For the past few months, I've been sitting on a career-spanning interview with Fontana that I commissioned through work (Stephen Bowie did the interview, and did a great job). It's been a complete dog of a week there already, but I'm going to try and get it ready for publication before the weekend. If I meet that goal, I'll share the link here.
Not to diminish her in the least, but in fairness Coon re outlined the story which she then executed, then Coon took a stab at it and somewhere in there GR got his mitts on bits.[...]Isuspect she was the primary engine behind, and therefore credit her with, rescuing Ellison's unfilmable City script.[...]
Didn't Dorothy want to write the book, but the bigwigs wouldn't let her. I kind of hope that she did write it. I always wanted to read it.A shame https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Star_Trek:_Secret_of_Vulcan_Fury never got released
Precisely the opposite. She was offered a contract to novelize the game, but Pocket couldn’t offer her a big enough advance to make it worth her while, so she declined.Didn't Dorothy want to write the book, but the bigwigs wouldn't let her. I kind of hope that she did write it. I always wanted to read it.
That is a shame. I would have liked to read that novel. I also would have liked to play the game.Precisely the opposite. She was offered a contract to novelize the game, but Pocket couldn’t offer her a big enough advance to make it worth her while, so she declined.
As much as we love her for her Trek contributions I wish the various obits went deeper and gave a better sense of how varied her career was. So many people who worked on Star Trek end up being defined solely by it and their other accomplishments get forgotten.
Ron Gans would later play the voice of Armus in a very slick TNG episode...
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