[rec.arts.startrek.info] LA Times Magazine: "TREKKING TO THE TOP"

tlynch@Juliet.Caltech.Edu (06/04/91)

Here y'go, Jim.  I think it's worth it.

This article appeared in the LA Times Magazine on Sunday, May 5.  It's a bit 
lengthy, but I think it makes a lot of interesting points.  (Any typos are 
probably mine...oh, my aching hands...:-) )

============================================================================
"TREKKING TO THE TOP"
	--by Sheldon Teitelbaum

The carpeted bridge of the starship Enterprise was suddenly invaded by several 
dozen bald and sandaled beings attiured in burnt-orange robes.  Intrigued by 
the Lucite-and-halogen spectacle, they wandered about quietly, gently touching 
the flashing consoles, pointing to the padded chairs on which the famous 
starship captain and his officers usually sit and whispering among themselves 
in what seemed to be an alien language.

But they were a good deal less alien than the outworlders who usually beam up 
to the set of Paramount's "Star Trek: The Next Generation."  This was a 
delegation of Tibetan monks from the Dalai Lama's monastery in India.  And 
they were transfixed by the sight of actor Brent Spiner, who plays the series' 
popular Pinocchio-like android, Data.

Studying Spiner's skin, swathed in gold makeup, and his eyes, glinting gold 
from his contact lenses, the monks were curious:  Was he man or machine?  
Their curiosity seemed satisfied, however, when some of them shook hands with 
the impish actor, whose makeup rubbed off on their palms.

Spiner quips that smudging has prevented him, until a recent on-screen 
entanglement with guest star Michele Scarabelli, from being kissed as much as 
he'd like.  "I fear when I die, they'll find traces of this makeup in my 
blood," he says.

In Spiner's four years on the show, he's gotten tired of inquiries into his 
humanity.  (There are some who, in fits of extreme cognitive dissonance, 
simply will not accept that Spiner is human, causing great distress for both 
him and them.)  But he schmoozed patiently with the monks.  And "when the 
bells rans out for 'quiet on the set,'" recalls Spiner, "these people did 
_professional_ quiet."

The monks--who appeared to mesh better with the scenery than did the previous 
day's visitor, Marilyn Quayle--had been invited to the Paramount lot to attend 
a taping of "Cheers."  But they made it known that as much as they liked 
Cliff, Norm, Frazier and Lilith, they and their spiritual mentor, the Dalai 
Lame, were big-league "Star Trek" fans.  This cheers series creator Gene 
Roddenberry, a 69-year-old Texas-born former airline pilot, flack for the Los 
Angeles Police Department and head writer of the famous '50s TV western "Have 
Gun Will Travel."

For Roddenberry, "Star Trek" in any of its manifestations--the first, or 
"classic" TV series, which ran from 1966 through 1969 and survives in daily 
syndication throughout the world; a short-lived animated series that premiered 
in 1974; a spate of high-grossing feature movies launched in 1979; and the now 
4-year-old TV series "Star Trek: The Next Generation"--has always been more 
than mere entertainment.

"It has become a crusade of mine," says Roddenberry, "to demonstrate that TV 
need not be violent to be exciting.  I'd often felt that no one was catching 
on.  But if the Dalai Lama likes us, I suppose the message is getting out."

A stocky man with a silver mane and a quick smile, Roddenberry now fancies 
himself the invisible conscience of a universe of the imagination that has 
taken on a powerful existence entirely beyond the confines of his mind.  "I 
finally feel I have become a philosopher, junior grade," he says.  "There's 
hardly a subject you could mention I haven't spent time thinking out while 
writing 'Star Trek' scripts.  You spend years dreaming up strange new worlds, 
and they build up into something quite real."

Roddenberry considers his greatest fest to be that nearly 25 years after the 
original series inauspiciously debuted on NBC (and after network execs deemed 
the first pilot too cerebral), "Star Trek" lives on--with a vengeance.  
Indeed, as "Star Trek: The Next Generation," it had become one of the most 
widely watched shows on TV, reaching 12.4 million households nationwide--a 
13.1 ratings--during the February sweeps.  ("Cheers," a _network_ show, was 
seen in 19.9 million households--a 21.8 rating.)  Though this is, in fact, a 
smaller percentage than watched the old series, TV has since become 
sufficiently fragmented by cable and video to make this a consistently 
impressive, and eminently profitable, showing.

