Gary Seven


Gary Seven is the major character in the last episode of the second season of the original television series, "". He is portrayed by Robert Lansing.

"Assignment: Earth"

The episode "" was originally a television pilot for a proposed series about Gary Seven, who, according to "Assignment: Earth”, is a human from the 24th century undertaking a mission on Earth in 1968, "the only Earth man to survive the transit." His goal in the original series pilot would have been to defeat the Omegans, a race of shape-changing aliens who have sent agents back in time to change Earth's history so they can defeat Earth in the future.
The pilot was later reworked as an episode for Star Trek, where Seven is now a human raised on a distant planet. The crew of the starship Enterprise, who have been sent back in time by the United Federation of Planets to do detailed research on Earth in 1968, accidentally intercept the transporter beam that is sending Seven to Earth. Seeing humans and Vulcans together, Seven realizes that the starship has come from the future, while the crew suspect that Seven is also a time traveler.
The pilot was debuted as an episode of Star Trek, where Gary Seven, assigned by his planet's agency as a Class One Supervisor known as Supervisor 194, has been sent to determine why two resident agents, colleagues Agent 201 and Agent 347, had stopped reporting to their superiors. When he discovers that they have been killed in a traffic collision, he takes over their immediate task of sabotaging the launch of an orbital missile platform by the U.S. to prevent nuclear war on Earth.
Seven uses the Enterprise transporter and beams back to Earth into a teleporter that looks like a safe on the outside. The transporter is hidden behind a counter located within his office in Apartment 12B at 811 East 68th Street in New York City. Here, he makes use of his Beta 5 computer, which has a circular view screen and is hidden behind a book case. The computer speaks with a female voice and has broad, though limited, powers. He also shows several high-tech devices he employed such as his servo, the Beta 5 computer and the transporter chamber. The desk also has a blue green cube on it and a typewriter that types whatever is spoken.
His colleagues, Agents 201 and 347, have been using the cover of researching for a new encyclopedia, and hire Roberta Lincoln as their secretary. She is originally unaware of Seven's origins, but as she "possesses high I.Q.", she realizes swiftly that he is not what he seems; she even guesses that he is alien or from the future.
Lincoln tries earlier to foil Seven, but the two begin to work together.
Seven also has a constant companion in Isis, who at first appears to be ordinary, but is then shown to have intelligence and capability that far exceeds that of an Earthbound cat. Though she gives the appearance of being Seven's pet, Isis is more. She communicates with him through a rudimentary telepathy and understands his speech. She accompanies him wherever he goes and watches out for him, to the point of being able to find him easily when they are separated. In fact, Isis seems to have a classically magical power, in that she appears able to alter her shape into a different form, or at least create the illusion that she has done so. Lincoln discovers this ability during one of the last scenes in the episode, when Isis appears to her briefly as a human female, wearing a collar similar to the one worn while in cat form, and then reverts back into her original feline shape while Lincoln's back is turned.
At the end of the episode, Spock informs Seven and Lincoln that after a check of Federation records, he finds that the new team has "interesting experiences in store for them."

Powers and abilities

Although Seven is human, he manifests at least one non-human feature: he is immune to the impact of the Vulcan nerve pinch, an ability very few human or humanoid characters of the Star Trek universe ever manifested. Seven utilizes a small pen-shaped device called a. It functions as a communication device, a remote control to his personal transporter, a handheld weapon with both stun and kill settings and enough precision to cut a telephone wire from across a room, a remote manipulator to circuitry and machinery, and a mechanical manipulation device.
Fans of Dr Who will automatically see this as a version of the Doctor's sonic screwdriver.

Non-canon">Star Trek canon">Non-canon appearances

''Star Trek'' novels

In Greg Cox's, Gary Seven had numerous dealings with Khan Noonien Singh and initially hopes to train Khan as his successor. Along with his now-partner Roberta Lincoln, Seven tries to prevent World War III in a variety of ways. Seven leaves Earth in 1996, after sending Khan on the DY-100 class sleeper ship SS Botany Bay.
Cox also wrote a 1997 novel, , featuring Seven. In this novel, the alien agency which Seven works for is called the "Aegis", though whether this refers to the organization or the alien species in charge of the organization is unclear.
Seven is mentioned, but not seen, in the Star Trek: Department of Temporal Investigations: Watching the Clock novels as well as the 2017 novel Star Trek: The Next Generation: Hearts and Minds.

''Star Trek'' comics

According to several issues of the Star Trek comic books released by DC Comics in the 1990s, Gary Seven and Isis were sent by a force known as the "Aegis", who took individuals from many worlds to selectively alter historical events. They gave their agents long lifespans, estimated to be as long as 1,000 years. Not all of these interventions went well—at least one led to an agent becoming the sole survivor of his homeworld—leading to a small rebellion against the Aegis. Several agents go so far as to injure or murder innocent beings who stand in their way.
Gary Seven later went against the wishes of the Aegis when he tried to stop the Devidians from altering the timeline so that the Federation would fall to the Romulans. Seven died in an initial attempt to rescue Spock from the Devidians, but was pulled from the timeline by the Aegis prior to the moment of his death after Exana stopped the Devidians with the aid of Captain Kirk and Captain Picard.
In 2008, IDW Publishing launched an Assignment: Earth comic miniseries written and drawn by John Byrne.