
| Statements |
There were quite a few more U.K. conventions,
but most were Fab or Fanderson
conventions featuring all of Gerry Anderson's works.
Some of these other conventions are listed in the
Conventions by Guest of Honor entry.
More are listed in the Links part of the
main Conventions entry.
|
| Links |
Journey to Where Con (official site for 2010 con)
|
|
Conventions by Country, State/Prov, City, and Year |
Intro |
Partial list of
conventions
primary focused on Space: 1999, by country.
May include upcoming (i.e. planned) conventions.
|
| Table |
| Where | Year | Name |
| Canada | Alb | Calgary | 2008 | Another Con, Another Place |
| France | Paris | 1990 | Cosmos 1999 |
| Lyon | 1993 | Cosmos 1999 |
| 1995 | Cosmos 1999 |
| 1998 | Cosmos 1999 |
| Italy | Bologna | 2003 | Moonbound III bis |
| Modena | 2000 | Moonbound One |
| 2001 | Moonbound Two |
| 2002 | Moonbound III |
| 2004 | Moonbound 2004 |
| 2004 | Moonbound 2004 bis |
Monza/Milan | 1999 | Il Giorno del Distacco |
| Padenghe | 2005 | Moonbound 2005 |
| 2006 | Moonbound 2006 |
| U.K. | Leeds | 1987 | Space 1999 Minicon |
| 1990 | Alphacon |
| Manchester | 1992 | Psycon |
| U.S.A. | CA | Los Angeles | 1986 | SpaceCon VIII |
| Culver City | ~ L. A. |
1999 | Breakaway: The Convention |
| La Mirada | 1992 | SpaceCon XI | * |
| Norwalk | 1995 | Command Conference |
| FL | Tampa | 2001 | Breakaway: 2001 |
| 2005 | Earthbound: 2005 |
| GA | Atlanta | 1981 | SpaceCon IV |
| MA | Springfield | 1982 | SpaceCon V |
| NY | N.Y. City | M |
2000 | Main Mission: 2000 | * |
| OH | Cincinatti | 1983 | SpaceCon VI |
| Columbus | 1978 | SpaceCon I |
| 1980 | SpaceCon III |
| Sandusky | 1987 | SpaceCon IX |
| Wapokeneta | 1989 | SpaceCon X |
| OR | Portland | 1997 | SpaceCon XII |
| 2003 | SpaceCon XV |
| PA | Pittsburgh | 1979 | SpaceCon II |
| TX | Austin | 2010 | Journey to Where |
| VA | Arlington | 1985 | SpaceCon VII |
|
| * Notes |
U.S.A. California conventions all took place in the Los Angeles (L.A.) area.
Three are known to have taken place in suburbs or other nearby cities.
For the first convention in the area (1986),
the Editor does not have information indicating
whether or not it took place in a suburb or the city proper.
La Mirada and Norwalk are near each other,
about 10-15 miles ESE of downtown L.A.
Norwalk's population was ~97,000 during the 1990's,
but barely appears as a small label on maps.
Culver City is a few miles north of the LAX airport,
and is the first(?) suburb directly west of downtown.
Main Mission: 2000 took place in the New York City borough of Manhattan.
|
| Statements |
There were quite a few more U.K. conventions,
but most were Fab or Fanderson
conventions featuring all of Gerry Anderson's works.
When the Editor's full conventions page is returned to this site,
that full list will be accessible.
|
| Links |
Journey to Where Con (official site)
|
|
Conventions by Guest of Honor |
Intro |
Partial list of
conventions
primarily or partially focused on Space: 1999,
by Guest of Honor (GoH), as best as the Editor is aware.
Even though the guests of some cons were not necessarily associated
with S19, this entry keeps focus on S19-related guests.
Guests are sorted by first name.
May include upcoming (i.e. planned) conventions.
Some con titles may be abbreviated.
|
| Table |
| Guest | Role | Yr. | Which Convention | Where |
Alibe Parsons | Alibe | 1990 | Alphacon | U.K. |
| 1991 | Plan B | U.K. |
| 1991 | Fanderson 91 | U.K. |
| 1992 | Psycon | U.K. |
| 2005 | Destination MBA. | U.K. |
Anton Phillips | Bob Mathias | 1979 | SpaceCon II | U.S.A. |
| 1999 | Breakaway: The Con. | U.S.A. |
| 2005 | Moonbound 2005 | Italy |
Barbara Bain | Helena Russell | 1986 | SpaceCon VIII | U.S.A. |
| 1992 | SpaceCon XI | U.S.A. |
| 1999 | Breakaway: The Con. | U.S.A. |
Barry Gray | original music | 1978 | SpaceCon I | U.S.A. |
| 1979 | SpaceCon II | U.S.A. |
| 1981 | SpaceCon IV | U.S.A. |
Barry Morse | Victor Bergman | 1982 | SpaceCon V | U.S.A. |
| 1982 | Fanderson 82 | U.K. |
| 1986 | SpaceCon VIII | U.S.A. |
| 1989 | SpaceCon X | U.S.A. | * |
| 1990 | Cosmos 1999 | France |
| 1991 | SpaceCon XI | U.S.A. |
| 1997 | SpaceCon XII | U.S.A. |
| 1999 | Breakaway: The Con. | U.S.A. |
| 2000 | Moonbound One | Italy |
| 2000 | MainMission: 2000 | U.S.A. |
| 2001 | Breakaway: 2001 | U.S.A. |
| 2003 | SpaceCon XV | U.S.A. |
| 2005 | Earthbound: 2005 | U.S.A. |
| 2005 | Destination MBA. | U.K. |
| 2005 | Ctdown. to Disaster | U.K. |
| Bob Kellett (director) | 1990 | Alphacon | U.K. | |
| Carolyn Seymour (Eva) | 2010 | Journey to Where | U.S.A. | |
| Catherine Schell (Maya) | 2000 | MainMission: 2000 | U.S.A. | * |
| Clifton Jones (Kano) | 1978 | SpaceCon I | U.S.A. |
Christopher Penfold | script writer | 2000 | MainMission: 2000 | U.S.A. |
| 2002 | Stand By For Action | U.K. |
Dave Prowse | creatures | 1978 | SpaceCon I | U.S.A. |
| 1980 | SpaceCon III | U.S.A. |
| Fred Freiberger (prod) | 1999 | Breakaway: The Con. | U.S.A. | * |
| George Bellak (writer) | 2000 | MainMission: 2000 | U.S.A. |
Gerry Anderson | executive producer | 1978 | SpaceCon I | U.S.A. |
| 1981 | Fanderson 81 | U.K. |
| 1982 | Fanderson 82 | U.K. |
| 1984 | Fanderson 84 | U.K. |
| 1986 | Fanderson 86 | U.K. |
| 1990 | Fanderson 90 | U.K. |
| 1991 | Plan B | U.K. |
| 1991 | Fanderson 91 | U.K. |
| 1992 | Fab 1 | U.K. |
| 1995 | Danger Zone | U.K. |
| 2000 | Century 21 | U.K. |
| 2002 | Stand By For Action | U.K. |
| 2005 | Destination MBA. | U.K. |
| 2005 | Ctdown. to Disaster | U.K. |
| 2006 | Sector 25 | U.K. |
| 2007 | HD21 | U.K. |
John Hug | Bill Fraser | 1996 | Fanderson Gold | U.K. |
| 2000 | MainMission: 2000 | U.S.A. |
Johnny Byrne | script writer/ editor | 1998 | Cosmos 1999 | France |
| 1999 | Breakaway: The Con. | U.S.A. |
| 1999 | Spazio 1999... | Italy |
| 2000 | MainMission: 2000 | U.S.A. |
| 2002 | Moonbound III | Italy |
| 2005 | Destination MBA. | U.K. |
Keith Wilson | production designer | 1995 | Danger Zone | U.K. |
| 1996 | Fanderson Gold | U.K. |
| 2000 | MainMission: 2000 | U.S.A. |
| 2005 | Destination MBA. | U.K. |
| 2006 | Moonbound 2006 | Italy |
| 2007 | HD21 | U.K. |
Martin Bower | model maker | 1982 | SpaceCon V | U.S.A. |
| 1981 | Fanderson 81 | U.K. |
| 1982 | Fanderson 82 | U.K. |
| 1987 | Space 1999 Minicon | U.K. |
| 1990 | Alphacon | U.K. |
Martin Landau | John Koenig | 1978 | SpaceCon I | U.S.A. |
| 1986 | SpaceCon VIII | U.S.A. |
| 1992 | SpaceCon XI | U.S.A. |
Nick Tate | Alan Carter | 1978 | SpaceCon I | U.S.A. |
| 1979 | SpaceCon II | U.S.A. |
| 1980 | SpaceCon III | U.S.A. |
| 1992 | SpaceCon XI | U.S.A. |
| 1992 | Command Conf. '95 | U.S.A. |
| 1999 | Breakaway: The Con. | U.S.A. |
Prentis Hancock | Paul Morrow | 1979 | SpaceCon II | U.S.A. |
| 1980 | SpaceCon III | U.S.A. |
| 1987 | Space 1999 Minicon | U.K. |
| 1990 | Alphacon | U.K. |
| 1992 | Psycon | U.K. |
| 1999 | Breakaway: The Con. | U.S.A. |
| 2000 | MainMission: 2000 | U.S.A. |
| 2006 | Sector 25 | U.K. |
Suzanne Roquette | Tanya Aleksandr | 1981 | SpaceCon IV | U.S.A. |
| 1987 | Space 1999 Minicon | U.K. |
| 1993 | Cosmos 1999 | France |
Zienia Merton | Sandra Benes | 1999 | Breakaway: The Con. | U.S.A. |
| 2000 | MainMission: 2000 | U.S.A. |
| 2000 | Century 21 | U.K. |
| 2001 | Moonbound Two | Italy |
| 2004 | Moonbound 2004 bis | Italy |
| 2005 | Destination MBA. | U.K. |
| 2005 | Ctdown. to Disaster | U.K. |
| 2006 | Sector 25 | U.K. |
|
| * Notes |
Barry Morse:
his fellow SpaceCon X (1989) GoH was his wife, actress
Sydney Sturgess.
Catherine Schell:
"MainMission: 2000" is said to be her
first science fiction convention.
In S19, besides
Maya,
she also played the role of the
Servant of the Guardian of Piri.
Fred Freiberger: surprise guest in "Breakaway: The Convention"
|
| Statements |
Barry Morse was guest at ~15 conventions through 2005,
before he passed away in February 2008.
Tony Anholt is the only regular
cast member not known to have
attended a S19 or Fanderson convention, though a fanzine
(Cosmoconnection #4) indicates,
in reference to SpaceCon I (1978) that,
"Tony Anholt had said he could come, but later couldn't make it."
Note: He passed away in July 2002.
Guest at six or more cons each:
Barry Morse,
Gerry Anderson,
Johnny Byrne,
Keith Wilson,
Nick Tate,
Prentis Hancock,
Zienia Merton.
|
|
Conventions by Year and Date |
Intro |
Partial list of
conventions
primary focused on Space: 1999, by year.
May include upcoming (i.e. planned) conventions.
|
| Table |
| Yr | Bgn | End | Name | Where | Comments |
| 1978 | 07/28 | 07/30 | SpaceCon I | U.S.A. |
| 1979 | 07/27 | 07/29 | SpaceCon II | U.S.A. |
| 1980 | 07/25 | 07/27 | SpaceCon III | U.S.A. |
| 1981 | 08/07 | 08/09 | SpaceCon IV | U.S.A. |
| 1982 | 07/30 | 08/01 | SpaceCon V | U.S.A. |
| 1983 | 07/15 | 07/17 | SpaceCon VI | U.S.A. |
| 1985 | 07/19 | 07/21 | SpaceCon VII | U.S.A. |
| 1986 | 07/18 | 07/20 | SpaceCon VIII | U.S.A. |
| 1987 | 07/17 | 07/19 | SpaceCon IX | U.S.A. | (a Relaxacon) |
| 09/13 | 09/13 | Space: 1999 Minicon | U.K. |
| 1989 | 08/11 | 08/13 | SpaceCon X | U.S.A. | ("Barry-Fest") |
| 1990 | 11/03 | 11/04 | Alphacon | U.K. |
| 1992 | 07/17 | 07/19 | SpaceCon XI | U.S.A. |
| 10/23 | 10/25 | Psycon | U.K. |
| 1995 | 07/22 | 07/23 | Command Conference '95 | U.S.A. |
| 1997 | 09/13 | 09/14 | SpaceCon XII | U.S.A. |
| 1999 | 09/10 | 09/13 | Breakaway: The Convention | U.S.A. | SpaceCon XIII |
| 09/25 | 09/26 | Spazio 1999: il Giorno... | Italy | ... del Distacco |
| 2000 | 09/01 | 09/03 | Main Mission: 2000 | U.S.A. |
| 2001 | 06/16 | 06/17 | Moonbound II | Italy |
| 07/27 | 07/29 | Breakaway: 2001 | U.S.A. |
| 2002? | ???? | SpaceCon XIV (?) | U.S.A. | (canceled?) |
| 2003 | 07/19 | 07/20 | SpaceCon XV | U.S.A. |
| 2005 | 07/22 | 07/24 | Earthbound: 2005 | U.S.A. | 30th Anniv. |
| 09/04 | 09/04 | Destination Moonbase Alpha | U.K. |
| 2008 | 07/18 | 07/20 | Another Con, Another Place | Canada |
| 2010 | 07/16 | 07/18 | Journey to Where Con | U.S.A. | 35th Anniv. |
|
| Statements |
The Editor believes he read once that SpaceCon I was the
first S19 convention in the world.
|
|
Calendar Years |
Intro |
Events, real or fictional,
related to the series.
Any decade which has a year represented will have its own row.
Decades without a year entry will be represented by a single dot.
The dots will give an idea of the timescales in between entries.
Whole centuries without year entries will be grouped as ten dots.
|
| Table |
|
|
| Capt. |
See Captain |
|
| Captain |
a.k.a. |
Capt.
|
| Intro |
A List of individuals who had the title of Captain in the series,
or could perhaps be considered such even if not so-named.
|
| List |
Capt. Alan Carter, chief Eagle pilot
Capt. Zantor, a
Kaldorian (humanoid alien), in
"Earthbound"
Capt. Tony Cellini,
commander of the Ultra Probe.
Perhaps John Koenig in 1996 and 1997? (in
"Dragon's Domain")
Capt. Duro, of the Menon (a Betanon Scout Cruiser)
Sahala(?):
Perhaps in charge of the Croton ship,
but that title is not used.
|
|
| Captain Carter |
See Alan Carter |
|
Card Games |
Intro |
Instances of playing card games, as a
recreational and/or social activity, on
Moonbase Alpha.
|
| Examples |
Poker (as identified in a Catacombs transcript):
Smitty and others are playing in the final hour(s) approaching the
"Black Sun".