Winner of seven Emmies and a Peabody Award, "TNG" is even endorsed by the 
national organization Viewers for Quality TV, which prizes wholesome TV fare.  
It has become, asserts Paramount, the No. 1 one-hour show for men 18 through 
49.  Women like it less, though they prefer it to such past and present 
network powerhouses as "Dallas," "Murder She Wrote" and "Designing Women."  In 
a telephone survey conducted this year for Paramount, 99% of the respondents 
had heard of "Star Trek", and 53% said they were fans.

"Star Trek" has certainly evolved light-years beyond the frequent punch-ups 
and photon torpedo blasts that characterized the original TV series (which, 
Roddenberry insists, was itself less violent than virtually every other 
dramatic series on the air at that time).  Death and strife have not been 
entirely banished from the universe soem 400 years hence.  But the new show, 
which is set some 85 years after the old series transpired, generally eschews 
violence and bluster for diplomacy and intellectual guile, explains 
Roddenberry in the slim "bible" he created to guide the show's writers.  "Show 
a somewhat better kind of human than today's average," he writes on Page 3 of 
the "Writers'/Directors' Guide" for the 1989 season.  "Our continuing 
characters are the kind of people that the 'Star Trek' audience would like to 
be themselves.  They are not perfect, but their flaws do not include 
falsehood, petty jealousies and the banal hypocrisies common in the 20th 
century."

Phasers are rarely set to kill.  The new Enterprise--a plush, high-rent hotel 
in space--seeks out its new worlds gingerly, fearing, with a politically 
correct '90s sensibility, that outright human interference may irrevocably 
muck up physical and cultural ecologies.

Thankfully, individual characters are instead permitted to grapple more 
decisively with their own internal demons.  In one compelling fourth-season 
episode, for instance, starship Capt. Jean-Luc Picard--a Frenchman played by 
50-year-old Briton, Royal Shakespeare Company veteran Patrick 
Stewart--struggled to overcome the humiliation of being mentally dominated by 
a race of quasi-omnipotent, hive creatures.  His second-in-command, Will Riker 
(played by actor Jonathan Frakes), has learned to recognize that an apparent 
lack of personal ambition reflects genuine career satisfaction and competence. 
Ship counselor Deanna Troi (Marina Sirtis) has survived the temporary but 
highly traumatic loss of her empathic powers.  And android Data has realized 
that becoming human is a slow process even for a quick study who may otherwise 
prove immortal.

Gone, however, is the crusty banter that characterized relations among the 
original series' Capt. Kirk (William Shatner), his logic-bound and ironically 
charismatic, pointy-eared Vulcan science officer, Mr. Spock (Leonard Nimoy), 
and his irascible shipboard doctor, Leonard (Bones) McCoy (DeForest Kelley).  
Internal conflict among the new crew has been relegated to its recurring poker 
game, reflecting Roddenberry's newfound conviction that tomorrow's space 
explorers will have forgone petty bickering and jealousies in the workplace.

By limiting the boundaries of what "Star Trek" characters can and cannot do, 
Roddenberry has set before his writers a unique, and occasionally 
insurmountable, challenge:  how to generate genuine human drama on TV without 
drawing on the baser motives--greed, lust, and power--that appear to drive 
other TV characters.

Few writers have successfully adapted to this format.  In fact, Roddenberry's 
efforts to enforce his Pollyannaish vision of the future--during the first 
season, he virtually rewrote the first 15 episodes--caused many writers who 
might otherwise have had to be dynamited off a successful series to run 
screaming into the night.  It was simply too difficult for them to sustain one 
man's dogmatic view of the future.

First-season writer Tracy Torme recently described his growing discomfort with 
these constraints during his brief tenure on "TNG" to Cinefantastique writer 
Mark Altman.  There was an atmosphere, Torme said, of "We can't do this, and 
we can't do that" instead of "Hey, we have a big success on our hands, we have 
a loyal audience no matter what, so let's take some chances."

