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Majel Barrett-Roddenberry, RIP

I was sorry to hear that Majel Barrett-Roddenberry had passed away. One of the things that struck me when seeing the trailer for J.J. Abrams’ new Star Trek movie was…

I was sorry to hear that Majel Barrett-Roddenberry had passed away.

One of the things that struck me when seeing the trailer for J.J. Abrams’ new Star Trek movie was that, for as much as he changed in his effort to revitalize the Trek universe, there were just enough things that he left unaltered—perhaps in an effort to tacitly state, “While this isn’t your father’s Star Trek, it still is Star Trek.” Like that classic “red alert” sound. And it was also reassuring to know that Majel Barrett-Roddenberry—who passed away earlier today from complications from pneumonia at the age of 76—was once again the “voice” of Starfleet computers, reprising the role she had played in every iteration of Star Trek since the very first episode back in 1966.

While I never much cared for her simpering Nurse Chapel character, her pilot role as Number One had fine promise, and she made up for a lot with the marvelous character of Lwaxana Troi — not to mention, as noted, her universality as the Enterprise‘s computer voice.

 

 

She also had a (not at all mentioned, sadly, in any of the IMDB tributes I waded through) regular role voicing Lt. M’Ress on the animated Star Trek. (And I’ll also mentioned she had a famous, gracious, and nicely turned star appearance on Babylon 5 as well.)

Wikipedia entry.

(via Amanda)

 

Go, Gandalf, go!

  Ian McKellen has confirmed he’s back on board for The Hobbit. Huzzah!  Here’s hoping he’s up for the filming through 2009-10. (via Ginny)…

 

Ian McKellen has confirmed he’s back on board for The Hobbit. Huzzah! 

Here’s hoping he’s up for the filming through 2009-10.

(via Ginny)

NYC – Avenue Q

So, after long months of hearing Doyce rave about Avenue Q, we got tickets for the Broadway performance (at the Golden Theatre) while we were out there. And, yes,…

So, after long months of hearing Doyce rave about Avenue Q, we got tickets for the Broadway performance (at the Golden Theatre) while we were out there.

And, yes, it’s a ton of fun, rollicking goodness, witty and funny and simple and profound.

Indeed, the simplicity of the show is both a weakness and a strength. It touches on such themes as love, sex, commitment, purpose, life, bad decisions, racism, schadenfreude, communication, integrity, careers, coming of age … I mean we’re talking Shakespearean stuff here in a lot of ways. And, like Shakespeare, it’s neatly packaged up in a low comedy package that seems treat everything lightly, yet leaves enough loose ends (“For Now”) to smack of much more reality than most TV dramas manage.

Like Sesame Street (the unabashed inspiration), the show has some actors who just play people, and other actors who play one (or more) puppets — usually standing, holding the puppet next to them. It’s like watching a movie with subtitles — do you watch the puppet or the actor? In the end you do both, in an odd, schizophrenic fashion, and it all works.

Some puppets are manned by two people at a time. The two main leads actually play two characters each (Princeton/Rod and Kate Monster/Lucy). If there’s a scene where both are on stage, they end up handing one puppet off to another of the actors, but do both voices. Even more schizophrenic (do you watch the puppet, the voice actor, or the puppet actor?), but, again, it all works.

I highly recommend it to anyone who would not be offended by enthusiastic (if non-graphic) puppet sex. It’s a great fun.

Then, afterward …

Continue reading “NYC – Avenue Q

“I cannae change the laws o’ physics!”

In an odd twist to an odd story, Scotty’s not in trekking toward the stars. James Doohan’s cremated remains were supposed to be launched into space along with about…

In an odd twist to an odd story, Scotty’s not in trekking toward the stars.

James Doohan’s cremated remains were supposed to be launched into space along with about two hundred others.  The launch of the private UP Aerospace SpaceLoft XL rocket was successful, and all went well with flight trajectory, for some unknown reason the payload ended up parachuting back down into rough New Mexico landscape, where it’s yet to be found.

Scotty always did get in trouble on landing parties …

(via BoingBoing)

RIP Molly Ivins

I didn’t always agree with all of her positions, and sometimes she was a bit prone to take the cheap shot (though she always did so with incredible homespun panache),…

I didn’t always agree with all of her positions, and sometimes she was a bit prone to take the cheap shot (though she always did so with incredible homespun panache), but Molly Ivins was still one of the greats of modern modern political commentary.

