Memory Alpha
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{{realworld}}
 
{{realworld}}
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{{Sidebar actor
{| class="wiki-sidebar"
 
  +
| Name = Gary Lockwood
|-
 
  +
| image = Gary Mitchell.jpg
| colspan="2" style="text-align: center" |[[Image:Gary_Mitchell_before.jpg|200px]]
 
 
| imagecap = ...as Lieutenant Commander Gary Mitchell
|-
 
  +
| Birth name = John Gary Yurosek
| class="odd" | Actor:
 
  +
| Gender = Male
| class="even" | Gary Lockwood
 
  +
| Date of birth = {{d|21|February|1937}}
|-
 
 
| Place of birth = Van Nuys, California, USA
| class="odd" | Character:
 
  +
| Date of death =
| class="even" | [[Lieutenant Commander]] [[Gary Mitchell]]
 
  +
| Place of death =
|-
 
  +
| Awards for Trek =
| class="odd" | Series:
 
  +
| Roles =
| class="even" | [[TOS]]
 
  +
| Characters = [[Lieutenant Commander]] [[Gary Mitchell]]
|-
 
  +
| image2 =
| class="odd" | Episodes:
 
  +
| imagecap2 =
| class="even" | {{e|Where No Man Has Gone Before}}
 
  +
| image3 =
|-
 
  +
| imagecap3 =
| class="odd" | Born:
 
 
}}
| class="even" | February 21, 1937
 
 
'''Gary Lockwood''' {{born|21|February|1937}} is the actor who played [[Lieutenant Commander]] [[Gary Mitchell]] in the second pilot for ''[[Star Trek: The Original Series]]'', called {{e|Where No Man Has Gone Before}}. He filmed his scenes between Monday {{d|19|July|1965}} and Wednesday {{d|28|July|1965}} at Desilu Culver Stage 15, Stage 16, and Stage 17, participating in all eight days of production.
|-
 
| class="odd" | Place of Birth:
 
| class="even" | Van Nuys, California, USA
 
|-
 
|}
 
'''Gary Lockwood''' ([[Star Trek birthdays|born]] '''John Gary Yurosek''' on {{d|21|February|1937}}) is the actor who played [[Lieutenant Commander]] [[Gary Mitchell]] in the second pilot for ''[[Star Trek: The Original Series]]'', called {{e|Where No Man Has Gone Before}}. This is his only ''[[Star Trek]]'' appearance to date.
 
   
Lockwood broke into show business as a stunt man in 1957, but quickly moved to acting. He is probably best known for his role in the revered 1968 science fiction classic, ''{{w|2001: A Space Odyssey}}'', where he played "Dr. Frank Poole", the astronaut murdered by the HAL-9000 computer.
+
Lockwood is perhaps best known for his role as Dr. Frank Poole in the revered 1968 science fiction film {{wt|2001: A Space Odyssey}}.
   
 
Despite his one-time guest appearance in the ''Trek'' franchise, Lockwood participated in the 1997 documentary ''[[Trekkies]]'', which chronicles the impact of ''[[Star Trek]]'' on the US culture.
His other feature film credits include ''Splendor in the Glass'' (1961), ''It Happened at the World's Fair'' (1963), and ''Firecreek'' (1968), the latter of which also featured fellow [[TOS]] guest stars [[Barbara Luna]] and [[Morgan Woodward]]. He went on to appear in such films as ''R.P.M.'' (1970, with [[Paul Winfield]], [[John McLiam]], [[Graham Jarvis]], and [[Don Keefer]]), ''Stand Up and Be Counted'' (1972, with [[Michael Ansara]] and [[Madlyn Rhue]]), and ''Night of the Scarecrow'' (1995, with [[Stephen Root]]).
 
   
  +
== Early years ==
From 1963 through 1964, Lockwood was the star of the television series called ''The Lieutenant'', a show which, like ''[[Star Trek]]'', was created by [[Gene Roddenberry]]. The show also had [[TOS]] actress and frequent [[TNG]]/[[DS9]] guest [[Majel Barrett]] in the cast. Lockwood would later reunite with his ''Star Trek'' co-star [[William Shatner]] for an episode of ''T.J. Hooker'', on which the [[Captain]] [[James T. Kirk|Kirk]] actor was starring (as were [[Richard Herd]] and [[James Darren]]).
 