The same transcript identifies the location as Smitty's quarters.
Three-dimensional solitaire: something
Maya is introducing (in
"Beta Cloud") to
Tony while he is in traction,
recovering from broken bones in Medical Center.
It is not known if this is an variant she invented on Alpha
or was pre-existing.
|
|
| Carter |
See Alan Carter |
|
Cast and Characters (Regular and Semi-Regular) |
Intro |
A Table of the regular and semi-regular cast of
Space: 1999.
|
| Details |
Regulars are those who appeared in more than one half of
at least one season's episodes in a reasonably prominent role.
The first four listed were credited directly in the opening
theme sequence of one or both seasons.
Semi-regulars are those who appeared in at least a
few episodes of at least one season,
in at least a mildly-prominent role.
Other characters appeared in many episodes but in
background or extremely brief roles (e.g. guards)
are not listed in this entry.
The boundary points are admittedly somewhat arbitrary.
The 'Episodes' column of the Table (and *Notes as well)
does not count "flashback footage" (from prior episodes)
as an actual appearance,
Blank cell in 'Episodes' column means verifiably no appearance
in that Year;
just a question '?' mark means the Editor is not sure
whether there were any appearances.
|
| Table |
|
| * Notes |
Alan did not appear in the following (at least):
"Brian the Brain",
"Devil's Planet" (except by flashback?)
John did not appear in the following (at least):
"Dorzak".
Tony did not appear in the following (at least):
"The AB Chrysalis" (reverify?),
"Devil's Planet" (reverify).
Maya did not appear in the following:
"Devil's Planet" (except by flashback).
Sandra also appeared in the following:
"Message from Moonbase Alpha"
|
| Misc |
Catherine Schell did appear as a guest character in a single
Y1 episode,
but as a different character than
Maya,
namely the
Servant of the Guardian of Piri.
This appearance does not count in this entry.
|
| See Also |
Cast by Episode
|
|
Cast by Episode |
Intro |
Cast by appearance within each
episode.
|
| Warnings |
This entry is still under initial development,
and still contains many question marks,
even for Table cells where the reader
might not have any question at all,
as it turned out to be simpler for the Editor
to initially clarify the entries for secondary/tertiary cast
than many of the primaries.
|
| Details |
Character abbreviations are listed in the 2-letter column in the
Cast entry.
Some abbreviations may be to direct entries about that character.
In the main part of the chart,
blank is no appearance, ? is unknown,
+ is marking presence without quantifying,
while the numbers 1-4 refer to how prominent a role,
from minor to major
(the number is an admittedly subjective judgment, and at the moment,
could be initial snap judgments that may be modified over time).
At this point, there are still a lot of question marks,
until the Editor can think about or check the combination
(there are hundreds!).
## blocks each bind two episodes filmed more or less concurrently,
where some main characters may have appeared predominately in
one of the pair and little or not at all in the other of the pair.
Flashbacks of clips of prior episodes (e.g. those in
"Devil's Planet") do not count;
flashbacks which add something new of the past (e.g. those in
"Dragon's Domain") do count.
A reference to a character not seen or heard
(e.g. to Paul in "Infernal Machine" or to Tony in
"AB Chrysalis") will not be counted.
|
| Table |
|
| Notes |
Maya in "Space Warp": spent a lot of time in alter forms,
but as it was her character, counted as a 4.
Sandra was the only character to appear in
MFMBA (many others appeared in flashback,
but are not counted, per Details).
|
| See Also |
Episode List (Full Form)
Episode Capsules
|
|
Catacombs of the Moon |
a.k.a. |
COTM
|
| Definition |
The 12th
episode of Y2;
and 36th episode overall.
Written by
Anthony Terpiloff and
directed by Robert Lynn.
|
| Summary |
Michelle Osgood
is dying of a heart ailment and needs an
artificial heart transplant,
but that requires some tiranium metal for it to work properly.
Her husband,
Patrick Osgood is the
chief engineer in charge of the search in The Catacombs underneath
Alpha.
He, however, has been seeing visions of fire,
which he interprets as Alpha's destruction.
Stressed on multiple fronts, he reacts poorly,
lashing out at friends and others, getting himself injured,
donning an explosives vest to get a weak Michelle out of
Medical Center to "safety" in The Catacombs,
where they are tracked down.
Finally,
Helena persuades a reluctant
Tony
to release a little of Alpha's critical store of tiranium,
an artificial heart ends up finally working,
and she has life-saving surgery.
|
| Details |
1196
DAB close to the beginning of the episode.
Michelle Osgood is dying, and needChief engineer in charge of the search for tiranium
(scarce metal needed for medical and life support)
is Patrick Osgood, husband of the dying woman.
Tony is in
temporary command for much of the episode as
John is checking out space ahead of
Alpha.
Sandra is
on watch at least once in this episode.
Maya is seen little in this episode.
Dressed in some light casual clothing,
she happens across Tony and Pat fighting,
the latter trying to use a stun gun on the former.
She transforms into a dog and bites Pat;
he gets away, bloodied, later collapsing in the Solarium(?).
Later, she is called on by Tony to track the Osgoods in
the Catacombs, shows up in a jumpsuit,
and transforms into a tiger.
As the heat climbs, most Alphans end up in lighter clothing,
in some cases very light.
This includes most or all of the
officers seen.
Alan is not seen in this episode.
|
| Comments |
There is a firestorm of sorts, partially verifying Patrick's visions,
but only to a point. He saw (or interpreted) much worse results
than actually occurred, though there was nonetheless
damage to Alpha.
However, his exaggerated responses frequently put others in danger,
including his best(?) friend and especially his wife
(creating more stress in her, prompting her into more
physical activity while she was weak,
and exposing her to further dangers in The Catacombs).
After this episode, how much responsibility might he
be granted in the future?
|
|
Catherine Schell |
a.k.a. |
Catherina Schell von Bauschlott
Catherina von Schell
CS
|
| Who |
An actress who played two separate characters,
one in each season.
|
| Roles |
Servant of the Guardian of Piri in
an episode of
Year One of
Space: 1999.
Maya,
an alien welcomed as member of
Alpha in
Year Two of
Space: 1999.
One of her best known roles.
|
| Biography |
Catherine Schell was born Catherina Schell von Bauschlott,
to a baron(?) in Hungary,
before her family escaped the Communist takeover,
and renounced their titles (on emigrating to the U.S.),
when she was only a few years old.
She grew up in the
United States and later Munich,
then went into acting, primarily in British productions,
but also other (mostly European) productions.
Met William Marlow^, an actor "Amsterdam Affair" (1968 movie),
and they later married (and divorced).
She was initially known as Catherina von Schell,
before changing it to Catherine Schell.
She is probably best known for roles as
Maya in Space: 1999, and as
Lady Litton in "Return of the Pink Panther."
After three decades in the movies and television,
she (mostly) retired from acting to write and to run a
bed and breakfast in the French countryside,
with her second husband (he died in 2006 or so).
|
| News! |
2010/02/03: Announcement from
Journey to Where con's organizers that she
is scheduled to appear as a
Guest of Honor at that
convention.
|
| Notes |
Attended her first science fiction convention,
as a Guest of Honor, at
Main Mission: 2000,
in New York City.
Confirmed a booking
to make a guest appearance at this show in Birmingham (UK),
apparently on 24/25 November 2007:
Memorabilia,
but withdrew a few weeks before.
Catherine Schell Website (see Links) indicates
"Catherine will be appearing at Memorabilia 29th and 30th March"
apparently in 2009. The Editor could not confirm this at the
Memorabilia website
as of 2008/12/19).
Had an official fan club
(Catherine Schell Career Shots?) starting in the mid-1980's
(based in Germany but English-language),
which for a number of years published a
periodical fanzine called
Catherine Schell Career Shots.
Later, in the 1990's, the club was renamed
Catherine Schell Information Service (CSIS),
providing means of obtaining photos or autographs,
and sometimes recordings of interviews carried out by the club's
organizer (Jovan Evermann).
The CSIS moved part of its presence to the web on 2005/02/28.
Please see the first of the Links below, for more detail
on this whole point.
|
| See Also |
Catherine Schell Roles in General
Multiple Roles
Cast
|
| Links |
Catherine Schell Career Shots
Catherine Schell Website
(indicates it is official?).
Information about a B&B(?) she runs (page from ~2000±2)
|
|
Catherine Schell Roles in General |
Intro |
Some of the better-known acting roles of
Catherine Schell in general.
Her two
S19 roles
are highlighted in yellow in the Table.
Her two generally best-known characters
are highlighted in orange.
In the case of TV Series, Year is of the initial release
of the episode(s) she was in.
|
| Table |
| Year | "Movie" (if 2-column; or...) | Character |
| TV Series | Seasons / Episodes |
| 1964 | "Lana: Queen of the Amazons" | Lana | * |
| 1968 | "Amsterdam Affair" | Sophie Ray | * |
| 1969 | "Moon Zero Two" | Clementine Taplin | * |
| 1969 | "On Her Majesty's Secret Service" | Nancy | * |
| 1972 | "Madame Sin" | Barbara | * |
| 1972 | The Adventurer | whole series? | Diane | * |
| 1974 | "The Black Windmill" | Lady Julyan |
| 1975 | Space: 1999 | "Guardian of Piri" | The Servant |
| 1975 | "Return of the Pink Panther" | Lady Litton (Claudine) |
| 1976 | Space: 1999 | second season | Maya |
| 1978 | Return of the Saint | "Imprudent Professor" | Samantha |
| 1979 | "The Prisoner of Zenda" | Antoinette | * |
| 1979 | Doctor Who (DW) | "City of Death" | Countess Scarlioni | * |
| 1980 | The Spoils of War | 8 episodes | Paula Brandt |
| 1983 | "On the Third Day" | Clarissa Hammond |
| 1987 | "On the Black Hill" | Lotte Zons |
| 1988 | "The Border" (a.k.a. "Escape" in U.S.) | Melena Lotskova |
| 1990 | Wish Me Luck | third season (8 eps) | Virginia Mitchell | * |
| 1991 | Lovejoy | "Raise the Hispanic" | Frances Beauchamp |
| 1994 | The Wimbledon Poisoner (TV miniseries) | Mrs. Gunther |
|
| * Notes |
"Lana...": First movie. According to interview(s), found this to be an unpleasant experience, and nearly quit acting.
"Amsterdam...": with William Marlowe, who later became her first husband.
"OHMSS": Briefly a 'Bond Girl' in a movie that some argue is the best of the series.
"Madame Sin": starring Bette Davis, Robert Wagner.
The Adventurer: with Gene Barry, Barry Morse -- the latter also in S19.
"... Zenda": her second role in a movie with Peter Sellers ("Return of the Pink Panther" being the other).
DW "City of Death": Most popular episode of the series?
Wish...: This series had 7-8 episodes (each an hour long) per season.
|
| Links |
Internet Movie Database (IMDB) page
|
|
| CC |
Meanings |
Charles Crichton
"Collision Course" (episode)
Command Center
|
|
| Century 21 |
a.k.a. |
C21
|
| Definition |
Magazine
which had focus on Gerry Anderson series.
|
| Timeframe |
1990-1993 |
| Statements |
One issue had "Space 1999 The Merchandise"
Produced by Engale Marketing
|
| See Also |
Merchandise
|
|
Character Studies |
Disclosure |
The author of the fiction described in this entry
is the same person as the Editor of this Knowledgebase.
|
| Statements |
The Summary was written by the original initiator of this idea,
namely Marcy Kulic, who also did the original editing and
provided vidcaps and other images.
|
| Definition |
A series of short
fan fiction
speculative backstories on the List of alien characters.
|
| Summary |
There were many interesting characters on Space: 1999.
The staff of Moonbase Alpha was composed of people
from all backgrounds, countries and experience.
We came to know these characters better through their
continuing story as the Moon wandered through space.
However, some of the most complex and fascinating characters
were those that we met only briefly,
that the Alphans encountered and then left behind in their journey.
Presented here are character studies of
four of the aliens the Alphans met.
These particular characters were chosen because
they are not the typical hostile, arrogant aliens
often encountered in sci-fi, but are instead
complicated beings with their own interesting stories.
|
| List |
Zantor: "Zantor of Kaldor — Involuntary Reduction"
Arra: "Arra of Astheria — The Great Purpose of Mutation"
Mentor: "Mentor of a Doomed World ...and His Insane Psyche"
'Immunity Syndrome' Being — "I Am I"
|
| Links |
here at Metaforms
within Space: 1999 Cyber Exposition II (archived at Cyber Museum)
|
|
| Charles Crichton |
See Episodes Directed by Charles Crichton |
| Charles Woodgrove |
See Fred Freiberger |
|
Chemical Elements |
Intro |
A number of the fundamental chemical elements
are mentioned in various contexts.
The list is in order of atomic number
(listed in parentheses).
|
| List |
(01) Hydrogen?
(06) Carbon?
(07) Nitrogen?
(08) Oxygen
(17) Chlorine
(22) Titanium: "The Metamorph" at least
(74) Tungsten: "AB Chrysalis" (as part of an alloy Maya speculates is present...)
(78) Platinum: "AB Chrysalis" (ditto, ...on a moon of the chlorine planet)
|
|
| Chief Commissioner Theia |
See Theia |
|
Chief Engineer |
What |
A title held by several
Alphans,
each apparently chief of a different
engineering discipline
(either that or there was a lot of turnover).
|
| Who |
Patrick Osgood (in
COTM):
apparently in charge of the search for tiranium in the Alphan mines.
Perhaps chief engineer of mining operations?
He does have explosives experience as well.
The Catacombs indicates the following:
"'chief engineer of life support' Osgood."
However, the editor of this KB is not clear
where this the inner quotation comes from,
as the dialog does not seem to imply this directly
so much as being in charge of the search for tiranium.
Pete Garforth (in "The Lambda Factor"):
Maintains Eagle components, and is an Eagle test pilot as well.
Has worked with Eagles for a long time.
He is called to the Maintenance department.
Knows metals and atomic motors.
Speculation: Chief Eagle Maintenance Engineer perhaps?
|
|
Child(ren) on Alpha |
Statements |
The only
verifiable child born on
Alpha was Sue Crawford's son,
called Jackie by the Alphans who "adopted" him
after Sue rejected him due to his abnormal growth,
induced, without the Alphans' knowledge,
by an alien presense inside him.
He was later restored to the form of a newborn.
However, several
Population
numbers in both Y1 and Y2 suggest more children were born.
