Early Life
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| Gene when he was in high school. |
Gene was born in El Paso, Texas, on August 19, 1921, to parents who lived modestly in a rented home. Fortuitously for Gene, his father got a job in California which brought the family to live in Los Angeles. During his childhood he was very interested in space related stories like John Carter of Mars.
| Gene during WWII |
Gene graduated from high school in 1939 and went on to study at Los Angeles City College, where he met Eileen Rexroat, who would become his first wife. While at college Gene became fascinated with aeronautical engineering and obtained his pilot's license. He enlisted in the USAAC and graduated and became a second lieutenant. Gene would go on to flying combat missions during World War II and later would be a pilot for Pan American World Airways.
His Introduction to TV
After the war Gene became an officer in the Los Angeles Police Department, where he eventually became a writer for the Chief of Police. This led him to an opportunity to become the LAPD advisor to the popular TV series Dragnet. He eventually became a writer for the show and for other police related TV series. After some time doing two jobs, Gene realized his calling and resigned from the police department to focus on his writing jobs.
Gene went on to write scripts for a number of TV series. During this time he tried to pitch a series of his own but that went nowhere. This did lead to a job with Screen Gems where he wrote scripts for several pilots that were not successful, This is where he met Majel Barrett, who would later go on to play Number One in the first Star Trek pilot and Nurse Chapel in The Original Series, and she also would become Gene's second wife.
Star Trek
Gene originally had an idea for a series set on a ship in Hawaiian waters manned by a multiracial crew. Remembering his childhood love of space stories, Gene then changed the premise of the series to be a ship in outer space and gave it the title Star Trek. He took the idea to Oscar Katz, head of programming at Desilu Productions, and they pitched the proposal for a pilot to CBS Television, but CBS passed on the project because they already had a science fiction show ready to go into production called Lost in Space.
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| Jeffrey Hunter as Captain Pike in the First Pilot |
Roddenberry and Katz then took the idea to NBC, where its concept was approved. Out of the story ideas pitched, "The Menagerie" was accepted and it would be filmed as the pilot – it would later become known as "The Cage" in a an episode of TOS. Somehow Roddenberry secured established star Jeffrey Hunter to play Captain Christopher Pike, and Barrett suggested Leonard Nimoy whom she had previously worked with to play the role of alien science officer Spock. The pilot was made but test audiences did not like it overall, and NBC executives discounted it as "too cerebral."
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| Shatner and Kellerman in the Second Pilot |
Roddenberry and Katz did not give up after this rejection, and somehow a second pilot was ordered – which is usually unheard of when the first pilot is rejected. One factor in the second pilot's favor was that the sets were already built, which cut the cost of filming the second pilot. With Hunter unavailable, Roddenberry chose William Shatner to play the captain in "Where No Man Has Gone Before," and also brought on board established actors Gary Lockwood and Sally Kellerman.
Success
NBC test audiences approved of the new pilot. Roddenberry brought the pilot to The World Science Fiction Convention where it was viewed and received a standing ovation. NBC accepted the series, and it went into production of 13 episodes and premiered on September 8, 1966. Gene had achieved his goal of getting his concept realized and shown on broadcast TV.
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| Nichols as Uhura and Takei as Sulu |
His vision for a multiracial cast for The Original Series was also realized. Nichelle Nichols was brought in to play Black communications officer Nyota Uhura and George Takei was selected to play the Japanese helmsman Hikaru Sulu. Perhaps the greatest casting of all was Nimoy as the Vulcan Spock. For a 1960s television show to have an alien from another planet as a main cast member was quite an accomplishment.
Impact
Despite only running for three seasons (79 episodes), Star Trek has had a lasting cultural impact that resonates to this day. Gene's vision was for a future where Earth was at peace and that space travel to "strange new worlds" was possible, and it is where we would meet a vast array of alien beings who were different from us but also similar in so many ways.
The crew of the Enterprise lived and worked together in harmony as opposed to life during the era of the Cold War that was far from harmonious. The show did not only feature a diverse crew but also addressed many social, economic, and political issues of the time in a fresh and many times astonishing way that still matters now.
Gene's Legacy
Gene Roddenberry was a visionary who knew the worst of humanity and sought to elevate us in a future world where all of our conflicts were resolved. Things like race and social standing and wealth no longer mattered in the world he created. By overcoming the things that separated people, Gene brought together the human race with beings from other worlds that all basically wanted to live peacefully – although there were the Klingons, Romulans, and Gorn who would have different intentions.
The Prime Directive was an ingenious way of showing humanity at its best. Unlike those the empires and kingdoms that came before, Star Trek showed us the way in the sense that despite superior technology that captains were not kings. They could not interfere in the society of the worlds that they encountered. This was as resonant in the 1960s as it still is today.
Gene's initial concept has spawned multiple TV series, films, and a slew of merchandise including toys, video games, and and clothing lines. That young boy who dreamed about space stories could perhaps never have imagined the impact he would have on television, film, and the world.
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| Nimoy as Spock - Live Long and Prosper |
So, I feel a huge debt of gratitude to Gene Roddenberry because Star Trek has impacted my life since I was a little boy. I appreciate his vision and am grateful for how he helped me view the world – and the final frontier of space beyond it.
Thank you, Gene, for helping me to dream about a better world and countless fans across the decades as well. You helped us to believe we were better than ourselves and could live in peace and harmony. Now, if only somehow we could manifest this in the real world.
Indeed, I wish everyone reading this will be able to follow Spock's mantra and Live long and prosper!
Please watch the video below featuring Gene talking about his Trek philosophy.


