  +
Lockwood was born '''John Gary Yurosek''' in Van Nuys, California and attended the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA) on a football scholarship. He broke into show business as a stuntman and as a stand-in for actor Anthony Perkins in 1957, but he quickly moved to acting.
   
  +
His first movie as an actor was the 1959 western ''Warlock'', which also featured fellow ''[[Star Trek]]'' alumni [[Whit Bissell]], [[Paul Comi]], [[Frank Gorshin]], [[Roy Jenson]], and [[DeForest Kelley]]. That same year, Lockwood made his major television acting debut on an episode of ''Bronco'', alongside [[Yvonne Craig]].
Despite his one-time guest appearance in the ''Trek'' franchise, Lockwood participated in the 1997 documentary ''[[Trekkies]]'', which chronicles the impact of ''[[Star Trek]]'' on the US culture.
 
   
  +
Lockwood made an uncredited appearance in the 1960 film ''Tall Story'', which starred later ''[[Star Trek: The Next Generation]]'' and ''[[Star Trek: Voyager]]'' guest actor, [[Ray Walston]]. Lockwood's first credited film role came a year later in the Elvis Presley picture ''Wild in the Country''; he again worked with Presley (and Yvonne Craig) in 1963's ''It Happened at the World's Fair''. [[Pete Kellett]], [[Bill Quinn]] and [[Guy Raymond]] also appeared in the latter film. Lockwood's early feature film credits also included the Academy Award-winning 1961 drama ''Splendor in the Grass'' and 1962's ''The Magic Sword'' (which co-starred [[Liam Sullivan]]).
==Additional credits==
 
===TV guest appearances===
 
* ''Bronco'' (1953, with [[Yvonne Craig]])
 
* ''Seaway'' (1965, with ''Star Trek'' pilot co-star [[Sally Kellerman]])
 
* ''{{w|Mission: Impossible}}'', (1972, with [[Jason Evers]])
 
* the unsold TV pilot for ''Manhunter'' (1974, with [[Lenore Kasdorf]] and [[John Anderson]])
 
* ''The Six Million Dollar Man'' (1974, with [[William Schallert]])
 
* ''Police Story'' (1976, with [[Phillip Pine]])
 
* ''Macgyver'' (1988, with [[Bruce McGill]])
 
* ''Superboy'' (1988, with [[Salome Jens]])
 
* ''Dark Skies'' (1997, with [[Jeri Ryan]], [[Tim Kelleher]], [[Charley Lang]], [[Conor O'Farrell]], and [[Dennis Creaghan]]).
 
   
  +
From 1963 through 1964, Lockwood was the star of the television series called ''The Lieutenant'', a show which, like ''[[Star Trek]]'', was created by [[Gene Roddenberry]]. Many other performers who later worked on ''Star Trek'' appeared in this series, including TOS regulars [[Walter Koenig]], [[Nichelle Nichols]], and [[Leonard Nimoy]], recurring ''Trek'' actress [[Majel Barrett]], and such guest performers as [[Barbara Babcock]], [[James Gregory]], [[Paul Lambert]], [[Don Marshall]], [[Oliver McGowan]], [[Dallas Mitchell]], [[Ricardo Montalban]], [[William O'Connell]], [[Leslie Parrish]], [[Andrew Prine]], [[Madlyn Rhue]], [[Michael Strong]], and [[Kenneth Tobey]].
===TV movies===
 
  +
* ''Earth II'' (1971, with [[Mariette Hartley]])
 
