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46 Years Ago Today: The Kirk/Uhura Kiss

Apart from the kiss the episode was pretty dire and not one of Trek's best! I've read that this episode was banned on BBC television for many years not because of the kiss but because of the quality of the story itself. Kirk pretending to be a horse, Nimoy doing a Greek dance around shatner's head! Weird stuff in the day!
JB
 
The claim predates Asherman. "A Visit to Star Trek's Movie Launch," by Marguerite Michaels (in the Boston Globe) is dated December 10, 1978. In the article, Michaels claims that "television's first interracial kiss was on the Enterprise."

A ProQuest search doesn't uncover the claim being made any earlier, which leads me to speculate that it may have been from the Paramount marketing department, churned up to promote Star Trek--The Motion Picture.

Random aside/interesting discovery made while investigating this: Stanley Robertson (the creative executive NBC assigned to Star Trek) wrote a column called "L.A. Confidential" for the Los Angeles Sentinel.
 
Let's not overlook the other good things as well, such as the sky outside the Platonian compound, changing from a day to night look...



I love those kinds of touches. :)

How did I never notice that? That's amazing. I guess I was so busy despising most of the episode all these years that I never really looked at the details.
 
Truthfully, it wasn't even the best thing in "Plato's Stepchildren."


Oh cripe. What WAS the best thing? :eek:


I'd say the best things in "Plato's Stepchildren" are:

1. Michael Dunn's heart-touching scene at the end.

2. The music (but that can be said for any episode).

3. Barbara Babcock's beauty and her speaking voice.

The forced encounters with Uhura and Chapel would be way down my list, appearing somewhere after Kirk and Spock's excruciating song and dance routine. So that's like, way down.
 
The article states, "As it turns out, the first references to Star Trek having “TV’s first interracial kiss” don’t show up until the early 1990s, which was not-so-coincidentally about the same time Shatner and Nichols were putting out memoirs that talked about filming the episode."

Allan Asherman mentions it in my copy of the Star Trek Compendium, which was published in September 1986.

Neil

Actually the article states:
As it turns out, the first references to Star Trek having “TV’s first interracial kiss” don’t show up until the 1980s, and the mainstream media didn’t take notice until the early 1990s, which was not-so-coincidentally about the same time Shatner and Nichols were putting out memoirs that talked about filming the episode

My favorite thing about this episode by far is:

ALEXANDER: As far as I know it just comes to you sometime after you're born. They say I'm a throwback, and I am, and so are you. I'm sorry. I shouldn't have said that.
KIRK: Don't worry about it. We're happy without it.
ALEXANDER: You know, I believe you are. Listen, where you come from, are there a lot of people without the power and my size?
KIRK: Alexander, where I come from, size, shape, or color makes no difference, and nobody has the power.

My second favorite thing is how the actors, especially the stars but including the guest stars, play it so well. It's not a great story but they don't turn in a lackluster or halfhearted performance.

And Barbara Babcock, what more need I say. I think she's my favorite guest star.
 
The article states, "As it turns out, the first references to Star Trek having “TV’s first interracial kiss” don’t show up until the early 1990s, which was not-so-coincidentally about the same time Shatner and Nichols were putting out memoirs that talked about filming the episode."

Allan Asherman mentions it in my copy of the Star Trek Compendium, which was published in September 1986.

Neil

Actually the article states:
As it turns out, the first references to Star Trek having “TV’s first interracial kiss” don’t show up until the 1980s, and the mainstream media didn’t take notice until the early 1990s, which was not-so-coincidentally about the same time Shatner and Nichols were putting out memoirs that talked about filming the episode

The article was updated after I posted that correction here. The section I quoted was copied and pasted directly from the article before the update.

Neil
 
Truthfully, it wasn't even the best thing in "Plato's Stepchildren."


Oh cripe. What WAS the best thing? :eek:

Michael Dunn?

I think so, too. Well, that and the line about "Where I come from, size, shape or color makes no difference."

