Toronto Star

Star Trek’s interracia­l kiss heralded change

While it didn’t create immediate impact, scene made an early statement

- JESSE J. HOLLAND THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON— It was the kiss heard around the galaxy.

Fifty years ago — and only one year after the U.S. Supreme Court declared interracia­l marriage was legal — two of science fiction’s most enduring characters, Captain James T. Kirk and Lieutenant Nyota Uhura, kissed each other on Star Trek.

It wasn’t romantic. Sadistic, human-like aliens forced the dashing white captain to lock lips with the beautiful Black communicat­ions officer. But the kiss between actors William Shatner and Nichelle Nichols in “Plato’s Stepchildr­en” would help change attitudes in America about what was allowed to be shown on TV, and made an early statement about the coming acceptance of interracia­l relationsh­ips in a United States still struggling with racism and civil rights.

The kiss between Uhura and Kirk “suggested that there was a future where these issues were not such a big deal,” said Eric Deggans, national television critic for National Public Radio. “The characters themselves were not freaking out because a Black woman was kissing a white man … In this utopian-like future, we solved this issue. We’re beyond it. That was a wonderful message to send.”

“Plato’s Stepchildr­en,” which first aired on Nov. 22, 1968, came before Star Trek morphed into a cultural phenomenon. The show’s producers, meanwhile, were concerned about one of the main episode elements: human-like aliens dressed as ancient Greeks who torture the crew with their telekineti­c powers and force the two USS Enterprise crew members to kiss.

Worried about reaction from Southern television stations, showrunner­s filmed the kiss between Shatner and Nichols — their lips are mostly obscured by the back of Nichols’ head — and wanted to film a second where it happened off-screen. But Nichols said in her book Beyond Uhura: Star Trek and Other Memories that she and Shatner deliberate­ly flubbed lines to force the original take to be used.

Despite concerns from executives, “Plato’s Stepchildr­en” aired without blowback. In fact, it got the most “fan mail that Paramount had ever gotten on Star Trek for one episode,” Nichols said in a 2010 interview with the Archive of American Television.

Officials at Paramount, the show’s producer, “were just simply amazed and people have talked about it ever since,” Nichols said.

While inside the show things were buzzing, the episode passed by the general public and the TV industry at that time almost without comment, said Robert Thompson, a Syracuse University professor of television and popular culture.

“It neither got the backlash one might have expected nor did it open the doors for lots more shows to do this,” Thompson said. “The shot heard around the world started the American Revolution. The kiss heard around the world eventually did … but not immediatel­y.”

In 1967, the year before “Plato’s Stepchildr­en” aired, the Supreme Court struck down U.S.- wide laws that made marriage illegal between Blacks and whites, between whites and Native Americans, Filipinos, Asians and, in some states, “all non-whites.”

Only 3 per cent of newlyweds were intermarri­ed that year. In 2015, 17 per cent of newlyweds were intermarri­ed, according to a Pew Research Center analysis of U.S. Census Bureau data.

Most TV, outside of the news, was escapist fare and not willing to deal with the raucous atmosphere in the1960s, Thompson said.

“That kiss and that episode of Star Trek is an example of how every now and again television in that period tried to kick the door open to those kinds of representa­tions.” Gene Roddenberr­y, Star Trek’s creator, and his team had more leeway because he was writing about the future and not current life, experts said.

“Setting Star Trek three hundred years in the future allowed (Roddenberr­y) to focus on the social issues of the 1960s without being direct or obvious,” Shatner said in his book Leonard: My Fifty-Year Friendship with a Remarkable Man.

A later episode entitled “Let That Be Your Last Battlefiel­d” highlighte­d the folly of racism by showing a generation­s-long battle between two people from the same planet who thought each other to be subhuman: one was black-skinned on the left side and white on the right, while the other was the opposite.

Throughout the ensuing decades, interracia­l relationsh­ips with Black and white actors became more prevalent on TV, spanning multiple genres. From comedies like The Jeffersons and Happy Endings, to dramas such as Parenthood, Six Feet Under and Dynasty, and back to sci-fi with the shortlived Firefly.

The trend is still not without its detractors. In 2013, a Cheerios commercial featuring an interracia­l couple and their daughter drew thousands of racist comments online.

Historians have noted that interracia­l kisses between Blacks and whites happened on British television during live plays as early as1959 and on subsequent soap operas like Emergency Ward 10.

Other shows like Adventures in Paradise and I Spy featured kisses between white male actors and Asian actresses.

Whether another kiss came first doesn’t really matter.

“For whatever reason, that one between Captain Kirk and Lieutenant Uhura seems to be the one that is marked as the milestone,” Thompson said.

 ??  ?? Star Trek’s biracial kiss between Nyota Uhura and James T. Kirk “suggested there was a future where (racial issues) were not such a big deal,” says television critic Eric Deggins.
Star Trek’s biracial kiss between Nyota Uhura and James T. Kirk “suggested there was a future where (racial issues) were not such a big deal,” says television critic Eric Deggins.

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