  +
Many episodes of ''The Lieutenant'' were directed by [[Vincent McEveety]]. McEveety later directed Lockwood in a two-part episode of ''Gunsmoke'' which aired in early 1965 and in the 1968 western film ''Firecreek''. The latter also featured fellow [[TOS]] guest stars [[Barbara Luna]] and [[Morgan Woodward]] and [[TNG]] guest star [[Brooke Bundy]]. Besides this, [[Robert Butler]] and [[David Alexander]] both directed two episodes of ''The Lieutenant''.
* ''The F.B.I. Story: The FBI Versus Alvin Karpis, Public Enemy Number One'' (1974, with [[Robert Foxworth]], [[Harris Yulin]], [[Lenore Kasdorf]], [[Bill Zuckert]], [[Whit Bissell]], [[Arch Whiting]], [[Dallas Mitchell]], and [[James B. Sikking]])
 
  +
  +
Lockwood's early television credits also included a guest spot on the [[NBC]] drama ''Saints and Sinners'', under the direction of veteran TOS director [[Marc Daniels]]. Lockwood then appeared in an episode of ''Perry Mason'' with [[Anthony Caruso]], followed by an episode of ''Combat!'' with [[Jim Goodwin]]. In 1964, Lockwood made a guest appearance on ''12 O'Clock High'', a series which starred TOS guest actors [[Robert Lansing]] and [[Frank Overton]]. He reprised his role from this episode the following year, then made a third appearance on the show in a different role. [[Nancy Kovack]] was also seen in Lockwood's first episode; [[Lee Meriwether]] appeared in the third.
  +
  +
In 1965, Lockwood acted alongside [[Sally Kellerman]] on an episode of the Canadian series ''Seaway'' and in a segment of ''Kraft Suspense Theatre'' entitled ''Connery's Hands'' (the latter also featured [[Francine Pyne]]). Lockwood and Kellerman later worked opposite each other on "Where No Man Has Gone Before" the same year.
  +
  +
== Later career ==
  +
Following his iconic role in ''2001: A Space Odyssey'', Lockwood has only acted in a handful of films. He acted alongside [[Graham Jarvis]], [[Don Keefer]], [[John McLiam]], and [[Paul Winfield]] in the 1970 Stanley Kramer drama ''R.P.M.'', which was followed in 1972 by the comedy ''Stand Up and Be Counted'', which co-starred [[Michael Ansara]] and the aforementioned Madlyn Rhue. He then starred in a number of low-budget independent films, including ''Project: Kill'' (1976), ''Survival Zone'' (1983), and ''Night of the Scarecrow'' (1995, with [[Stephen Root]]).
  +
  +
The majority of Lockwood's career since the 1970s has been comprised of television guest appearances, made-for-TV movies, and other television projects. In 1971, he starred in ''Earth II'', an unsold pilot for a proposed science fiction television series. [[Mariette Hartley]] starred in this production, as well. Lockwood also worked on the pilot for the short-lived series ''The Manhunter'', along with [[John Anderson]], [[Lenore Kasdorf]], and [[Tim O'Connor]].
  +
  +
Among the television shows on which Lockwood guest-starred throughout the 1970s are ''Medical Center'' (with [[Barbara Baldavin]] and series regular [[James Daly]]), ''Mission: Impossible'' (with [[Jason Evers]]), ''Ironside'' (again working with Madlyn Rhue), ''The Six Million Dollar Man'' (two episodes: one with [[William Schallert]], the other directed by [[Russ Mayberry]]), ''The Bionic Woman'' (with [[Jeff Corey]]), and ''Starsky and Hutch'' (which starred [[David Soul]] as "Hutch"). Lockwood also made numerous appearances on the drama series ''Barnaby Jones'', each time playing a different character. Aforementioned TOS guest star Lee Meriwether was a regular on this series; others Lockwood worked with on the show include [[Ward Costello]], [[Meg Foster]], [[Ellen Geer]], [[Vince Howard]], [[William Lucking]], [[Phillip Pine]], [[Lawrence Pressman]], the aforementioned Michael Strong, and director [[Corey Allen]].
  +
  +
In the mid-1980s, Lockwood reunited with his ''Star Trek'' co-star [[William Shatner]] for two episode of ''T.J. Hooker'', the police drama on which the [[James T. Kirk|Kirk]] actor played the title role. [[James Darren]] (later of ''[[Star Trek: Deep Space Nine]]'') was also a regular cast member at the time. Lockwood's first episode ("The Snow Game", 1984) was directed by Shatner himself, while the second episode ("To Kill a Cop", 1985) guest-starred [[Julie Cobb]] and [[Thalmus Rasulala]].
  +
  +
Lockwood made four appearances each on the TV dramas ''Simon & Simon'' and ''Murder, She Wrote'', portraying a different character in each episode. Veteran ''Star Trek'' director Vincent McEveety, whom Lockwood worked with many times during the 1960s, directed Lockwood in one episode from each series. On ''Simon & Simon'', he also worked with fellow ''Trek'' performers [[Daphne Ashbrook]], [[Michael Dante]], and [[Kenneth Mars]]; on ''Murder, She Wrote'', he acted with [[Theodore Bikel]], [[Joanna Cassidy]], [[Mary Crosby]], [[Allan Miller]], [[Robert O'Reilly]], and [[William Windom]].
  +
  +
Throughout the 1980s, Lockwood has also made guest appearances on such programs as ''Charlie's Angels'' (directed by [[Kim Manners]]), ''Hart to Hart'' (with [[Andrew Robinson]]), and ''MacGyver'' (with [[Bruce McGill]]). He also continued appearing in TV movies, including the 1983 drama ''Emergency Room'', in which he worked with ''Next Generation'' regular [[LeVar Burton]] as well as [[Warren Munson]], [[John Vargas]], [[Gary Faga]], [[Biff Yeager]], [[Michael Spound]], and [[Gary Frank]]. He also had a supporting role in 1987's ''The Return of the Six-Million-Dollar Man and the Bionic Woman'' along with [[William Campbell]] and [[Tom Schanley]].
  +
  +
Lockwood's most recent television work was a guest spot on the science fiction series ''Dark Skies'' in 1997. [[Jeri Ryan]], who later joined the cast of ''Star Trek: Voyager'', was a regular on this series at the time. The episode in question, "The Warren Omission", also guest-starred [[Dennis Creaghan]] and [[Conor O'Farrell]].
  +
 