Was anyone else surprised by Leonard Nimoy's singing? He has such a deep and resonant speaking voice that I was surprised that his singing was nothing at all special. I mean, he CAN carry a tune, which is more than Shatner and Kelley could do, as Star Trek V showed us. :lol: But I thought anyone with such a lovely speaking voice would have a more noteworthy singing voice.
 
Let's not overlook the other good things as well, such as the sky outside the Platonian compound, changing from a day to night look...



I love those kinds of touches. :)

How did I never notice that? That's amazing. I guess I was so busy despising most of the episode all these years that I never really looked at the details.

Don't feel bad, Zap: it only jumped out at me a year or two ago. :)

Was anyone else surprised by Leonard Nimoy's singing? He has such a deep and resonant speaking voice that I was surprised that his singing was nothing at all special. I mean, he CAN carry a tune, which is more than Shatner and Kelley could do, as Star Trek V showed us. :lol: But I thought anyone with such a lovely speaking voice would have a more noteworthy singing voice.

Singing is funny. I'm no expert about it, but I've noticed over the years that oftentimes, great singers have speaking voices that are nothing to write home about. Here, the opposite is in play, I suppose!
 
Singing is funny. I'm no expert about it, but I've noticed over the years that oftentimes, great singers have speaking voices that are nothing to write home about. Here, the opposite is in play, I suppose!


Jim Neighbors is a high-talker with a baritone singing voice.

I'm sure that if Nimoy had studied singing with a teacher, he could have produced a decent baritone voice. And I think in "Plato's Stepchildren" he was playing a mortified Spock rather than giving a full performance. He has a better singing voice on his LPs.
 
Singing is funny. I'm no expert about it, but I've noticed over the years that oftentimes, great singers have speaking voices that are nothing to write home about. Here, the opposite is in play, I suppose!


Jim Neighbors is a high-talker with a baritone singing voice.

I'm sure that if Nimoy had studied singing with a teacher, he could have produced a decent baritone voice. And I think in "Plato's Stepchildren" he was playing a mortified Spock rather than giving a full performance. He has a better singing voice on his LPs.
He does have a decent voice. A bit of practice and he could be quite enjoyable.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AGF5ROpjRAU
 
Was anyone else surprised by Leonard Nimoy's singing? He has such a deep and resonant speaking voice that I was surprised that his singing was nothing at all special. I mean, he CAN carry a tune, which is more than Shatner and Kelley could do, as Star Trek V showed us. :lol: But I thought anyone with such a lovely speaking voice would have a more noteworthy singing voice.

Singing is funny. I'm no expert about it, but I've noticed over the years that oftentimes, great singers have speaking voices that are nothing to write home about. Here, the opposite is in play, I suppose!

Perhaps it's all due to training, then -- actors train their speaking voices, and singers train their singing voices. I'm sorta surprised the training doesn't seem to carry over at all, but then, I know nothing about it, being entirely untrained in either realm.
 
25 years before "the kiss", possibly the first interracial thumb-war.

[yt]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SY_IGq13LX8[/yt]

The first interracial hand-holding actually appears to be in The Littlest Colonel between Shirley Temple & Bill Robinson from 1935 (another 8 years earlier).

Slow progress that.
 
^ TV in the 1930's? Fairly rare & experimental.

Just different kinds of media, plus it's about breaking a barrier more than the type of media it was done on.
 
The first interracial hand-holding actually appears to be in The Littlest Colonel between Shirley Temple & Bill Robinson from 1935 (another 8 years earlier).
The studio probably figured it wouldn't spark any controversy since Shirley Temple was 6 years old at the time.
 
The first interracial hand-holding actually appears to be in The Littlest Colonel between Shirley Temple & Bill Robinson from 1935 (another 8 years earlier).
The studio probably figured it wouldn't spark any controversy since Shirley Temple was 6 years old at the time.

The more I think about this, if someone was going to get upset about this kind of thing, wouldn't they be more upset if it was a little white girl?
 
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