See the See Also items for some episodes
where the numbers suggest this,
and one of several numerical scenarios as well.
|
| Notes |
An alien child,
Etrec,
was on Alpha for a short time (in
"The Mark of Archanon"),
along with his father,
Pasc.
For a few seconds (in
"Seance Spectre"), Maya was
transformed into a Psychon child,
perhaps herself at a young age.
This was not on Alpha, but elsewhere on the
Moon, at
Area B7(?), inside an Eagle.
|
| See Also |
Population at Arkadia
Population at Psychon
Population at Entra
Population Statistical Speculation Scenario 1a
|
|
| Chlorine |
a.k.a. |
Cl (though not shown as such in the series, to the best of the Editor's knowledge)
|
| Intro |
Chemical element (#17)
mentioned at least twice in the series,
obviously as chlorine gas (Cl2),
which is deadly poison to most life.
|
| Episodes |
"AB Chrysalis": Unnamed planet encountered
has significant chlorine in its atmosphere,
and its native people breathe it.
Rash action by Alan strands him in a room full of chlorine.
Maya transforms into a chlorine-breathing
creature from Kreno
to rescue him.
"Beta Cloud":
Maya suggests to
Tony that they fill the
Hydroponic Experimental Section
with chlorine, and Tony lures the invader in there remotely,
in what turns out to be a futile effort to kill it
(the Alphans later discover it is robotic).
|
|
| Clea |
See Croton Crew |
|
Clive Kander |
Who |
Records technician (Technical section).
Used a very compact video camera which records
onto small memory squares.
Clive was intentionally driven mad by the aliens
in the episode, filled the records lab with oxygen,
and a spark ignited the oxygen and burned him.
Pronounced dead at the scene
(from burns and/or inhalation, presumably).
Actor: Nick Hobbs.
|
| Episodes |
"The Bringers of Wonder (part 1)"
|
| Commentary |
Huh, do the video record cards he used remind anyone else of some
types of memory cards which became popular in the 2000's?
|
|
Collision Course |
a.k.a. |
CC
|
| Definition |
The 13th episode,
in production order, of
Y1.
Written by
Anthony Terpiloff.
Directed by
Ray Austin.
|
| Summary |
The
Alphans
blow up an asteroid on a collision course with
the Moon,
only to discover a large planet is following behind,
also on a collision course.
trying to use more
nuclear charges between planet and
Moon in an attempt to alter course.
Yet the planet shows some signs of potential inhabitability,
to which they could evacuate to the far side from the Moon's
collision point and hope the planet can survive the hit.
Koenig decides to take an exploratory mission,
but a large alien ship appears and captures his.
He meets
Arra, Queen of Atheria,
who has been "waiting a long time to meet" him,
and whose people have been expecting the Alphans for
"many millions of years."
She prophesies a grand destiny for the Alphans,
and "mutation" of her race to another form.
For this to happen, Koenig must allow
the Moon to collide with
Atheria.
Though with a little reservation, he accepts this;
but he -- and an Alan whose mind was previously touched by Arra's --
are considered under the influence of radiation sickness,
and confined.
|
| Details |
Action takes place over approximately five days:
Collision with Atheria is quoted at 105 hours,
and this is at least a few hours after the
episode starts.
The course alteration attempt is labeled
Operation Shockwave.
The existing
Operation Exodus is considered --
though that name is not mentioned.
Planet is perhaps inhabitable,
but somewhat on the cool side,
at +10 to -30C as a typical range.
|
| Quotes |
Victor, regarding planetary collision course: "Well... I've been thinking."
John, in response: "It's the best news I've had today."
Arra, regarding the Alphans:
"You shall continue....
Your odyssey shall know no end.
You will prosper and increase in new worlds, new galaxies.
You will populate the deepest reaches of space."
|
| Biblio |
At least some quotes are adapted from an episode transcript at
The Catacombs.
|
| Threads |
Feb. 1998: Episode by Episode discussion.
|
| Links |
Episode Guide at The Catacombs.
|
|
| Cmdr. |
See Commander |
|
| ComLoC |
Definition |
A periodical fanzine,
by Piri Press Publishers (Chuck Raue),
which ran for at least a few issues starting
in December 1976 and running through at least July 1979.
|
| Statements |
The spelling of this fanzine as listed here is as it officially was.
All information here is based solely on the issues (seen by the
editor of this KB), which are listed in the Table below.
Contents list is not all-inclusive,
but sections which appeared frequently are listed.
Editor will go back to look up dates of
issues #2 and #3 at a later point.
|
| Details |
Front cover has artwork or occasional photo montage/collage.
Occasional full-page artwork inside as well.
Both of the above are listed in the Table or Notes below.
Back cover occasionally has, in part of it,
image of Moon and/or Eagle and/or other spacecraft.
These images are not listed in this entry.
Occasional random cartoons or such as well. Also not listed here.
All artwork is black and white.
|
| Contents |
Letters: usually or always about 50% or more of the content.
Emporium: buy/sell lists,
fanzine information,
other publications, modelwork, etc.
Reviews: of at least fanzines.
Ramblings [or various other titles too]: ComLoC editor's section.
Once Upon an Almost Classic: dedicated to fanzine information.
Appeared later? Split from Reviews or renamed?
1999-Con Update: some issues
|
| Table |
| # | Date | Cover Art | Inside Art |
| 1 | 1976/12 | Victor | |
| 2 | ????/?? | Maya | |
| 3 | ????/?? | Alan collage | |
| 4 | 1977/10 | collage of stills | | * |
| 5 | 1978/03 | Maya / C.Schell | | * |
| 6 | 1978/05 | Mentor | |
| 7 | 1978/06 | Helena | Maya |
| 8 | 1979/07 | John and Helena | Cantar | * |
|
| * Notes |
4) Cover stills are: Moonbase Alpha;
Helena, John(?) in spacesuit, profile of three Eagles and Moon;
Tony, Maya, Alan, two spacesuited figures;
Eagle on pad, Raan, Helena in OMOH dress.
5) Artistic interpretation of Catherine Schell and Maya with Moon in background.
8) John sitting on command chair, Helena with elbows resting on it.
Inside has collage of Cantar going through his aging.
|
|
| Comlock |
See Commlock |
| Comm. |
See Commissioner |
|
Command Center |
a.k.a. |
CC
|
| Definition |
Primary command location starting
in Y2.
Significantly smaller than Main Mission,
and evidently located at a deeper level within the base.
|
|
"Command Conference" |
Meanings |
A command/officer level
meeting.
of the commander with some or all of his
officers.
The name of an S19 convention in 1995,
which took place in Norwalk, part of the Los Angeles metro
area of California, United States.
|
|
Command Conference |
Definition |
A meeting of the commander with some or all of his
officers,
usually (always?) in the commander's office in
Y1.
|
| Examples |
MOLAD:
Discuss the initial findings on:
Lee Russell
(or more accurately, whether or not it is him),
Terra Nova, and potential
Operation Exodus.
Attended by
John Koenig,
Paul Morrow,
Alan Carter,
David Kano,
Sandra Benes, and
Victor Bergman; but not by
Helena Russell (presumably due
to her watching the medical state of the unconcious Lee,
the two pilots, and perhaps a conflict of interest?).
"Earthbound":
John Koenig,
Paul Morrow,
Alan Carter,
Helena Russell,
Commissioner Simmonds.
It is just wrapping up when the scene starts,
until Simmonds objects, saying how he is "shocked"
they are not trying hard enough to return to
Earth.
John: "Our priorities are survival, and
the search for an alternative place to live."
"Guardian of Piri":
An initial one features an argument between
David Kano and
Alan Carter over how much to trust Computer.
GOP (again):
A later, off-kilter one, during the time of
the Guardian's clear influence over the Alphans,
is attended by at least
Paul,
Helena,
(Kano?,)
Sandra,
Victor, and a
Security Section representative --
but not initially by John,
who stumbles upon it later.
"War Games":
the severity of the damage (later
reset)
is laid out by the
officers.
"Troubled Spirit":
John, Alan, David, Helena, Paul, Victor, Sandra --
after the death of Dr. James Warren.
|
| Speculation |
Though no formal conferences took place "on screen" in
Y2 it is possible some took place
"off screen" in some nearby room,
even while some discussions usually done in
Command Conferences in
Y1 simply took place in
Command Center in Y2.
|
|
Command of Alpha |
Intro |
Individuals in command
(permanent, temporary, or attempted) of
Alpha at various times.
|
| List |
Actual
Commanders of Alpha, of which
John Koenig is the ninth.
Subordinates who were in
temporary command
while the Commander was on a mission or incapacitated.
Carolyn Powell attempted a lone take-over
("The Lambda Factor"),
even taking the command chair in
Command Center,
but lost a battle of wills against Koenig.
|
|
| Commander |
a.k.a. |
Cmdr.
|
| Intro |
A List of known individuals who had the title
of Commander in the series, of
Moonbase or of Other things.
Regarding Moonbase Alpha, there were seven prior commanders,
but their names are not known.
|
| Moonbase |
Cmdr. Gorski,
the eighth commander of
Moonbase Alpha
before being suspended (by whom?) and replaced by John Koenig.
Cmdr. John Koenig, the ninth
commander of Moonbase Alpha,
starting September 9, 1999.
Is on-base when the
Moon is
blasted into interstellar space.
|
| Other |
Dione?
Not called Cmdr. Dione,
but is referred to as commander of the
Satazius.
Pasc, of an
Archanon that reached the Moon but unraveled,
with fatal results, when he fell ill with Killing Sickness virus,
and was subdued and left in a stasis chamber.
Lyra, Pasc's wife,
after she is forced to replace him
and leave him -- and their son
Etrec -- on the Moon
due to the illness.
|
| See Also |
Command of Alpha
|
|
| Commissioner |
a.k.a. |
Comm.
|
| What |
A title used for certain characters in the series.
Some were Terran human, some
Aliens.
|
| See Also |
Commissioners (Human)
Commissioners (Alien)
|
|
Commissioners (Alien) |
Intro |
Alien characters with the title
Commissioner.
|
| Examples |
Commissioner Theia of
Betha.
The title was technically Chief Commissioner,
but Koenig referred to her as Comm. Theia.
This role was of oversight of defense forces,
but (uncertain:) she herself may have been considered civilian.
|
| See Also |
Commissioners (Human)
|
|
Commissioners (Human) |
Intro |
Commissioner is the
title for a type of civilian authority on
Earth,
more specifically (in the series) the
lead of Earth's space program.
|
| Examples |
Commissioner Dixon: pre-Breakaway
(as shown in DD).
Commissioner Simmonds
|
| See Also |
Commissioners (Alien)
|
|
Commissioner Simmonds |
a.k.a. |
Comm. Simmonds
Gerald Simmonds?
(The Editor was told at one point Gerald was his first name,
according to some source. Speculation: a writer's guide?
The Editor has not yet been able to confirm such for this
knowledgebase.)
|
| Who |
Representative of
Earth authority
(i.e. the ILC?) on the Moon.
In charge by September 9, 1999.
Heads to
Moonbase Alpha after
Cmdr. Koenig issues
"Emergency Condition Alpha One" (?),
and is on-base when the Moon
breaks from
Earth orbit.
He later extorts(?) his way onto an alien (Kaldorian)
spaceship on its way to Earth,
but was not properly scanned into a matrix
maintained by the ship's computer,
and did not go into proper
suspended animation.
He woke back up, trapped in a chamber at the beginning
of a 75-year final journey.
He presumably died some days into it.
|
| Details |
Was covering up the severity of astronaut deaths on
MBA,
even to the new commander,
in an attempt to get the
Meta mission launched.
Though he retains his title after
Breakaway,
it has no real meaning or authority at that point;
but he was still included in some high-level interaction
(see next point).
Attends command conferences
in at least the following:
"Earthbound".
Apparently collects butterfly specimens
(see in the background in one communication with
John in
"Breakaway",
at about 14:30-16:30 in an uncut version).
|
| Notes |
Simmonds is counted as a verifiable loss
not for his presumed death but from his dereliction from
Alpha.
|
| Episodes |
"Breakaway"
"Earthbound"
|
| Threads |
Commissioner Simmonds
|
| See Also |
Commissioner
Cast
|
|
| "Commlock" |
Meanings |
A personal communications device
Name of a periodical fanzine.
|
|
| Commlock |
a.k.a. |
Comlock
|
| Definition |
A personal, hand-held communication device which each member of
Moonbase Alpha has.
Used on Alpha and missions.
One major piece of
Alphan technology.
It has various Parts.
|
| Parts |
Compact video screen
Keypad
Picture ID of owner
Camera
Antenna
|
| Details |
Seen being put in what appears to be a charger,
which cradles the lower half but still allows
a video image to appear.
A number of them were
lost or destroyed
over the course of the series.
Commlocks were among the Alphan devices subject to
jamming by aliens.
|
|
Commlocks Lost or Destroyed |
Intro |
Incomplete, partially speculative lists,
most still needing verification, of
commlocks that are Destroyed
on Alpha or on missions, or Lost from Alpha,
for whatever reason.
The ones Lost may have been taken or later recovered by non-Alphans.
|
| Lost |
"Earthbound":
Koenig's commlock, stolen by
Simmonds and removed from the base.
It is the means by which Simmonds discovers he is still near the Moon,
that he is not going to be in suspended animation for
the seventy-year journey to Earth.
TOA (?): Luke and Anna's commlocks?
"The Exiles"(?): (highly uncertain:) Zova and Cantar given commlocks?
If Cantar had one, perhaps taken back by Tony or Helena?
"Journey to Where"(?)
"Rules of Luton": (unverified)
Koenig loses his commlock?
"Devil's Planet": the two carried by Koenig and Blake Maine
(or was the latter destroyed?).
"The Dorcons"(?): (unverified:)
Did the Dorcons confiscate the commlocks of Maya and John?
|
| Destroyed |
"Force of Life" (?): Zoref's?
"Voyager's Return" (?): Ernst Linden's?
"Mission of the Darians" (?): Bill Lowry's?
"Dragon's Domain" (?):
Tony Cellini's?
"The Metamorph": (all unverified)
Picard's for sure, when he was vaporized.
(The rest allowed to keep theirs, but jammed?)
"Seed of Destruction" (?):
Koenig's taken by fake and destroyed with the fake Koenig?
"Immunity Syndrome":
Tony, driven mad by contact with the being
on the planet several teams are exploring, crushes his commlock.
It is later found as part of a "trail" leading to Tony.
Commlock presumably beyond repair.
Editor is not sure if the other Alphans kept it
(evidence/salvage value?), however.
|
|
Commlock (fanzine) |
Intro |
Periodical fanzine, subtitled
"Journal of Alpha League, the international Space: 1999 fan club"
|
| Timeframe |
Was on volume 2 in Autumn 1991.
|
|
Communication Interference |
Intro |
Aliens often interfered with
(or hacked into) Alpha communications systems,
for good or ill intent.
