A question that's been bugging me for quite a while.
There were two very prominent guest stars on Star Trek in relatively close proximity to each other -- prominent enough that they both made the mainstream news outside Trek fandom of the time.
First was Stephen Hawking, playing a holodeck representation of himself on TNG. The second was Jordan's Prince Abdullah (now King Abdullah), who had a non-speaking cameo in a Voyager corridor.
The article talking about Prince Abdullah mentioned that since he's not a professional actor, he's not a member of the Screen Actors Guild, therefore he wasn't allowed by union contracts to have any speaking lines.
So how did Stephen Hawking earn the privilege? What gave him the authorization to have speaking lines when Jordanian Royalty didn't get the same treatment?
My best guess is that perhaps SAG rules provide an exception for a person like Professor Hawking who plays himself. Another thought (less likely) relates to Hawking's "unique" method of communication: they might have argued that Hawking himself wasn't actually speaking, he was using a prop that spoke.
Anybody else have any ideas?
There were two very prominent guest stars on Star Trek in relatively close proximity to each other -- prominent enough that they both made the mainstream news outside Trek fandom of the time.
First was Stephen Hawking, playing a holodeck representation of himself on TNG. The second was Jordan's Prince Abdullah (now King Abdullah), who had a non-speaking cameo in a Voyager corridor.
The article talking about Prince Abdullah mentioned that since he's not a professional actor, he's not a member of the Screen Actors Guild, therefore he wasn't allowed by union contracts to have any speaking lines.
So how did Stephen Hawking earn the privilege? What gave him the authorization to have speaking lines when Jordanian Royalty didn't get the same treatment?
My best guess is that perhaps SAG rules provide an exception for a person like Professor Hawking who plays himself. Another thought (less likely) relates to Hawking's "unique" method of communication: they might have argued that Hawking himself wasn't actually speaking, he was using a prop that spoke.
Anybody else have any ideas?