== Additional credits ==
  +
Other film and television projects not mentioned above in which Lockwood worked with other ''Star Trek'' alumni include:
  +
=== Films ===
 
*''The Wild Pair'' (1987) with [[Ellen Geer]]
  +
 
=== TV guest appearances ===
  +
* ''Bus Stop'' episode "Charlie" (1961, with [[John McLiam]])
  +
* ''The Young Rebels'' episode "To Kill a Traitor" (1971, with [[Alex Henteloff]])
 
* ''The F.B.I.'' episode "The Animal" (1974, with [[Meg Foster]])
  +
* ''Cannon'' episode "Coffin Corner" (1975, with [[Richard Evans]] and [[Noble Willingham]])
  +
* ''Cannon'' episode "Cry Wolf" (1976, directed by [[Lawrence Dobkin]])
  +
* ''The Blue Knight'' episode "Bull's Eye" (1976, with [[Elisha Cook]] and [[Nicolas Coster]])
 
* ''Police Story'' episode "Trash Detail, Front and Center" (1976, with [[Phillip Pine]])
  +
* ''The Quest'' episodes "The Longest Drive: Part 1" and "The Longest Drive: Part 2" (1976, with [[John Rubinstein]])
  +
* ''The Streets of San Francisco'' episode "Monkey is Back" (1977, with [[Phillip Richard Allen]], [[Earl Boen]], and [[Ted Gehring]])
  +
* ''Police Story'' episode "End of the Lind" (1977, directed by [[Michael O'Herlihy]])
  +
* ''Trapper John, M.D.'' episode "'Til Life Do Us Part" (1980, with [[Norman Stuart]])
  +
* ''Vega$'' episode "Sudden Death" (1980, with [[Ian Abercrombie]] and [[Frank Corsentino]])
  +
* ''The Fall Guy'' episode "Scavenger Hunt" (1982, directed by [[Cliff Bole]])
  +
* ''The Fall Guy'' episodes "Colt Breaks Out: Part 1", "Colt Breaks Out: Part 2" (both 1982) and "King of the Cowboys" (1984, with [[Michael Pataki]])
  +
* ''Matt Houston'' episode "The Good Doctor" (1982, with [[John Chandler]] and [[William Windom]])
  +
* ''Matt Houston'' episode "On the Run" (1984, with [[Stefan Gierasch]] and [[Andrew Prine]])
  +
* ''Cover Up'' episode "The Million Dollar Face" (1984, with [[Henry Gibson]] and Andrew Prine)
  +
* ''Finder of Lost Loves'' episode "Wayward Dreams" (1985, with [[Samantha Eggar]])
  +
* ''Trapper John, M.D.'' episode "Research and Destroy" (1986, with [[Madge Sinclair]])
  +
* ''The Highwayman'' episode "Send in the Clones" (1988, with Michael Pataki)
  +
 
