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Star Trek: The Animated Series is an animated science fiction television series set in the Star Trek universe. The series was aired under the name Star Trek, but it has become widely known under this longer name (or abbreviated as ST:TAS or TAS) to differentiate it from the original live action Star Trek. It is also sometimes referred to (such as on STARTREK.COM (http://www.startrek.com/startrek/view/series/ANI/index.html)) as "The Animated Adventures." The series was produced by Filmation and ran for two seasons, 1973 and 1974, airing a total of twenty-two half-hour episodes. It featured most of the original cast performing the voices for their characters, except for Pavel Chekov (Walter Koenig). He was replaced by Lieutenant Arex, a member of a species which had three arms and three legs. Another semi-regular addition to the cast was Lt. M'Ress, a female cat-like alien. (An earlier Filmation proposal had children assigned to each of the senior officers as cadets, including a young Vulcan for Mr. Spock.) Koenig was not forgotten and later wrote an episode of the series, becoming the first Star Trek actor to write a Star Trek story in the process. It is generally assumed that the episodes in the series take place after the events of the Original Series, possibly during the last year of the NCC-1701's five-year mission. However this is never stated on screen. It is impossible to support this notion using the stardates mentioned in the episodes, since they are often inconsistent with the Original Series. One episode, "Magicks of Megas-Tu" carries a stardate that would place it before the first episode of the series, while another episode carries a stardate well after the date given in Star Trek: The Motion Picture. As is usual for animation, the voice actors did not perform together but recorded their parts separately to avoid clashing with other commitments. For instance, William Shatner, who was touring in a play at the time, would record his lines in whatever city he happened to be in and have the tapes shipped to the studio. Trek regulars James Doohan and Majel Barrett performed virtually all of the "guest star" characters in the series, except for a few notable exceptions (Sarek, Cyrano Jones and Harcourt Fenton Mudd, who were performed by their original actors from The Original Series). While the freedom of animation afforded large alien landscapes, budget constraints were a major concern and animation quality was generally poor, with very liberal use of stock shots. Occasionally, though, parts of episodes would be animated at a near-theatrical quality level. Several episodes were novelized by Alan Dean Foster and put into collections of three stories each called "Captain's Logs." A few episodes are especially notable due to contributions from well-known science fiction authors:
For a variety of reasons (most likely legal ones, such as the use of concepts from Niven's own works), Paramount Pictures does not consider The Animated Series to be true Star Trek canon. Also, Gene Roddenberry reportedly asked soon before his death that the series not be considered canon. There have however been occasions where writers and other production crew have sneaked animation-series references into one of the live-action series, to many a Trekkie's delight. Most recently, the Star Trek: Enterprise episodes "The Catwalk" and "The Forge" included references to "Yesteryear". See also: List of Star Trek: The Animated Series episodes
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