Nichelle Nichols - Whoopi Goldberg, Martin Luther King Jr. on Star Trek's UHURA

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  • Опубликовано: 25 апр 2020
  • 0:00 Actress #NichelleNichols on how Lieutenant #Uhura inspired #WhoopiGoldberg
    1:25 Whoopi tells her side of the story
    2:09 Nichols discusses how #MartinLutherKingJr - a fan of #StarTrek - convinced her to stay on the show
    #RepresentationMatters

Комментарии • 24

  • @rootfish2671
    @rootfish2671 Год назад +20

    RIP Nichelle Nichols. She was not only a part of television history but also civil rights history. You will be missed.

  • @Willpower-74205
    @Willpower-74205 Месяц назад +1

    The fact that one Star Trek actress can influence another in the same franchise is remarkable in itself. Nichelle was a true pioneer whose legacy lives on, even today. 🖖😎👍

  • @sparky6086
    @sparky6086 Год назад +9

    Loved it, when Lt Uhura slapped Sulu in "Mirror, Mirror". In the alternate universe, they were like pirates! The actors must have had a blast, making that episode.

  • @seabassseabass8835
    @seabassseabass8835 3 года назад +15

    I always loved this story 🖖

  • @Tzarina8472
    @Tzarina8472 2 года назад +6

    I can't believe this doesn't have more views.

  • @AndieBlack13
    @AndieBlack13 2 года назад +17

    For a sheltered boy of ten-years-old, I never looked as Lt. Uhura as specifically a "black woman", I thought of her as a wiz in communications technology. One episode has her underneath her console, "soldering iron" in hand reworking the circuitry, dressed in coveralls, hard at work...and when Spock queried her progress, she quipped, "I haven't done this kind of thing in years, it's very delicate work Sir"...telling all of us, this is all "old hat" stuff...been there, done that...in response, Spock responds with "I can think of no one more qualified Lieutenant , please proceed".

    • @captainbryce1
      @captainbryce1 Год назад +3

      And that’s exactly the correct way to view it. It’s the way she was intended to be viewed by the majority. That was kind of the whole point of what Gene Roddenberry wanted to do, and the point MLK was making. The only way you could view her as not specifically a “black woman” was for her to be in a role that wasn’t written as a black woman. Lt. Uhura was the communications officer on a starship! And having a black woman play her helped to normalize the idea that black people could be viewed as something other than a stereotype.

  • @dac314
    @dac314 2 года назад +6

    Stunning, what a radiant beauty, and amazing soul.

  • @maryanncampbell3428
    @maryanncampbell3428 Год назад +1

    Love you so much, Nichelle, rest in life.

  • @suzettewilliams1758
    @suzettewilliams1758 Год назад +2

    RIP Nichelle Nicols

  • @NolanUeno
    @NolanUeno 2 месяца назад +1

    No matter your race, gender, sexuality etc. we are all going into space.

  • @jennijones1532
    @jennijones1532 Год назад

    I LOVED Whoopi Goldberg on Star Trek. She was auh-mazing.

  • @deborahpinkey1264
    @deborahpinkey1264 Месяц назад

    Fascinating, as Commander Spock would say.

  • @jessejauregui
    @jessejauregui 3 года назад +2

    🖖 🥰

  • @joeybulford5266
    @joeybulford5266 Год назад

    That’s pretty awesome

  • @starmsjc
    @starmsjc Год назад

    Exactly not some wealthy person’s Mamie. An intellectual explorer

  • @thehod152
    @thehod152 Год назад

    RIP Nichelle Nichols, you have done so much for minorities

    • @jessejauregui
      @jessejauregui Год назад

      Plus women 👏👏👏 rest in power

  • @ninaschust3694
    @ninaschust3694 3 года назад +5

    Not a black role, not a female role.
    Today for everybody Ltd. Uhura could not be anything else without offending Star Trek.

    • @chy03001
      @chy03001 2 года назад +2

      Well... that's because the character is established. If we had a different Star Trek show with a different communications officer, we wouldn't care if they were black, white, female, alien, or a robot.

  • @psikeyhackr6914
    @psikeyhackr6914 2 года назад +1

    Star Trek was a Science Fiction show.
    What did Martin Luther King ever say about science and technology?

    • @Kain5th
      @Kain5th 8 месяцев назад +3

      not much but thats not the point, the point is Star Trek offers a very optimistic vision of the future and black people are a part of that future. whereas before that it seemed like they were not.

    • @psikeyhackr6914
      @psikeyhackr6914 8 месяцев назад

      @@Kain5th
      What did MLK say about the Ethiopian Bible?