It's not only book covers. Or comics with lots of pictures of the actors/characters.Do the actors get paid when their likeness is on the cover of a book? You have new 'Trek' books coming out decades after the show ended but the actors' faces are on the jacket cover frozen in time.
It seems to me the newer shows must have some kind of deals. Like Stewart (as you said) or Mulgrew.
Well most of the TOS cast signed away their rights shortly after TOS ended for a payout cheque, so for the movies it makes sense that the actors would be more controlling of their image seeing as their payout cheque’s were issued when they thought they would get more in payout than rerun/licensing fees.Nimoy's return for ST:TMP only happened because Paramount finally compensated him for that infamous Heineken Beer droopy-eared Spock billboard.
I wonder if they'll ever stop reusing the same photo of Picard.
Or how about the “Star Trek Nemesis” DVD disc art? The phot of Data is from the movie, but the image of Picard is from Season 6 or 7.That's one of the things that annoyed me about Trek novel cover art: Many times it's just a publicity photo of Kirk, Picard, Spock, et. al photoshopped into a different background. Sometimes the art didn't even have anything to do with the story. It would be nice to go back to the days when Boris Vallejo used to create awesome unique cover art that actually featured original characters who appeared in that specific book.
Which is doubly odd considering Patrick Stewart is not a man who looks extraordinarily different across seven or eight years, and it's just a dead-on face shot of him looking serious. They have exactly the same photo of him in the correct outfit from "First Contact." If the DVD packaging didn't crop to show his collar, you wouldn't be able to tell they'd used two different photos in the posters.Or how about the “Star Trek Nemesis” DVD disc art? The phot of Data is from the movie, but the image of Picard is from Season 6 or 7.
I've heard that on the comics, the actor's rights to approve their likenesses would only kick in on panels where they were appearing without any other characters. So the artists would often stick additional characters in there so avoid extra production time being taking up with getting approvals or potentially redrawing panels.It can also depend on how well known an actor is when first signing a contract. eg. LeVar Burton and Patrick Stewart had more control over their likenesses in products. Stewart has tighter likeness approval in comics and he once prevented the release of a Picard ceramic figural mug. Burton stopped a particular figure's release because it had an older hairstyle.
I wonder if they'll ever stop reusing the same photo of Picard.
Does Shatner get royalties from the Halloween movies?
I think the mask was altered enough -- turned inside-out and painted white and maybe modified some other way -- that it counts as a distinct creation. I certainly never recognized it as based on Shatner until I read about it (although I never actually saw the movies, just pictures from them).
I also love driving my wife crazy, who is not a Trekkie, with bringing up Star Trek tidbits on shows she's watching (hey, that's Enabran Tain from Deep Space Nine...and son on). She used to love the show 7th Heaven and I took a special delight in telling her that the two main characters were both in separate Star Trek films (yuk yuk yuk).
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