‘Starfleet Academy’ creators talk bringing a 20th-century American play into 32nd-century ‘Star Trek’ (Interview)


Hoping to settle the cadets’ nerves after the trauma of the USS Miyazaki training incident in Episode 6, “Come, Let’s Away,” that left the fledgling Federation officers mentally shaken, “Starfleet Academy” downshifted to Episode 8, “The Life of the Stars.” This meditative chapter served to reset the students’ psyches via the most unlikely of methods… by the reading of a classic 20th-century American stage play.

We connected with “Star Trek: Starfleet Academy” co-executive producer Noga Landau and series creator/ Episode 8 co-writer Gaia Violo to learn more about this throttled-back interlude before the season’s final two installments drop.

“For me on, a personal level, I’ve been wanting to bring literature into the show,” Violo tells Space.com. “I know we talk a lot about science. But my background is classics, Ancient Greek and Latin. You become a writer, hopefully, because you love reading and because it changed your life in some shape or form. That experience is always present. For ‘Our Town’ specifically, the writers’ room was brainstorming ideas for the episode. We went from wondering if we’d just have an episode of the week structure where we’d go on an adventure, and then that will launch us into the last two episodes.”

a woman on a spaceship standing up clapping

“Starfleet Academy” cadets ingest some culture by reading a classic play (Image credit: Paramount)

Thornton Wilder’s “Our Town” was written in 1938 and centers around the lives of the residents of Grover’s Corner, a typical pre-war community in New Hampshire, representing small town life at its most intimate.



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