I have never heard of that story and not saying that it is not true. Makes me 
wonder did or was Kirk character was model after him in some way?
--Lavender


From: Keith Johnson 
Sent: Wednesday, June 17, 2009 12:42 AM
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com 
Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] Re: The Disposible Negro in sci-fi list





Yeah, Roddenberry was dating Nichelle Nichols and Majel Barrett at the same 
time. Indeed, Nichols related that Roddenberry used to take her riding on his 
motorcycle. One day he said, "I need you to meet someone". They drove to a 
house, Gene walks up and knocks on the door, and Majel answers. Gene introduces 
the ladies, and Nichols says she realized at that moment he was not only 
two-timing her, but was going to marry Barrett. (Actually, he may have been 
three-timing her. He had a previous wife of nearly three decades whom he 
divorced sometime during this period, so he may have started affairs with 
Nichols and Barrett while still being married. Not sure).

A sad final chapter in this strange tale. Evidently Roddenberry's last years 
were marked by increasingly ill health. not sure what he had, but it's why he 
had to relinguish creative control of The Next Generation. At any rate, in 
those final years, Gene had some mental difficulties. At a big party given in 
his honor---a party in which most of the OS Trek alumni and showrunners were in 
attendance--Gene appears in a highly agitated and confused state. In front of 
all the guests--including his wife Majel--Roddenberry walks over to Nichele 
Nichols and confesses his undying love for her. "You're the one I really loved, 
Nichelle! I should have married you, Nichelle!" he exclaimed.

Nichols had to keep her composure and tell the crowd that Gene was just ill and 
didn't know what he said.

I've read this account more than once. Hope it's not just an urban legend. 
Don't know if it was recorded in Nichols' official autobiography.

----- Original Message -----
From: "Martin Baxter" <truthseeker...@lycos.com>
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Tuesday, June 16, 2009 8:27:40 AM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] Re: The Disposible Negro in sci-fi list




      None whatsoever. Roddenberry recognized it by putting her right behind 
KEEEEEEEEEROOOOOOOOOOK on the Bridge, so that she (or at least *parts*) of her 
made it in shot. And, if the tales I've heard are true, Roddenberry did *more* 
than just "recognize" her beauty... he *appreciated* it in a way *all* men wish 
they could've.





        ---------[ Received Mail Content ]----------
        Subject : Re: [scifinoir2] Re: The Disposible Negro in sci-fi list
        Date : Tue, 16 Jun 2009 12:06:29 +0000
        From : mcjennings...@yahoo.com
        To : "SciFi2" <scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com>

        No chauvinism in recognizing beauty. I was flipping channels (a chore 
without a remote), and I saw her at that console. I was just back from 18 
months in the Philippines, and I was appreciating Black Women. And here is 
Uhura. Lawd! 
        Sent via BlackBerry by AT&T 

        -----Original Message----- 
        From: "C.W. Badie" 

        Date: Tue, 16 Jun 2009 02:51:39 
        To: 
        Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] Re: The Disposible Negro in sci-fi list 


        ....And consistently the most beautiful babe on the show...pardon the 
chauvinism, but she was gorgeous! 

        --- On Thu, 6/11/09, Adrianne Brennan wrote: 


        From: Adrianne Brennan 
        Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] Re: The Disposible Negro in sci-fi list 
        To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com 
        Date: Thursday, June 11, 2009, 12:26 PM 








        I dunno, I've always thought Uhura kicked ass. :D 

        ~ "Where love and magic meet" ~ 
        http://www.adrianne brennan.com 
        Experience the magic of Blood of the Dark Moon:  http://www.adrianne 
brennan.com/ botdm.html 
        Take a bite out of Blood and Mint Chocolates: http://www.adrianne 
brennan.com/ bamc.html 
        Dare to take The Oath in this erotic fantasy series: 
http://www.adrianne brennan.com/ books.html# the_oath 



        On Thu, Jun 11, 2009 at 1:22 PM, ravenadal wrote: 

        Beware of the "Disposable Negro Effect" which is akin to the "butterfly 
effect."  You may think a negro is disposable but then you remove them and all 
heck breaks loose.  I mean haven't you seen Douglass Turner Ward's "Day of 
Absence" where all the negroes disappear one day and all the white folks don't 
have a clue as to what to do? 

        I mean take something as innocuous as Lt. Uhura on Star Trek.  You 
would think she was a disposable negro, afterall, anybody can answer the phone, 
but it totally ignores the fact that her showing up on the bridge everyday in 
those boots and that mini-skirt made the mens,   James T. and the rest of dem, 
happy - heck - eager to come to work.  Remove Uhura and it gone get snarly, 
snarky and plum ugly up in there quick and in a hurry. 

        ~rave! 


        --- In scifino...@yahoogro ups.com, George Arterberry wrote: 
        > 
        > Please list the greatest disposible Negroes in sci-fi.What is a 
disposible Negro you ask? Well if he or she is removed from the storyline it 
wont change one iota. I'll nominate Anastasia "Dee" Dualla and her totally 
uncalled for suicide in Battlestar Galactica. 
        >   
        > I mean we needed at least some sisters in modern-day Tanzinia to help 
repopulate the human race. 
        >   
        > There are so many others to list,where do i start????? 
        > 




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