Actress Nichelle Nichols, 'Star Trek's' trail-blazing Uhura, dies at 89
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[August 01, 2022]
By Will Dunham
(Reuters) -Nichelle Nichols, whose
portrayal of starship communications officer Lieutenant Uhura in the
1960s sci-fi TV series "Star Trek" and subsequent movies broke color
barriers and helped redefine roles for Black actors, has died at age 89,
her family said.
Nichols, whose fans included Martin Luther King Jr. and a young Barack
Obama, "succumbed to natural causes and passed away" on Saturday night,
her son, Kyle Johnson, wrote on Facebook.
"Her light however, like the ancient galaxies now being seen for the
first time, will remain for us and future generations to enjoy, learn
from and draw inspiration," Johnson wrote.
The series, which became a pop culture phenomenon, shattered stereotypes
common on U.S. television at the time by casting Black and minority
actors in high-profile roles on the show.
In 1968 she and "Star Trek" star William Shatner broke a cultural
barrier when they engaged in U.S. television's first interracial kiss.
She had planned to quit "Star Trek" after one season, but King, the
1960s civil rights leader, convinced her to stay because it was so
revolutionary to have a Black woman playing an important senior crew
member at a time when Black people were fighting for equality in
American society.
Nichols also helped break color barriers at NASA, whose leaders were
"Star Trek" fans. After she criticized the space agency for failing to
pick qualified women and minorities as astronauts, it hired Nichols in
the 1970s to help in recruiting.
Her efforts helped attract, among others, the first woman U.S.
astronaut, Sally Ride; the first Black woman astronaut, Mae Jemison; and
the first Black NASA chief, Charlie Bolden.
Nichols "symbolized to so many what was possible" and "inspired
generations to reach for the stars," NASA said on Twitter.
Nichols' portrayal of the competent, level-headed Uhura also helped
inspire future Black actors, including Oscar winner Whoopi Goldberg.
Nichols recalled Goldberg telling her of watching "Star Trek" as a
9-year-old, seeing her playing Uhura, and yelling out to her mother:
"Come quick! There's a Black lady on television and she ain't no maid!'"
The original "Star Trek" series, tracking the adventures of the crew of
the starship USS Enterprise in the 23rd century, ran for only three
seasons on the NBC network from 1966 to 1969. But it became hugely
popular in syndication in the 1970s, inspiring first an animated series
that reunited the cast from 1973 to 1975 and then a succession of
feature films and shows.
Nichols appeared in six "Star Trek" films ending with "Star Trek VI: The
Undiscovered Country" in 1991.
Uhura deftly handled the starship Enterprise's communications with
allied spaceships and alien races while interacting with Captain James
T. Kirk (Shatner), Vulcan first officer Mr. Spock (Leonard Nimoy) and
the starship's helmsman, Sulu (George Takei).
Takei wrote on Twitter that he and Nichols "lived long and prospered
together," describing her as trailblazing and incomparable. "(My) heart
is heavy, my eyes shining like the stars you now rest among."
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Actresses Zoe Saldana and Nichelle Nichols present the best actress
award during the BET Awards '09 in Los Angeles June 28, 2009.
REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni (UNITED STATES ENTERTAINMENT)
Nichols' best-known scene featured
the first scripted interracial kiss on U.S. television, although it
was not a romantic one. In an episode called "Plato's Stepchildren,"
Uhura and Kirk were compelled telekinetically to smooch by aliens
toying with the feeble humans. In real life, Nichols disliked
Shatner, who she considered arrogant.
"She was a beautiful woman & played an admirable character that did
so much for redefining social issues both here in the US &
throughout the world", Shatner said on Twitter.
She felt differently about "Star Trek" creator Gene Roddenberry, who
cast her after she had acted in a previous show he produced. Nichols
had a romance with him in the 1960s and sang a song called "Gene" at
his 1991 funeral.
VISIT TO THE WHITE HOUSE
Obama, the first Black U.S. president, who was 5 years old when the
"Star Trek" series made its debut, also was a fan. Nichols visited
him at the White House in 2012 and posed for a photo in the Oval
Office, with the president smiling and putting his hand on her
shoulder while both made a "Star Trek" Vulcan hand gesture meaning
"live long and prosper."
In a 2011 interview with Smithsonian magazine, Nichols recalled
meeting King at a civil rights group's fundraiser.
Nichols said she was approached by one of the event's promoters, who
told her, "There's someone who wants to meet you and he says he's
your biggest fan, so I'm thinking of a young kid. I turn around and
standing across the room, walking towards me, was Dr. Martin Luther
King with this big smile on his face."
After Nichols told King she planned to quit "Star Trek," she said he
implored her to stay.
She said King told her: "This is a God-given opportunity to change
the face of television, change the way we think. We are no longer
second-class, third-class citizens. He (Roddenberry) had to do it in
the 23rd century but it's the 20th century that's watching.'" She
rescinded her resignation.
Like other "Star Trek" cast members, she had a hard time finding
work due to typecasting after the original series ended. It was
during this time when she played a foul-mouthed madam in the film
"Truck Turner" (1974) starring Isaac Hayes. She was a recurring
character on the television show "Heroes" in 2007.
She was born on Dec. 28, 1932 in Robbins, Illinois, trained as a
singer and dancer and toured with jazz greats Duke Ellington and
Lionel Hampton before her acting career took off.
Nichols, who was married twice and had one child, suffered a mild
stroke in June 2015.
(Reporting and writing by Will Dunham; Additional reporting by Rami
Ayyub and Timothy Gardner; Editing by Bill Trott, Diane Craft and
Christopher Cushing)
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