Welcome to Star Trek Simulation Forum

Register now to gain access to all of our features. Once registered and logged in, you will be able to contribute to this site by submitting your own content or replying to existing content. You'll be able to customize your profile, receive reputation points as a reward for submitting content, while also communicating with other members via your own private inbox, plus much more! This message will be removed once you have signed in.

Sign in to follow this  
Followers 0
AndrewLyon

To bold retire where no Vulcan has retired before...

<<This is something I caught on Yahoo News>>

 

Nimoy ready for retirement

Posted By KEVIN WILLIAMSON

Posted 1 day ago

 

 

Just when he thinks he's out, they beam him back in.

 

How else to describe Leonard Nimoy's enduring, at times conflicted relationship withStar Trek,the franchise that has defined his career for more than four decades -- regardless of how many times he swore it off or believed it was finished?

 

"Countless times, I thought it was done," he admits on the phone from Los Angeles.

 

 

But this time, says the 79-year-old actor-director-photographer, there are no more possibilities. Spock, his pointy-eared alter-ego, will live long and prosper. But it will be without Nimoy.

 

"I want to get off the stage. Also, I don't think it would be fair to Zachary Quinto," he says, referring to the actor who portrayed a youthful Spock in last summer's smashStar Trekrelaunch. "He's a terrific actor, he looks the part, and it's time to give him some space. And I'm very flattered the character will continue."

 

In other words, don't expect to see Nimoy in the nextTreksequel, scheduled for 2012. And don't expect to see him anywhere else, either. Having just shot what will be his final appearance as enigmatic genius Dr. William Bell in TV'sFringe,he says he's retiring from acting altogether.

 

"I've been doing this professionally for 60 years," he says with a laugh. "I love the idea of going out on a positive note. I've had a great, great time."

 

After all, his involvement withFringewas never intended to be permanent. Rather, he'd only agreed to appear in a few episodes as a favour to J.J. Abrams, who producesFringeand, of course, directedStar Trek.

 

"I was away from acting for 12 years, so I guess I was seducable," Nimoy says. "But since J.J. Abrams revived theStar Trekfranchise, I felt I owed him something. And I'm glad I did it because he promised me a good story, and it was."

 

Also in question is how many more science-fiction conventions he has in his future. He'll be at this weekend's Calgary Comic and Entertainment Expo which "could be the last go-round for that too," he says, noting he only has a few more public appearances planned.

 

Not that he doesn't enjoy them. He describes each one as "a love fest. I'm so grateful to the fans. I call these kind of experiences a victory lap ... It's like having a family meeting -- a family reunion."

 

That goodwill mirrors how his own emotions aboutTrekhave mellowed. Famously, his 1975 autobiography was entitledI Am Not Spock.By 1995, when he published his second autobiography, the title had been modified toI Am Spock.

 

He explains he made peace with the iconic series during the 1980s and particularly withStar Trek IV: The Voyage Home,which he directed. "I felt likeStar Trek IVwas my personal statement onStar Trek."

 

Now, typecasting be damned, he feels no regrets about donning the ears that made him famous. "SinceStar Trekbegan in 1966, I've never had to worry about where the next job was."

 

Rather, with his acting and filmmaking career behind him, he wants to concentrate on photography, citing an exhibition he has coming up in Massachusetts. He acknowledges he was met with skepticism initially about this latest creative venture, "but I've built credibility now in the art world."

 

And among the general population, too. He recalls an incident in which he and Tom Hanks were approached by a young man who wanted his picture taken with Hanks. When Hanks asked who would take the photo, the man turned to the now former Mr. Spock.

 

"He said, 'Mr. Nimoy, you're a wonderful photographer. Would you take our picture?' "

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Interesting-i going to miss his acting.....

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!


Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.


Sign In Now
Sign in to follow this  
Followers 0