=== TV movies ===
 
* ''Sally and Sam'' (1965, with [[Phyllis Douglas]])
 
* ''The F.B.I. Story: The FBI Versus Alvin Karpis, Public Enemy Number One'' (1974, with [[Robert Foxworth]], [[Harris Yulin]], [[Lenore Kasdorf]], [[Bill Zuckert]], [[Whit Bissell]], [[Arch Whiting]], [[Dallas Mitchell]], and [[James B. Sikking]]; directed by [[Marvin Chomsky]])
  +
* ''Kit Carson and the Mountain Men'' (1977, with [[Ike Eisenmann]] and [[Nick Ramus]])
 
* ''The Ghost of Flight 401'' (1978, with [[Alan Oppenheimer]], [[Byron Morrow]], [[Eugene Roche]], [[Allan Miller]], and [[Mark L. Taylor]])
 
* ''The Ghost of Flight 401'' (1978, with [[Alan Oppenheimer]], [[Byron Morrow]], [[Eugene Roche]], [[Allan Miller]], and [[Mark L. Taylor]])
 
* ''The Incredible Journey of Doctor Meg Laurel'' (1979, with [[Brock Peters]], [[Ray Young]], and [[Gary Graham]])
 
* ''The Incredible Journey of Doctor Meg Laurel'' (1979, with [[Brock Peters]], [[Ray Young]], and [[Gary Graham]])
 
* ''Top of the Hill'' (1980, with [[Adrienne Barbeau]] and [[Chuck Hicks]])
 
* ''Top of the Hill'' (1980, with [[Adrienne Barbeau]] and [[Chuck Hicks]])
 
* ''Emergency Room'' (1983, with [[LeVar Burton]], [[Warren Munson]], [[John Vargas]], [[Gary Faga]], [[Biff Yeager]], [[Michael Spound]], and [[Gary Frank]])
 
* ''Emergency Room'' (1983, with [[LeVar Burton]], [[Warren Munson]], [[John Vargas]], [[Gary Faga]], [[Biff Yeager]], [[Michael Spound]], and [[Gary Frank]])
* ''Half Nelson'' (1985, with [[Fred Williamson]], [[Nicolas Surovy]], and [[Dean Martin]])
+
* ''Half Nelson'' (1985, with [[Fred Williamson]] and [[Nicolas Surovy]])
* ''The Return of the Six-Million-Dollar Man and the Bionic Woman'' (1987, with [[William Campbell]] and [[Tom Schanley]])
+
* ''The Return of The Six Million Dollar Man and Bionic Woman'' (1988, with [[William Campbell]])
===Movies===
 
* ''The Magic Sword'' (1962, with [[Liam Sullivan]])
 
* ''2001: A Space Odyssey'' (1968, with Keir Dullea)
 
   
==External link==
+
== External links ==
  +
* Gary Lockwood Official Website: [[www.gary-lockwood.com]]
*{{IMDb-link|page=nm0516972}}
 
  +
* {{wikipedia}}
 
 
* {{IMDb-link|page=nm0516972}}
[[Category:Performers|Lockwood, Gary]]
 