Molly Ivins, whose biting columns mixed liberal populism with an irreverent Texas wit, died at 5:30 p.m. Wednesday at her home in Austin after an up-and-down battle with breast cancer she had waged for seven years. She was 62.

Hers was a unique voice, and it will be missed.

Four quotes by her from my WIST database:

Yes, the bad-lawyer felony is the leading cause of the death penalty in Texas.

The single most dangerous thing you can do in politics is shut off information from people who don’t agree with you. Surround yourself with sycophants, listen only to the yea-sayers … then stick a fork in it, you’re done. — “Election Denial,” 3 Apr. 2001

There’s a weird Republican schizophrenia: They want welfare mothers to work and working mothers to stay home. — “Winning Women,” 2 Aug. 2001

Keep fighting for freedom and justice, beloveds, but don’t you forget to have fun doin’ it. Lord, let your laughter ring forth. Be outrageous, ridicule the fraidy-cat, rejoice in all the oddities that freedom can produce. And when you get through kickin’ ass and celebratin’ the sheer joy of a good fight, be sure to tell those who come after how much fun it was.

RIP Jane Wyatt

Yeah, the headlines all talk about her “Father Knows Best” role, but I’ll always remember her as the utterly dignified (if occasionally exasperated) Amanda Grayson, wife of Sarek, mother of…

Yeah, the headlines all talk about her “Father Knows Best” role, but I’ll always remember her as the utterly dignified (if occasionally exasperated) Amanda Grayson, wife of Sarek, mother of Spock.

Farewell, G’kar

Andreas Katsulas, RIP. Katsulas had a varied movie and TV career, but the geek factor for him stemmed from … … his portrayal of the One-Armed Man in the Harrison…

Andreas Katsulas, RIP.

Katsulas had a varied movie and TV career, but the geek factor for him stemmed from …

… his portrayal of the One-Armed Man in the Harrison Ford remake of The Fugitive.

… his occasional appearance as Romulan Commander Tomalak on Star Trek: The Next Generation.

… and, most of all, in his pivitol role of Narn Ambassador G’kar on Babylon 5.

The latter was what brought him to my attention. He was one of a very few actors to go through the entire series (1994-98), and his nuanced and evolving character was part of the bedrock of that show. Evidently a consummate professional as an actor, he convincingly carried G’kar along from poncy schemer to fierce warrior to unexpected religious and political icon.

He will be missed, though his work will remain.

Lloyd Bochner, RIP

Lloyd Bochner, who played a slew of suave, wealthy villains, military officers, and doctors during his lengthy film and TV career, has passed away at age 81. He showed up…

Lloyd Bochner, who played a slew of suave, wealthy villains, military officers, and doctors during his lengthy film and TV career, has passed away at age 81.

He showed up on practically every TV show I watched or enjoyed from the 60s and 70s (except, oddly, Star Trek), and is most famous to the Geeky Set for his lead role in the “To Serve Man” episode of Twilight Zone (the Really Geeky Set recall him as the evil Terran military officer in Battlestar Galatica, while the non-Geeks will remember him as Cecil Colby on Dynasty).

(via DPS)

A beautiful butterfly

A major Pixar talent, Joe Ranft, was killed in an auto accident a few days ago. Ranft was one of the heads of story on both TOY STORY and TOY…

A major Pixar talent, Joe Ranft, was killed in an auto accident a few days ago.

Ranft was one of the heads of story on both TOY STORY and TOY STORY 2, as well as the voice of Heimlich the Caterpillar in A BUG’S LIFE. He had also worked on story for THE NIGHTMARE BEFORE CHRISTMAS, BEAUTY AND THE BEAST, THE LION KING, WHO FRAMED ROGER RABBIT and THE RESCUERS DOWN UNDER, among other films.

If the elegies are any indication, this is a huge loss for Pixar, for animation, and for those who knew him.

Good-night, Scotty

RIP, James Doohan. He’d been in failing health for some time. A WWII vet (and D-Day survivor), he was a talented voice artist (and did a number of voices on…

RIP, James Doohan. He’d been in failing health for some time.

