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Gene Roddenberry




Eugene Wesley Roddenberry ( August 19 , 1921October 24 , 1991 ) was an American scriptwriter and producer. He is best known as the creator of the Science Fiction television series '' Star Trek '', and was one of the first people to be Buried In Space .


PERSONAL LIFE

Born in El Paso, Texas to Eugene Edward Roddenberry and Caroline Glen, Roddenberry spent his boyhood in Los Angeles, California , where his family had moved so his father could pursue a career with the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD). Following in his father's footsteps after high school, Roddenberry took classes in police studies at Los Angeles City College , and headed that school's Police Club.

In that role, he liaised with the FBI , thanking them for sending speakers and securing copies of the FBI Code and publications for club use, and attempted to take fingerprint records of the college community for the FBI's Civil Identification Division.

He later transferred his academic interest to Aeronautical Engineering and qualified for a Pilot's License . Roddenberry joined the U.S. Army Air Corps in 1941 and became an aviator. He flew many combat B-17 missions in the Pacific Theatre and was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross and the Air Medal .

After leaving the service, he was a commercial pilot for Pan American World Airways (Pan Am). He received a Civil Aeronautics commendation for his efforts following a crash in the Syrian desert, while on a flight to Calcutta .

Roddenberry left Pan Am to pursue writing for television in Los Angeles. He fell back on his early training as a policeman and joined the LAPD. He served the LAPD from 1949 – 1956.

Roddenberry was married twice. He had two children by his first wife, Eileen Rexroat (to whom he was married 27 years) — Dawn, and the late Darleen. His second marriage was to - Shinto ceremony on August 6 , 1969 . He had one child, Rod Roddenberry , with Barrett.

Gene Roddenberry was a Secular Humanist .Interview in ''The Humanist'', March/April 1991 After his death, a lipstick-sized capsule of his ashes was sent into space to orbit the earth for six years (after which they burned up in the earth's atmosphere).


TELEVISION CAREER

Before ''Star Trek'', Roddenberry wrote scripts for many of the popular television series of the 1950s, such as '' Have Gun, Will Travel ''. He produced ''The Lieutenant'', a 1963-1964 NBC series about the United States Marines . He was also trying to get other science fiction series off the ground, mostly without success.

Roddenberry developed his idea for ''Star Trek'' in 1964. The series was finally picked up by Desilu Studios . The original $500,000 Pilot received minor support from NBC, but the network commissioned an unprecedented second pilot. The series premiered on September 8 , 1966 and ran for three seasons. Although it was cancelled due to low Ratings , the series gained wide popularity in Syndication .

Following the cancellation of ''Star Trek'', Roddenberry pitched four sci-fi tv series concepts that all had pilot movies produced but were not picked up; '' The Questor Tapes '', '' Genesis II '', '' Planet Earth '', and '' Strange New World ''. He also co-wrote and was executive producer on the made for TV movie, '' Spectre '' (1977).

During the 1970s, Roddenberry also lectured at universities around the country. He amused the attendees with anecdotes from the '' Star Trek '' set, spoke of his visions of the future and showed the ''Star Trek Blooper Reel'', a collection of outtakes from the original series. Fans bestowed upon him the affectionate nickname "The Great Bird of the Galaxy," after a mythical creature referenced in "Man Trap," the first aired episode of ''Star Trek''.

Beginning in 1975, go-ahead was given by Paramount for Roddenberry to develop a sequel "Star Trek" television series based around as many of the original cast as could be recruited. This series was to be the anchor show of a new network, but plans by Paramount for this network were scrapped and plans were changed to do a Star Trek feature film.

The result ''''.

Roddenberry only produced the first Star Trek film, ''''.

The last film based on the original ''Star Trek'' series, '''' was dedicated in Roddenberry's memory; he reportedly viewed a version of the film a few days before his death, aged 70.

In addition to his film and TV work, Roddenberry also wrote the novelization for ''Star Trek: The Motion Picture'', which was published in 1979 and was the first of hundreds of ''Star Trek'' based novels to be published by Pocket Books . It has been claimed by some that Alan Dean Foster was the Ghost Writer of the book, but this has been debunked, although Foster did contribute to the film's screenplay. Roddenberry talked of writing a second ''Trek'' novel but died before he was able to do so.


CONTROVERSY

Writers on ''Star Trek'' have charged that ideas they developed were later passed off by Roddenberry as his own, or that he lied about their contributions to the show at ''Star Trek'' conventions. Roddenberry was confronted by these writers, and apologized to them, but according to his critics, he continued to repeat the false claims.See ''Gene Roddenberry: The Myth and the Man Behind Star Trek'' by Joel Engel, books by Star Trek Producer Herb Solow, science-fiction convention talks by Star Trek writer Dorothy C. Fontana, and books and articles by Harlan Ellison .

In her Autobiography , actress Nichelle Nichols who played Uhura in the first ''Star Trek'' series, reported having had a love affair with Roddenberry. She felt that his strong and controversial inclination to get her on the show had a lot to do with their relationship.

Roddenberry's life and work has been favorably chronicled in the biography ''Inside Trek: My Secret Life with Star Trek Creator Gene Roddenberry'' by Susan Sackett, his close associate for 17 years. The book has been described as inaccurate by his critics.

Despite his reduced management of ''Star Trek'' near the end of his life, Roddenberry was still respected enough that '' not be considered Canon by the studio. According to the reference work ''The Star Trek Chronology'', Roddenberry reportedly considered elements of the fifth and sixth ''Trek'' films to be apocryphal, though there is no indication that he wanted them removed from ''Trek'' canon.

In 1987, Roddenberry first made a public statement, at a science fiction junket, in a response to a fan's question, that the ''Star Trek: The Next Generation'' television series would address what it was like to be Gay in the science fiction future. This would be done in a similar fashion to the way the original series had dealt with ethnicity and gender. Fans still debate to what extent this Roddenberry statement was fullfilled and what is the definitive role of LGBT Characters In The Star Trek Universe .


LEGACY

Walk Of Fame . The star was presented to him by his fans in 1986.]]
After his death in 1991 in '' and '' Andromeda '' were produced under the guidance of Majel Barrett-Roddenberry. A third Roddenberry storyline was adapted in 1995 as the short-lived Comic Book ''Gene Roddenberry's Lost Universe''.

There is an asteroid called 4659 Roddenberry and a Crater on Mars that were named in his honor.

On October 4 , 2002 , the El Paso Independent School District Planetarium was renamed The Gene Roddenberry Planetarium. Eugene W. Roddenberry Jr. cut the ribbon at the dedication ceremony.

Roddenberry was born at 1907 E. Yandell Street in El Paso and lived there for nearly two years. The site is now a flower shop within a Strip Mall , but there is a wooden plaque marking the historical site.


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