This does not count communications established
in the normal way, via hails from one side or the other.
|
| List |
Space Brain: not really; more an attempt to communicate.
Mentor:
though he does hail via Big Screen,
he also shows up on a lot of monitors throughout
the base (which does not seem normal to the Editor),
and prevents communications with Eagles not long after
they are captured.
|
|
| Connor |
See Episode Directors |
|
| Conway |
See Joan Conway |
|
| Cosmoconnection |
a.k.a. |
COSMOCONNECTION Magazine
Cosmo (occasional self-reference within the zine)
|
| Summary |
Periodical fanzine
apparently focussed primarily on
S19,
as well as other science fiction and science.
Published "irregularly" in Ann Arbor, Michigan.
|
| Details |
It was apparently published in the 1976-1979 timeframe,
and there were at least five issues.
Edited by Mona Delitsky.
There are claims this was the first S19 zine (before
ComLoC?).
|
| List |
Issue #4
(Fall/Winter 1978).
|
|
Cosmoconnection Four |
Definition |
Issue #4 of a
periodical fanzine named
Cosmoconnection.
Published for Fall/Winter
1978.
|
| Contents |
Cover artwork of S19's Voyager 1 and NASA's Voyager 1
Editor's note
Article on The Prisoner
Article on Carl Sagan (to whom this issue was dedicated)
S19 parody
Various S19 and non-S19 art
Article on Battlestar Galactica and other TV
SpaceCon I (first
convention) report
Star Wars review
John and Helena poem(?) and art
|
|
| COTM |
See Catacombs of the Moon |
|
| Countries |
Intro |
Some
Earth countries are stated by name,
shown, stated as a character's origin,
implied as a character's origin,
or otherwise indicated in some source or another.
List ongoing.
|
| List |
Australia
England
France: the southern part suffers a major
earthquake after the moon
breaks from orbit.
Ireland: home country of
Dave Reilly.
Italy: home country of
Tony Verdeschi and apparently
a number of other Alphans as well.
United States
Yugoslavia: suffers a major
earthquake after the moon
breaks from orbit.
|
|
| Couples |
Intro |
Several couples are listed below.
This can include any sign of two perhaps being in a relationship,
either Pre- or Post-Breakaway (BA).
Any relationship, however brief, may be Listed here.
Attempts by Magus
(and others?) to force individuals
into couples are not listed in this entry, however.
Though there are three separate lists below,
the names all procede (very) roughly in order of formation,
but for convenience are split into three lists:
Y0 (pre-Breakaway),
Y1, and
Y2 --
though the lines in some cases really are not that clear
(did some relationships seen in Y1 start before Breakaway,
or seen in Y2 start in Y1 or before?).
|
| Y0 |
John Koenig and
Diana Morris: "childhood sweethearts"
(met at M.I.T.?); but he now refers to her as "that barracuda."
John and Jean: married.
She died in the 1987 war.
Lee and
Helena Russell: married, he went MIA,
was found (or a "reflection" of him),
then lost again, permanently.
Alan Carter and
Jeanie: dating before Breakaway.
Ben Vincent and Louisa(?): engaged,
but forced apart due to Breakaway.
Peter Rockwell and
Sandra Benes: engaged,
but forced apart due to Breakaway.
|
| Y1 |
Mike Ryan and
Sandra Benes:
Appears to be the start of a relationship between them (in
"Black Sun"), but he dies.
David Kano and
Angela Robinson?
They hug briefly in
"Black Sun",
but it could just as easily be
a platonic gesture between good friends.
Kelly and Melita: married.
Anton and Eva Zoref: married.
Paul Morrow and Sandra Benes.
Alan Carter and
Tanya Aleksandr:
apparently only briefly
(holding hands and such in "The Last Sunset").
Dan Mateo and Laura Adams: kiss briefly.
Both die within a short time of each other.
("The Troubled Spirit")
John Koenig and Helena Russell.
Luke Ferro and Anna Davis
Bill and Annette Fraser:
married about two months before the
Psychon encounter.
|
| Y2 |
Patrick and Michelle Osgood:
married by the time of
COTM.
Tony Verdeschi and Maya.
Mark Sanders and Sally Martin:
previously dating, apparently engaged,
before Carolyn Powell makes moves on Mark,
and the relationship breaks up.
(One part of a
love triangle;
see next point too).
Mark Sanders and Carolyn Powell:
dating after Carolyn makes moves on Mark (see prior point).
He later suspects Carolyn of Sally's death,
and breaks up with Carolyn. See subsequently murders him.
Eddie Collins and Shermeen Williams?
They seem to have had some background before she develops a crush on
Tony Verdeschi.
After that fails, her words suggest her
interest has returned(?) to Eddie.
(MOB)
Greg Sanderson and
Eva?
Helena believes Eva is in love with Greg,
and Greg and Eva often act together.
|
| See Also |
Married Couples
(a subset of the above who were married at some point).
Love Triangles
|
|
| Crawford |
Intro |
Surname of three related individuals seen or mentioned in
"Alpha Child" (Y1).
|
| List |
Sue Crawford, widowed some months before.
Jack Crawford, her husband,
who died months before the episode began.
Jackie Crawford, their son,
born at the start of the episode.
|
|
| Crichton |
See Episodes Directed by Charles Crichton |
|
| Crom II |
Definition |
A world apparently visited by the Alphans at some point between
Breakaway and 640
DAB.
(The latter date being when
Pasc and
Etrec were
found.)
|
| Statements |
Flammon symbols were located
in places of potential danger,
the symbols placed by some
"god-like race" as a warning.
|
| Speculation |
Two Alphans,
Tony and
Helena
briefly discuss their knowledge of the Flammon
in such a way that makes it seem their knowledge is first-hand,
rather than read in a report written by other Alphans
who went there, or from another source altogether such as
Maya.
If Tony and Helena were indeed on Crom II,
it could have been in Y2 timeframe before 640DAB,
but it could have also been in a Y1 timeframe,
if Tony was already participating in off-Moon missions,
either "unseen" on one of the main Eagles or on an
unseen or unmentioned support Eagle.
|
| Stories |
MOA: reference.
"Dance of the Flammon" -- upcoming
fan fiction story
from the same person as the Editor of this KB.
|
|
Croton Crew |
Intro |
The
Croton ship which
approaches the
Moon initially has a crew
of three (excluding the prisoner
Dorzak),
but various losses whittle this down to one.
The crew members as Listed below.
|
| List |
Sahala:
the captain(?), or at least the only crew member
left in full capacity by the time the ship reaches
Alpha.
Yesta: injured in flight by Clea,
dies on Alpha after post-surgical
psychic attack by Dorzak.
Clea: falls in love with Dorzak, frees him, injures Yesta;
and then, in guilt, throws herself into space.
|
|
Croton Ship |
Definition |
An unnamed
spaceship carrying
Dorzak into exile.
|
| Details |
Has a Photon Drive
Large vertical design.
Approaches the Moon with a
crew of three,
but various losses whittle this down to one.
Its apparent
captain is
Sahala.
|
| Episodes |
"Dorzak"
|
|
| CS |
See Catherine Schell |
|
| CW |
See Fred Freiberger (Charles Woodgrove) |
|
| DAB |
Stands For |
Days After Breakaway |
| a.k.a. |
Days after leaving
Earth's orbit
|
|
Dance of the Flammon |
Disclosure |
The author of the story described in this entry
is the same person as the Editor of this Knowledgebase.
|
| Definition |
Fan fiction
novella from David Welle,
covering events on
Crom II,
a world mentioned in passing in
MOA.
Planned release: 2010Q1.
Status: First draft complete.
|
| Intro |
Just what happened on the planet Crom II,
mentioned so briefly later in the year?
What about a science officer still relatively new on the job,
being challenged on the science board of which she is the chairperson,
when an experiment to try expanding food production has two possible paths?
What happens when a rather typical social activity
finally returns to Alpha for the first time since Breakaway?
Does it bring some people closer together or reveal hidden fault lines?
|
| Timeframe |
440-453
DAB in
Y2.
Between
"Whose Orders?" (which follows soon after
"The Exiles" episode)
and precedes (fairly far before) the
OMOH episode.
|
|
Dark Threads Universe |
a.k.a. |
DT
|
| Definition |
A fan fiction series by
MGK and ECL.
|
| Desc. |
Parallel universe story arc where the
Alphans
have settled on a hospitable planet.
Familiar characters are found in unexpected relationships,
and a small native species winds its way into Alphan life.
|
| Intro Story |
Dark Threads |
| Biblio |
The Desc(ription) and Intro(ductory) Story parts were provided by MGK,
and edited very slightly to fit the flow of this KB.
|
| Links |
At Ellen's Fan Fiction Pages,
click on Needleworks Universe, then find the
reference to Dark Threads near the bottom.
|
|
Dave Reilly |
Summary |
An Alphan geologist, apparently from Ireland,
but with a fascination with the state of
Texas (in America).
Light-hearted and witty,
yet can turn serious very quickly.
|
| Details |
Dubbed the "Irish Cowboy" by Alan or Tony.
Has at least two ex-wives --
or perhaps an ex and one left behind at
Breakaway.
The former sounds more likely, however:
"The rocks understand me.... Me wives never did, but the rocks do."
Makes a pass at Maya,
who looks surprised,
either not understanding the action,
not knowing how to respond to or against it,
or brushing it off in her own way.
A few minutes later, seated as a passenger next to her,
and eyes her during the landing.
Later, when her concern for Tony is clear,
he does express his sympathy about Tony's plight,
directly to her.
|
| Stories |
"All that Glisters": flew with the team to the planet.
|
|
| David Tomblin |
See Episodes Directed by David Tomblin |
|
David Kano |
a.k.a. |
Kano (rarely called by his first name)
DK (initials in reference, not in series)
|
| Who |
Technical Section leader, an
officer,
and Alpha's computer expert in
Y1.
|
| Details |
Replaced Benjamin Ouma? Ouma was only seen in first episode.
In Main Mission, he is often seen at the rotating desk
in the middle of the arrangement of other consoles.
Seems to be an
officer, based on his duties,
leadership abilities, and inclusion in group
meetings with the Commander.
Leader of Technical Section?
Has a mechanical computer interface implant in his skull,
which is used at least once in series (namely
GOP).
At least one source indicates he is from Jamaica,
but that may not be canon.
An Eagle
pilot
(e.g. "The Full Circle").
Given temporary command at least once:
MOTD.
Thrown half-way across
Main Mission in
RATM.
Injured by Luke Ferro who uses a stun gun
as a blunt instrument against Kano's head.
Recovers almost immediately.
TOA
Is completely absent from sight and mention in
Y2, leading to lots of speculation
on his possible fate. (Absence of the character,
along with several others from Y1,
was also controversial.)
|
| See Also |
Cast
|
|
| DD |
See Dragon's Domain |
|
Death's Other Dominion |
a.k.a. |
DOD
|
| Definition |
The 14th
episode of the
first season.
Written by
Anthony Terpiloff and
Elizabeth Barrows.
Directed by
Charles Crichton.
|
| Summary |
The Moon approaches an icy planet
and hears the voices of humans lost 14 years before,
sending a mixed message of warning and welcome to
Ultima Thule.
John,
Victor,
Helena, and
Alan visit the planet,
and discover the Uranus mission astronauts have
been living there 880 years without any signs of aging -- apparent
immortality.
Alphans may have the same opportunity,
but realize there are prices -- including one ultimate price.
|
| Statements |
The inadvertant colony's people are now called
Thuleans.
|
| Links |
Episode Guide at
The Catacombs.
Episode by Episode discussion of this episode.
|
|
| Delta |
Definition |
One of two planets around a single star that
the Moon passed.
|
| Episodes |
"The Last Enemy"
|
| Details |
From the perspective of the
Alphans
as they passed through the alien system,
Delta was on the right-hand side of its sun.
A mostly red-shaded world, with a few black smudges.
The Alphans soon determine it is inhabited,
after the Bethan gunship, now sitting on the Moon,
launches an attack on Delta, and Delta responds.
In a constant and long-standing
state of war with Betha,
which is on the other side of their common star.
The Deltans also send a missile-bearing gunship to the Moon.
It is destroyed by Bethan missiles.
The name of that gunship is unknown,
and none of its crew were seen by Alphans during the attack.
Only one individual, a human-appearing male,
Supreme Commander Talos,
was seen by the Alphans during the
battle.
|
| See Also |
Greek Alphabet
|
|
Derek Wadsworth |
Who |
Composer and conductor of the
Year 2 score.
|
| Details |
Born in 1939.
Died in 2008 (early December?)
|
|
| Derelicts |
Intro |
Different types of objects, particularly ships, known to be left
behind on the Moon for some reason or another.
|
| List |
Alien wrecks
Apollo descent modules and sundry equipment/rovers/flags.
Possible Eagle wreckage,
if not all hulls recovered
for repair or recycling.
|
|
| Desertion |
Intro |
A few
Alphans permanently left
the base by force.
|
| List |
Commissioner Simmonds
forced his way onto a
Kaldorian spaceship that was on its way to
Earth.
This action included threatening
Alpha.
The Kaldorian captain,
Zantor,
who allowed himself to be taken hostage by Simmonds,
decided to allow Simmonds on board,
despite the former calling the latter (verify:) "diseased."
The spaceship launched. However,
given the circumstances,
Simmonds had not been scanned into the ship's (verify:) "matrix"
for suspended animation needed for the 75-year journey to Earth,
and he woke up in what amounted to a prison of his own making,
doomed to die soon of (probably) thirst.
Luke Ferro and Anna Davis:
stole supplies, held
Dr. Russell hostage, stole an
Eagle and moonbuggy;
all to try settling and repopulating planet
Arkadia after both experienced visions there.
They became a colony, fate unknown, of
the Moon. (in
TOA)
|
| Notes |
Desertion could have also included those
disappearing more quietly from base, of their own accord,
without leave -- but no such incidents known.
|
|
| Dione |
Who |
Commander of the gunship
Satazius, from the planet
Betha.
|
| Summary |
She played central roles in a Moon-based
battle between Betha and Delta,
and interacted heavily with the Alphans as
part of the strategy within the battle.
She was killed in battle by the very Alphans she had trapped
in the middle of the battle.
|
| Details |
Commanded by
Theia.
Apparently gained some degree of respect for
the alien Moonbase Commander,
John Koenig,
even caring somewhat about his welfare
while still not wanting him to board her ship.
Very dark, straight hair, to upper shoulders.
Brown eyes.