A WWII vet (and D-Day survivor), he was a talented voice artist (and did a number of voices on Star Trek besides the one he was famous for, usually the big, booming disembodied ones like the Guardian of Forever and Sargon, as well as dozens of others on the animated series), but he’ll always be the passionately geeky and stand-up Star Fleet engineer Mr. Scott to me.

(via BoingBoing)

Riddle me this

According to the Dead People Server, Frank Gorshin passed away yesterday. One of my favorite character actors from days gone by (particular his work in Batman, of course, not to…

gorshin_r.jpggorshin_b.jpgAccording to the Dead People Server, Frank Gorshin passed away yesterday. One of my favorite character actors from days gone by (particular his work in Batman, of course, not to mention his Emmy-nominated turn on Star Trek), it’s a shame to see him go.

“I canna change the laws o’ physics!”

Nor of biology, alas. James “Scotty” Doohan gave his last con appearance over the weekend, and Tuesday will mark his final planned public appearance, as he accepts a star on…

scotty1.jpgNor of biology, alas. James “Scotty” Doohan gave his last con appearance over the weekend, and Tuesday will mark his final planned public appearance, as he accepts a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

The 84-year-old actor, who played “Scotty” on the ’60s TV series, decided to retire after being diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease several months ago. He blew kisses to a crowd of Trekkie faithful gathered at Sunday’s finale of a two-day tribute held at the Renaissance Hollywood Hotel.

Doohan, who also has Parkinson’s disease and diabetes, mingled with fans at the convention and spoke at a news conference between Scotty impersonation contests and a panel discussion titled, “The Influence of Scotty on Society.”

Scotty was always one of my favorites, too often pushed out of the spotlight by the Big Three, but, on those occasions when he got to be in charge, or got a good line — “Wolf in the Fold,” “The Trouble with Tribbles,” “Mirror, Mirror,” “Friday’s Child” come immediately to mind — always showing fiery determination, an effacing sense of humor, and a deep loyalty to Star Fleet, his ship, and his Captain. That was Doohan’s doing, and he was a fine character actor and, from all I’ve read, quite a nice fellow. He’ll be missed.

The kitchen is closed

“Bon Appetit!” to Julia Child (1912-2004). From WIST: I … go to MacDonald’s and Burger King on occasion. What else are you going to do when you’re on the road…

“Bon Appetit!” to Julia Child (1912-2004).

From WIST:

I … go to MacDonald’s and Burger King on occasion. What else are you going to do when you’re on the road and you have to dash in for some food? They are pretty good; they’re clean, and you know what you’re getting. I don’t know why anyone would think I always dine on hummingbird tongues or something.

Sic transit Jerry Goldsmith

Jerry Goldsmith, composer of more great soundtracks and theme songs than one could shake a stick at, has died. Just to list the ones that I find are particularly noteworthy…

Jerry Goldsmith, composer of more great soundtracks and theme songs than one could shake a stick at, has died.

Just to list the ones that I find are particularly noteworthy would take a while, but just a few off the list includes:

The Mummy
Mulan
Star Trek: Voyager (theme)
Total Recall
Star Trek the Motion Picture (thus, the theme to Star Trek: Next Generation)
Aliens
The Omen
Barnaby Jones (theme)
Patton
Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (TV theme)
Perry Mason (theme)
Have Gun, Will Travel (theme)

And eleventy zillion others. Impressive, both in scope and length. I’ll miss him.

Books on Tape

I’ve been having mixed luck with the Books on Tape regimen driving to and from the office. When it’s good, it’s a heck of a lot more relaxing than listening…

I’ve been having mixed luck with the Books on Tape regimen driving to and from the office. When it’s good, it’s a heck of a lot more relaxing than listening to the news, a lot more engaging than listening to music, and a hell of a lot more intelligent than listening to drive-time chatter. When it’s bad, it’s … not.


The good news is, this unabridged audio of Ellis Peter’s Cadfael novel, The Confession of Brother Haluin, is excellent. The bad news is, the version I listened to (from the library) is not the version currently offered on tape, above, but this one, narrated by Patrick Tull, now sadly out of print and not showing up anywhere on Google.

