After I heard that Leonard Nimoy died, it took me a while to put together my thoughts about the event. Growing up in the early 70s, Star Trek was a favorite show of mine, together with those other syndicated standbys, Bewitched and I Dream of Jeanie. It was broadcast early in the evening, before prime time. When I got old enough to stay up later, I enjoyed M*A*S*H* (Hawkeye!) and All In The Family, but they never captured my imagination the way Star Trek did.
My older brother and I used to watch the show together. It was one of the few experiences we shared, since he usually didn’t want his kid sister following him around, and would physically enforce the ban. He was a boy with strong, suppressed emotions, and Spock represented that, I think. Whenever there was an embarrassing moment on the show, especially if it had to do with Spock getting emotional, my brother would get up and leave the room:
Spock gets hit by alien spores (“This Side of Paradise”) and suddenly turns into a Love Machine!
Spock goes into “heat” (“Amok Time”) and fights to the death with Kirk! When he realizes Kirk is alive, he greets him with great joy, then pretends nothing happened.
Spock and the rest of the crew become intoxicated by a strange space disease (“The Naked Time”). When Nurse Chapel confesses her love for him, he loses control of himself!
Of course, those were my favorite bits. I loved Spock’s rational, logical, scientific learnedness, but I also loved his emotional side. It was a powerful metaphor for masculinity: being in control of your feelings all the time takes a lot of work. As a girl, I didn’t have to worry about that; having and revealing emotions didn’t take away from my girl-ness. Spock showed me that it was OK to be smart, and to love science. I could have the best of both worlds.
When I got older, I realized things weren’t that simple. But I never stopped believing.

Shana and Uruha in “The Gamesters of Triskelion.” Slave girls were a preoccupation on the show, and no female had a higher rank than Uhura’s “communications officer.”
The characters in Star Trek were archetypes. Spock was the logical one who relied on reason–the Tin Man who “didn’t have a heart.” McCoy was big-hearted, the Scarecrow of the story. In his gruff, no-nonsense way, he represented compassion and intuition. But just as Spock had emotions, McCoy had brains. When Spock and Kirk were forced to fight to the death, McCoy pronounced the wounded Kirk “dead” and beamed them away to the ship. He knew when to step in and call a halt to macho silliness. Kirk was the hero, the ideal synthesis of brain and heart. He was, in Gene Roddenberry’s original vision of the show, Horatio Hornblower in space.
Anyone who has read C. S. Forester’s Hornblower books knows that Hornblower is an extraordinary character, a man of great courage, intelligence and integrity who is also plagued by self-doubt. As played by Shatner, Kirk was far more confident, and more the ladies’ man, forever enjoying James Bond-like trysts with exotic women. But he had Hornblower’s determination to do the right thing, if not always by the book. According to the writer’s guide for the original series, Kirk was “always on trial with himself,” and “inclined to push himself beyond human limits.”
We all recognize the Star Trek music. The original show had special themes for different situations, beautifully performed by the studio orchestra (“Danger!” “Romance!” “Battle!” “The Awesomeness of Space!” “Weird Planets!”). And the writing on the show was nothing less than extraordinary. Theodore Sturgeon, Norman Spinrad, David Gerrold, and Harlan Ellison all wrote episodes. The titles themselves were riveting. Here are some of my favorites:
Is There In Truth No Beauty?
For The World Is Hollow, And I Have Touched The Sky
The City On The Edge Of Forever
The Conscience Of The King
Whom Gods Destroy
Who Mourns For Adonais?

“Who Mourns For Adonais?” may be my all time favorite. Michael Forest plays an Apollo who has outlived the other gods.
Viewers were often treated to a dose of humor (with whimsical music to match), as in “The Trouble With Tribbles.” Most episodes had a moment of comic relief at the end, with Kirk and the rest of the crew chuckling at some “human” joke and Spock raising a supercilious Vulcan eyebrow.
Like Sherlock Holmes, Spock is one for the ages. Leonard Nimoy’s portrait of Spock was so convincing that he will be forever identified with that character, a fact he struggled with. In the end, I think he understood that it was not just a case of typecasting, but something larger and more profound. Spock meant a great deal to people around the world, and Nimoy’s legacy is a lasting gift. After we are all long gone, he will still be teaching boys and girls that to be a “Science Officer” is an admirable thing, and that the truly “humane” person is one who tempers reason with feeling.
Beautiful Man, you are one of the Immortals now.
A lovely tribute! I used to watch the show with my big brothers and it was a huge part of my childhood too – thanks for the walk down Memory Lane!
Thanks for the comment! These days we all have separate media, but a show like that reveals the role TV used to play in family life.
it was the most looked-forward-to and popular show in my childhood home also!
My brother really liked “Hogan’s Heroes” too. We had a dachshund named Hogan, but I wish we had called her Spock 🙂
enjoyed reading this so much, all the memories flooding back! I think of all the original Star Trek characters he was my favourite (as my favourite captain was another 😉 I think it is a testament to the quality of the writing and the acting that even so many years later we can still enjoy the original series very very much!
I just realised that he was also quite a talented photographer!
He left us a wonderful legacy and i am sure his soul is resting in an amazing place 🙂
Thanks! Even though I watched and enjoyed some of the later series (Captain Picard!), I find that the original has stayed with me the longest. I’m oriented toward the story and characters rather than the special effects, so the dated look of the original doesn’t bother me.
me neither, i think the stories are great, but i did like Picard just a tiny bit better than Kirk, but only a tiny bit 😉
LOL. I used to quiver every time he said “Make it so.”
Aw, thanks for this post 🙂
Star Trek was a big part of my childhood, and Spock was my favourite, of course!
Interestingly, Patterns of Force wasn’t broadcast in Germany in the 70’s, but I caught up on it a couple of decades later. And boy, was it worth it! Spock was shirtless for most of the episode – I’d not have appreciated that quite as much back then when I was still a kid 😉
Ah yes, that was the episode with the “Nazi” scenario. Very memorable for the shirtless scenes. Nimoy had a nice body, muscular but trim, whereas Shatner kept having to suck in his gut, LOL!
Ah yes… Nimoy… tall and lean and toned… with a few splashes of green Vulcan blood… that’s how he shall live on in my memory… 🙂
Really enjoyed this post LM. Ahh, he was a beautiful man and compelling character, I adored the show. If such a thing does really exist, may his soul live long and prosper out into the far reaches of this wondrous Galaxy.
A Beautiful Man indeed! And “compelling” is a great description of the character.
Great post! I guess if you have read the moving article that Zachary Quinto has written about his friendhsip with Nimoy, he talked of an exceptional human being. I’ve always wondered how hard it is for an artist in general and particularly an actor to be remembered just for one of their works; it takes a lot of intelligency to take it as elegantly as Mr. Nimoy did.
I didn’t read that, but it sounds good. I very much appreciated Quinto’s performance as Spock. The reboot of “the original” in movie form surprised me with its quality, and the characters seemed fresh, yet familiar.
Nimoy wrote a book called “I am not Spock,” but then followed it later with “I am Spock,” so he must have made his peace with it.
Fascinating! Great that you can find the exact photos.
Thank you! The web seems to be flooded with screenshots of the original series, so happily for me I didn’t have to do them myself 🙂
nice complete succinct summary, as it were. your ability to write what seems to be a research paper AND fun reading is commendable.
Wow, that is a great compliment 🙂