Personal life of Gene Roddenberry
He went on to become a television
Barrett and Roddenberry were married in Japan on August 6, 1969, in a Shinto ceremony. His divorce was not yet finalized, so he and Barrett had a second ceremony at their home in California on December 29. However, Roddenberry continued to have relationships with other women. The couple had a son, Eugene Jr., who was born on February 5, 1974. Roddenberry and Barrett remained married until his death in 1991.
First marriage
While at Los Angeles City College, Roddenberry began dating Eileen-Anita Rexroat, who was two years younger. She was initially uninterested in him, but he persevered. Their first date was a bonfire on the beach. Her parents disapproved of Roddenberry and saw him as the common son of a policeman.[2] They became engaged before Roddenberry left Los Angeles during his military service in the United States Army Air Corps. At the start of June 1942, he was moved back to Kelly Field for advanced training and made plans to marry Eileen, initially considering a double wedding but the other fiancée changed her mind and the plan was cancelled. Roddenberry applied for a marriage license on June 13, and they were married seven days later at the chapel at Kelly Field, San Antonio, before Chaplain George W. Shardt.[3] Eileen was not fond of the heat in Texas and sometimes stripped nude when in the apartment.[4] Shortly afterwards, Roddenberry was posted to the South Pacific,[5] not returning permanently until October 1943.[6]
After he left the military in July 1945, the couple moved briefly to
After being introduced to television executives through connections at the LAPD,
Nichelle Nichols and Majel Barrett
Before his work on Star Trek, Roddenberry began relationships with both Nichelle Nichols and Majel Barrett.[18] After he met Nichols when she was cast in "To Set It Right," an episode of The Lieutenant, he began a friendship that lasted for the rest of his life. During the early period, prior to Star Trek, they entered into a romantic liaison that she described as falling in love.[19] At the same time, after meeting Barrett during the filming of the episode "In the Highest Tradition", they became friends and soon entered into a relationship.[20] After several months he introduced Nichols to Barrett. At the time, Roddenberry wanted to remain in an open relationship with both women,[19] but Nichols, recognizing Barrett's devotion to him, ended the affair as she did not want to be "the other woman to the other woman".[21] Barrett and Nichols had met previously when Nichols auditioned for The Singing Nun.[21]
Nichols wrote about their relationship only after Roddenberry's death, in her autobiography Beyond Uhura.
Star Trek and divorce
As work began on "The Cage", Barrett and Roddenberry's relationship was out in the open, and they invited Solow to join them for drinks. He turned them down and tried to talk Roddenberry out of continuing with the affair, but was pushed on the issue as Roddenberry wanted to discuss casting Barrett in Star Trek as Number One.[17] Solow spoke to NBC's executives about it, who were shocked as they remembered Barrett as Roddenberry's girlfriend from her time on set during filming of The Lieutenant. Deciding not to upset Roddenberry during the early stages of production, they agreed to the casting.[17]
After "The Cage" failed to lead to a series,[26] a second pilot, entitled "Where No Man Has Gone Before" was produced. Andrea Dromm was cast as Yeoman Smith. Director James Goldstone overheard Roddenberry telling someone that Dromm had been specifically hired because he wanted to have sex with her.[27] She later said that she never had a problem with him, and thought he was "a nice man".[28] Stories of sexually related pranks began to spread among the crew, one involving the new story editor, John D. F. Black. Roddenberry had asked him to interview a new actress, who promptly came onto Black, stripping down to her underwear before sliding onto his lap. At that point, Roddenberry burst in demanding to know what was going on – the woman was Barrett.[29]
By the opening weeks of Star Trek, Roddenberry and Barrett had an apartment together near to
Instead, Roddenberry gave his secretary, Penny Unger, a pay raise in exchange for telling both Eileen and Barrett that he was in meetings when required. She also provided early warning to Roddenberry and Barrett whenever Eileen arrived on set.[32] Grace Lee Whitney, who played Janice Rand during the first half season, was suggested by Solow and Justman in their book Inside Star Trek: The Real Story to have been in a relationship with Roddenberry prior to Star Trek. She denied this in her book, The Longest Trek: My Tour of the Galaxy, saying that before she appeared on the series that they had only a professional relationship. But during Star Trek, he made multiple passes at her, as well as remarks involving innuendos and double entendres.[33]
The stories about Roddenberry's womanizing grew among the cast and crew of Star Trek, and he appeared to revel in each new tale.
