You don't mean it was Shatner's vendetta against Nimoy, do you?
Shatner's
insecurities about Nimoy... Shatner was the nominal star of the show by Nimoy was getting almost all the accolades... and Emmy nominations...
Is there any corroboration to the theory that the staff downplayed Spock's role due to Nimoy's second Emmy nomination besides Marc Cushman's speculation?
Cushman states that both D.C. Fontana (by direct memo quotation) and Bob Justman (not directly annotated) wrote memos to Gene Coon, telling him that Spock needed to be more involved earlier in the story. Roddenberry may have also had a say with Coon in this matter, again emphasizing the role of Kirk and downplaying the role of Spock in the story.
Given the evidence Cushman presents, including:
- Nimoy having gotten a second Emmy nomination while Shatner was again passed over;
- Nimoy's salary battle at beginning of the second production season where Roddenberry went far enough to consider firing Nimoy;
- The script for the episode filmed prior ("The Doomsday Machine") included large chunks of action where Shatner was not involved at all. In fact, Shatner felt compelled to cut Nimoy's lines (to the point Norman Spinrad stated that one scene no longer worked as written), suggesting Shatner thought Nimoy's prominence this the script could reinforce the notion that Nimoy was the "real" star of the show, not Shatner. Justman and Solow wrote extensively about that friction point in their book.
With these factors in mind, I find Cushman's analysis of the situation to be sound, logical, and supported by factual evidence from other sources (both Fontana's memo and the Solow/Justman book).
I'm certainly willing to entertain any contrary or different interpretations of why Spock is not a prominent character in the first half of this episode. However, until they are presented to me, with at least as much evidence that Cushman has presented, there's no "there there."
I'm not advocating that everything that Cushman has written in his books is totally accurate or completely correct--I know that's not true. But give me a little credit for being able to figure out what makes sense and what doesn't.
While we're on this subject, let me say this: There are those--not necessarily you, Harvey--who have (at least implicitly) criticized others here for believing things simply because they appeared in Cushman's books. Those who would dismiss viewpoints, etc. simply because they come from a particular author without presenting factual, verifiable evidence that disproves the author's claims themselves display bias that discredits them... at least with me.