Whoopi Goldberg’s reaction on first seeing Star Trek’s Lt. Uhura, played by Nichelle Nichols. Apparently Nichols almost left the show because she had a Broadway offer, until a chance encounter with a fan changed her mind.
That fan was Martin Luther King Jr. Nichols recalls their conversation:
One of the organizers came up to me and said that there was someone who wants to meet you; and he says that he’s you’re best, biggest fan and I’m thinking it’s a Trekkie! [laughs] and so I said certainly and I got up and turned around and maybe 10 or 15 feet coming towards me I see Dr. Martin Luther King and I remember thinking whoever that little fan is, he’s going to have to wait, because here’s Dr. King, who walks straight up to me with this big, magnificent smile on his face and says, “I’m the fan!” because I’m sort of looking around for someone else, and he says, “I am your best fan, I am your biggest fan!” and I… I was at a loss for words, and if you know me, I am never at a loss for words.
…and so I told him I would be leaving the show, because; and that was as far as he let me go, and he said, “STOP! You cannot! You cannot leave this show! Do you not understand what you are doing?! You are the first non-stereotypical role in television! Of intelligence, and of a woman and a woman of color?! That you are playing a role that is not about your color! That this role could be played by anyone? This is not a black role. This is not a female role! A blue eyed blond or a pointed ear green person could take this role!” And I am looking at him and looking at him and buzzing, and he said, “Nichelle, for the first time, not only our little children and people can look on and see themselves, but people who don’t look like us, people who don’t look like us, from all over the world, for the first time, the first time on television, they can see us, as we should be!
Our debt grows ever greater.


7 comments
September 18, 2010 at 2:46 pm
Tom
That’s a great story.
Of course, since MLK has been adopted by Glenn Beck & co., I assume this means Star Trek is now an exemplar of right-wing politics.
September 19, 2010 at 7:44 am
V.K. Wilson
Nice! Look how far we have come since this ‘first non-stereotypic’ role. In television and real life there are many positive role models for our non-white young people to emulate. The most recent being presidential status of the USA.
September 19, 2010 at 10:57 am
docdave
This anecdote reminds me of something I read back during the initial run of ST-Next Generation, that advanced the idea that Michael Dorn’s Worf provided perhaps the best role model for young African-American males on US tv at that time. I don’t remember the author but the thesis has much to recommend it: Worf was strong, respected, dealing with anger-management issues stemming in part from a cultural predisposition, faced all the problems of being a member of a long-distrusted minority trying to work within a culture that has moved on past that distrust, or sort of….
September 19, 2010 at 7:50 pm
Steve
A picky little point, but I’ve heard Whoopi Goldberg report that exclamation as “Mommy, come look! There’s black people in the future!”
September 19, 2010 at 9:12 pm
Brainz
Following the link, I also loved the moment where Nichols goes back to Roddenberry and explains why she’s staying with the show.
September 21, 2010 at 9:45 am
hebisner
And Shatners role in helping prevent the Network from cutting out the first black/white kiss almost makes up for his otherwise obnoxious behavior.
September 21, 2010 at 4:11 pm
Dave
Well, Shatner is a Canadian, after all.