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On Sept. 8, 1966, an American science
fiction icon was born. The “Star Trek”
television show lasted only three seasons, but spawned a lasting legacy
that has stretched across decades and led to four spinoff live-action
shows, a cartoon series and a dozen feature films.
Gene Roddenberry and his team set their show aboard the U.S.S. Enterprise, a sophisticated
starship with a competent crew of professional astronauts.
A pilot episode starring Jeffrey Hunter was rejected by the NBC TV
network as “too cerebral” for a general audience. The show was retooled
with William Shatner in the starring role of Captain James T. Kirk.
Leonard Nimoy was featured as the alien officer Spock.
After its cancellation in 1969, the show grew even more popular,
appearing several times per week (or even daily) in syndication.
The Star Wars phenomenon of 1977 led Roddenberry to consider bringing
the show back to television. Soon the plan changed, and “Star Trek the
Motion Picture” appeared in 1979 to lukewarm reviews. Not wanting to
waste their investment, the studio replaced Roddenberry at the helm and
made several sequel films with much lower budgets.
In 1987, Roddenberry created a new TV show from the ground up with an
entirely new cast led by Patrick Stewart as Captain Jean-Luc Picard.
“Star Trek the Next Generation” debuted directly into syndication, not
appearing on any of the major TV networks. Its popularity grew slowly
but eventually it became successful enough to spawn its own set of
feature films.
Three more TV series would follow: “Deep Space Nine,” “Voyager” and
“Enterprise.” When the latter went off the air in 2005, an unbroken run
of 18 years of Star Trek on television was ended.
By 2009 Star Trek had faded from pop culture prominence, but a reboot
movie, called simply “Star Trek,” changed all that. Director J.J. Abrams
reimagined the original TV series, casting Chris Pine and Zachary
Quinto in the lead roles of Kirk and Spock. The film became the
highest-grossing of the franchise.
In 2013, Abrams’ sequel “Star Trek into Darkness” features Benedict Cumberbatch as a terrorist villain.