Ottawa Citizen

Takei takes on Russia

Star Trek star says move Olympics to Vancouver,

- NICK PATCH

Russia’s “horrific” and “homophobic” anti-gay laws justify depriving it of next year’s Winter Olympics, actor and activist George Takei says.

And Star Trek’s former helmsman Lt. Sulu knows just where to relocate them from Sochi — to Vancouver, which hosted the Winter Games in 2010.

The 76-year-old actor, an outspoken activist for gay rights, says he was “outraged” by the law, signed by Russian President Vladimir Putin in June, which outlaws “propaganda of non-traditiona­l sexual relations” to children, threatenin­g socalled offenders with prison sentences, hefty fines or, in the case of foreigners, deportatio­n.

Takei says the law has given “licence to the thugs and the hooligans, who then felt free to attack anyone that they deemed to look gay or lesbian.” And Takei warns that giving Putin an Olympic platform will only increase his support and lead to “other horrific, oppressive things.”

“We’ve got to learn from history,” Takei said this week in an interview from his California home. “In 1936, the Olympics committee granted the rights to stage the Summer Olympics in Berlin. Three years before that, Hitler came to power and he got a law passed which seemed innocuous at that time: Jewish professors could not get tenure.

“But then the internatio­nal stage was offered to him and he gloried in it, and it raised his status and gave him more power amongst the German people. And his campaign of horror began and you know where that led.

“Putin is a former KGB guy, and now he’s president of Russia, and he got this — some people say it’s innocuous, I think it’s horrific — propaganda law passed, homophobic propaganda law passed. And now we’re offering him that same internatio­nal stage, that same internatio­nal spotlight ... I think we need to take the Winter Olympics away from Russia.”

Takei has thrown his support behind an online petition urging the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee to relocate the Feb. 7-23 sporting spectacle to Vancouver. The petition has attracted roughly 160,000 signatures.

Beyond the fact that the West Coast city still has its gleaming Olympic facilities intact, Takei feels it’s appropriat­e because he says Canada is an internatio­nal beacon for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgende­r rights. Takei — who has family and history in Canada, with an aunt and cousins scattered in Toronto, Ottawa and, until recently, Vancouver — notes that the 2010 Games even had an Olympic Pride House to celebrate athletes of all sexual orientatio­ns.

“You’re a leading state in terms of equality and justice,” he says of Canada, which legalized same-sex marriage in 2005. “You have been the leader and in many ways inspiratio­ns for us. The various steps forward that you’ve made — the U.S. is catching up in your footsteps.”

Takei, who will appear at Fan Expo Canada Aug. 23-25 in Toronto and at Montreal ComicCon Sept. 1315, will watch closely as the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee meets Sept. 10 to elect a new president. He argues that Russia is breaching the Olympic charter’s stance on human rights, and that the IOC subsequent­ly has “a right and responsibi­lity” to take the event away.

In a recent blog post, Takei says Russian intoleranc­e of LGBTs wouldn’t be accepted if it were aimed at Jews, Roman Catholics or Muslims. Takei says moving the Games wouldn’t seem like an outlandish proposal if those groups were facing such discrimina­tion.

British actor and writer Stephen Fry also called for the Olympics to be moved, writing in a letter to British Prime Minister David Cameron and IOC executives asking them not to give Putin “the approval of the civilized world.”

Takei is aware many have called the proposed shift to Vancouver unrealisti­c, and says that if there isn’t enough time, then the IOC should consider postponing the Games for a year until a suitable location can be prepared.

He muses on an even less orthodox solution.

“The Russian athletes could be disqualifi­ed from participat­ing. How humiliatin­g that must be for Putin — to have the Winter Olympics in Russia with Russian athletes not participat­ing because of their egregious violation.”

Takei was originally moved to advocacy in the aftermath of then-California governor Arnold Schwarzene­gger’s decision to veto the first California same-sex marriage bill in fall 2005. Takei watched the news that night with his now-husband Brad Altman, and decided he needed to go public with his sexuality — which to that point had been a carefully guarded secret.

“Here we were, Brad and I, at home comfortabl­e in our living room — and my blood was boiling.”

Takei came out less than a month later.

He says that friends in Hollywood had known he was gay for years, but stayed silent on his behalf.

“People in show business are sophistica­ted people — they know,” he said. “At the wrap parties every Friday night, people bring their husbands, their wives or boyfriends or girlfriend­s. I used to bring my beard, a girlfriend. But then I brought a buddy along. And I seemed to have a buddy more often than I had my girlfriend. And they got it. But they were also sophistica­ted enough that if they made it known, it would jeopardize my career. So it was that silent acknowledg­ment.”

Takei is tickled that he’ll be joined at Fan Expo Canada by Zachary Quinto, another openly gay actor, who portrays the stoic half-Vulcan Spock in the rebooted Star Trek film franchise.

“The world has certainly changed when we can be who we are and still maintain a career,” he says. “I was in deathly fear. My career would have ended if I were out at that time.”

Now? Takei’s mellifluou­s voice is in hot demand, his honeyed tone working its way into countless animated projects (including The Simpsons, Adventure Time with Finn & Jake and the upcoming starstudde­d film Free Birds) and earning Takei the position of the “official” announcer of The Howard Stern Show. (A chuckling Takei insists upon the scare quotes).

“My career took on new momentum,” he says.

Now it’s not just Trekkers excitedly approachin­g him at the convention­s he frequents, but a separate group of admirers who are similarly enthused to meet him.

“There’s a lot of LGBT people who come up to me or us as a couple and they thank me for my advocacy,” he said.

“It’s expanded my fan base enormously.”

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 ?? WONG MAYE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Gay-rights advocate George Takei, who played Lt. Sulu in the sci-fi series Star Trek, says Canada would be the perfect venue for the Winter Games. ‘You’re a leading state in terms of equality and justice,’ he said.
WONG MAYE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Gay-rights advocate George Takei, who played Lt. Sulu in the sci-fi series Star Trek, says Canada would be the perfect venue for the Winter Games. ‘You’re a leading state in terms of equality and justice,’ he said.

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