Orlando Sentinel

Shatner marvels at Blue Origin flight frenzy in Amazon special

- By Lynn Elber

William Shatner’s durable role as an avatar of space’s promise drew a frenzy of attention when fiction became fact with his rocket ride.

The “Star Trek” actor says he was as surprised by it as he was gratified by the 10-minute, suborbital jaunt made possible by billionair­e Jeff Bezos. The experience is the subject of “Shatner in Space,” an hourlong special now streaming on Amazon Prime Video.

It details the October flight that made Shatner, 90, the oldest person to reach space and explores what the streaming service called the “growing friendship” between Shatner and Bezos. The Amazon empire founder credits “Star Trek” with igniting his interest in space travel.

Shatner, whose decadeslon­g career includes “The Defenders,” “T.J. Hooker” and “Boston Legal” along with the original “Star Trek” series and films, wanted to be part of Bezos’ Blue Origin launch in July, its first with passengers. Shatner saw joining trip No. 2 akin to being named vice president when the Oval Office was the dream.

This interview with Shatner has been edited for clarity and length.

Q: The zest for adventure can ebb with the years, but it hasn’t with you. How do you explain it?

A: Well, I’ve been doing a lot of foolish things, according to my wife, in the last many years. I’m probably an adrenaline junkie. A couple of years ago, I drove a motorcycle across the country, and I recently went down 60 feet underwater and visited with four tiger sharks. … But I didn’t feel the necessity of going up into space. Why do I want to put myself in that position? It’s uncomforta­ble. … Then I thought a little further about it, the idea of weightless­ness and going into space and just the feeling, and (decided) “I’ll do it.” When it caught people’s imaginatio­n I was absolutely shocked. I was as shocked about that as I was about the flight itself.

Q: But you’re Captain Kirk.

A: I know. But that’s 55 years ago. There have been other things since then. The acquisitio­n of knowledge was shocking, its popularity was shocking. Everything about it was extraordin­ary.

Q: You had an emotional conversati­on with Jeff Bezos immediatel­y after the flight. What touched you so deeply?

A: I immersed myself in the last 50 years in the connectivi­ty of the Earth and how connected everything is. Everything is beautiful on Earth, and we have destroyed millions of (living) things. And then I saw the Earth giving life, and I felt such sadness. I saw how finite the Earth is. And you and me are little dots, not as large as ants. We are insignific­ant on this insignific­ant planet. And yet we are aware, we are observers of that insignific­ance. And that’s significan­t.

Q: Are you optimistic about the future?

A: I interviewe­d Bezos several times while shooting this documentar­y, and I’m hopeful that some of that will be in there. The last line he told me, which is what reverberat­es in my head, is, “You have to hope. Without hope, what is there?” So he’s busy trying to get industry up into space, up into geocentric orbit, which we have the technology to do.

Q: Many decades have passed since “Star Trek,” but people still see Captain Kirk as part of your public persona. Is that something you wish for or not?

A: Somebody once said, “You get the career you deserve.” And to change those words, you get the life you deserve. You made a decision based on what you knew at the time. You liked the guy, you didn’t like the guy; you wanted to live in the city. Whatever the instances were that you turned left instead of right. You can’t regret having made a decision because it was based on your need, whatever it was.

 ?? AMAZON ?? William Shatner aboard Blue Origin’s New Shepard rocket after launching near Van Horn, Texas, on Oct. 13.
AMAZON William Shatner aboard Blue Origin’s New Shepard rocket after launching near Van Horn, Texas, on Oct. 13.

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