Fillings in some of her teeth.
Wore a white dress, until she came to Alpha
in a black outfit and helmet reminiscent of
human "biker chicks."
At one point, seen playing what
appears to be a recreational game.
|
| Links |
Catacombs:
image 1,
image 2
|
| See Also |
John and Dione
|
|
Directive Four |
Definition |
A command-level coded signal
directive
to attack the location the order is sent from.
|
| Used |
Cmdr. Koenig to
First Officer Verdeschi to destroy
Psychon,
despite the former and several other Alphans being on Psychon.
Tony sends a
nuclear-packed Eagle, but
Maya and
Mentor detect the subterfuge,
and destroy the Eagle short of Psychon.
The attempt disgusts Maya to the point of confronting Koenig,
allowing him to try -- successfully this time --
to convince her to find out what Mentor has been up to.
|
| Notes |
The signal is apparently arranged solely between the commander
and the first officer,
for none of the following recognize its meaning,
despite being
officers and within earshot:
Alan Carter,
Helena Russell, and
Sandra Benes.
|
|
| Doctor |
Meanings |
Medical Doctor
Presumably a title held by some non-medical members
of this scientific base; i.e. anyone(?) with a PhD.
The Editor is not sure if the title was actually used
for this category, however.
|
|
| DOD |
See Death's Other Dominion |
| Dorca |
See Dorcons |
|
| Dorcons |
Summary |
An alien people
originating from the planet Dorca (VERIFY)
who have created a powerful empire.
They are the enemy the
Psychons
fear the most.
Dorcons appear generally human,
have considerably powerful technology,
and are ruled by the Archon.
|
| Details |
Two of their
Archons died above
Moonbase Alpha while trying to secure a
Psychon named
Maya,
when the attempt was undone by a combination
of Malic's machinations to become the Archon,
and the Moonbase commander's
attempts to rescue his crewmember.
The Dorcon flagship was
destroyed.
|
| Examples |
The Archon who was killed by Malic.
Varda, a Consul, shot by Malic
Malic, who died shortly after
several soldiers/guards
a (female) medical technician
|
| Technology |
Meson Converter, with considerable and varied abilities.
Weapons which can detect Psychons,
even when in another form,
and cause them great pain and
drive them into reverting.
|
| Episodes |
"The Dorcons"
|
|
| The Dorcons |
Definition |
The 24th episode of Y2;
the 48th and final episode
of the original broadcast series.
Written by Johnny Byrne.
Directed by Tom Clegg.
|
| Plot |
An alien probe ship attacks Maya
remotely with an energy beam.
A Meson Converter is detected.
That ship disappears and is replaced
with what Maya now recognizes,
to her terror, as a
Dorcon warship,
which turns out to be the flagship
of the Archon,
the ruler of the Dorcon Empire.
He seeks
"immortality" via a transplant
of a Psychon's hearty brain stem,
which would leave Maya a living husk.
He dispatches Consul Varda to capture her.
The Alphans attempt to defend Maya,
despite her frequent protests of the futility of such action,
and pleas to either let the Dorcons take her,
or for a fellow Alphan to kill her first.
After destruction (including two deaths)
is rained down on Alpha,
the Commander is forced to surrender the base to the Dorcons.
They invade Alpha
and capture and remove Maya.
After the Dorcons also leave,
Koenig jumps into the transport beam,
onto the Dorcon ship, where he is promptly stunned and imprisoned.
Maya is taken away to be prepared for surgery.
However, Malic, the nephew of the Archon, covets the chances
to gain the role of Archon and "immortality"
all at once, and frees John to serve as a distraction,
while Malic himself kills the Archon.
Koenig briefly frees Maya, but they are caught back
in the Dorcon control room.
John implicates Malic in the Archon's death,
and manages to convince Varda of Malic's guilt.
Malic promptly shoots Varda,
but a stray shot from her weapon damages
the Meson Converter,
which allows John and Maya to escape,
and leads to the destruction the Dorcon flagship.
|
| Quotes |
"Resistence is futile" -- a phrase Maya uses to confirm
and echo what Varda stated moments before:
"The Psychon will tell you how futile it is to resist us."
|
|
| "Dorzak" |
Meanings |
Name of an episode of Y2.
A Psychon character portrayed in the
episode of the same name.
|
|
Dorzak (character) |
Who |
A Psychon
philosopher poet with powerful long range
telepathic projection and contact telepathic reception abilities,
who, in the struggle to survive after leaving Psychon
some time before its destruction,
turns evil and causes chaos among Croton peoples
(or more specifically the Norvahns?).
He was captured and on his way to exile when the ship,
captained(?) by
Sahala, encounters
Alpha, on which resides another Psychon,
Maya.
The last argues on Dorzak's behalf,
which together with his psychic forcing of another Croton to lie
on his behalf, allows him to gain his freedom on Alpha,
before Sahala's continued warnings and
increasing corroborating evidence
start creating concern among more of the Alphans.
They in turn eventually convince Maya
to confront him. Dorzak captures Maya,
Helena, and Sahala, and is plotting his escape,
in the form of Maya,
when Tony realizes the masquerade and captures Dorzak,
who is then re-imprisoned and taken away on the
Croton ship.
|
| Stories |
"Dorzak"
|
| Details |
At the time of Tony's confronting Dorzak,
the latter is forcing Helena to start surgery on Sahala,
to remove the latter's
Neuro-Pulsonic Jammer,
and thus destroy her defense against Dorzak,
so he can force Sahala to fly the Croton ship as he wants.
Presumably, he was going to keep Maya on board.
Has the nascent ability of Psychons for
molecular transformation,
but does not know how until he forces the knowledge from
Maya's mind.
He takes her form (forcing her to take his form),
in an initially successful attempt at deception
that fails when Tony grows suspicious of a
possibly metamorphic ruse and undoes it.
|
|
Dorzak (episode) |
Definition |
The 21st episode of Y2 of the series;
the 45th episode overall.
Written by Christopher Penfold.
Directed by Val Guest.
|
| Plot |
While
Commander Koenig is away
on an exploratory mission, a
Croton ship,
broadcasting the Universal Plague Warning Signal
gains (with difficulty) permission to land on Alpha.
On arrival,
Sahala, the female ship captain(?), attacks
Maya with a
staser,
explaining it is because Maya is a
Psychon,
and a ship of Psychons caused considerable tormoil
among Sahala's people.
Sahala is confined. Tony does not want
to hear any explanation from Sahala, but
Alan is willing to give her a chance,
and prompts her to bring Maya out of stasis.
On board the Croton ship is
Dorzak,
the primary Psychon instigator, according to Sahala.
Maya indicates Dorzak is a philosopher and a poet,
and pleads with Tony to speak to him,
desperate to talk to someone of her race again.
Sahala claims insideous powers from Dorzak;
and upon his being brought out of stasis,
he uses telepathic projection to force another Croton,
Yesta, to give false witness against Sahala,
who ends up imprisoned again.
Alan still believes Sahala, and even Tony starts having doubts
about Dorzak, and finally convinces a very reluctant Maya to
transform herself into Sahala's form,
to hear Dorzak's own words.
She does, and finds the ugly truth about yet another Psychon,
and wonders if Psychon nature is flawed.
Dorzak, not practiced in metamorphosis,
forces his way into her mind to gain the secrets,
forces her to
molecularly transform
into his appearance, and transforms into hers,
a metamorphic masquerade
of which Tony eventually becomes suspicious.
Tony confronts Dorzak and stuns him.
The Croton ship, with Dorzak safely back in stasis,
leaves, after Alan and Sahala share a kiss goodbye.
|
| Details |
Clea fell in love with Dorzak,
and her freeing him is what precipitated the crisis
on board the Croton ship that brought it to Alpha:
though Sahala regains control over her ship,
it is not before Clea gives Yesta a head injury,
and Clea herself, in remorse, throws herself into space.
These circumstances are what prompt Sahala
to seek help from Alpha.
Crotons developed a defense against Dorzak's
"organic psycho waves," in the form of a small brain implant: a
Neuro-Pulsonic Jammer.
Tony finds one sitting free on the Croton ship (Clea's?),
and sends it to Technical Section for analysis,
not knowing what it is.
Helena removes one from Yesta's brain,
also not knowing what it is.
Tony talks to Sam (?) from Technical,
and they work out what it might be,
which is part of what makes Tony more suspicious of Dorzak.
After becoming suspicious of Dorzak's masquerade as Maya,
but before confronting Dorzak,
Tony has Dr. Spencer(?) implant one in his brain,
so Tony can be immune to Dorzak.
|
| Comments |
The Universal Plague Warning Signal is presumably
known to the Alphans via some
post-Breakaway source,
such as deciphering some part of the
Voyager 1 records,
from Maya, or from another alien source.
|
|
| Dotrice |
See Roy Dotrice |
|
Dragon's Domain |
a.k.a. |
DD
|
| Definition |
The 23rd episode, in production order,
of Y1 of the series.
Written by Christopher Penfold.
Directed by Charles Crichton.
|
| Details |
Includes numerous flashbacks to
Earth and a pre-1999 space mission,
providing considerable backstory for several characters,
regular and guest.
The alien creature is usually referred to,
by fans if not in the episode (CHECK),
as "the dragon" or "the Dragon."
Involves a spaceship graveyard.
Tony Cellini appears,
and dies, in this episode.
|
|
| Droplets |
See Enigma |
|
| Eagle |
a.k.a. |
Eagle Transporter
Eagle Transporter System?
|
| Summary |
The spaceship
type used by the Alphans.
A workhorse able to swap pods as per mission dictates,
atmosphere capable, equipped with a degree of shielding,
as well as artificial gravity.
|
| Capabilities |
Spaceflight
Atmospheric flight
Artificial gravity
Shielding (inc. anti-radiation, to some degree)
On-board computer (a second in some pods?)
As of
"War Games" (Y1), some, but not all
are laser-equipped. Others are unarmed.
Ability to swap pods.
Ability to add supplementary boosters,
sometimes on the spine (e.g.
"Metamorph") and sometimes
on the sides of the pod (e.g.
NANE).
Can (and sometimes was) remote-controlled.
|
| Examples |
Eagle 1
Eagle 2
Eagle 3
Eagle 4
Eagle 5
Eagle 6
Eagle 7
Eagle 10
Eagle 11
Eagle 12
Eagle 14
Eagle 28
Eagle 29
Rescue Eagle 4
|
| Notes |
Eagle models of 44", 22", 11", and 5.5" were used
in filming the special effects sequences of the series.
In an episode of Futurama,
an obvious take-off of an Eagle appears.
It shoots the last copies of Star Trek
(The Original Series) episodes onto a planet,
as a way of eliminating the series from
human culture.
|
| See Also |
Eagles in Episodes
Eagles Lost or Damaged
Eagles Stolen or Hijacked
Eagle Sections
Other Eagle Parts
|
|
| Eagle 1 |
Intro |
A frequently used
Eagle
designation through S19.
It is involved in many missions and incidents,
which for this entry are split into
Y1 and
Y2 parts.
|
| Year One |
"Breakaway" (Y1):
VIP pod.
Capt. Carter takes up the Eagle
Commissioner Simmonds arrived in,
to observe from high orbit as the Area Two pile is broken up.
He becomes direct witness (probably the only one)
to the actual Breakaway explosion.
He keeps pace and catches up with the Moon,
landing back on Alpha.
"Black Sun":
Piloted by Mike Ryan.
Normal pod?
Pulled part by gravitational forces near a black sun (black hole),
with one
verifiable fatality.
Destroyed.
RATM:
Last Eagle mission sent to Triton.
Normal module (?).
John, Alan,
Pierce Quinton,
and three other guards on board.
Alan remains with Eagle.
All four guards go with Koenig.
All successfully escape sphere's destruction.
"Earthbound":
sent to initially intercept the incoming Kaldorian spacecraft.
Piloted by Alan and a co-pilot.
Standard-shaped pod with red/orange stripes
(rescue pod?).
"Missing Link":
normal pod.
Returning empty-handed from an exploration of what appears to be
a dead world they later find out is inhabited and called Zenno.
The Eagle loses power (?) and control and crashes with
John,
Alan,
Victor, and
Sandra aboard.
All are knocked unconscious,
and some are more severely injured,
mainly Sandra and, most critically, John.
The Eagle's pilot section has to be separated from the rest of it,
by explosive bolts, and hauled away by a Cargo Eagle.
It is not clear if the Eagle can be repaired or is totalled.
"Collision Course": piloted by
Alan,
suffering from main booster problem,
damaged in nuclear blast against asteroid.
DOD: The mission to
Ultima Thule with
John, Helena, Victor, and Alan on board.
"The Full Circle": standard transporter pod;
sent on further exploration mission of five people
(at same time as Eagle 2)
after Eagle 6
is brought back without the first landing party.
Piloted by Commander Koenig;
co-pilot is ????.
"Space Brain": doing reconnaisance with two pilots on board:
Wayland, Cousteau; it and the pilots are crushed by
the Space Brain. Destroyed.
"Dragon's Domain":
(Unverified:)
Tony Cellini attempts and fails to
steal
Eagle 1 while it sits on Launch Pad 4 at the time;
Koenig blocks this by giving an order which
leaves the docking tube attached to the Eagle.
Later, several people take him on a mission to the
spaceship graveyard, where he eventually
stole the Eagle (its final fate unclear).
See Tony Cellini Steals Eagle 1
regarding the latter situation.
TOA:
main exploration of Arkadia.
Team of eight:
John, Alan, Helena, Victor,
Luke, Anna,
Quinton, another guard (who?).
|
| Year Two |
"The Metamorph":
standard pod; captured by
Mentor,
destroyed with
Psychon
with no one on board any longer.
See Psychon Destroys Eagle 1
for why the Editor considers this a verifiable loss.
"The Exiles": "Eagle Mission 1" (is this same as Eagle 1?),
defensive response, but recalled when alien missiles went into
lunar orbit.
"Brian the Brain": Piloted by
Bill during the initial
Evacuation phases. When the Swift is detected,
Eagles 1 and 2 divert to intercept,
then escort the Swift to Alpha.
"Rules of Luton":
John, Tony, Maya.
Eagle develops fault in Oxygen system just prior to landing.
John decides they should land so he and Maya can explore
while Tony returns to Alpha to pick up another Eagle.
MOA:
John and
Maya flying a survey mission,
runs into meteor storm. Standard pod.
Laser equipped, using it to destroy at least one meteor.
"Brian the Brain": Flown by Bill and Tony with directional
guidance by Maya over computer interference.
Lands on Planet D ahead of the Swift.
Tony and Maya leave and meet up with John in the mothership.
John (carrying Maya/mouse) returns to the Swift,
Tony back to Eagle 1, which later docks with the Swift to
pick up John, Helena, and Maya.
