Shallow Nation

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Video: William Shatner on Conan O’Brien 5-12-08

William Shatner on Boston Legal

William Shatner made an appearance on May 12, 2008 on “Late Night with Conan O’Brien,” discussing his book, Up Till Now: The Autobiographywhich was released today, May 13 and surveys Shatner’s lengthy film, theater and television career. The early days of his career saw Shatner in movies such as “Judgment at Nuremberg” and television series such as “The Twilight Zone” in the years before the “Star Trek” — and now “Boston Legal” — roles for which he is most known.

In a recent interview, William Shatner discussed how and why he wrote the book.

“I wrote it because I had the opportunity to,” he says, speaking in his deliberate way by phone after a day on the set of “Boston Legal.” “And I chose to do it because I felt it was a way of explaining to my children and grandchildren who I was … in some minuscule form, like a book.

“So the last while I’ve been trying to do things that may explain who this creature was that they were looking at, and what was going on inside.”

In a way, he explains, one of the most recognizable faces in show business needed to write a book to help his own family recognize who he was and what his life had meant for all those years he’d spent in the spotlight. It was an experience, that Shatner says showed him things about himself he’d never before recognized.

Shatner told his stories into a recorder and sent them to co-author David Fisher, who worked them into rough drafts of chapters, which mapped the actor’s life in ways he’d never considered it before, he says.

“I saw my life laid out in a pattern, laid out in a sequential way that I’d never thought of it before, and then I went through the process of puzzling out what was the meaning of all this, where were the repetitions, the habits – why did I do the things that I did?

“And it was alarming! First of all, the time, the interval between the first story and the last story in my head is about seven weeks,” Shatner says. “But it turns out to be considerably longer than that. And it all happened so quickly and I had no idea that it was happening.”

William Shatner and Julie Harris 1962

William Shatner and Julie Harris in the Broadway play “A Shot In The Dark” in 1962

Seeing the passage of time in his life’s story, Shatner says, encouraged him not just to complete the book, but also to consider everything else that he wanted to accomplish in his life.

“It reinforces a feeling of anxiety of getting thing done, of doing the things you meant to do, or you have in mind to do,” he says. “There’s an urgency involved that wasn’t there before.”

And so he talked and talked, and Fisher sculpted the stories into chapters and a book that is filled with stories.

Many are funny – his encounter with Koko the famous gorilla, who decided to grab him by a most sensitive part of the anatomy, helps open the book.

Leonard Nimoy and William Shatner

William Shatner with Leonard Nimoy

Others poignant – after “Star Trek” ended, freshly divorced and completely broke, he was practically homeless, working in summer stock around the country, sleeping behind the theaters in his pickup truck to save money.

Source: William Shatner shares O.C. memories in new book

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Via - William Shatner Conan Video: William Shatner “Late Night With Conan O’Brien” Video

That’s the news and video: William Shatner on Conan O’Brien 5-12-08

Video: William Shatner on “The Oprah Winfrey Show”

William Shatner made an appearance on Oprah.

William Shatner and Oprah Winfrey

Today, William Shatner boldly went where he’d never been before, The Oprah Winfrey Show. Shatner was featured as one of Oprah’s ‘TV icons’ series. The show also included Happy Days’ Fonzie, Henry Winkler and soap opera singing sensation Rick Springfield (who was also Zac on the original Battlestar Galactica). No big news (besides seeing Shatner using a cane) and no questions about the new movie, but was still interesting to see Shatner in this environment.

John Tenuto’s article on Shatner’s appearance continues. Watch the video in its entirety here.


William Shatner visits Oprah

It was an endearing appearance.

Shatner’s “Star Trek” and “Boston Legal” successes are well known. He has had success in music with his 2004 album, “Has Been.” Here’s another side of William Shatner: his appearance on the Tonight Show performing “Common People” (from “Has Been”) with Joe Jackson and Ben Folds. “Common People” is a cover of a Pulp song and this is a performance as indescribable as it is compelling.


Video: Interview with ‘Star Trek’ Star Anton Yelchin, the New Chekov

MTV interviewed Anton Yelchin who will portray Pavel Chekov in J.J. Abram’s upcoming “Star Trek” movie.

In the years since the original “Trek” depicted Vulcan Mr. Spock (Leonard Nimoy) working alongside a human crew, various incarnations have occasionally shown nonhuman crew members, like android Data or half-Borg Seven of Nine. But according to Yelchin, Abrams’ depiction of the “Trek” crew’s early days will reveal dozens of distinctive-looking aliens helping to run the ship.

“The aliens are people that sit through, like, three hours of makeup to become that oh-so-special alien in the shot,” Yelchin grinned, adding that they’re much more than generic creatures with green skin and big eyes. “They’re good; they’re Enterprise aliens.”

[…]

But even though 71-year-old Walter Koenig won’t be reprising his role as Russian Starfleet officer Pavel Chekov, he did give Yelchin the thrill of meeting up to compare notes. “He was on set, and I talked to him for a while, and I was really nervous,” Yelchin admitted sheepishly. “I was like, ‘Oh my God, he’s gonna come on set and say I suck!’ But, he was really gracious and happy about what we were doing. I talked to him about a couple of things.”

Their discussions included Koenig’s accented line deliveries over the last few decades, which — depending on whom you ask — are either beloved, all wrong or a combination of the two. “That’s a trademark Chekov thing, the V’s [being pronounced as W’s], so there’s a lot of that in the film,” revealed the Russian-born Yelchin. “I did take the V/W thing, because I thought that was really [iconic]. We are doing our own thing, we aren’t remaking the old show, but the whole goal is to do your own thing and be original, while being respectful.”