(Indeed, the writers' bible contains an entire list of "thou shalt not's", 
which includes the admonition that "We are not in the business of toppling 
cultures that we do not approve of.  We are not 'space meddlers.'"  Item 10 on 
the list urges writers to "Beware of spaceship battles:  They cost enormous 
amounts of money and are not really as interesting as people conflicts.")

Torme, who claims to have been groomed for a top position on the in-house 
staff, recalled once having had to change a blue-skinned Andorian character to 
another species of alien at the last moment.  On the old series, he said, 
Andorians had antennae.  But in "TNG," insisted one producers, "we don't do 
antennae."  These apparently smacked too much of vintage pulp science fiction, 
which, stripped of its pretensions, is really what "Star Trek" has always 
been.

The idea of creating drama without conflict also seemed beyond the reach of 
most writers, who chafed under Roddenberry's rule that "Regular characters all 
share a feeling of being part of a band of brothers and sisters.  As in the 
original 'Star Trek,' we invite the audience to share the same feeling of 
affection for our characters."

"I think the show was unbelievably static," Torme said.  "All of these 
characters like each other all the time, and for me that was a real big 
disadvantage."  It made, many fans have complained, for bland viewing.

What was needed--and what Roddenberry ultimately got despite the Writers Guild 
strike that nearly crippled the final episodes of the show's first season and 
the next season's first episodes--were writers who could not only accommodate 
but become energized by the challenges of his restrictions.  If conflict could 
not arise among the characters, it could be imported from the universe they 
were made to inhabit.

According to executive producer Rick Berman--who with executive producer 
Michael Piller is widely credited for having improved the series' dramatic 
quality during the past two years by making that universe more detailed, 
layered and Angst-ridden--Roddenberry was probably correct to have adopted a 
hard-line approach.

"The show needed a helmsman who would set a strong course," says Berman, a 
45-year-old producer/writer who served a two-year stint as development 
executive at Paramount before "TNG."  "By rewriting the first 15 scripts, Gene 
set the course for the rest of us."

Those who most comfortably settled into Roddenberry's universe learned early 
on how to flesh out the new characters while balancing them with the fact that 
they actually amount to little more than individual facets of a single, 
mythically potent Odyssean protagonist.  In "Star Trek"--and Freudians (one of 
the many schools of academics to have milked the series for doctoral theses) 
believe this was as true for the original series as it is for "The Next 
Generation"--the Enterprise, not its crew, is the hero.  Despite the 
haimishness of both series, this, in fact, may be the key to the series' 
immense durability.  As long as there is a universe to explore and a spaceship 
to explore it, suggests Roddenberry, there will be a "Star Trek."

"TNG" survived its birth pangs largely because Paramount, spared the whims of 
an interfering network, had committed to a mulityear run.  There were few 
assurances that lightning could strike again.  But Paramount was prepared, 
recalls John Pike, the studio's president of network TV, to let Roddenberry 
work out the kinks until the series, like most others, hit its stride a season 
or two down the line.

It was willing to do so because, over the decades, "Star Trek" has shown 
itself to be a vigorous golden goose, generating immense profits.  What 
Roddenberry originally pitched as a "Wagon Train to the Stars" has become 
omnipresent:  a corporate gravy train for Paramount so unbiquitous in 
syndication and crafty in its merchandising as to appear virtually 
unstoppable.  Indeed, the studio refers to it as "the franchise."

The original series has been "stripped"--broadcast daily in most major 
Americal markets--since the early '70s and watched more and more by people who 
never saw its first run.  In its fourth season, "TNG" surpassed the original's 
output of 79 episodes.  It, too, is being stripped in syndication even as new 
episodes continue to be produced.  According to Cinefantastique, this is 
because the show, which allegedly costs more than a million dollars an episode 
to produce, runs at a sizable deficit.  However, Berman denies this is the 
case and says that "TNG" does better than break even.

At Paramount, only the foolhardly or the legally well-represented engage in 
debates over what defines profitability.  The five "Star Trek" movies alone, 
however, have grossed more than $400 million in box office receipts.  The 1986 
film "Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home," for instance, has earned $110 million in 
gross receipts and did an equally brisk business in video rentals.  Directed 
by Nimoy and written by writer/producer Harve Bennett and writer/director 
Nicholas Meyer, its pro-whale theme, comedic tone and contemporary setting 
attracted filmgoers who would not otherwise have gone to a "Trek" film.

