And the author has been extremely irritated over this for decades.
Probably also irritated over Roddenberry forcing him off the show and not crediting him with the large amount of creative work he did in bringing TNG into existence.
This. And certainly irritated at all the money he lost out on by being forced out of the show.
Right. Of course. Thx.
As Roddenberry became more ill the lawyer was actually doing some re-writing and lots of decision making. Growing and long term illness often weakens a person's resolve and ability to make right decisions that are enforceable. Mr. Roddenberry was progressively becoming more and more ill.
Maybe he didn't 'see' that his lawyer was the problem simply because he was in the middle of fading. Maybe he did see at least some of it but was weakened and didn't/couldn't get the emotional wherewithal to act. We weren't in his mind, we weren't his family, we weren't close to him as his slow decline toward total incapacity moved him toward his death during that time he was still working in TNG. We don't know what his lawyer was whispering in his ear.
True enough, but how do we know the conversation in 1987 didn't go more like this?
Gene: "Leonard, I'm sick and I'm gonna die soon. I won't be able to participate in the production of TNG. The show is my legacy and I need you to protect my interest in it for the sake of my family."
Maizlish: "Okay Gene."
There is evidence enough to support such a view because it is reported from various sources outside of Mr. Gerrold that during this time Mr. R. went virtually nowhere w/out Mr. Maizlish when he was doing anything business related because Mr. R.'s mental faculties were beginning to fail and he was leaning heavily on his friends/family, therefore possibly his attorney too, to keep him focused.
I didn't know Maizlish (who died in 1994) and to my knowledge he was never interviewed and never commented on his involvement in Trek, probably due to attorney-client privilege and WGA scrutiny, but what I do know is that he was a lawyer and lawyers are hired to represent their clients' interests. He also had more than a passing knowledge of Trek as evidenced by the second memo critiquing the flaws in TFF (flaws that remained in the final film) here:
http://www.missionlogpodcast.com/discovereddocuments/095/
Maizlish is actually schooling GR on Star Trek! While GR was more concerned about the "quaint and outdated"..... Maizlish was pointing out Shatner's ego trip of a script and the preposterousness of Spock betraying Kirk
First: You too are a Mission Log follower?!!!
Virtual High Five! Me too!
Second: Now M.L. titles that memo "Memo from Paramount Pictures to Gene Roddenberry". I do see the 'from' is LM, as is the signature.
So are we saying that this is indeed Mr. Maizlish, and that he is indeed employeed by Paramount? Because M.L. titles the memo as coming from Paramount Pictures itself?
I'm not lumping him in with the likes of Gene Coon, Dorothy Fontana, Harve Bennett, Ronald Moore, or even Gerrold as a creative influence on the Trek franchise, but it's not impossible that he may have had a positive impact on the show (if not Gerrold's career).
Well, okay perhaps not impossible. Impossible being an all encompassing word. Though, from what I've read and listened to from various people I do not believe this is the case.
I will accede that Mr. Maizlish could have possibly contributed something productive on occasion. I have seen or read nothing to advance my thoughts on this more than that.
What I have read and heard from various people was that Mr. M.'s participation was divisive, polarizing, and creating a toxic workplace for a lot of good people on TNG.
David Alexander, Roddenberry’s authorized biographer, referred to the lawyer as “Roddenberry’s dark presence.”
Now whether Mr. M. was acting on behalf of his mentally diminishing client, whether he was acting on behalf of his 'friend' who was also his client, whether he was acting from some other motivation, it is recognized by more that Gerrold that Mr. M.'s actions and participation in TNG had a negative and detrimental general effect.
There were skirmishes and wars going on with Mr. Maizlish consistently being the central causation.
And during this time Gene's memory had become so poor that he was not remembering things from one day to the next. Mr. Roddenberry appears to be the Giant Of A Man losing his faculties, wanting to retain his seat, while the business world around him was crumbling due in no small part to the participation of his lawyer, for however good or ill the lawyer's intentions were.
What we do know he 'wanted' to be out of TNG after the first season because of his health. What we do know is that the lawyer saw the weakness and moved in.
How do we "know" this? Because Gerrold has said so? Everyone says this when they're fired -- this and "I wanted to spend more time with my family" which Gerrold has also said. No way he wanted out; there was big money at stake. TNG was a huge ratings (if not creative or critical) success. It was a Hollywood power struggle; Gerrold lost and he's bitter to this day -- pure and simple.
Perhaps it would have been more accurate for me to have worded it "moved in, possibly
to help Mr. R.
Here's the thing, even in his diminished mental capacity there were times he could still inspire people to be better than they believed they were capable of. He still had moments of greatness.
