Bruna. 28. Bisexual. Brazil. I've got a film degree.
Sometimes I post mature content, so I'll ask to only follow me if you're 18+.
This is a multifandom blog. Expect lots of Hannibal and Star Trek. Also Vampire Chronicles. Lots of movies. There will be on occasion rock bands and singers. Also books and TV shows and random stuff.
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Interviewer: Does Spock envy Kirk in any way - or wish he had that ease with women, rather than the problems he’s always having?
Nimoy: “Well - Wait a minute - What problems?”
Interviewer: ‘Well, for example, Leila in “This Side of Paradise -“
Nimoy: “‘This Side of Paradise?’ That’s not a problem.”
Interviewer: ‘“I can love you,” Spock says when he finally is under the effect of the spores. Before that he couldn’t even talk to her.’
Nimoy [flatly]: “It’s not a problem. Spock without the influence of the spores functions the way he wants to - functions the way he chooses to. The spores put him in an altered position, where he functions differently because of the spores. But before and after the effect of the spores, he functions the way he chooses to.
Interviewer: ‘But the essence of that particular story is that spores released him to express the emotions which he had within him.’
Nimoy: “Well, I dealt with that in the book, I Am Not Spock. The
point is that what you’re saying, the position you’re taking is that Spock,
if he had the choice would choose to function as he did under the influence
of the spores. Or that he was happiest then. And what I said in the book was that
that’s not necessarily true. He had some insight into another kind of
experience, which was interesting. But that does not necessarily mean
that that would be his choice. Given the opportunity, he makes the choice
to go the other way. He could, at the end of the show say, I would prefer
to be that way, to be in that condition. But he doesn’t, does he?”
Interviewer: ‘Actually, he almost does. He says, “For the first time in my life,
I was happy.” ’
Nimoy: “I wrote about that line, and what I said was that the human assumption
would be that that would be a desirable state. Spock is not describing
it in a qualitative sense. He’s describing it in a descriptive sense.
Like you might say, ‘For the first time in my life I had a hamburger.
For the first time in my life I was happy. For the first time in my life
I walked down La Cienega Boulevard. For the first time in my life, I sat
down and had lunch at The Captain’s Table.’ It’s just a statement
of fact of something that he experienced. Humans would automatically say,
‘Aw, the poor guy, he can’t be happy anymore. He was only happy for that
moment.’ Spock wasn’t feeling sorry for himself when he said that. He
isn’t saying: (Spock:) ‘That’s a state of grace that I would like to achieve
for the rest of my life.’ He’s just saying: ‘That’s interesting. Now I
know what Humans mean when they say, “I’m happy.” Well, for
the first time in my life, I was happy. So, I know, now. It’s part of
my recorded matter in my head. If somebody says, “Do you know what
happiness is?” - Yeah, I think I could say I know what that is. I
had that once.’”
Last night while at her home in LA, Nichelle Nichols suffered from a mild stroke. She is currently undergoing testing to determine how severe the stroke was. Please keep her in your thoughts.
I was one of the first black women in the country, more years ago than I care to remember, who wore an afro ‘outside,’ in public. This was way before Star Trek. I wore one of the biggest afros in New York, but I wore it with Dior and Chanel suits. One of the other persons who was the first to wear an afro, but she cut it very short, was Cicely Tyson.
But when it came time to do the Star Trek movie, I had to fight for that afro. It was nothing against the afro, but the feeling was that the afro had become so very popular that it looked too contemporary.
I said, ‘However, the afro is not modern, the afro has been around for at least not less than 5,000 years and probably at least 10,000. I’m not sure how long we’ve been on the planet, but as long as there have been black people the afro has been around.’
Then they said, ‘Well, it can’t be the big bubble, so let’s try to get a more “Uhura’ style.” I said, ‘What are you going to do, deny her race and make her hair straight again? If we’re going to have to live through that again…’ They assured me that what they had in mind was more of a balance, and we agreed.
We said, 'OK, women in the future will do all kinds of things, as they have in the past. For 5,000 years and more they’ve straightened their hair and curled it and rolled it and twisted it and braided it and twirled it and shaved it off and done everything under the sun. And so, in the future, it’s very conceivable that, just as we do today, black people will do these twirly-curl kind of things, and point their bangs, and this would be peculiar to Uhura: the pointed bangs and long sideburns.’
[…] To tell the truth, I really wanted cornrow braids. And don’t you dare call them 'Bo Derek braids!’ That’s something that we’ve been doing for thousands of years before she was born!
I love this so, so much. It really speaks to issues that black women in Hollywood and everyday life are still facing today around the shaming of natural hair that comes with the assumption that the beauty standard to appeal to is that of white women’s hair. And it touches on cultural appropriation of black hairstyles like cornrows by white people! Nichelle Nichols is so the most amazing.
that bio of grace lee whitney says that she became depressed and addicted after she was dropped from the series, but that makes it sound like she was, i don’t know, just bitter - it does not mention, for example, that while she was under contract she put herself on diet pills so she could fit into the too-tight uniform, or that she was sexually assaulted by a star trek executive before she was “let go.” i understand that those things might not belong in an obituary, because her life blossomed into so many bigger and better things, but i don’t know, i think we should respect the difficulty of that journey, i think it’s worth remembering that for all we may like to romanticize the original series and the people involved (leonard nimoy, to the credit of his memory, was very supportive of her), this incredible woman went through hell and came back fighting. she absolutely did take back her life, and she even came back to star trek. i think she was pretty amazing. rest peacefully, grace.
I spent my boyhood behind the barbed wire fences of American Ointernment camps and when we came out of camp, that’s when I first realized that being in camp, that being Japanese-American, was something shameful. Star Trek is a show that had a vision about a future that was positive. The starship Enterprise was a metaphor starship Earth, and the vision was that the strength of this starship lay in its diversity