Ah. Gotcha.No, they did it because someone came up with the idea to have Tuvok aboard the Excelsior during TUC, probably after seeing Russ as a human Starfleet officer aboard the Enterprise-B in Generations. TWT and DS9 had nothing to do with it.
Ah. Gotcha.No, they did it because someone came up with the idea to have Tuvok aboard the Excelsior during TUC, probably after seeing Russ as a human Starfleet officer aboard the Enterprise-B in Generations. TWT and DS9 had nothing to do with it.
I'm not certain that's true. Strange New Worlds is centered around the original captain character created by Gene Roddenberry, as well as many other characters created for TOS. Picard was centered around the central character of TNG, also created by Gene Roddenberry. Prodigy featured characters created for Voyager by Berman, Piller, and Taylor. The Kelvin films were entirely about the TOS characters created by Roddenberry.You know the main reason there's little chance anyone with real connections will pitch a Sulu show? Because the central character was invented by someone else, and that impacts how much of the "creator" of the show you are.
George Takei is no Anson MountI'm not certain that's true. Strange New Worlds is centered around the original captain character created by Gene Roddenberry, as well as many other characters created for TOS. Picard was centered around the central character of TNG, also created by Gene Roddenberry. Prodigy featured characters created for Voyager by Berman, Piller, and Taylor. The Kelvin films were entirely about the TOS characters created by Roddenberry.
There seems to be a great deal of willingness to pitch Star Trek shows and films that are centered around characters created by someone else.
Patrick Stewart didn't want to do the show originally. He wasn't the one who pitched it. In fact, he was very reluctant and had to be talked into it.Well, at least with the SNW example, Mount’s Pike is absolutely nothing like Hunter’s Pike, even though we only saw him once. And the reason why we got PIC was because Patrick Stewart has far more clout than George Takei.
That is true, but also not really relevant to the point I was making. No one is avoiding pitching shows simply because the characters they would be based on were created by someone else. If they were, we would have never gotten Strange New Worlds. Because even though Anson Mount might be a better and more compelling actor, he's still playing a character that was created by Gene Roddenberry.George Takei is no Anson Mount
I meant when the balloon was first being floated by George, Sulu was too much of a nothing character for anyone at the time to make the center of a show, and not have the central figure be their own creation.I'm not certain that's true. Strange New Worlds is centered around the original captain character created by Gene Roddenberry, as well as many other characters created for TOS. Picard was centered around the central character of TNG, also created by Gene Roddenberry. Prodigy featured characters created for Voyager by Berman, Piller, and Taylor. The Kelvin films were entirely about the TOS characters created by Roddenberry.
There seems to be a great deal of willingness to pitch Star Trek shows and films that are centered around characters created by someone else.
He did the Starfleet Academy video games at that time. Even Christopher Plummer did one! Shatner would have done it if the money was right.If there was a show (roughly in the voyager era), would they have been able to entice some of the TOS actors for cameos? Nimoy seemed ok to do the occasion guest role. I doubt Shatner would….
Forgot about the game. Wasn’t nimoy in an episode of TNG? I swear I remember him acting across from spiner.He did the Starfleet Academy video games at that time. Even Christopher Plummer did one! Shatner would have done it if the money was right.
Nimoy? Probably not. He only did TNG to promote his own film.
Yes. Nimoy appeared in the 'Unification' two-parter to promote the release of Star Trek VI.Forgot about the game. Wasn’t nimoy in an episode of TNG? I swear I remember him acting across from spiner.
The benefit of a sulu show would be the occasional cameo.
Yes, Nimoy did appear in TNG but only because he was executive producer of TUC and it was a cross-promotion. He turned down doing a cameo in Generations and likely would have done the same for a theoretical Sulu show.Forgot about the game. Wasn’t nimoy in an episode of TNG? I swear I remember him acting across from spiner.
The benefit of a sulu show would be the occasional cameo.
I can understand that. But, yeah, that was the intent. I think it was one of the studio heads at the time who came up with the idea of cross-pollinating the Trek worlds. Michael Dorn appeared in TUC as Worf's ancestor and Nimoy appeared in TNG as Spock. It was designed for each to promote the other.In the UK I never realised the intention was for Spocks appearance in TNG to be any sort of tie in with TUC. It didn't air in the UK until 1993.
I guess if you saw it before TUC Spocks reference to the events in TUC would seem to promote the movie but seeing it over a year later the comments just seemed a natural reference.
I can understand that. But, yeah, that was the intent. I think it was one of the studio heads at the time who came up with the idea of cross-pollinating the Trek worlds. Michael Dorn appeared in TUC as Worf's ancestor and Nimoy appeared in TNG as Spock. It was designed for each to promote the other.
Maybe. However, at that point in Trek history, there had been extremely few crossovers and even hardly any "fan service" as we call it today. I think by that point, McCoy's brief cameo in Farpoint and Sarek's appearance were the only times anyone from TOS had appeared. And no one from the TNG era had appeared in any of the movies. And given that Vulcans are very long lived, having Spock appear on TNG did make sense.It was a pretty gratuitous* casting crossover.
* - or shameless, blatant, or something
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