The story mixes religious devotion of 12th Century Benedictines with — as is usual in Cadfael novels — a murder mystery. Unlike most of the series, though, most of the action takes place away from the abbey, on a pilgrimage wherein a cripped brother, escorted by Cadfael, attempts to atone for evils he has committed. And the murder, in this case, is almost incidental to the other, greater mystery and drama going on.

It’s one of my favorite Cadfael books. And Tull’s narration (he’s did a number of other Cadfael books, and many others) is excellent. Even though older and a bit harsh-voiced, he manages a richness and variation in tone that plows through even long narrative bits without being boring, and lets him convincingly play everything from youths to women to old men. His equally-fine rendition of the Cadfael Summer of the Danes is still available. I’ll be remembering his name as I look for other BoTs.


There may be a bigger, more jarring leap available out there than between The Confession of Brother Haluin and Laurell Hamilton’s Seduced by Moonlight, but I’d be hard-pressed to think of it. From a tale of 12th Century monks to modern-day faeries in LA, from gentility to crudity, from nunneries to sex, from forced marriages to …

Well, there are some aspects that aren’t that much different, in substance if not in tone.

I enjoy Hamilton’s works, though the Merrie Gentry series less than the Anita Blake one. But while Laural Merlington does a good job narrating as Gentry, the book is too thick, too full of interminable narrative and exposition, especially toward the beginning. The abridged version might work better, in that way, except that there’s so much backstory that needs explaining (in-between the sex) that it’s difficult enough to understand as it is.

The other failing touch is that while Merlington’s has Merrie’s voice down, she simply cannot do men’s voices well — certainly not anyone with a deep voice. Cross-gender voices are difficult to pull off in a recorded medium, and it just doesn’t quite work here. Which, given the number of guys Merrie’s fooling aorund with, is a problem.

I think this one’s a better book than a tape.


I asked yesterday whatever happened to all the Star Trek fiction. I think I found part of my answer.

Star Trek: Spectre is either evidence that Bill Shatner cannot write, or that he cannot hire a decent ghost writer. On my worst day as an author, at my most ill-plotting and melodramatic and awkward and pretentious (all of which I manage to achieve high levels in when I’m not careful, and sometimes when I am), I don’t come near to the crowning achievements in this novel.

Now throw in Bill Shatner doing the narration. And cheesy sound effects.

Let’s see — in the first 20 minutes or so of this 2-cassette abridgement, we have mysterious people declaring that “James … Tiberius … Kirk … will … die!” We have some leaden comedy involving a tree stump and a romantic scene with Kirk’s Klingon wife, we have Jean-Luc Picard and the Enterprise, and we have the return of Voyager. All of it intoned with Shatner’s trademark bombast and smugness.

That was enough for me. When Shatner made Riker sound even less interesting than Frakes usually did, I’d had enough. It had moved beyond amusing to just too damned irritating for words.

It may be that this turns into a fabulous novel at 30 minutes in or so, but I wouldn’t count on it. The synopsis mentions that we get a return of Spock. And McCoy. And the Mirror Universe folk. No mention of kitchen sinks.

The jacket intones:

William Shatner has once again brought his unique blend of talents as actor, writer, director, and producer to continue the saga of Jim Kirk’s remarkable second life, as an insidious menace from his past threatens a new generation of heroes…

“Unique” is doubtless the right word here. “Insidious” also fits, though perhaps not as intended.

An unforgettable saga peopled by old friends and ancient enemies, Star Trek® Spectre propels Kirk on a journey of self-discovery every bit as harrowing as the cataclysmic new adventure that awaits him.

“Unforgettable,” alas, yes. “Harrowing” and “cataclysmic” — oh, yeah.

Gack. Escape in the life pods while you can.

Your Kim Possible trivia for today

Dr. Drakken is voiced by John DiMaggio, better known as Bender on Futurama. Ron Stoppable is voiced by Will Friedle, better known to many as the voice of Terry McGinnis…

Doctor_Drakken.gifDr. Drakken is voiced by John DiMaggio, better known as Bender on Futurama.

Ron Stoppable is voiced by Will Friedle, better known to many as the voice of Terry McGinnis in Batman Beyond.

Shego is voiced by Nicole Sullivan, of MadTV and Buzz Lightyear Mira Nova fame.

And now you know.