  +
* [http://i194.photobucket.com/albums/z309/FleetCaptain/LWoodat70.jpg Photo of Gary Lockwood] (shortly after his 70th birthday)
[[Category:TOS performers|Lockwood, Gary]]
 
   
 
[[de:Gary Lockwood]]
 
[[de:Gary Lockwood]]
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[[fr:Gary Lockwood]]
 
[[fr:Gary Lockwood]]
 
[[sv:Gary Lockwood]]
 
[[sv:Gary Lockwood]]
 
[[Category:Performers|Lockwood, Gary]]
 
[[Category:TOS performers|Lockwood, Gary]]

Revision as of 14:01, 18 October 2015

Template:Realworld

Gary Lockwood (born 21 February 1937; age 87) is the actor who played Lieutenant Commander Gary Mitchell in the second pilot for Star Trek: The Original Series, called "Where No Man Has Gone Before". He filmed his scenes between Monday 19 July 1965 and Wednesday 28 July 1965 at Desilu Culver Stage 15, Stage 16, and Stage 17, participating in all eight days of production.

Lockwood is perhaps best known for his role as Dr. Frank Poole in the revered 1968 science fiction film 2001: A Space Odyssey.

Despite his one-time guest appearance in the Trek franchise, Lockwood participated in the 1997 documentary Trekkies, which chronicles the impact of Star Trek on the US culture.

Early years

Lockwood was born John Gary Yurosek in Van Nuys, California and attended the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA) on a football scholarship. He broke into show business as a stuntman and as a stand-in for actor Anthony Perkins in 1957, but he quickly moved to acting.

His first movie as an actor was the 1959 western Warlock, which also featured fellow Star Trek alumni Whit Bissell, Paul Comi, Frank Gorshin, Roy Jenson, and DeForest Kelley. That same year, Lockwood made his major television acting debut on an episode of Bronco, alongside Yvonne Craig.

Lockwood made an uncredited appearance in the 1960 film Tall Story, which starred later Star Trek: The Next Generation and Star Trek: Voyager guest actor, Ray Walston. Lockwood's first credited film role came a year later in the Elvis Presley picture Wild in the Country; he again worked with Presley (and Yvonne Craig) in 1963's It Happened at the World's Fair. Pete Kellett, Bill Quinn and Guy Raymond also appeared in the latter film. Lockwood's early feature film credits also included the Academy Award-winning 1961 drama Splendor in the Grass and 1962's The Magic Sword (which co-starred Liam Sullivan).

From 1963 through 1964, Lockwood was the star of the television series called The Lieutenant, a show which, like Star Trek, was created by Gene Roddenberry. Many other performers who later worked on Star Trek appeared in this series, including TOS regulars Walter Koenig, Nichelle Nichols, and Leonard Nimoy, recurring Trek actress Majel Barrett, and such guest performers as Barbara Babcock, James Gregory, Paul Lambert, Don Marshall, Oliver McGowan, Dallas Mitchell, Ricardo Montalban, William O'Connell, Leslie Parrish, Andrew Prine, Madlyn Rhue, Michael Strong, and Kenneth Tobey.

Many episodes of The Lieutenant were directed by Vincent McEveety. McEveety later directed Lockwood in a two-part episode of Gunsmoke which aired in early 1965 and in the 1968 western film Firecreek. The latter also featured fellow TOS guest stars Barbara Luna and Morgan Woodward and TNG guest star Brooke Bundy. Besides this, Robert Butler and David Alexander both directed two episodes of The Lieutenant.

Lockwood's early television credits also included a guest spot on the NBC drama Saints and Sinners, under the direction of veteran TOS director Marc Daniels. Lockwood then appeared in an episode of Perry Mason with Anthony Caruso, followed by an episode of Combat! with Jim Goodwin. In 1964, Lockwood made a guest appearance on 12 O'Clock High, a series which starred TOS guest actors Robert Lansing and Frank Overton. He reprised his role from this episode the following year, then made a third appearance on the show in a different role. Nancy Kovack was also seen in Lockwood's first episode; Lee Meriwether appeared in the third.

