This ‘Star Trek’ Actress Changed TV (and NASA) Forever

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Live long and prosper? Nichelle Nichols sure has. At the height of the American civil rights movement, she played “Star Trek’s” Lieutenant Uhura—then one of television’s few confident, strong Black female characters. It was a trailblazing role she nearly walked away from—until a certain legendary activist and super fan intervened. Who knew Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was a Trekkie?
BSRsays...

I rode in an elevator with Nichelle Nichols back in 1989 at Magnum Opus Con in Greenville, South Carolina. I was starstruck.

antsays...

Did you even talk to her? Obviously, no pictures.

BSRsaid:

I rode in an elevator with Nichelle Nichols back in 1989 at Magnum Opus Con in Greenville, South Carolina. I was starstruck.

BSRsays...

Talked briefly. Told her I couldn't believe I was meeting her. The usual fan stuff. It wasn't until afterwards I thought I should have said, "bridge" as soon as the doors closed.

A lost moment.

antsaid:

Did you even talk to her? Obviously, no pictures.

antjokingly says...

Do what Star Trek and other scifi does, time travel!

BSRsaid:

Talked briefly. Told her I couldn't believe I was meeting her. The usual fan stuff. It wasn't until afterwards I thought I should have said, "bridge" as soon as the doors closed.

A lost moment.

MilkmanDansays...

Heard a lot of that before, but I never knew that Nichelle was thinking of leaving the show and got talked out of it by MLK himself. Wow!

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