To boldly go where nobody should have gone before

As yet another reminder that actors are not, themselves, the characters they play, Patrick Stewart is speaking out against manned space travel. “As I get older my unease at the…

As yet another reminder that actors are not, themselves, the characters they play, Patrick Stewart is speaking out against manned space travel.

“As I get older my unease at the time and the money that has to be spent on projects putting human beings back to the moon, and on to another planet, is so enormous,” he said.

“And it would take up so many resources, which I personally feel should be directed at our own planet.”

Lileks has the best rejoinder:

Making movies takes up many resources which could be directed at our own planet. For that matter, millions of pounds are spent in England annually for theater productions – I propose a ten-year moratorium on all stage shows, with the money distributed directly to our own planet. And after we have gotten things right on this planet we can get back to such frivolous luxuries as theater.

What’s that, you say – theater employs many people? Theater inspires imaginations, adds to our store of knowledge, helps us define what it means to be human?

And exploring other words doesn’t, eh. Noted: the future of humanity shall consist not in getting this place right but watching angry Pinter screeds about that wretched meat we know as our own flawed species. And when we leave the theater we can look up and behold an infinite world we must never pollute.

Passages

Amidst all the “stars who died this year” recaps, may I commend to you one Wah Ming Chang, who died 22 December. One of the three founding members of Project…

Amidst all the “stars who died this year” recaps, may I commend to you one Wah Ming Chang, who died 22 December.

One of the three founding members of Project Unlimited in 1956, he and his cohorts did fx, masks, prop, and animations for TV and film, including Tom Thumb, The Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm, The Seven Faces of Dr. Lao, and Spartacus.

He was also a key contributor to similar work on The Outer Limits and Star Trek (TOS). In the latter, he is credited with the design work for the phaser (II), the tricorder, and the communicator. He also did creature and costuming work on ST, including the Salt Vampire.

He made masks for the ballet sequence in The King and I, and created the massive head dress worn by Liz Taylor in Cleopatra.

He also sculpted the original various heads for animation of the Pillsbury Doughboy.

The Miniature Time MachineHe was an Academy Award Winner — sort of — for George Pal’s The Time Machine (woo-hoo!). Among other things, he built the miniature model of the TM, and sculpted the head of the Sphinx. He and his colleagues animated the “time passage” sequence out of the Inventor’s window, as well as the volcanic eruption that destroys the future city. And, of course, there was the famous animated decomposition of a morlock.

The way the credits were submitted, only Chang’s two partners, Gene Warren Sr. and Tim Barr, got actual Oscar statuettes; Chang only got a plaque. While others were irked by this, Chang took it in stride; he had done his job, and that was recognition enough.

In later years, his studio created costumes for ice shows and made television commercials. Since 1970, he’d lived in Carmel, sculpting.

In the pre-CGI era of animation, fx, and miniatures, Wah Chang’s name and work will long remain famous.

Up the Tube

Matt Jefferies, who provided the design work on the original Star Trek, including the ship design, the bridge layout, and the ubiquitous “Jefferies Tubes,” has passed away. (via Heinleinblog)…

Matt Jefferies, who provided the design work on the original Star Trek, including the ship design, the bridge layout, and the ubiquitous “Jefferies Tubes,” has passed away.

(via Heinleinblog)

Actors

I was sorry to hear that James Coburn had died the other day. His knife-thrower, Britt, in The Magnificent Seven, was iconic, and his deep, gravelly voice and lanky frame…

FlintI was sorry to hear that James Coburn had died the other day. His knife-thrower, Britt, in The Magnificent Seven, was iconic, and his deep, gravelly voice and lanky frame graced many other enjoyable flicks.

The pain!I was surprised I’d not heard about it when Jonathan Harris (also) died, earlier in the month. Though forever stamped into the mold of Dr. Zachary Smith in Lost in Space (“Oh, the pain …”), Harris rolled with the punch, and was willing to live with it, including a number of voice-over roles in recent years — Freakazoid and A Bug’s Life come to mind. Nobody would likely guess he grew up with a thick Bronx accent. For that matter, few folks would guess he left behind a wife of 64 years and a son.

I try not to be disappointed when actors turn out to have feet of clay. They are, after all, humans, too. When it turns out to be a favorite of mine, though, and the feet are more like slime, I get really irked — and have to remind myself that indictment doesn’t necessarily equate to guilt.