Even the wildly overbudget ($45 million) "Star Trek--the Motion Picture," the 
first in the series, which opened in 1979 to a poor critical and box office 
reception, has managed to turn a profit.  At Paramount, such achievements are 
seldom scoffed at.

There is also a whole range of subsidiary merchandising to consider.  The 
"Star Trek" novels published monthly by Simon & Schuster's Pocket Books (a 
division of Paramount)--with plots alternating between the "classic" series 
and the new show--frequently reach the top of the New York Times bestseller 
list.  They alone generate close to a million dollars a year.

And even the Franklin Mint, which to date has only issued collectible 
Hollywood tie-ins to "The Wizard of Oz" and "Gone With the Wind," conducts a 
brisk trade with high-end "Star Trek" _tchotchkies_, including 
25th-anniversary commemorative coins, pewter models of the various Enterprises 
and even ornate chess sets costing nearly $1,000.  Timex offers a complete 
line of Trek watches.  Associates National Bank, headquartered in Dallas, even 
offers "Trek" credit cards.

Licensing fees for these and other marketing schemes go back to Paramount, 
which has come to regard "Star Trek" as a "tent-pole" capable of propping up 
the studio when times are particularly hard.  Although Paramount won't supply 
actual figures, the vehicle, in its assorted guises, may have already 
generated as much as a billion dollars in revenues.  With the studio now beset 
by sinking profits and vicious infighting, such performance is deeply 
appreciated and, according to a piece in Variety, heavily relied upon.

"Star Trek" and "TNG" are seen in some 40 countries including southern 
Lebanon, where Roddenberry's credo of non-violence has yet to take hold.  But 
despite being as pervasive as Madonna and perhaps as enduring as Mickey Mouse, 
Roddenberry's format seems to play best in America.

Fragmented by modernity, Americans appear starved for meaning, community and 
the promise of a better future that "Trek" attempts to deliver.  "Unlike most 
soap operas," says John De Lancie, who appears as a mischievous but lovable 
omnipotent alien called Q, "'Trek' is also _about_ something.  It seems to 
have a higher appeal, and people actually have a sense it might presage a 
better future."

Roddenberry's wide-eyed, highly idealistic view of the future is remarkably 
free from war and disease, racism and sexism.  This largely utopian vision was 
certainly the major attraction of the old series, in which the feisty Capt. 
Kirk, played with hammy exuberance by Montreal expatriate Shatner, policed the 
galaxy with decidedly un-Canadian gunboat diplomacy.  And it remains so today, 
although an equally bald-headed captain (fans still joke about Shatner's 
increasingly unwieldy hairpiece) now commands a kindler, gentler Enterprise.  
Capt. Picard is no interstellar "Stormin' Norman" Schwarzkopf.

This became evident when, at a recent convention n New York attended by 2,000 
Trekkers, Shatner and Stewart shared a stage for the first time.  Someone 
asked how Capts. Kirk and Picard would have handled Saddam Hussein.  One would 
have gone to war; the other would have opted for a mixture of vigorous 
negotiations and diplomacy, backed by sanctions, if necessary.  "I'd have told 
him to drop dead," said the blustery 60-year-old Shatner, who was always ready 
for a fight in the old seires and who regarded his frequent sexual conquests 
as de riguer for the protean hero.

"As for Capt. Picard," quipped Stewart, who has not always been comfortable 
with his alter ego's occasionally long-winded and sometimes 
inactive-to-the-point-of-somnolent leadership qualities, "he would still be 
talking."

The new Enterprise ostensibly shares the same mission as its predecessor, 
though the now-famous preamble is gender-neutral, promising to "boldly go 
where no _one_ has gone before."  However, according to J. Michael Stracynski, 
a co-host of KPFK's Friday-night science-fiction radio talk show, "Hour 25," 
the new show is more reserved, "which may make for interesting science fiction 
but not for very compelling stories."

