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(1934–1972). Czechoslovakian actor.
In science fiction circles, Ihnat is undoubtedly, and
unfortunately, best known for his role in the Star Trek episode
"Whom Gods Destroy," playing a charismatic madman with shape-changing
abilities who almost seizes control of the Enterprise. While the
story itself is the sort of meaningless melodrama that often marred the
series' third season, it is amazing to observe how thoroughly Ihnat dominates
the proceedings; just as "Space Seed" was Ricardo MONTALBAN's
episode, "Whom Gods Destroy" is Ihnat's episode—and it is a tribute
to both men's talents that I can recall no other Star Trek episodes
in which star performers William SHATNER and
Leonard NIMOY were so forcefully shoved to the sidelines.
However, his most memorable performance came in a two-part
episode of The Outer Limits, "The Inheritors," where he again outshone
a capable competitor—a young Robert DUVALL—in portraying a soldier,
turned into a genius by an alien implant, who conspires to kidnap some
handicapped children and take them to the aliens' planet where, we are
finally told, they will be cured to live happy lives. Persuasively sympathetic
in an apparently villainous role, Ihnat made a slow-moving story strangely
involving. He was also impressive in two episodes of Mission Impossible,
a program ideally suited to his subdued air of authority, and although
he was given little to do as a NASA general in the film Countdown,
he did it very well.
Despite his demonstrated talents in several genres, Ihnat
seemed to have a special affinity for westerns, and it was shortly after
co-writing and directing a comedy about rodeo performers, The Honkers
(1972), that he collapsed and died of a heart attack at the young age
of thirty-eight. Perhaps all those years of struggling to steal the spotlight
away from the stars of the show had finally taken their toll. |
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