However, he was also increasingly losing the ability to focus. Not finishing any of his various projects, and his writing was getting increasingly weird in content.
Warped Factors and
Inside Star Trek also recount Mr. R. getting weirdly sexual in his writing, even for him.
Gerrold said the mass exodus of crew from "Star Trek: The Next Generation" in its first season moved Roddenberry to tears because all of his friends were gone. "It was because Maizlish chased them away."
Maizlish was actually Leonard Maizlish, Roddenberry's attorney who attempted to take over the Star Trek franchise once his client started to become ill. Gerrold's memories of Maizlish are not fond, and it was because of him people like Gerrold, D.C. Fontana and others from the classic "Star Trek" run didn't stay around long for Capt. Picard and his crew of the Enterprise-D.
"Gene was having very small strokes in meetings, and he wasn't nearly as active as he hoped he would be," Gerrold said. "We all stayed there as long as we did 'because' of Gene. If it were any other show, we would say, 'F you,' and walk off."
Gerrold speaks for a lot of people here. I for one would like to hear / read some corroboration from Fontana, Justman, et al.
Well, yeah, when asked which parts exactly of the
TNG bible Gene wrote, Gerrold said: "Gene wrote one 16-page draft of the bible, and less than a dozen memos, several of which were embarrassing for their sexual content." If I come across anything for/against by Fontana, Justman, et al I will post it. What I can post is that Walter Koenig and Susan Sackett also speak to this bizarre sexual writing Mr. R. was doing that there was no way in heaven or earth could ever be part of StarTrek. Which corroborates others' recognizing the failing mind of this once great writer.
Again, Gerrold is wrong. Maizlish was in no position to "take over" the franchise and probably had no desire to. He was there to represent GR and his estate and that was it.
You do have a point on Mr. M.'s position to "take over" but I will respectfully disagree it is impossible for you to accurately state "that was that". We were not there. We did not know this man's mind. He does not speak on the matter in anything I can find.
And I 'can' argue that ESPECIALLY in the world of film power is intoxicating. I have tasted it. I have seen other drink it and change. So, you 'may truly be correct' in a supposition that "that was that". But, we were not there, we do not know how seducing it might have been to be The Power Behind The Throne of a mentally declining giant in the field. We do not have written or spoken evidence of the mind of the lawyer of Gene Roddenberry on all matters StarTrek. That could have indeed been a heady prospect; becoming the power behind the throne.
Gerrold has a legitimate beef that Maizlish was not a WGA member and probably should not have been allowed to exercise the creative input he did (and Gerrold reported such to the WGA; likely nothing came of it after his settlement).
Well we do know that Mr. Roddenberry was counciled to settle by the Executive Director of the WGAW because if he didn't a lot of damaging testimony to him would have to be made public.
Gerrold also reports Maizlish was "fired and banned from the Paramount lot." While Paramount could have physically banned him from the studio, they could not "fire" him; he was never on staff nor a Paramount employee. He was hired by GR; I don't know if or for how long he continued to represent the Roddenberry estate after Gene's death, but it may have been up to Maizlish's death in 1994.
I have been unable to find information dismissing or supporting this. So I don't know, though I am interested if you come up with something I can read or listen to on 'somebody' firing/not firing him or if it was just Paramount banning him.
Lest anyone think GR was just being paranoid... This may be old news (I had not heard it before), but in a personal conversation with an ENT cast member several years ago I was told that ENT was called simply "Enterprise" and not "Star Trek: Enterprise" as a way to avoid paying the Roddenberry estate royalties for the title of the show. I never thought eliminating "Star Trek" from the title made much sense otherwise (why remove a highly recognizable brand from the title of your fledgling show?); this does though. I do not know if it was later reinstated for legal reasons or marketing purposes; both are possible.
I definitely agree with you on why remove a highly recognizable brand thing.
Legally, his lawyer(s),
after the OriginalSeries, got a lock for Mr. Roddenberry on creative right monies for future StarTrek film/TV for a very long time. I would suspect at the time of ENT this creative rights contract monies lock would still have been in place for the estate though I have nothing to corroborate my thinking except Ent arrived only 14 years after TNG. I have no information if the legal lock is still in place at this date, though it is still less than 30 years and falls way within the 'typical' creative rights active ownership.
I certainly believe you were told this by cast members. However, I will also respectfully assert that there is little a cast member could actually learn, much less talk about to strangers about in a public venue except as rumor. Actors do not even know the money logistics of their cast mates. Much less huge properties like StarTrek.
Well, this discussion has been absolutely engrossing and enjoyable, Joe_Atari. I have spent many hours today researching my files and the Internet to converse with you in this reply.
And I am tuckered out now!
Thanks for a very enjoyable Trek exploration afternoon.