The separation and divorce after twenty-six years of marriage, particularly with my Southern family traditions and concerns over the sanctity of personal contracts, was a traumatic experience. I realize now it was much more difficult than it should have been. Relationships, like people, can die and while they can be properly mourned, it seems to me that they should have a proper burial at the appropriate time. I wish I had realized that all the sooner.
Gene Roddenberry, Letter to Isaac Asimov, April 1972[34]
Roddenberry became involved in the casting of actresses for the series, seeking for them to have both acting talent as well as being good looking.[35] Following the pressures of the first two years of his series, Roddenberry found that he had very little time for his family.[36] He had planned to divorce Eileen after the first season of the show, but when it was renewed, he delayed doing so fearing that he did not have enough time to deal with both the divorce and Star Trek. His oldest daughter, Darleen Anita, was married on July 27, 1968, to William Luther "Bill" Lewis.[37]
Roddenberry sought to embarrass Eileen at the reception by arranging for an ex-girlfriend to attend with a neighbor. After they recited impromptu poetry at each other in the middle of the reception, he explained loudly how he had spent a year seducing the woman during his marriage.[37] Two weeks later on August 9, Roddenberry moved out of the family home. Barrett later remarked that she went and stayed with him at the Century Plaza Hotel, and stayed by his side for the following twenty-three years.[38] The divorce was not easy, and Roddenberry felt that he did not get his fair share of the assets, and that he never received some promised items such as his war medals.[39]
Second marriage
Following his work on Star Trek, Roddenberry sought to produce a television movie based on Tarzan. But the studio passed on the project, as they felt that he had written the character as too sexual for broadcast on TV in the late 1960s.[40] In 1969, while scouting locations in Japan for MGM,[41] Roddenberry claimed that he realized that he missed Barrett and proposed to her by telephone.[42] According to Solow, Roddenberry traveled to Japan with the intention of marrying Barrett.[41] She had a passport and joined Roddenberry in Tokyo, where they were married in a Shinto ceremony on August 6, 1969.[43] Roddenberry had considered it "sacrilegious" to use an American minister in Japan,[42] and the ceremony was attended by two Shinto priests as well as maids of honor. Roddenberry and Barrett both wore kimono, and spent their honeymoon touring Japan.[43] He continued to have liaisons with other women, telling his friends that while in Japan he had an encounter with a masseuse about a week after he was married.[44]
The new marriage was not legally binding, as his divorce from Eileen was not yet final. This was resolved two days after his divorce was complete, and on December 29, a small ceremony was held at their home followed by a reception for family and friends. Despite this, the couple continued to celebrate August 6 as their wedding anniversary. His young daughter, Dawn, decided to live with him and Barrett,[45] and together they moved to a new house in Beverly Hills during the following October.[46] He began work on the film Pretty Maids All in a Row, based on a book which he felt was vulgar. The volume of nude scenes in the movie was new to MGM, and proved difficult due to requirements for those scenes to be agreed in written contracts with the relevant actresses.[47]
Roddenberry and Barrett had a son together, Eugene Jr., commonly referred to as Rod Roddenberry, in February 1974.[42] They remained married for the rest of Roddenberry's life, and Roddenberry died by Barrett's side on October 24, 1991, at a doctor's office in Santa Monica, California.[48] From 1975 until his death, Roddenberry maintained an extramarital relationship with his executive assistant, Susan Sackett.[49]
Rod had not followed his parents' work on Star Trek, leaving him to question what it was all about after his father's death. This exploration eventually resulted in him producing the 2011 documentary, Trek Nation.[50]
Notes
- ^ Alexander (1995): p. 204
- ^ Alexander (1995): p. 48
- ^ Alexander (1995): pp. 54–55
- ^ Alexander (1995): p. 56
- ^ Alexander (1995): p. 58
- ^ Alexander (1995): p. 77
- ^ Alexander (1995): p. 79
- ^ Alexander (1995): pp. 98–99
- ^ Alexander (1995): p. 102
- ^ Alexander (1995): p. 123
- ^ Alexander (1995): p. 163
- ^ Alexander (1995): p. 128
- ^ Alexander (1995): p. 137
- ^ a b Alexander (1995): p. 148
- ^ Alexander (1995): p. 151
- ^ a b Cushman & Osborn (2013): p. 52
- ^ a b c Cushman & Osborn (2013): p. 53
- ^ a b Sterling, Ian (January 1995). "Uhura and Beyond". Starlog (210): 47–49. Retrieved April 17, 2015.