For some, in fact, "Trek" has always rhymed with "yech."  In a recent exchange 
on the computer information service and network CompuServe, science-fiction 
writer Mike Resnick instructed a would-be "Star Trek" writer on the inherent 
drawbacks of plowing someone else's literary field.  His comments gave vent to 
the disdain that many still feel for the series in its various formats.  
"Novelizing someone else's characters," declared Resnick, "is secondhand 
writing and requires secondhand thinking.  I can think of no quicker way to 
stunt an embryonic writer's professional and artistic growth than to hand him 
a secondhand universe and a fully drawn set of characters and tell him to go 
to work writing yet another thirdhand adventure for readers who find comfort 
in the continual retelling _of what is essentially the same story_."

"'Star Trek' has the virtue in this world of being illiterate," acknowledges 
writer/director Meyer, now directing the current feature, "Star Trek VI: The 
Undiscovered Country," which is slated for a Christmas release.  "America is 
now an illiterate society, with no particular oral tradition," he observes.  
"Myths have to be served up in a new way."

Talk remains central to "Trek," says Meyer, who once told a film class that 
the classic series was at heart a radio play, not a TV show.  Meyer 
demonstrated this by running an episode of "Star Trek" without the picture.  
The class was able to follow "Trek" merely by listening to it.

What "Trek" offers to those who can get past its "high-Trek" terminology, says 
Stewart, "is the kind of narrative power that our earliest ancestors knew 
around their first in the cave.  It's what kept people together.  It's what 
gave meaning to their lives.  It's what validated them, or placed them in time 
and space.  It still does."

The old series dealt liberally with any number of noble and socially relevant 
themes of the '60s, tackling racial prejudice, the alleged irrationality of 
religious worship and even (in one of the more abysmal third-season episodes) 
the hippie phenomenon.  Although somewhat more restrained, politically, than 
its predecessor, "TNG" has also tackled complex human issues, including 
terrorism and drug abuse.

It has even explored the dangers of excessive "Trekishness" in a particularly 
wry and whimsical episode about one man's addiction to fantasy characters 
created in the ship's "holodeck," a 24th-Century virtual-reality simulator.  
The protagonist, a 24th-Century schlemiel, had fabricated imaginary but 
otherwise tangible replicas of the series' main stars--he was too inept to 
deal with them directly--during work hours.  In his holodeck fantasies, they 
actually fawned on him.

Marina Sirtis, as the ship's empathic counselor, Troi, and a sensual subject 
of these fantasies, seemed to be the only one to discern the true carnal 
nature of this illicit dalliance and was suitably shocked at the invasion of 
privacy it represented.

The more self-aware Trekkers, whom Shatner once admonished to "get a life" on 
an episode of "Saturday Night Live," may well have realized that they had 
become the butt of this gentle parody.  The rank-and-file probably were not, 
for which Paramount may be grateful.  THe people who have shaped such plots 
over the years for TV and film have learned that "Star Trek" fans are best 
left unprovoked.

It was the fans, in fact, who are credited with saving "Star Trek" from 
cancellation after both its first and second seasons.  The network didn't 
understand the show, remained unimpressed with its numbers and had moved it to 
a dreadful Friday-night time slot that assured its demise.  The Trekkers waged 
a letter-writing campaign of unprecedented proportions (some insist at 
Roddenberry's behest) against NBC, which relented by assuring a subsequent 
season.  Although many of the final season's shows, says Straczynski, might 
have best been dropped off a pier, the added year of production afforded the 
first series enough episodes to permit its survival in syndication.

The sheer power and durability of the "Trek" phenomenon did not become 
evident, however, until the early '70s, by which time "Star Trek" conventions 
were providing Roddenberry and his cast members with a new kind of livelihood. 
Fans wanted the series back, and Roddenberry tried valiantly to accommodate 
them, first with an animated series featuring the voices of some of the 
actors, and later with a revamped TV series with the original cast, to be 
called "Star Trek II."

Ultimately, plans for TV's "Star Trek II" gave way to an overpriced and 
generally stolid feature movie produced because of the overwhelming success of 
George Lucas' "Star Wars" and released in 1979 as "Star Trek: The Motion 
Picture."  That film, directed by Robert Wise, begat a more economical and 
dramatically successful trilogy of films that concluded with the popular "Star 
Trek IV: The Voyage Home."

