Yeah, I know how he went about it, but the way I read into it, it was his way of getting one over on them, or the last word if you like.

Yeah, I know how he went about it, but the way I read into it, it was his way of getting one over on them, or the last word if you like.
Inside Star Trek: The Real Story by Herb Solow and Bob Justman
The Making of Star Trek by Stephen E. Whitfield & Gene Roddenberry
Star Trek Sketchbook: The Original Series by Herbert F. Solow and Yvonne Fern Solow
[EDIT]
Star Trek: Lost Scenes by David Tilotta (@alchemist) and Curt McAloney.
[END EDIT]
Anything @Harvey eventually publishes![]()
Same here. I got that book for Christmas, and I haven't had the chance to do more than flip through it so far. But it looks amazing. I'm sure it will have a spot on my list in a few months!
Yes! I look forward to seeing what he does with all the cool info he's discovered.
More the opposite. He went into why some of his TOS costars had such problems with him. Nichelle Nichols and Walter Koenig both took the opportunity to tell Shatner exactly why and how he was inconsiderate of his costars. Takei apparently chose not to broach the subject when they talked because they were having such a good conversation, which is pretty ironic considering how Takei never misses the opportunity to bash the guy now.
James Doohan refused to even speak with Shatner, certain that Shatner would either not use what he said, or quote him out of context. (And, considering that Nichelle Nichols and Majel Barrett both had issues with how Shatner used their quotes in Star Trek Memories & refused to be interviewed for Star Trek Movie Memories, maybe Doohan had a point.)
Personally, I think it was big of Shatner to acknowledge that some of his costars had a problem with him. It would've been the easiest thing in the world for him to not put any of that stuff into his book.
Yes! I look forward to seeing what he does with all the cool info he's discovered.
Same here. I got that book for Christmas, and I haven't had the chance to do more than flip through it so far. But it looks amazing. I'm sure it will have a spot on my list in a few months!
Yes! I look forward to seeing what he does with all the cool info he's discovered.
More the opposite. He went into why some of his TOS costars had such problems with him. Nichelle Nichols and Walter Koenig both took the opportunity to tell Shatner exactly why and how he was inconsiderate of his costars. Takei apparently chose not to broach the subject when they talked because they were having such a good conversation, which is pretty ironic considering how Takei never misses the opportunity to bash the guy now.
James Doohan refused to even speak with Shatner, certain that Shatner would either not use what he said, or quote him out of context. (And, considering that Nichelle Nichols and Majel Barrett both had issues with how Shatner used their quotes in Star Trek Memories & refused to be interviewed for Star Trek Movie Memories, maybe Doohan had a point.)
Shatner appears amazed that people have a problem with the way he treats them.Well, when it's your book, you get the last word by definition. Which I suppose is why all the other main cast members of TOS except DeForest Kelley eventually wrote their own books.
I can relate! I'm working on a long-gestating book project myself (about the DC Animated Universe), and although people are telling me they can't wait to read it, I have to keep telling them it's a looooong way off from completion, as I'm still in midst of conducting interviews for it (Although I did get to talk to two new people this week, so that's good.)Geeze! Pressure, pressure, pressure!![]()
OK, let me first qualify this by saying that I'm going from memory here, as I no longer recall exactly where I first read this stuff. (Perhaps while flipping through Nichols' own bio? I honestly forget.)What issues did they have with the book?
Something specific about Shatner's memory book that concerns me is that he constantly mentions that Nimoy was an alcoholic. Was that well-known? Was it Shatner's story to yell?
I can relate! I'm working on a long-gestating book project myself (about the DC Animated Universe), and although people are telling me they can't wait to read it, I have to keep telling them it's a looooong way off from completion, as I'm still in midst of conducting interviews for it (Although I did get to talk to two new people this week, so that's good.)
OK, let me first qualify this by saying that I'm going from memory here, as I no longer recall exactly where I first read this stuff. (Perhaps while flipping through Nichols' own bio? I honestly forget.)
Nichols objected to a passage where Shatner talked about the fact that she and GR had had a romantic relationship sometime before TOS (I forget if it was an extramarital affair or not). I think she wanted to save that for her own book. (Which, if that's so, don't talk to Shatner about that stuff, Nichelle. He can't use what you don't give him.) And she REALLY didn't like a bit where Shatner and Kreski quoted her out of context by saying that GR's "appetite" was "voracious," with all the sexual connotations that that implies. What Nichols said she actually said was that GR had a voracious appetite for life -- Which, yeah, that's quite a different thing.
I have a feeling that some of that might have been Chris Kreski's influence, as he also co-wrote Barry Williams' Growing Up Brady, which had a similar focus on salacious details like Barry Williams going on a date with his TV mom Florence Henderson, and the teen romances among the cast playing the Brady kids.
Barrett's statement was much more general, along the lines of (again, IIRC): "Bill's book should be in the fiction aisle, it's so full of baloney."
Sorry I can't give you more details, but that's all I can recall right now. If you're researching this stuff, I hope it's of some help to you.![]()
I was typing it as you posted this!Looking forward to JQ's answer to Harvey's question. I seem to remember Ms. Nichols having some (characteristically vague) rebuttals that didn't seem to justify her stance. But I have no recollection of Ms. Barrett saying anything.
My read on Shatner is that he's more ignorant and oblivious at times than truly malicious. I don't think he really realized the effect that his behavior could have on folks at the time. Takei told a story in his bio about Shatner not remembering his name when they worked on another job in between shooting "Where No Man Has Gone Before" and the pickup of TOS as a series. As someone who can often blank on names of acquaintances myself (I remember faces much better than names), I know how awkward it can be when you have no idea how to address somebody.Shatner appears amazed that people have a problem with the way he treats them.
