Nichelle Nichols

Another one? How come so many heroes age going right now.
Bye Bye Nichelle Nichols. We loved you for so long.
 
Also on BBC News

I always particularly liked her character. In some of the spin-off books they make even more of Uhura and bring out a lot of the linguistics.

Read her autobiography some years back and that was interesting with some bits that were really sad.
 
She lived a long, productive life and influenced many due to her role in Star Trek. She was an essential part of Star Trek's utopian vision of the future. Rest in peace, Lt. Uhura.
 
Possibly my very first space crush, this was very sad to hear on the morning news, this is the loss of a beautiful and inspiring woman, it does seem to be natural causes so no illness just a long life and a quiet passing R.I.P. :(

Doesn't this only leave Shatner as the last of the original crew still alive?
 
R.I.P

Can’t believe she was 89. As is often the case, the enduring image we have of film and TV stars is the one we last saw on the screen. For me, she’s still in her 30s.
 
George Takei is still with us... and he was quoted this morning on the radio about Nichelle Nichols's death.

Yeah after asking I went off and had a google, for some reason I thought he had passed away during the Covid lockdown.
 
RIP Nichelle. You have done so much. If there is an afterlife, I hope you find your final frontier.
 
Proving that I'm a white male, it really shocked me the number of people who found her to be a real inspiration. I just thought it was normal as could be for a black woman to be part of a star ship crew. She will be missed for sure.
 
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I was not aware of her death until she was pictured on the "In Memoriam" section on last night's Oscars presentation.
As Stephan Palmer notes she was prevailed on by Martin Luther King to not leave ST. The story is longer. You can read it on Wikipedia.
Here's their precis of her pre-ST career. Impressive

Career​

Nichols began her professional career as a singer and dancer in Chicago. She then toured the United States and Canada with the bands of Duke Ellington and Lionel Hampton. In 1959, she appeared as the principal dancer in the film version of Porgy and Bess. Nichols' acting break came in an appearance in Kicks and Co., Oscar Brown's highly touted but ill-fated 1961 musical. In a thinly veiled satire of Playboy magazine, she played Hazel Sharpe, a voluptuous campus queen who was being tempted by the devil and Orgy Magazine to become "Orgy Maiden of the Month". Although the play closed after a short run in Chicago, Nichols attracted the attention of Hugh Hefner, the publisher of Playboy, who booked her as a singer for his Chicago Playboy Club. She also appeared in the role of Carmen for a Chicago stock company production of Carmen Jones and performed in a New York production of Porgy and Bess. Between acting and singing engagements, Nichols did occasional modeling work.

In January 1967, Nichols also was featured on the cover of Ebony magazine, and had two feature articles in the publication in five years. Nichols continued touring the United States, Canada, and Europe as a singer with the Duke Ellington and Lionel Hampton bands. On the West Coast, she appeared in The Roar of the Greasepaint and For My People and she garnered high praise for her performance in the James Baldwin play Blues for Mister Charlie. Prior to being cast as Lieutenant Uhura in Star Trek, Nichols was a guest actress on television producer Gene Roddenberry's first series The Lieutenant (1964) in an episode, "To Set It Right", which dealt with racial prejudice.
 

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