NANE:
normal transporter pod.
Alan attempts a rescue flight to
New Earth,
but though engines fire, no liftoff occurs.
Alan later attempts a launch after extra
vertical booster
units were attached, but this fails as well,
and it is shown that Magus is fighting,
from New Earth,
and with some strain on his part, against the launch.
"AB Chrysalis":
One of the numerous Eagles which evacuate
Alpha ahead of a predicted shockwave and hide behind the
protection of the other side of the Moon. Normal transporter pod.
Piloted by Alan, who is sitting in the starboard seat.
"AB Chrysalis": Mission to the planet and moons
which are found to be the origin of the shockwaves.
John, Alan, and Maya aboard.
Normal transporter pod again.
Stairs are seen on portside at one point.
"Seed of Destruction":
Tony and Maya steal the Eagle, in order to check
out asteroid over doubts of Koenig's words
and identity.
They find the real Koenig there and rescue him.
He takes the Eagle back to Alpha while they
try to destroy the Heart of Kalthon (unsuccessfully).
"Matter of Balance": first mission to Sunim?
"Matter of Balance":
hijacked by
Shermeen after she
uses plant vapors to put
Bill Fraser into a trance state
and forces him to fly the Eagle and her to the planet.
Verify: Later flown back to Alpha by Tony,
with Bill (not yet recovered) and Maya on board.
"Seance Spectre":
Damaged during a crash exploring of Tora,
with John and Maya aboard, after the
Tora mutineers damage
a computer link back on Alpha.
Has to be brought back remotely.
|
| Comments |
So far in analysis, seems to be the most common Eagle designation.
The Eagle which Alan pilots is often Eagle 1.
Several Eagles bearing this designation are destroyed
through the series. The designation is clearly reused,
either by renumbering other Eagles to be Eagle 1,
or if new ones are being manufactured on Alpha.
|
|
| Eagle 2 |
Intro |
A designation number used for an
Eagle in at least one
instance.
|
| Missions |
"Breakaway" (Y1):
ferrying newly-installed
Cmdr. Koenig from
Earth to
Alpha.
Standard passenger pod?
"Earthbound":
sent to initially intercept the incoming Kaldorian spacecraft.
Standard-shaped pod with red/orange stripes
(rescue pod?).
"The Full Circle": standard transporter pod,
sent on search and rescue mission after Eagle 6
is brought back without the landing party.
Alan pilots it;
Sandra is in co-pilot seat
but apparently only works search-related controls.
"The Exiles" (Y2): "Eagle Mission 2" (is this same as Eagle 2?),
defensive response, but recalled when alien missiles went into
lunar orbit.
"Brian the Brain": Part of a group of 6(?) during initial
Evacuation phases. When the Swift is detected,
Eagles 1 and 2 divert to intercept,
then escort the Swift to Alpha.
"Matter of Balance": follows
Eagle 1 to Sunim
after Shermeen has
hijacked the latter,
forcing Bill to fly her to the planet.
Returned to Alpha by John, with Shermeen
(now the wiser) on board.
"Seance Spectre": John and Maya,
so he can set a nuclear trigger.
Eagle hit by a laser rifle wielded by Sanderson,
leading to Maya being knocked unconscious.
She recovers, and they make their escape.
BOW2: speculative.
Carter,
Ehrlich, and
Bartlett
think they are flying (more as passengers?)
in a Superswift's tiny "pilot ship" but are really
flying an Eagle. All three individuals are
wearing an Eagle 2 patch.
|
|
| Eagle 3 |
Intro |
A designation number used for an
Eagle in at least one
instance.
|
| Missions |
RATM:
First Eagle sent towards Triton probe.
The probe attacks the Eagle with what the Alphans believe is a
force field.
Both Carter and Donovan are eventually knocked unconscious,
and the Eagle blasted back towards the Moon.
The Eagle crashes 700 meters from Alpha.
Donovan is
killed, apparently in the crash.
The Eagle seems relatively intact,
so it is not clear if this is a lost Eagle.
"Dragon's Domain":
Ordered to pursue
Eagle 1
after the latter is stolen (minus its pod) by
Tony Cellini.
MOA: did not leave on a mission,
but put on standby in case it was needed to rescue
John and
Maya, who were flying
Eagle 1 on a survey mission
but running into a meteor storm.
Pasc, holding
Helena hostage,
commandeers Eagle 3,
but is blocked from lift-off,
and later talked off the Eagle due to
his son's self-inflicted injury
and Helena's convincing words she can help him.
"Seance Spectre":
the Eagle Tony (pilot seat), Sandra (co-pilot seat
to help with scans), and Helena are aboard during evacuation).
|
|
| Eagle 4 |
Intro |
A designation number used for an
Eagle in at least one
instance.
|
| Missions |
"Missing Link":
Rescue pod.
Koenig is the only one who mentions the number,
but he is out of communication (to put it simply),
so he must have been aware Eagle 4 was the Rescue Eagle
on standby during Koenig's mission.
"Collision Course" (Y1): normal pod;
captured and released by Arra's ship.
"Space Brain": Rescue Eagle 4?
"Dragon's Domain":
Ordered to pursue
Eagle 1
after the latter is stolen (minus its pod) by
Tony Cellini.
"The Metamorph":
laboratory pod and spine booster unit;
sent on science/diplomatic/rescue mission to
Psychon
with
John Koenig,
Helena Russell,
Alan Carter, and
Lew Picard;
nearly destroyed in Psychon's destruction;
returned with John, Helena, Alan, as well as
Maya (a
Psychon saved
from her own world's end).
"The Exiles": normal transporter pod, plus gripping arm;
first mission with John, Alan, and Maya
returned with one Exile's pod.
"All that Glisters":
laboratory pod (no spine booster).
On board are:
John,
Tony,
Alan
Helena,
Maya, and
Dave Reilly.
"Rules of Luton":
Tony takes this one out after he has to
return Eagle 1 after it developed a fault.
He searches for the disappeared planet Luton
in Eagle 4, trying to return to John and Maya.
He nearly crashes when the planet reappears in
front of him.
NANE:
normal transporter pod.
John,
Tony,
Helena,
Maya, and
Magus boarded,
to fly to the planet;
but Magus instead
instantaneously transported
the entire Eagle there.
Later, when the Alphans tried to return to the Eagle,
it vanished, which Maya interpreted as
atomic dispersal.
After Magus was rendered powerless,
the Eagle rematerialized, and the Alphans
escaped the exploding
New Earth.
"Seance Spectre":
Initial partial approach of Tora
by John and Alan.
|
|
| Eagle 5 |
Intro |
A designation number used for an
Eagle in at least one
instance.
|
| Missions |
"Metamorph" (Y2):
Combat Eagle 5, only mentioned.
BOW2: standard transporter pod.
John,
Tony, and
Maya intercept the moonbuggy
being used by
Carter and
Ehrlich as they,
under the mind control of enemy aliens,
attempt to set a nuclear trigger (?) to blow up nearby dumps.
Maya reports the ground is unsuitable for landing the Eagle,
so first John and then Maya winch down.
|
|
| Eagle 6 |
Intro |
A designation number used for an
Eagle in at least one
instance.
|
| Missions |
"Breakaway" (Y1):
name mentioned in chatter while trying to break up
Area Two.
"The Full Circle" (Y1): standard transporter pod;
initial reconnaisance^ Eagle flies to Retha
with party of seven. Main Mission cannot raise Eagle,
but Paul brings it back to
Alpha under remote control,
returns with one dead caveman later found to be a
transformed crew member.
"Metamorph" (Y2):
Combat Eagle 6, only mentioned.
"The Beta Cloud":
standard transporter pod.
Tom Graham
flies out to a mysterious cloud to collect particles
for analysis, but does not return when expected,
only to return after its fuel should be expended.
Graham is not on board; instead, a robotic creature
has piloted the craft back,
and it proceeds to attack.
"Seance Spectre": Alan during evacuation.
|
|
| Eagle 7 |
Intro |
A designation number used for an
Eagle in at least one
instance.
|
| Missions |
"Missing Link":
Cargo (i.e. winch) pod. Brought in to
haul the pilot module of the damaged
Eagle 1,
in which lies a critically-injured Koenig
(with Alan and Helena on either side),
the ~100 miles back to Alpha.
(Verify:) "Space Brain" (Y1): standard pod? Flown by
Cmdr. Koenig.
The "fastest Eagle," used
to catch up with the nuclear Eagle
when it ceases to respond to commands.
|
|
| Eagle 10 |
Intro |
A designation number used for an
Eagle in at least one
instance.
|
| Missions |
"Collision Course" (Y1):
carries a nuclear bomb to asteroid.
Shown dropping it off, without incident.
Pod: winch system.
BOW1 (Y2): taken on an erratic flight by a delusional
Koenig, who crashes it into a nuclear
waste area dome and onto the Moon.
It suffers a fire and damage and is considered "totalled."^
Pod: passenger?
|
|
| Eagle 11 |
Intro |
A designation number used for an
Eagle in at least one
instance.
|
| Missions |
"Collision Course" (Y1):
name mentioned; carries a nuclear bomb to asteroid. (VERIFY!)
|
|
| Eagle 12 |
Intro |
A designation number used for an
Eagle in at least one
instance.
|
| Missions |
"Collision Course" (Y1):
name mentioned; carries a nuclear bomb to asteroid. (VERIFY!)
|
|
| Eagle 14 |
Intro |
A designation number used for an
Eagle in at least one
instance.
|
| Missions |
"Breakaway": unloading canisters at
Nuclear Waste Disposal Area Two while
Dr. Russell is at the Area Two Monitoring Depot.
"Breakaway" (again): winch, helping break up Area Two.
Reports some navigational disturbance.
Apparently not enough to pull it out of rotation?
|
|
| Eagle 26 |
Intro |
A designation number (arguably) used for an
Eagle in at least one
instance.
|
| Missions |
"Breakaway" (Y1):
name mentioned in chatter while trying to break up
Area Two?
The reference is to "Number 26" however,
so it is not perfectly clear,
but Paul has been directing nuclear waste canisters
to be carried to certain dispersal grids (e.g. Grid C, Grid D),
so it likely is an Eagle number reference.
|
|
| Eagle 28 |
Intro |
A designation number used for an
Eagle in at least one
instance.
|
| Missions |
Unverified: "The Last Sunset"
|
| Notes |
The Editor also edited/authored a Handy Forms
double-sided and laminated 8.5x11+" quick reference guide,
which had an erroneous reference to
this being the highest Eagle number mentioned.
The Editor is currently aware of there being an
Eagle 29.
|
|
| Eagle 29 |
Intro |
A designation number used for an
Eagle in at least one
instance.
|
| Missions |
"Collision Course" (Y1):
name mentioned as it is being shown (on the
Big Screen) approaching an asteroid.
Pod: winch system, which it is using to carry a nuclear bomb.
|
| Notes |
This is the highest-numbered Eagle of
which the Editor is currently aware.
There could be more (esp. since it
appeared to the Editor that one hangar had at least 12 Eagles.
Also, some are called Rescue Eagles, etc.
Given the interchangability of pods,
the possibility that designation numbers were
perhaps not permanent, it is entirely unclear
how many Eagles Alpha may have.
|
|
Eagles in Episodes |
Intro |
Per-episode list of
Eagle designations in
episodes,
whether the Eagle is shown or only referred to.
|
| Year One |
"Breakaway":
Eagle 1 (VIP),
Eagle 2 (transport),
Eagle 6 (winch?),
Eagle 14 (two missions: cargo, winch),
Eagle 26(?) (if so, winch).
Plus: one crashed at Area Two and two others(?) later destroyed there;
though some of these unnumbered ones may be the same as some numbered ones.
Other missions on Eagles whose numbers not mentioned?
RATM:
Eagle 1,
Eagle 3.
"Earthbound":
Eagle 1,
Eagle 2.
"Missing Link":
Eagle 1 (crashed),
Eagle 4(?) (rescue),
Eagle 7 (cargo w/winch).
"Collision Course":
Eagle 1,
Eagle 4,
Eagle 10,
Eagle 11,
Eagle 12,
Eagle 29,
Rescue Eagle 4.
DOD:
Eagle 1
"The Full Circle":
Eagle 1,
Eagle 2,
Eagle 6.
"Troubled Spirit": none
"Space Brain":
Eagle 1 (destroyed),
Rescue Eagle 4?,
Eagle 7?.
Plus two others whose numbers are not mentioned?
"Dragon's Domain":
Eagle 1 (ultimate fate unclear),
Eagle 2,
Eagle 3,
Eagle 4.
|
| Year Two |
"The Metamorph":
Eagle 1 (destroyed),
Eagle 4,
Combat Eagle 5,
Combat Eagle 6.
Plus: drone Eagle (destroyed),
an attack(?) Eagle (destroyed).
"The Exiles":
Eagle Mission 1,
Eagle Mission 2,
Eagle 4
"All that Glisters":
Eagle 4.
"The Rules of Luton":
Eagle 1.
MOA:
Eagle 1 (uses laser),
Eagle 3 (on pad and
commandeered by
Pasc).
"Brian the Brain":
Eagle 1,
Eagle 2,
four(?) others.
NANE:
Eagle 1,
Eagle 4
"The AB Chrysalis":
Eagle 1 (at least)
"Seed of Destruction":
Eagle 1 (at least)
"Beta Cloud":
Eagle 6
BOW1:
Eagle 10 (totalled)
BOW2:
Eagle 2?,
Eagle 5
"Lambda Factor": none.
However, a mention that 3/4 are "non-operational"
due to same problems afflicting base, or sabotage.
"Seance Spectre":
Eagle 1,
Eagle 2,
Eagle 3,
Eagle 4,
Eagle 6.
"Dorzak": none
|
|
| Eagle Forum |
See Eagle Transporter Forum |
|
Eagle Parts (Other) |
Intro |
A List of other aspects of
Eagle design.
|
| List |
Oxygen Recycling Plant (named in
"Seance Spectre")
Pressure hull
Remote guidance system.
Computer system
Weapons rack
|
|
Eagle Sections |
Intro |
Lists of Basic and Optional portions of an
Eagle.
|
| Basic |
Pilot module (command module?)
A section immediately behind the pilot module,
holding some basic equipment (e.g. spacesuits?),
mounting for two of the four landing pods,
and a partial mounting for a mission pod.
Central spine (which extends to the portion before and after in this list).
A section at the rear with mounting for other two landing pods,
partial mounting for the mission pod, and the main engines.
|
| Optional |
Mission pod: numerous types available.
Booster Unit for the spine (e.g.
"The Metamorph").
Vertical booster units
as appeared in NANE.
