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Halldan1

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Jan 1, 2003
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Trailblazer.....




Nichelle Nichols, a groundbreaking Black actress who played communications officer Nyota Uhura with cool authority on the popular 1960s series "Star Trek," has died at 89.​


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Actress Nichelle Nichols, seen here in December 2021, who played communications officer Uhura on the popular 'Star Trek' series, has died


Her son, Kyle Johnson, announced the death on the official uhura.com website, saying, "Last night, my mother, Nichelle Nichols, succumbed to natural causes and passed away. Her light, however, like the ancient galaxies now being seen for the first time, will remain."

A family spokesman said Nichols died in Silver City, New Mexico, where she had been living with her son.

Tributes poured in quickly, including from a long list of devoted "Trekkies."

George Takei, who as helmsman Sulu shared the bridge with Lieutenant Uhura on the USS Enterprise, called her "trailblazing and incomparable," while prominent Georgia politician Stacey Abrams lauded her as a "champion, warrior and tremendous actor."

Nichols made history with one of the first interracial kisses on US television -- a 1968 embrace shared with the Enterprise's Captain Kirk, played by William Shatner (a kiss deemed worthy of a separate entry in Wikipedia).

Martin Luther King Jr. himself once praised Nichols, who broke ground with her powerful performance at a time when Black actors more often were cast as servants or criminals.

Nichols, who had trained in ballet and musical theater, at one point told "Star Trek" creator Gene Roddenberry that she wanted to quit the show to return to the theater.

But when she mentioned that to King, in a chance meeting recounted by the Hollywood Reporter: "All the smile came off his face and he said, 'You can't do that. Don't you understand, for the first time, we're seen as we should be seen? You don't have a Black role. You have an equal role.'"

She stayed.

While best known as Uhura, Nichols had a varied career, dancing with Sammy Davis Jr. in "Porgy and Bess," appearing on the NBC series "Heroes" and recording an album.

She also played Uhura -- a name taken from the Swahili for "freedom" -- in the first six "Star Trek" movies.

Later, Nichols worked as a recruiter for NASA -- which reached out to her after she had criticized its lack of diversity -- and successfully encouraged several talented African-Americans and women of all races to consider careers with the space agency.
 
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Nichelle Nichols, best known as Lt. Uhura in the original Star Trek TV series and the first six movies, died of natural causes last night. Her son Kyle Johnson announced the sad news on her official website. (The site quickly overloaded to capacity, and the announcement reposted on her official Facebook page.) The actress had been diagnosed with dementia in 2018.

Nichols began her career as a stage actress and a singer with the likes of Duke Ellington. An appearance on Gene Roddenberry’s first TV series The Lieutenant — and a brief romantic involvement with him –would ultimately lead to Star Trek. There, she blazed a trail as one of the first black series regulars on American TV, part of Roddenberry’s vision to show an optimistic future where racial and cultural prejudices no longer existed. On the show, she participated in what is widely believed to be the first interracial kiss between a white man and a black woman on a scripted American TV series, when Uhura and Captain Kirk are forced into it by powerful alien beings.

Though she considered leaving the show to do Broadway, Nichols very famously changed her mind due to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. A fan of the show, he met her at an NAACP event and convinced her how important it was for black people to see her in that kind of role. She subsequently stuck with Trek through all three seasons, the animated series, and six subsequent feature films. Several significant genre voice-acting roles since include the part of Elisa Maza’s mother Diane on Gargoyles.

Nichols began her career as a stage actress and a singer with the likes of Duke Ellington. An appearance on Gene Roddenberry’s first TV series The Lieutenant — and a brief romantic involvement with him –would ultimately lead to Star Trek. There, she blazed a trail as one of the first black series regulars on American TV, part of Roddenberry’s vision to show an optimistic future where racial and cultural prejudices no longer existed. On the show, she participated in what is widely believed to be the first interracial kiss between a white man and a black woman on a scripted American TV series, when Uhura and Captain Kirk are forced into it by powerful alien beings.

Though she considered leaving the show to do Broadway, Nichols very famously changed her mind due to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. A fan of the show, he met her at an NAACP event and convinced her how important it was for black people to see her in that kind of role. She subsequently stuck with Trek through all three seasons, the animated series, and six subsequent feature films. Several significant genre voice-acting roles since include the part of Elisa Maza’s mother Diane on Gargoyles.

Like many Star Trek alumni, Nichols recorded some music albums, though unlike some others, she could actually sing. In The Firm’s infamous parody song “Star Trekkin’,” it is an Uhura impersonator who sings the chorus line, “There’s Klingons on the starboard bow, starboard bow, starboard bow…”

In addition to acting, Nichols became so passionate about real-life space travel that she volunteered for NASA. Working with the organization to recruit diverse astronauts, she helped to bring aboard the likes of Sally Ride. Her NASA work is featured in the documentary Women in Motion.

And Uhura has become such an iconic character that she continues even after her original actress has gone. Zoe Saldana played an alternate-timeline version of the character in three movies, and Celia Rose Gooding continues to play her on the prequel series Star Trek: Strange New Worlds.

Nichelle Nichols was 89, and an inspiration.
 
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