And yet, The Ashes of Eden begins with Kirk and Carol in a relationship. I don't know if Shatner and the Reeves-Stevens were riffing off of the unused prologue for Star Trek VI or if they came up with the idea independently. It's just worth noting that a Shatner novel features Carol Marcus in some capacity.
Sure, but it's not like she's fighting him for closeups in a novel.
But, by all reports, Saavik was recast because Alley priced herself out of the film.
My understanding is that Paramount attempted to offer her less than she got for ST II. That was their opening offer: "... because sequels usually make less money". And they had figures to prove it: ST II had made less money than TMP. Alley's agent countered with a salary in the vicinity of Shatner's, fully expecting a lower counter offer to be presented, which they would have accepted. But no other offer was forthcoming, and then Alley was suddenly offered the lead in a play, so she went with the role that would best extend her acting chops.
The fact is, Ian, we don't know why Alley priced herself out of Star Trek III.
Well, we
do know stories from people who knew her; we can only trust they they weren't vexatious rumours. The above info came from convention anecdotes of both Bjo Trimble and Richard Arnold (both during Australian conventions over several years - and while many fans like writing off RA anecdotes completely, Bjo's account of a discussion she'd had with Alley sounded pretty convincing) - and, IIRC, Alley herself briefly discusses it, either in a print interview or her diet book (which I have here somewhere).
And I think she was justified with her salary demands for Star Trek VI based on her profile at the time thanks to Cheers, but that was a salary demand the budget couldn't absorb. *shrug*
Definitely, but I have a feeling she was also worried she didn't look much like Saavik by then. By her own admission, she was at her skinniest only while auditioning for ST II because her mother had just been killed in a horrific car accident. During "Cheers" she didn't have to be squeezed into a slender Starfleet uniform.
Oooh, how would that have gone over, putting Kirstie Alley at third billing in Star Trek III. It would have been accurate, but jeez, the touchy egos amongst the Gang of Four...
Exactly! But at the time, there was also a strong sentiment in the newszines of the day that said things like, "Oh well, if Spock and Nimoy are really gone forever, at least I don't mind having this new Saavik character, as played by Kirstie Alley." As director, Nimoy certainly chose to put the revised Saavik (Robin Curtis) into a rather different direction, changing the character's demeanor, but even hair/eyebrows/eye colour.