"Star Trek V: The Final Frontier," which Shatner commandeered (Nimoy had 
directed the previous two), is widely regarded as the weakest of the feature 
series.  Fans who saw it were generally too numb to do anything but wring 
their hands.  Attend they did, however, despite bad advance word of mouth.

Still, when Paramount began contemplating "TNG" in 1986, it was far from 
certain the heavens would smile on this latest attempt to reincarnate "Star 
Trek."  Studio execs worries that the series might fail in its attempts both 
to capture the old audience and to attract new fans.

"There was great eagerness to do 'Star Trek' on television," recalls 
Paramount's Pike.  "But it was an anxious time, too.  You don't want to be the
one to screw up the franchise."  For one thing, it was thought that bringing 
"Trek" back to TV might saturate the market, softening the demand for more 
movies.  "Prior to 'TNG,'" says Bennett, "people who loved 'Trek' could watch 
reruns, and once every two years they could go to the theater and get a bigger 
dose of 'Trek,' and you'd have a feeding frenzy."  Too much "Trek," executives 
feared, could prove as bad as no "Trek."

But working in favor of the series' return to TV was the high cost of making 
the movies:  By "Star Trek VI," Paramount was paying Shatner and Nimoy $4 
million a film (though not up front, according to a recent report in the New 
York Times).  Increasingly strapped for funds, executives realized "Star Trek" 
would become more profitable if reincarnated as a TV series with a cast of 
relative unknowns.  Because Paramount could produce and market the series, 
there was no need to cut a network into the proceedings--a boon both for the 
front office and the creative staff.  "TNG" could boldly go where "Star Trek" 
had never gone before:  directly into syndication heaven.

"TNG" has succeeded nobly in distinguishing itself from the old series and the 
feature films.  There is hardly a Vulcan in sight on the new show.  Once-vile 
Klingons, humankind's formerly implacable warlike interstellar nemesis, are 
now in a loose alliance with the Federation, and one, the Enterprise's 
tactical officer, Lt. Worf (played by Michael Dorn), actually serves in 
Starfleet.  Children and families populate the decks of the new starship, 
leading, one assumes from the little seen of them, normal family lives with 
sedentary vocations.

Aboard the Enterprise, there has evolved a mutual admiration-and-support 
society sometimes so impossibly nurturing that some fans have come to concur 
with the series' renegade writers that, try hard as it does, the new show is 
simply not as interesting as its predecessor.  Missing, they say, is the 
successful interplay of characters.  Straczynski says, however, that he has 
observed a fair amount of what he calls "revisionism" among once-ardent fans 
of the old show:  "Some are now saying the old show wasn't that great--it was 
a little bombastic, the effects weren't good, the characters were flat."

But Straczynski has also noted that "TNG"--unlike the old show--has yet to 
foster quite as pervasive a cult.  "People don't watch it with as much 
attention, or rewatch it as much as the old show.  The old 'Trek' shows still 
hold up after 1,000 times.  The new show, I hear the fans say, is interesting 
enough.  But there isn't enough meat there."

Marina Sirtis lauds Roddenberry's universe for its unusual (in television) 
racial egalitarianism.  The original series is often touted for having 
facilitated TV's first interracial kiss, between Shatner and Lt. Uhura, played 
by Nichelle Nichols.  Three of the new show's principal players are black:  
among them, recent Oscar winner Whoopi Goldberg, who signed up for regular 
appearances as Guinan, the ship's bartender, because "Trek" had inspired her 
at a low point in her career.

Roddenberry's original bible also evinced a fascination with 24th-Century sex 
that has not, perhaps thankfully, been explored fully in the show.  Nearly an 
entire page of the booklet was devoted to the sexual obsessiveness of the 
Ferengi, a race of silly-looking Micky Mouse-eared alien bad guys who 
occasionally provide comic relief.  An early episode of the series--one of the 
few permitted to reflect his prurient interests--depicted members of the crew 
caught in the throes of overpowering amorousness.  For some cast members, who 
feel the show took chances in its first year no longer easily taken, that 
episode remains a favorite.