He says he can't understand why Nimoy stopped talking to him.
Apparently he's an innocent victim.
I'm not saying he''s done anything that bad but if you dish out you've got to learn to take it.
Nimoy and Shatner talked quite frankly about Nimoy's alcoholism as well as the alcoholism of Shatner's late wife Nerine in the 2001 one-on-one interview DVD Mind Meld: Secrets Behind the Voyage of a Lifetime (which I also highly recommend, BTW). Some clips of it also appear in Adam Nimoy's recent documentary For the Love of Spock.Something specific about Shatner's memory book that concerns me is that he constantly mentions that Nimoy was an alcoholic. Was that well-known? Was it Shatner's story to yell?
I was typing it as you posted this!
My read on Shatner is that he's more ignorant and oblivious at times than truly malicious. I don't think he really realized the effect that his behavior could have on folks at the time. Takei told a story in his bio about Shatner not remembering his name when they worked on another job in between shooting "Where No Man Has Gone Before" and the pickup of TOS as a series. As someone who can often blank on names of acquaintances myself (I remember faces much better than names), I know how awkward it can be when you have no idea how to address somebody.
Nichols also tells a story to Shatner in Star Trek Memories where, on set during the TOS days, he said something like, "C'mon, Uhura doesn't need to be saying that! Let's cut that line," thinking that her dialogue wasn't relevant to the plot of the episode (Which, let's face it, it probably wasn't), and not thinking about how he was suggesting cutting Nichelle's only lines from the show. And when 1960s Nichelle said something like "Dammit, Bill, don't disrespect me like that!" he immediately apologized.
Nimoy and Shatner talked quite frankly about Nimoy's alcoholism as well as the alcoholism of Shatner's late wife Nerine in the 2001 one-on-one interview DVD Mind Meld: Secrets Behind the Voyage of a Lifetime (which I also highly recommend, BTW). Some clips of it also appear in Adam Nimoy's recent documentary For the Love of Spock.
Yeah. In the Mind Meld DVD, Shatner describes his costars' problems with him as sounding "so minute" that he still doesn't quite understand what the problem is/was. And, as the four costars weren't around on set as often as Nimoy and Kelley were, Shatner didn't get to know them as well.I don't think its just one incident with Shatner. Its years of slights. But all pretty low-key. Hanging up on the phone. Cutting their lines. Pretending he doesn't know them. Probably from Shatner's lofty perch he treats everyone this way I'm guessing and wonders why his Star Trek co-workers get upset at him.
Yeah, I think by the time of the movies, Shatner and Nimoy came to regard each other as friends and colleagues. The favored nations clauses in their contracts (whatever one got, the other got) and shared life experiences probably also played into them becoming closer over the years.Probably Nimoy would have had the biggest beef with Shatner. The way he acted on set with him in TOS. Not all Shatner's fault but Shatner has to take some responsibility. But they later became good friends. I imagine at that stage maybe Shatner had come to regard Nimoy as an equal.
All those books listes above are filled with documented history, while my list is chockablock with unsupported speculation and gushing “gosh wow!”
Now, I ask you, which kind of book actually captures the genuine experience of a 12-year-old Trekkie in the late ‘70’s?
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Inside Star Trek: The Real Story by Herb Solow and Bob Justman
The Making of Star Trek by Stephen E. Whitfield & Gene Roddenberry
The Trouble With Tribbles by David Gerrold
The Star Trek Compendium by Allan Asherman
Star Trek Memories by William Shatner with Chris Kreski
Star Trek Sketchbook: The Original Series by Herbert F. Solow and Yvonne Fern Solow
Star Trek: Lost Scenes by David Tilotta (@alchemist) and Curt McAloney.
Anything @Harvey eventually publishes![]()
Yes. I never got a copy of the first edition, though. I believe it had a lot more info than the subsequent editions? I'm not sure if I've ever even seen a copy.I bought the first edition and read it cover to cover to the point where the pages separated from the spine. Loved that book, and it was the next "must have" ST book after The Making of Star Trek.
Thank you!Excellent list overall, JonnyQuest.
The World of Star Trek just missed my list. If I hadn't had to limit it to five, I'd have definitely included it. It's cool to read David Gerrold making suggestions to revisions to ST's format that eventually found their way into Star Trek: The Next Generation.I would add The World of Star Trek by David Gerrold, as its one of the best accounts of behind the scenes issues, early syndication years fandom (good and bad) ever written, and to read this when first published in 1973, it left many a TOS fan with a "you are there" feeling few books have matched since.
Yep. I still have my copy from 1973 and this is why I still own it, whereas my copy of Gerrold's tribbles book (published at the same time) vanished long ago.I would add The World of Star Trek by David Gerrold, as its one of the best accounts of behind the scenes issues, early syndication years fandom (good and bad) ever written, and to read this when first published in 1973, it left many a TOS fan with a "you are there" feeling few books have matched since.
I downloaded a text-only version of this about 5 years ago from TrekCore and found it quite absorbing; its title was somewhat different: FADE IN: From Idea to Final Draft / The Writing of Star Trek: Insurrection. (Before that, I'd seen a fancier version of the same text, nicely typeset and laid out with movie stills. Not sure whether either version can be easily found online today.)Fade In: The Making of Star Trek Insurrection - A Textbook on Screenwriting from Within the Star Trek Universe by Michael Piller (IIRC, this one was never officially published because Paramount put the kibosh on it - I think it revealed more than they were comfortable with. I read most of it in a PDF on some site or another, as I recall.)
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