There was a recent thread about the video recorded interviews of Inside Star Trek that was uploaded onto You Tube by 22 stars. Really good stuff.
Well, I finally got around to getting the book, "Inside Star Trek: The Real Story". This was co-authored by Robert Justman (co-producer) and Herbert Solow (executive producer), regarding a lot of the behind-the-scenes details about TOS. I have to say that it's a fascinating book, exposing a lot of things that were definitely left unsaid by everyone else (especially Roddenberry). This is predominantly through the eyes of Solow, as he provides a bit more detail than Justman. But both perspectives are just as valuable.
One thing I didn't particularly care for was that the first half of the book reads a lot like "Solow and Justman, producers during the years of Star Trek", rather than "the production of Star Trek, by Solow and Justman". There are some excruciatingly boring details about other things going on at NBC and Desilu Studios that Justman and Solow had to contend with. True, it had some impact on the Star Trek production, but I really felt like a lot of it could have been trimmed back. Solow and Justman had to juggle other TV obligations at the time, including Bruce Geller's Mission: Impossible. And quite frankly, since the book was titled "Inside Star Trek", you'd figure that details about other productions would be extremely brief. In exchange for that detail, I'd much rather have read more about particulars in the shooting of various episodes. Also, Gene is known for having done a tremendous amount of script rewriting, which annoyed the hell out of hired writers. Yet, we don't really get much detail about what that was... maybe Solow and Justman didn't know much about the details, but they could have at least done some research.
Also, it is common knowledge that Roddenberry had an appetite for women, cheating on his wife with Majel Barrett as well as others. But I really felt like Herb and Bob could have spared us a lot of the episodic details. It accentuated Gene's flaws and feels a bit disrespectful. Was it really necessary to belabor the point? For example, Herb went into quite a bit of detail about two instances where Nichelle was caught wearing practically nothing in Gene's office. I really felt it could have been simply summarized in a few sentences rather than a couple of pages.
It's obvious that Herb and Bob both had chips on their shoulders about Gene. Roddenberry distorted the truth on numerous occasions, in ways to promote himself and steal credit from others. And while he was alive, there would be problems with contradicting it. Once Gene passed away, Herb and Bob were free to write it all... and they certainly did. Even though they went out of their way to mention how much respect and admiration they had for Gene's creativity, they had no hesitation with raising the curtain on Gene's unseemly behavior and exposing it with high magnification. But, we must also assume that Solow and Justman may have very well embellished the truth a little as well. If there aren't any other "eyes" to attest to what they describe, we can't really know for sure that what they say is the absolute truth.
I wonder... if Majel Barrett had any reaction to the book, as it came out 10 years prior to her death. I've not been able to find anything on-line...
Anyway, has anyone else here read the book? If so, what are your thoughts and opinions about it?
Well, I finally got around to getting the book, "Inside Star Trek: The Real Story". This was co-authored by Robert Justman (co-producer) and Herbert Solow (executive producer), regarding a lot of the behind-the-scenes details about TOS. I have to say that it's a fascinating book, exposing a lot of things that were definitely left unsaid by everyone else (especially Roddenberry). This is predominantly through the eyes of Solow, as he provides a bit more detail than Justman. But both perspectives are just as valuable.
One thing I didn't particularly care for was that the first half of the book reads a lot like "Solow and Justman, producers during the years of Star Trek", rather than "the production of Star Trek, by Solow and Justman". There are some excruciatingly boring details about other things going on at NBC and Desilu Studios that Justman and Solow had to contend with. True, it had some impact on the Star Trek production, but I really felt like a lot of it could have been trimmed back. Solow and Justman had to juggle other TV obligations at the time, including Bruce Geller's Mission: Impossible. And quite frankly, since the book was titled "Inside Star Trek", you'd figure that details about other productions would be extremely brief. In exchange for that detail, I'd much rather have read more about particulars in the shooting of various episodes. Also, Gene is known for having done a tremendous amount of script rewriting, which annoyed the hell out of hired writers. Yet, we don't really get much detail about what that was... maybe Solow and Justman didn't know much about the details, but they could have at least done some research.
Also, it is common knowledge that Roddenberry had an appetite for women, cheating on his wife with Majel Barrett as well as others. But I really felt like Herb and Bob could have spared us a lot of the episodic details. It accentuated Gene's flaws and feels a bit disrespectful. Was it really necessary to belabor the point? For example, Herb went into quite a bit of detail about two instances where Nichelle was caught wearing practically nothing in Gene's office. I really felt it could have been simply summarized in a few sentences rather than a couple of pages.
It's obvious that Herb and Bob both had chips on their shoulders about Gene. Roddenberry distorted the truth on numerous occasions, in ways to promote himself and steal credit from others. And while he was alive, there would be problems with contradicting it. Once Gene passed away, Herb and Bob were free to write it all... and they certainly did. Even though they went out of their way to mention how much respect and admiration they had for Gene's creativity, they had no hesitation with raising the curtain on Gene's unseemly behavior and exposing it with high magnification. But, we must also assume that Solow and Justman may have very well embellished the truth a little as well. If there aren't any other "eyes" to attest to what they describe, we can't really know for sure that what they say is the absolute truth.
I wonder... if Majel Barrett had any reaction to the book, as it came out 10 years prior to her death. I've not been able to find anything on-line...
Anyway, has anyone else here read the book? If so, what are your thoughts and opinions about it?