Mounting for Re-Entry glider.
|
|
Eagles Lost or Damaged |
Intro |
Lists of
Eagles destroyed
(completely or with salvage potential),
major damage, and eventually "minor" damage
(little data listed on the last yet).
|
| Details |
The Editor treats destroyed Eagles using the
"verifiable" benchmark,
but there is still a level of interpretation
and uncertainty involved,
so if a range is presented anywhere,
the low end is considered "verifiable."
However separating between the columns is sometimes subjective.
Thus, this is the Editor's interpretation.
"Totalled" = Loss w/SP (Salvage Potential),
unless abandoned on a planet,
in which case it is CL (Complete Loss).
|
| Warnings |
The Editor is still looking closely at the episodes for all details,
including regarding Eagles, so some numbers may be subject to change
or addition.
"Breakaway" counts are during and post-Breakaway
|
| Key |
Loss = destroyed, permanenly stolen, left behind
CL = Complete Loss (i.e. no salvage potential for Alpha)
SP = Salvage Potential (destroyed, but perhaps some parts can be recovered)
Dama = Damage
M = Major (perhaps flyable, or perhaps only useful for salvage)
m = minor (incomplete listings)
? = unknown or uncertain
## = large number
|
| Table |
|
| Notes |
MOLAD:
One Eagle blows up with Alan on board (on the planet),
and the Eagles on Alpha are breaking down (?),
but all of that is
reset,
so those are not counted in the end.
ATAP:
A crashed Eagle is seen, but that is from the
alternate timeline,
not the mainline, and is thus not counted in the Table.
Note: the alternates have apparently disassembled all
the rest before that crash, for the alternates' bodies
were not recovered.
"War Games":
Several(?) Eagles destroyed during the battles,
but all is
reset at the end of the episode,
so none are counted in the Table.
"Dragon's Domain":
Tony Cellini detaches the passenger module
then later discards the main frame and attaches
the pilot module to the Ultra Probe.
It seems like these parts are left behind,
but it is perhaps possible another Eagle retrieved them.
This Eagle is not considered a verifiable loss,
but is listed as a 0-1 because it seems like there
is a good chance it had to be left behind in their
rush to return to the departing Moon.
NANE:
It is not clear (to the Editor)
if the Eagle
on the pad is actually destroyed by
Magus
or if the destruction is an illusion created by Magus.
"Space Warp":
Maya,
while ill, delusional, and in another form,
attempted to launch an Eagle while in a hangar,
and at minimum damaged at least one or two Eagles.
Though the damage was implied to be pretty bad,
the Editor cannot be sure any Eagles were
verifiably totalled or destroyed
(though the one she was in probably was).
|
| Conclusions |
Complete Losses (w/o even salvage opportunity) are 11-12;
but if one includes the others that are destroyed/totalled
(with some potential salvage opportunity),
this increases the count to 20-22 Eagles
lost to flight on Alpha.
The Editor thus currently considers there to be 20
"verifiable" losses of flyable Eagles to Alpha,
in the episodes.
If all those with what the Editor calls Major Damage are also
counted as unflyable (i.e. if the Alphans are unlucky enough
that all of those additional Eagles are "totalled" too),
the loss count climbs to 24-27.
|
|
Eagles Stolen or Hijacked |
Intro |
Eagles were at times stolen,
by Alphans or aliens,
either while in space or on Alpha.
|
| Examples |
"Dragon's Domain":
Tony Cellini attempts to steal (unverified:)
Eagle 1 early in the episode, but is blocked from takeoff.
Later in the episode, he steals
Eagle 1.
Final fate of the Eagle is not clear to the Editor,
who does not consider it a
verifiable loss.
Note: Both times, Tony assaults Alan,
knocking him out both times.
TOA:
Holding Helena hostage,
Luke and Anna demand an Eagle,
and receive it.
After they release Helena above Arkadia,
and Alan returns to communication range,
(reverify:) Pursuit Eagles 3 and 5 are to be sent
from Alpha to recapture Luke, Anna, the Eagle, and its equipment,
but the Moon abruptly leaves orbit, and the attempt is canceled.
This Eagle is thus considered verifiably lost from Alpha.
MOA:
Eagle 3 by
Pasc.
Never got it launched due to intervention from
Command Center and being talked out of the Eagle,
in part due to an injury his son,
Etrec, suffered.
"The Beta Cloud":
The intelligence in the cloud captured
Eagle 6,
got rid of the pilot,
Tom Graham,
and directed a robotic creature to fly the Eagle back to Alpha.
This Eagle remains on Alpha; i.e. was hijacked and regained.
"Space Warp":
Maya, taken ill and become delusional,
now in another form, and shot with a tranquilizer that is
unexpectedly slow to act, gets to an Eagle that's on pad.
It is (unverified:) evidently the fastest on Alpha
(an assumption based on the other Alphans' fear that
if she launches, they'll (unverified dialog:) "never get her back."
They attempt to prevent her take-off by lowering the pad
and lifting the Eagle into the hangar;
but once there, Maya/creature attempts a launch anyway,
getting injured and damaging at least her Eagle and some equipment,
if not more Eagles.
"A Matter of Balance":
Shermeen Williams, while under the sway of Vindrus,
used a plant (grown under the guidance of Vindrus),
to put
Bill Fraser in a trance-like state,
to fly her, with a portable nuclear generator she stole,
to Sunim in
Eagle 1.
|
|
"Eagle Transporter" |
Meanings |
More formal name for the
Eagle-class spaceship.
Name of a fan-built website.
|
|
Eagle Transporter (Website) |
Definition |
A website and forum dedicated to the
Eagle Transporter spaceship,
other S19 vehicles, and to a lesser degree,
vehicles from other British (or non-British)
SF or even non-SF series, movies, and real life.
|
| Details |
Strong emphasis on models and the model-working process
related to the ships mentioned in the Definition.
There is a Forum, and the sections within it are
dedicated to all of the above, organized along lines of interest,
and including some sections for non-modelworking discussion of
related topics as well.
|
| Links |
http://www.eagletransporter.com/
|
|
Eagle Transporter Forum |
a.k.a. |
ETF
Eagle Forum
|
| Tagline |
Classic British Sci-Fi Hardware Forum |
| Definition |
A web-based
forum
on science fiction hardware with a primary focus on
Space: 1999,
secondary on
UFO and other
Gerry Anderson series,
and tertiary on other hardware,
as well as some sub-fora dealing with
storyline, characters, other productions (fan or official),
music, etc.
|
| Details |
Part of the
Eagle Transporter website.
Based in the United Kingdom.
Started on 2005/09/13 (UK time).
Forum's owner's handle is Eagle.
Forum went read-only on 2009/12/18 1800 UK time,
for an "indefinite period" of time
(which was only about a week).
Stats on 2009/12/18: 129,670 posts in 8983 threads,
1752 members (with 469 of them "active" --
exact definition unknown to Editor).
Domain put up for sale on 2010/02/12.
|
| Links |
http://www.eagletransporter.com/forum/
first thread, still running in 2009 (post#1267, 2009/12/01)
Feb'10 domain sale
|
|
| The Eagle |
Disclosure |
The author of the story described in this entry
is the same person as the Editor of this Knowledgebase.
|
| Definition |
Released (2007)
fan fiction,
which takes place within the timeframe of
Y2.
Part of the Bridges and Anchorages
fanfic series (being) written by the Editor of this KB,
David Welle.
|
| Intro |
An unexpected Eagle mission leads to a surprise situation. |
| Links |
Story
|
|
Eagle Aerie Alpha |
a.k.a. |
EAA
|
| Disclosure |
The author of the story described in this entry
is the same person as the Editor of this Knowledgebase.
|
| Definition |
In-development
fan fiction novella(?),
which takes place immediately after
"Earthbound".
Part of the Bridges and Anchorages
fanfic series (being) written by the Editor of this KB,
David Welle.
|
| Intro |
Not long into the wayward
Earth colony's travels,
several key numerical trends both delight and trouble
the Alphans, prompting some study and changes,
not all of which are welcome.
|
|
Episodes (with Writer, Director , Loss/Gain, Days After Breakaway Information) |
Intro |
Lists of the series episodes, in production order
(considered by most, including many fans,
to be the official order).
The Editor is not sure if any arguments exist
regarding this as the true production order.
The first two characters in each column is an
unofficial episode designator the Editor uses
for convenience in various documents such as this.
Full episode titles are listed in this entry
(for convenience or layout reasons, they are sometimes
shortened or abbreviated in some other entries).
Losses are where "verifiable."
|
| Table |
|
| * Notes |
1a: An
Earth news report lists 311 people on Moonbase Alpha.
See Breakaway Population for analysis.
1j: Addition (birth) of Jackie Crawford.
1r: Koenig mentions there are "about three hundred" people on Alpha.
See Population in "The Last Enemy" for analysis.
1w: Only episode of Y1 known to list
Days After Breakaway;
but unfortunately, it and Y2 dates conflict.
1x: "There are over three hundred people...."
See Population at Arkadia for analysis.
2a:
Population listed as 297 at the start of the episode.
See Population at Psychon for analysis.
Addition of Maya
at the end of the episode.
2j: It is not clear (to the Editor)
if the Eagle
on the pad is actually destroyed by
Magus
or if the destruction is an illusion created by Magus.
2p: Maya,
while ill, delusional, and in another form,
attempted to launch an Eagle while in a hangar,
and at minimum damaged at least one or two Eagles.
Though the damage was implied to be pretty bad,
the Editor cannot be sure any Eagles were
verifiably totalled or destroyed
(though the one she was in probably was).
2r: Helena records 2515 DAB in her log;
but clearly 1915 would make much more sense.
It is not clear whether this is a production mistake
or some very subtle reference to the Alphans being
under the influence of partial alien mind control.
2u: comment by a
Croton ship
computer which scanned the Moon:
"it is inhabited by some three hundred... people."
2v: Population is mentioned as 298 (revealed during interrogation of Koenig).
See Population at Entra for analysis.
3a: A short film considered canon by many.
## blocks bind two episodes which were filmed concurrently,
which meant some of the principal cast members had little
or no presence in one episode of the pair,
and more in the other.
|
| Misc. |
"Movies" were made by assembling
some of these episodes via various editing.
|
| See Also |
Episode List (Compact Form)
Episode Capsules
|
| Links |
Episode Title Cards
Episode by Episode (ExE) — fan discussion/analysis
Cast by Episode
|
|
Episodes (Compact Form, w/ Writer, Director , Days After Breakaway Information) |
Intro |
Compact list of the original 48 episodes, in production order,
in compact format, with many episode names shortened or abbreviated.
The odd 2515 DAB number for
BOW2 is ignored;
1915 probably makes the most sense.
|
| Table |
|
| **Notes |
DOD: Written by AT,EB
Infernal Mach.: ditto
|
| See Also |
Episode List (Full Form)
Episode Capsules
|
|
Episode Capsules |
Intro |
Extremely brief episode summaries,
most about 4-5 words each,
presented solely as brief reminders of what the episode is about.
If the title is a link,
follow it to see if there is a longer description.
|
| Table |
| **** YEAR ONE **** |
| 1a | Breakaway | Moon blasted into deep space |
| 1b | Matter of Life and Death | Helena finds missing husband |
| 1c | Black Sun | Cannot avoid mysterious forces |
| 1d | Ring Around the Moon | Brain-like, planet-sized probe |
| 1e | Earthbound | Gentle aliens on way to Earth |
| 1f | Another Time, Another Place | Dopplegangers of Alpha(ns) |
| 1g | Missing Link | Koenig tested by aliens |
| 1h | Guardian of Piri | Computer enforces perfection |
| 1i | Force of Life | Man can drain anything's heat |
| 1j | Alpha Child | Baby ages rapidly, murderously |
| 1k | The Last Sunset | Moon is given an atmosphere |
| 1l | Voyager's Return | Earth probe with deadly past |
| 1m | Collision Course | Koenig resists saving the Moon |
| 1n | Death's Other Dominion | Stray Earth crew are immortal |
| 1o | The Full Circle | Alphans meet own Stone Age |
| 1p | End of Eternity | Immortal prisoner terrorizes |
| 1q | War Games | Battle irreparably damages base |
| 1r | The Last Enemy | Moon becomes missile platform |
| 1s | The Troubled Spirit | Man haunted by his own ghost |
| 1t | Space Brain | Crushing foam protects object |
| 1u | The Infernal Machine | Sentient ship, human companions |
| 1v | Mission of the Darians | Civilization, barbarism on ark |
| 1w | Dragon's Domain | Deadly creature haunts a man |
| 1x | The Testament of Arkadia | Past, future hope of dead world |
| **** YEAR TWO **** |
| 2a | The Metamorph | Computer drains mind; meet Maya |
| 2b | The Exiles | 53 missiles contain prisoners |
| 2c | One Moment of Humanity | Robots seek human emotions |
| 2d | All that Glisters | Living rock takes control |
| 2e | Journey to Where | Earth return? Time differences |
| 2f | The Taybor | Traveling trader covets Maya |
| 2g | The Rules of Luton | Plants rule world, judge others |
| 2h | The Mark of Archanon | Dig up violence-infected aliens |
| 2i | Brian the Brain | Over-friendly sentient computer |
| 2j | New Adam New Eve | "Creator" appears, experiments |
| 2k | The AB Chrysalis | Deadly explosions guard planet |
| 2l | Catacombs of the Moon | Visions haunt man, dying wife |
| 2m | Seed of Destruction | Mirror image of Koenig, energy |
| 2n | The Beta Cloud | Alphans ill, rampaging monster |
| 2o | A Matter of Balance | Alien seeks reversal of fate |
| 2p | Space Warp | Maya sick; John, Tony stranded |
| 2q | The Bringers of Wonder (part 1) | Earth sends rescue mission... |
| 2r | The Bringers of Wonder (part 2) | ... really aliens with a hunger |
| 2s | The Lambda Factor | Some Alphans turn psychic |
| 2t | The Seance Spectre | Delusional Alphans make turmoil |
| 2u | Dorzak | Psychon man declared a "plague" |
| 2v | Devil's Planet | Prison moon, dead homeworld |
| 2w | The Immunity Syndrome | Alien presence, deadly insanity |
| 2x | The Dorcons | Powerful aliens hunt down Maya |
| **** YEAR THREE **** |
| 3a | Message from Moonbase Alpha | Settle Terra Alpha, call Earth |
|
|
Episode Directors |
Introduction |
A Table of all episode directors by:
abbreviation used in main Episodes table;
name;
and episode count (Y1+Y2=Series).
|
| Table |
|
| Notes |
Bob Kellett both wrote and directed "The Last Enemy" --
but his primary contributions to the series as a whole
was as a director.
