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D.C. Fontana : ウィキペディア英語版
D. C. Fontana

Dorothy Catherine "D. C." Fontana (born March 25, 1939 in Sussex, New Jersey) is an American television script writer and story editor, best known for her work on the original ''Star Trek'' series.
==Work with Gene Roddenberry==
Originally Gene Roddenberry's secretary,〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.startrek.com/startrek/view/library/creative/bio/3008.html )〕 she wrote for ''Star Trek'' from the outset, starting with the original TV series from 1966 to the end of its production run. During that time she wrote such episodes as "Tomorrow Is Yesterday", "Friday's Child", "Journey to Babel", "This Side of Paradise", and "The Enterprise Incident".
Under the pen name Michael Richards, Fontana wrote "That Which Survives" and "The Way to Eden", both from the show's third season. In the Season 2 DVD featurette "Writer's Notebook: D.C. Fontana" she stated that her use of the "Michael Richards" pseudonym (a combination of her two brothers' names, Michael and Richard) was "an indication of a script (where) I didn't particularly care for what had been done to it, so I took my name off it."
Fontana also wrote under the name J. Michael Bingham. This pseudonym was used for the story and teleplay credits for "The Naked Now", an episode of ''Star Trek: The Next Generation''. The story credit was shared by John D. F. Black, who had written "The Naked Time", the original series episode to which "Naked Now" was an homage.
She also wrote the episode "Yesteryear" for the Emmy Award winning ''Star Trek: The Animated Series''.
She wrote several episodes in the first season of ''Star Trek: The Next Generation'' starting with the 1987 pilot episode, "Encounter at Farpoint", and the episode "Dax" of ''Star Trek: Deep Space Nine'' in 1993.
Between ''Star Trek'' assignments, she wrote the novelization of another Roddenberry project, ''The Questor Tapes''. In 1989, Pocket Books published her novel, ''Vulcan's Glory'', which concerns Spock's struggle to reconcile his Vulcan heritage with his obligations to Starfleet and his duties to family — and his own heart's desires.

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