In 1965, Lockwood acted alongside Sally Kellerman on an episode of the Canadian series Seaway and in a segment of Kraft Suspense Theatre entitled Connery's Hands (the latter also featured Francine Pyne). Lockwood and Kellerman later worked opposite each other on "Where No Man Has Gone Before" the same year.

Later career

Following his iconic role in 2001: A Space Odyssey, Lockwood has only acted in a handful of films. He acted alongside Graham Jarvis, Don Keefer, John McLiam, and Paul Winfield in the 1970 Stanley Kramer drama R.P.M., which was followed in 1972 by the comedy Stand Up and Be Counted, which co-starred Michael Ansara and the aforementioned Madlyn Rhue. He then starred in a number of low-budget independent films, including Project: Kill (1976), Survival Zone (1983), and Night of the Scarecrow (1995, with Stephen Root).

The majority of Lockwood's career since the 1970s has been comprised of television guest appearances, made-for-TV movies, and other television projects. In 1971, he starred in Earth II, an unsold pilot for a proposed science fiction television series. Mariette Hartley starred in this production, as well. Lockwood also worked on the pilot for the short-lived series The Manhunter, along with John Anderson, Lenore Kasdorf, and Tim O'Connor.

Among the television shows on which Lockwood guest-starred throughout the 1970s are Medical Center (with Barbara Baldavin and series regular James Daly), Mission: Impossible (with Jason Evers), Ironside (again working with Madlyn Rhue), The Six Million Dollar Man (two episodes: one with William Schallert, the other directed by Russ Mayberry), The Bionic Woman (with Jeff Corey), and Starsky and Hutch (which starred David Soul as "Hutch"). Lockwood also made numerous appearances on the drama series Barnaby Jones, each time playing a different character. Aforementioned TOS guest star Lee Meriwether was a regular on this series; others Lockwood worked with on the show include Ward Costello, Meg Foster, Ellen Geer, Vince Howard, William Lucking, Phillip Pine, Lawrence Pressman, the aforementioned Michael Strong, and director Corey Allen.

In the mid-1980s, Lockwood reunited with his Star Trek co-star William Shatner for two episode of T.J. Hooker, the police drama on which the Kirk actor played the title role. James Darren (later of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine) was also a regular cast member at the time. Lockwood's first episode ("The Snow Game", 1984) was directed by Shatner himself, while the second episode ("To Kill a Cop", 1985) guest-starred Julie Cobb and Thalmus Rasulala.

Lockwood made four appearances each on the TV dramas Simon & Simon and Murder, She Wrote, portraying a different character in each episode. Veteran Star Trek director Vincent McEveety, whom Lockwood worked with many times during the 1960s, directed Lockwood in one episode from each series. On Simon & Simon, he also worked with fellow Trek performers Daphne Ashbrook, Michael Dante, and Kenneth Mars; on Murder, She Wrote, he acted with Theodore Bikel, Joanna Cassidy, Mary Crosby, Allan Miller, Robert O'Reilly, and William Windom.

Throughout the 1980s, Lockwood has also made guest appearances on such programs as Charlie's Angels (directed by Kim Manners), Hart to Hart (with Andrew Robinson), and MacGyver (with Bruce McGill). He also continued appearing in TV movies, including the 1983 drama Emergency Room, in which he worked with Next Generation regular LeVar Burton as well as Warren Munson, John Vargas, Gary Faga, Biff Yeager, Michael Spound, and Gary Frank. He also had a supporting role in 1987's The Return of the Six-Million-Dollar Man and the Bionic Woman along with William Campbell and Tom Schanley.

Lockwood's most recent television work was a guest spot on the science fiction series Dark Skies in 1997. Jeri Ryan, who later joined the cast of Star Trek: Voyager, was a regular on this series at the time. The episode in question, "The Warren Omission", also guest-starred Dennis Creaghan and Conor O'Farrell.

Additional credits

Other film and television projects not mentioned above in which Lockwood worked with other Star Trek alumni include:

Films

TV guest appearances

TV movies

External links