Normally I post this stuff in the Introducing Fact Trek thread but I think a lot of people miss new topics of interest when we make everything a reply under an umbrella topic.
So today I want to share a recent discovery passed on to us by @alchemist.
In January 1972 the first large Star Trek convention, Star Trek Lives! was held at the Statler-Hilton Hotel in New York City. It was the first Trek-focused con to have people from the show actually in attendance, and on Saturday the 22nd these special guests did three panels. The 2nd and 3rd panels were a talk by Gene Roddenberry followed by an audience Q&A featuring Majel Barrett and Dorothy Fontana. But the 1st is the most notable from a historic perspective: a talk by Oscar Katz, Desilu's Executive Vice President in charge of Production from April 1, 1964 until March 11, 1966 and the man who brought Gene Roddenberry to the studio with a mandate to develop new shows.
A fellow named Bill Kobylak was given tape recordings of all three panels, and he generously gave FACT TREK his blessing to transcribe them. So today, that's just what we've done, focusing on the Katz panel.
So, why begin with Katz?
Well...
So today I want to share a recent discovery passed on to us by @alchemist.
In January 1972 the first large Star Trek convention, Star Trek Lives! was held at the Statler-Hilton Hotel in New York City. It was the first Trek-focused con to have people from the show actually in attendance, and on Saturday the 22nd these special guests did three panels. The 2nd and 3rd panels were a talk by Gene Roddenberry followed by an audience Q&A featuring Majel Barrett and Dorothy Fontana. But the 1st is the most notable from a historic perspective: a talk by Oscar Katz, Desilu's Executive Vice President in charge of Production from April 1, 1964 until March 11, 1966 and the man who brought Gene Roddenberry to the studio with a mandate to develop new shows.
A fellow named Bill Kobylak was given tape recordings of all three panels, and he generously gave FACT TREK his blessing to transcribe them. So today, that's just what we've done, focusing on the Katz panel.
So, why begin with Katz?
Well...
- The other speakers have been interviewed countless times and there's little new in these early tellings.
- Katz is a seminal figure in Star Trek's birth, but little known, rarely interviewed and never in depth; most of what we know about his tenure comes from 3rd parties, some with their own agendas.
- He died just months before the publication of Solow & Justman's Inside Star Trek book and never had a chance to address its assertions. (His account of what happened with Jeffrey Hunter differs from Solow's, for instance,)
- His account is full of details we've never seen reported anywhere else, and contradicts some of the conventional wisdom about the show's beginnings. Notably, Katz addresses some of the details in The Making of Star Trek, confirming some, disagreeing with others, and adding his perspectives on both.
- Historical. This recording is of
his one and only Trek con appearanceone of only two Trek con appearances we are aware of
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