I don’t idolize people in the
entertainment industry. It’s so hard to make it to the top that most talented
celebrities tend to be out of touch with the rest of the world, and for some
reason the people who gain celebrity without talent seem even more vacant. By
all accounts, celebrity also seems to make people … how can I say this? …
dicks.
Leonard Nimoy was not, by all
accounts, a dick. He was also anything but vacant. He had a Master’s degree,
served as a sergeant in the U.S. Army, was an accomplished photographer,
director, writer, and producer, and invented the Vulcan nerve pinch and salute.
Plus, he was a Transformer.
Just the same, it wasn’t the death of Nimoy
that sent me into a three day funk. It was the death of his most famous creation:
Captain S'chn-T' Gaii Spock, son of S'chn-T' Gaii Sarek, son of Skon and
Solkar, of Vulcan.
We’ll just call him Spock.
In his younger days Nimoy wrote a book
called “I Am Not Spock”, which was
true enough (although he wasn’t as negative about it as the title suggested).
He corrected that twenty years later
with “I Am Spock”. By that time,
ironically, I had come to realize he was not just Spock.
I wanted to be Spock. Not Kirk, not
Scotty, not even McCoy. I got a Spock haircut, and ankle boots that more or
less resembled those from Starfleet, and I even had a blue long sleeved shirt
with a little symbol thingy in the right place for Spock’s uniform. It was
actually a symbol for the shirt manufacturer, but close enough for imagination
to take over. I wanted to be a scientist, and an astronaut, and surely by the
time I hit my mid-twenties I’d be stomping around on Mars with the rest of the
crew.
None of this improved my standing at
school.
But that’s the point, that’s why I empathized
with Spock. As a kid I felt like I didn’t belong, like I was someone from
another world. We were both out of place, misunderstood, and trying to hide
emotions we didn’t want others to know we had. We were both tall and thin, and
a little alien looking. Neither of us ever seemed to get the girl, because we
were surrounded by charming adventurers like Kirk and Sulu. (It turns out Sulu
never got the girl, either.)
We were both … different. In the rural
Midwest of the 70s, that was a bad thing. But in the long run, Spock jumpstarted
my interest in science fiction, writing, science, and learning in general.
To me, of all the souls I’ve ever
known, his was the most human. All of this came from the creative genius of
Leonard Nimoy … who lived long, and prospered.
it's like losing a friend.
ReplyDeleteIt sure is ...
DeleteThis was beautifully written.
ReplyDeleteAw, thanks!
DeleteThis was beautifully written.
ReplyDeleteIt was like the rise of the nerds when Star Trek first came out - and I loved it. But Nimoy's talent showed through his other work as well. I had the opportunity to go see him in the one-man theater production, "Vincent": Vincent Van Gogh's life as passionately told by his loving brother.He was brilliant!
ReplyDeleteThere's no doubt he was talented in everything he did! My wife and I were big fans of "Fringe", and squealed with delight when he showed up.
DeleteSpock was the outsider, and I think that's what drew the audience to him, even if one wasn't a devout Trekkie.
ReplyDeleteExactly the way he affected me.
DeleteThat's the first time I've ever heard Spock's full name--and I'm a second generation Trekkie!
ReplyDeleteGreat post, Mark. He'll be missed by so many of us.
I only found out while I was researching for this!
DeleteNice tribute.
ReplyDelete