- ^ a b Nichols (1994): p. 132
- ^ a b Shatner & Kreski (1993): p. 14
- ^ a b Nichols (1994): p. 133
- ^ Nichols (1994): p. 130
- ^ Nichols (1994): p. 131
- ^ a b c Solow & Justman (1996): p. 223
- ^ a b Solow & Justman (1996): p. 224
- ^ Shatner & Kreski (1993): p. 66
- ^ Solow & Justman (1996): p. 75
- ^ Lisanti (2003): pp. 14–21
- ^ Whitney & Denny (1998): p. 132
- ^ Engel (1994): p. 103
- ^ Solow & Justman (1996): p. 221
- ^ a b Solow & Justman (1996): p. 222
- ^ Whitney & Denny (1998): p. 73
- ^ Alexander (1995): p. 330
- ^ Solow & Justman (1996): p. 226
- ^ Alexander (1995): p. 350
- ^ a b Alexander (1995): pp. 352–353
- ^ Alexander (1995): p. 356
- ^ Alexander (1995): p. 359
- ^ Alexander (1995): p. 362
- ^ a b Engel (1994): p. 139
- ^ a b c Van Hise (1992): p. 53
- ^ a b Alexander (1995): p. 370
- ^ Engel (1994): p. 140
- ^ Alexander (1995): p. 372
- ^ Alexander (1995): p. 377
- ^ Alexander (1995): pp. 379–381
- ^ Alexander (1995): p. 7
- ^ Sackett (2002): p. 70
- ^ Serrano, Elliott (August 13, 2013). "Rod Roddenberry explores Star Trek fandom in "Trek Nation"". RedEye. Archived from the original on November 20, 2013. Retrieved January 30, 2016.
References
- Alexander, David (1995). Star Trek Creator: The Authorized Biography of Gene Roddenberry. New York: Roc. ISBN 0-451-45440-5.
- Cushman, Marc; Osborn, Susan (2013). These are the Voyages: TOS, Season One. San Diego, CA: Jacobs Brown Press. ISBN 978-0-9892381-1-3.
- Engel, Joel (1994). Gene Roddenberry: The Myth and the Man Behind Star Trek. New York: Hyperion. ISBN 0-7868-6004-9.
- Lisanti, Tom (2003). Drive-In Dream Girls: A Galaxy of B-Movie Starlets of the Sixties. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland. ISBN 978-0-786-41575-5.
- Nichols, Nichelle (1994). Beyond Uhura. New York: G. P. Putnam's. ISBN 0-3991-3993-1.
- Sackett, Susan (2002). Inside Trek: My Secret Life with Star Trek Creator Gene Roddenberry. Tulsa, OK: Hawk Publishing Group. ISBN 978-1930709423.
- Shatner, William; Kreski, Chris (1993). Star Trek Memories. New York: HarperCollinsPublishers. ISBN 978-0-060-17734-8.
- Solow, Herbert F.; Justman, Robert H. (1996). Inside Star Trek: The Real Story. New York: Pocket Books. ISBN 978-0-671-89628-7.
- Van Hise, James (1992). The Man Who Created Star Trek: Gene Roddenberry. Pioneer Books. ISBN 1-55698-318-2.
- Whitney, Grace Lee; Denney, Jim (1998). The Longest Trek: My Tour of the Galaxy. Clovis, CA: Quill Driver Books. ISBN 978-1-884956-03-4.