In total, Charles Crichton and Ray Austin directed
15 of the 24 Y1 episodes,
8 of the 24 Y2 episodes, and
23 of the 48 originally-broadcast episodes.
In total, Charles Crichton and Tom Clegg directed
11 of the 24 Y2 episodes.
|
|
Episode Writers |
Introduction |
A Table of all episode writers by:
abbreviation used in main Episodes table;
name;
and episode count (Y1+Y2=Series).
The last is fractional for co-written episodes.
|
| Table |
|
| Notes |
There were at least two husband and
wife writing teams represented in S19,
indicated above by J&P and P&J.
The Editor once read that AT and EB were another husband and wife
writing team for S19, but has not checked for verification of this.
Bob Kellett both wrote and directed "The Last Enemy" --
but his primary contributions to the series as a whole
was as a director.
In total, Christopher Penfold and Johnny Byrne wrote
14 of the 24 Y1 episodes.
|
|
Episode Titles Poem |
Intro |
An semi-serious, semi-humorous,
and perhaps altogether ridiculous attempt
by the Editor of this KB to create
a pneumonic (memory aid) of the
episode titles
in the generally accepted production order of
Y1,
Y2, and the (sometimes treated as canon)
Y3 short film.
Whether or not it is really a poem is debatable,
and it makes no real sense either.
|
| Details |
Partial titles are often used,
and sometimes even altered or taken in part.
The articles and participles do not necessary
belong to neighboring episode title fragments.
"Earthbound" is represented only by "-bound"
"The Bringers of Wonder" is considered two episodes,
but is listed only once (as "Bringer") below.
|
| Main |
Breakaway from the Death Sun.
The Ring-bound Place is Missing its Guardian,
Forcing Alpha's Sunset.
Voyager's Course is to Death's Circle and the Eternity War.
The Enemy's Troubled Brain and its Infernal Mission.
Dragon's Arkadian Metamorph was Exiled in a Moment.
It Glisters Where, Taybor?
Rules of Mark, Brian, and Adam.
Chrysalis Catacombs Seed the Cloud.
A Balanced Warp is the Bringer of the Lambda Spectre,
Dorzak, Devil's Immunity, and the Dorcon's Message.
|
| Index |
Breakaway Ring Forcing Voyager's Enemy.
Dragon Glisters, Rules Chrysalis.
Balanced Dorzak (not!).
|
|
Episodes Directed by Bob Kellett |
Introduction |
List of episodes directed
by Bob Kellett, who worked during Y1.
|
| Year One |
"Voyager's Return"
"The Full Circle"
"The Last Enemy" (which he also scripted)
|
| See Also |
Multiple Roles
|
|
Episodes Directed by Charles Crichton |
Introduction |
Lists of episodes directed
by Charles Crichton,
who was the most prolific director on the series
with 14 episodes, from both seasons.
|
| Year One |
"Matter of Life and Death"
"Earthbound"
"Guardian of Piri"
"The Last Sunset"
"Death's Other Dominion"
"War Games"
"Space Brain"
"Dragon's Domain"
|
| Year Two |
"The Metamorph"
"One Moment of Humanity"
"The Mark of Archanon"
"New Adam New Eve"
"A Matter of Balance"
"The Lambda Factor"
|
|
Episodes Directed by David Tomblin |
Introduction |
List of episodes directed
by David Tomblin, who worked during Y1.
|
| Year One |
"Another Time, Another Place"
"Force of Life"
"The Infernal Machine"
"The Testament of Arkadia"
|
|
Episodes Directed by Ray Austin |
Introduction |
Lists, from both seasons, of the 9
episodes directed
by Ray Austin.
|
| Year One |
"Ring Around the Moon"
"Missing Link"
"Alpha Child"
"Collision Course"
"End of Eternity"
"The Troubled Spirit"
"Mission of the Darians"
|
| Year Two |
"The Exiles"
"All that Glisters"
|
|
Episodes Directed by Tom Clegg |
Introduction |
List of episodes directed
by Tom Clegg, who worked during Y2.
|
| Year Two |
"Journey to Where"
"The Bringers of Wonder (part 1)"
"The Bringers of Wonder (part 2)"
"Devil's Planet"
"The Dorcons"
|
|
Episodes Directed by Val Guest |
Introduction |
List of episodes directed
by Val Guest, who worked during Y2.
|
| Year Two |
"The Rules of Luton"
"The AB Chrysalis"
"Dorzak"
|
|
Episodes Written by Anthony Terpiloff |
Introduction |
Lists of episodes written
by Anthony Terpiloff, who worked in both seasons.
|
| Year One |
"Earthbound"
"Collision Course"
"Death's Other Dominion" (co-written with Elizabeth Barrows)
"The Infernal Machine" (co-written with Elizabeth Barrows)
|
| Year Two |
"Catacombs of the Moon"
|
| Questions |
Husband of Elizabeth Barrows?
The Editor thinks he read this once,
but has not been able to verify it for this knowledgebase.
|
|
Episodes Written by Charles Woodgrove |
Introduction |
List of episodes written
by Charles Woodgrove
(a pen name of Fred Freiberger).
|
| Year Two |
"The Rules of Luton"
"The Beta Cloud"
"Space Warp"
|
|
Episodes Written by Christopher Penfold |
Introduction |
Lists of episodes written
by Christopher Penfold, listed by season.
|
| Year One |
"Guardian of Piri"
"Alpha Child"
"The Last Sunset"
"War Games"
"Space Brain"
"Dragon's Domain"
|
| Year Two |
"Dorzak"
|
|
Episodes Written by Donald James |
Introduction |
Lists of episodes written
by Donald James.
|
| Year Two |
"The Exiles"
"Journey to Where"
"The Seance Spectre"
|
|
Episodes Written by Elizabeth Barrows |
Introduction |
Lists of episodes written
by Elizabeth Barrows.
|
| Year One |
"Death's Other Domininion" (co-written with Anthony Terpiloff)
"The Infernal Machine" (co-written with Anthony Terpiloff)
|
| Questions |
Wife of Anthony Terpiloff?
The Editor thinks he read this once,
but has not been able to verify it for this knowledgebase.
|
|
Episodes Written by Johnny Byrne |
Introduction |
Lists of episodes written
by Johnny Byrne,
divided by two main seasons plus one.
|
| Year One |
"Matter of Life and Death"
"Another Time, Another Place"
"Force of Life"
"Voyager's Return"
"End of Eternity"
"The Troubled Spirit"
"Mission of the Darians"
"The Testament of Arkadia"
|
| Year Two |
"The Metamorph"
"The Immunity Syndrome"
"The Dorcons"
|
| Year Three |
"Message From Moonbase Alpha"
|
| Notes |
Also wrote "Children of the Gods" -- an unfilmed script.
The script was lost during a move between studios (?),
but Johnny wrote an outline or similar in later years.
|
|
Episodes Written by Terence Feely |
Introduction |
List of episodes written
by Terence Feely.
|
| Year Two |
"New Adam New Eve"
"The Bringers of Wonder (part 1)"
"The Bringers of Wonder (part 2)"
|
|
| EAA |
See Eagle Aerie Alpha |
|
| Earth |
Summary |
Original mother world of the Moon
and homeworld of most of the Alphans,
to which they attempt some returns,
or to which there are references.
|
| Stories |
"Breakaway":
Moon is in Earth orbit until the
Breakaway,
which triggers major
quakes on both.
"Earthbound": a small group of
Kaldorian aliens, lead by
Captain Zantor,
are flying to Earth to seek
sanctuary
from environmental(?) decline.
Their ship, programmed to find the Moon first,
lands (gently crashes) there.
Due to an accidental Kaldorian death triggered by Helena,
Captain Zantor offers to bring a human with them,
back to Earth.
Although a computer determination is intended to find
which Alphan that is to be,
Commissioner Simmonds
extorts (blackmails?) his way on board the ship,
holding all of the Moonbase
hostage in the process, and Zantor accedes.
The problem, for Simmonds, is that he is not properly
scanned in preparation for the
suspended animation (?)
process used, and wakes up only hours(?) into the flight,
trapped in a cubicle in the Kaldorian ship,
on its way for a 75-year (?) journey.
"Dragon's Domain":
several flashbacks to Earth,
years before Breakaway.
TOA:
"Journey to Where":
an advanced but environmentally damaged Earth of
2120 contacts Alpha,
and an attempt to return Alphans lands three of them in Earth of
1339.
"The Taybor":
A trader named
Taybor has an advanced Jump Drive,
and John and the Alphans hope it can mean a return to Earth.
However, the Alphans do not have a position of Earth relative
to the Moon's current location, and the Alphans and Taybor have
completely different systems of absolute reference (i.e. Earth's
location cannot be determined).
MOA:
A "thousand years" (?) ago,
Archanons reached Earth (or the Moon at least).
Pasc claimed they were trying to bring peace,
but failed miserably, and some Archanons mutinied.
Much of this story is seemingly contradicted by
Etrec's reaction as he listens,
and later events that show Pasc and Etrec
were infected with contagion that led to their being put in a
stasis chamber.
"Bringers of Wonder":
What appear to be Terrans arrive on a Super Swift,
all of them people one Alphan or another knows,
promising a multi-stage rescue for everyone.
However the Terrans prove to be an illusionary
disguise of hostile aliens trying to deceive them.
Earth return is not possible.
|
| See Also |
Countries
Earth's Solar System
|
|
Earth's Solar System |
Intro |
Table of the Sun (a.k.a. Sol) and nine best-known
planets of
Earth's solar system, whether
terrestrial planet (TP),
gas giant (GG), or
drawf planet (DP) -- and any mention in S19.
The drawf planet category was created in real-life ~2007(?),
as the new category for Pluto,
which became the category's best known (prototypical?) object.
|
| Table |
| | Sun | |
| 1 | Mercury | TP |
| 2 | Venus | TP | mentioned in "The Lambda Factor" |
| 3 | Earth | TP | mentioned several times; its Moon broke away |
| 4 | Mars | TP | "Mars Satellite" (is that a reference to the planet?) |
| 5 | Jupiter | GG | Astro 7 mission lost here |
| 6 | Saturn | GG |
| 7 | Uranus | GG | lost mission, crew found on Ultima Thule |
| 8 | Neptune | GG |
| 9 | Pluto | DP |
|
|
| Earthbound |
Definition |
Fifth episode,
in production order, of Y1.
Written by Anthony Terpiloff.
Directed by Charles Crichton.
|
| Summary |
A small group of
Kaldorian aliens, lead by
Captain Zantor, are in
suspended animation (?) as they journey to
Earth, to seek
sanctuary
from environmental(?) decline.
Their ship, programmed to find the
Moon first,
has still found it despite
Breakaway
(that is what the ship's computer was programmed to do?)
lands (gently crashes) there.
Due to an accidental Kaldorian death triggered by
Dr. Russell,
Captain Zantor offers to bring a human with them,
back to Earth.
Although a computer determination is intended to find
which Alphan that is to be,
Commissioner Simmonds
extorts (blackmails?) his way on board the ship,
holding all of the Moonbase
hostage in the process, and Zantor accedes.
The problem, for Simmonds, is that he is not properly
scanned in preparation for the suspended animation (?)
process used, and wakes up only hours(?) into the flight,
trapped in a cubicle in the Kaldorian ship,
on its way for a 75-year (?) journey.
|
| Details |
The episode starts with a
command conference.
|
| Threads |
Dec. 1997: Episode by Episode discussion
|
|
| Earthquakes |
See Quakes |
|
Energy Screen |
Intro |
A reference to what is presumably a synonym
for a force field.
The term is used in two episodes
(verified against transcripts in The Catacombs).
|
| Episodes |
"The Metamorph":
This term is used by
Mentor
for a barrier which also reflects laser energy backwards
(and which killed Lew Picard).
Note: Maya uses the term "force field"
for other energy barriers.
They are presumably synonyms for the same and/or similar things.
See Force Fields on Psychon.
"Seed of Destruction":
the Koenig copy uses this term during his ruse.
|
|
| Embie |
See Simmonds Duology |
|
Emma Porteous |
Who |
Costume designer on the series. Wife of
Peter Porteous.
|
| Biblio |
The Catacombs website (regarding marriage).
|
|
| Enigma |
Intro |
Fan fiction series,
currently planned as an eventual trilogy, by
Meredith Kausch.
The Description was provided by the author.
The Stories are listed in their intended reading order.
|
| Desc. |
A splintered community, memories lost, old friends found.
The Alphans must endure and unravel the mystery
of their existence in order to preserve
their heritage and their future.
|
| Stories |
Acts of Reparation
"Droplets"
"Cypher"
|
| Links |
Space: 1999 Net, click on
Ellen's Fan Fiction Pages, then
look for Enigma listed for Meredith Kausch.
|
|
| Eric Bernard |
Who |
A fan who has put out some fan-produced
re-edits of some
of the episodes.
There are, as far as the Editor can tell,
two distinct Projects --
apparently distinct re-interpretations,
even if some source episodes used in the
first were used as sources again in the second.
|
| List |
Initial Re-Edits (from around or before 2000)
Space: 2099 (launched July 2008)
|
|
Eric Bernard Initial Re-Edits |
Intro |
Fan-produced re-edits of a half-dozen Y1 episodes, by
Eric Bernard.
The re-edits contain some slightly or greatly
enhanced or changed SFX (special effects),
tweaks to the flow of the storyline,
or in one case (the last in the Table below),
radical changes to the flow of story.
|
| Warnings |
These re-edits are apparently unrelated
(though if I'm interpreting correctly,
a partial inspiration for) his
Space: 2099 project.
|
| Statements |
The two episodes with the greatest changes are renamed;
the others keep their original name.
There are some changes which cut across all of the re-edits,
listed in General below.
|
| Table |
| Re-Edit Title | Original Title | | Comments |
| Breakaway |
| The Eyes of Triton | Ring Around the Moon | | many SFX changes |
| Another Time, Another Place |
| Collision Course |
| The Testament of Arkadia |
| God's Will | War Games | | many SFX, flow changes |
|
| General |
Credits have revised fonts, the start credits
with some effects like moderate rotation,
or "wrapping" around a background object
(e.g. one of Victor's electronic-filled globes).
"This Episode" frame removed,
but sequence replaced not with bits from
the particular re-edited episode,
but all six.
More stars in starfields.
Cropping(?) to widescreen (why?).
|
|
Ernst Linden |
a.k.a. |
Ernst Queller (apparent birth name)
|
| Stories |
"Voyager's Return"
|
| Details |
Creator of the destructive
Queller Drive on the
Voyager 1,
which was responsible for numerous deaths,
human (e.g. parents of Jim Haines?)
and alien (two worlds of Sidons).
Renamed prior
|