Cheapjack said:
Howcome he was sp open about it in the 60's, but so defensive in the 80's? It's practically a national secret!
I don't believe that Shatner was wearing a wig at all. Howcome he took it off regularly in the sixties, according to rumour, but has been so defensive in the eighties?
I've read Stephen Whitfield's book and no-where does it say he was wearing a wig. I've paused my DVDs and I can't see it. His hair was thinning, that's all.
Transplants are real hair (from the back of the same head) and thus there wouldn't need to be any guarantee as to how it acts in water per se'. After the procedure, it's just 'normal' growing hair. What you're describing sounds like a weave ala' "the hair club for men" commercials that used to hog up all the late night infomercial spaces after Popeil (aka Ronco), got rich selling pocket fishermen and bald spot scalp paint. This was before girls gone wild took over all the time slots.Because Shatner underwent some kind of very expensive hair transplant or hair weaving in the mid 80s, a procedure that was guaranteed to hold up in water, hence Shatner's insistence that he perform his own underwater stunts in ST IV to show off the new handiwork.
You're right. His hair was thinning and he never wore a full toupee on Star Trek.
He only wore a small hairpiece that covered his thinning front. You could detect it on screen once or twice but the easiest way to see it is when he wasn't wearing it for the old age scenes in The Deadly Years. After watching that episode again this weekend, you can really tell that his hairpiece is missing.
Here's a cap from Balance of Terror. You don't have to look too closely to see the tape under Shatner's "hairline".
http://tos.trekcore.com/gallery/albums/1x14/balanceofterror031.jpg
Should we dig up evidence of his girdle next?
Should we dig up evidence of his girdle next?
Probably not. Unlike his hairpiece, the imprint of his girdle underneath his shirt was easily seen.
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