Indeed, the human universe of "TNG" remains dominated by monogamous 
relationships or by on-board abstinence.  "One of the things we are always 
wrestling with," Berman says, "is that because this show has existed within 
the confines of the AIDS era, promiscuity is not a good thing to promote.  
Kirk seemed to sleep with someone in every episode, but that's more '60s than 
'90s."

Relations among the cast members can be characterized as familiar, protective, 
and even intimate.  This, too, is in stark contrast to the original TV series. 
Though they have grown more cordial toward one another as their career 
interests have appeared to merge--they have contracts that indicate what one 
gets, the other gets--Shatner and Nimoy were never the best of friends.  And 
Shatner has only once--while directing "Star Trek V"--tried to hide his 
disdain for his supporting players, whom he has reportedly characterized to 
associates as the "Seven Dwarfs."

In part, relations among the new cast may be better because Roddenberry, and 
now Berman, have deliberately--and perhaps fruitlessly, given the popularity 
of the vehicle--tried to prevent the characters from emerging as stars.

"Star Trek: The Next Generation" ended its fourth season of production at 
roughly the same time that the "Star Trek VI" movie began shooting.  The 
original cast appears to have accepted the notion that the movie will probably 
end its now-25-year mission.  Indeed, Meyer's script--described as a 
perestroika-esque story that details the breakup of the Klingon empire under a 
Gorbachev-like leader--appears to suggest as much.  Their television 
counterparts, meanwhile, have two years left in their contracts, leaving some 
to ponder what comes next.

Although the show's still-burgeoning ratings don't yet suggest the 
possibility, "The Little Starship That Could" may eventually run out of steam, 
and the actors themselves may grow weary of their roles, especially if they 
perceive a danger of being as terminally typecast as their predecessors.  They 
realize that the 150-or-so episodes they do will probably follow them 
throughout their lives.  Having seen what that did to the careers of the 
former cast--most could not get decent film work after the series--not all 
relish that prospect.  

There is talk at Paramount of reviving the feature-film franchise by adopting 
the casting and format of "The Next Generation," and the last installment of 
the classic movies reportedly links the casts of the old and the new Treks.  
The search for a new tent-pole is clearly on.  It remains to be seen, though, 
whether "TNG" has the mettle to keep "Trek"--and Paramount--chugging along.

"One of the ways any culture will be judged by history," says Stewart, "will 
be by the quality of its entertainment.  In this business, one can never 
attempt to see into the future--although it's what we're attempting to do on a 
daily basis.  I don't know what people will say of this show 100 years hence.  
But "Star Trek" has maintained its grasp for 25 years.  Where are we 
going?--if there are still any of us left to inquire--will continue to be 
asked then."

Whatever happens, Dorn, who is virtually unrecognizable without his Klingon 
makeup, appears eager for any "Trek"-related work that comes his way (he plays 
his character's own great-grandfather in the upcoming feature film).

"If what happened to the first cast is called being typecast," Dorn says, 
"then I want to be typecast.  Of course, they didn't get jobs after 'Trek.'  
But they are making their sixth movie.  Name me someone else in television who 
has made _six_ movies!"
=============================================================================

The article also has several accompanying pictures--cast rehearsing, that sort 
of thing.  (Spiner with the monks grinning like a hyena is a good one, as is 
one of Worf kissing Picard's hand.  :-) )

Well, I hope you made it through.  I thought it was worthy of note.

Tim Lynch (Cornell's first Astronomy B.A.; one of many Caltech grad students)
BITNET:  tlynch@citjuliet
INTERNET:  tlynch@juliet.caltech.edu
UUCP:  ...!ucbvax!tlynch%juliet.caltech.edu@hamlet.caltech.edu
Why are there so many songs about rainbows, and what's on the other side?
	R.I.P. Jim Henson, 1936-1990; we shall never see your like again.

--
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Jim Griffith  /--OO--\     | Two great powers are on our side: the power of
griffith@dweeb.fx.com      | Love and the power of Arithmetic.  These two are
BEWARE BATS WITHOUT NOSES! | stronger than anything else in the world.