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Franklinnoble
09-02-2004, 06:12 PM
'Scotty' of 'Star Trek' Bids Fans a Fond Farewell
http://www.latimes.com/images/standard/blackpix.gif James Doohan, diagnosed as having Alzheimer's, retires from public life.

By Richard Fausset, Times Staff Writer

<!-- MEDIUM RECTANGLE AD --> For a brief moment, the denizens of this peculiar universe stood united: the valiant Starfleet commanders, the fierce Romulan warriors, the pimply speculators in the action figure market.

They gathered Sunday in a ballroom at the Renaissance Hollywood Hotel to say farewell to James Doohan, 84, who played Lt. Cmdr. Montgomery "Scotty" Scott on the original "Star Trek" TV series.

With the recent onset of Alzheimer's disease, Doohan, a former regular on the Trekkie convention circuit, decided to make one final appearance for fans before retiring from public life.

The "Star Trek" faithful paid up to $995 to take part in a two-day tribute and convention, "Beam Me Up, Scotty … One Last Time," which culminated Sunday with the actor, in a wheelchair, flanked by his fellow space travelers, blowing kisses to a standing-room-only crowd.

"He wanted to say goodbye to his fans," said Dave Mendel, of Berryville, Va., who said he spent much of the weekend near Hollywood and Highland dressed in full Klingon battle armor — including sand-crab forehead and spiked shoulder pads. "How could you not show up for that?"

Mendel, a 6-foot-4 truck driver who also goes by the Klingon name "qarjagh," fit in among his fellow fans, some of whom packed fake phaser guns in homemade utility belts. There were Scotty impersonation contests, Scotty trivia and a panel discussion titled "The Influence of Scotty on Society."

The New York-based Fisher Center for Alzheimer's Research Foundation set up a booth, passing out information about the degenerative brain disease, and astronaut Neil Armstrong stopped by for an honorary banquet.

Doohan, who also has Parkinson's disease and diabetes, mingled with fans and spoke haltingly at a news conference, but his family members had to elaborate on his bond with "Star Trek" and its loyal followers.

Fans plan to flock Tuesday to Hollywood Boulevard, where Doohan's star will be unveiled on the Walk of Fame.

"We're just very proud to honor Dad with this star," his son, Chris Doohan, said. "A lot of 'Star Trek' fans helped us out with this."

It was, of course, William Shatner's Capt. James T. Kirk who was the star of the first "Star Trek" series, which ran on NBC from 1966 to 1969. But many Trekkies still find Shatner to be irredeemably nguq — Klingon for "arrogant" — after he dissed Trek culture in a 1987 "Saturday Night Live" skit.

Fans love Doohan for being so approachable. Some of the hundreds who made the trip for the chance to see him one last time said they paid the admission because over the years, the man they knew as Scotty always took the time to talk to them, sign autographs and chat about alternate universes, obscure plot points and spaceship specs.

"He's probably the nicest man I've had the pleasure of meeting in Hollywood," said Jim Pawlowski, a rebuilder of airplanes from the Ojai Valley.

They were equally fond of his character, the chief engineer of the starship Enterprise, the guy always ready to bail out Kirk and start the engines early.

After all, it was Scotty who fielded that famous request — "Beam me up" — which entered the pop lexicon as a geek-chic update on the hippie maxim "Tune In, Turn On, Drop Out."

The role came to Doohan after two decades in radio, television and theater. Before fighting mock battles in space, he had been a captain in the Royal Canadian Artillery, losing a finger and injuring his leg and hand as he led troops into battle on D-Day.

Although Doohan, whose ancestry is mostly Irish, became best known for the character whose Scottish brogue was a product of acting rather than lineage, the association never bothered him.

"Many actors get upset when they are typecast, but that didn't concern him, because he was typecast as Scotty," said Chris Doohan. "It's been his bread and butter."

DeToxRox
09-02-2004, 06:14 PM
... those will be some of the best memories he never had..

Franklinnoble
09-02-2004, 06:22 PM
... those will be some of the best memories he never had..
That's f'ing cold, man.

Hilarious, but cold. :D

Sun Tzu
09-02-2004, 06:25 PM
Wow, Scotty was in on D-Day. That's really cool.

Draft Dodger
09-02-2004, 06:26 PM
he's missing a finger or 2 also, if I'm not mistaken.

also, didn't he just have a kid?

clintl
09-02-2004, 06:30 PM
also, didn't he just have a kid?

He has a 4-year old daughter.

Chief Rum
09-02-2004, 08:07 PM
With the recent onset of Alzheimer's disease, Doohan, a former regular on the Trekkie convention circuit, decided to make one final appearance for fans before retiring from public life...

...Doohan, who also has Parkinson's disease and diabetes, mingled with fans and spoke haltingly at a news conference, but his family members had to elaborate on his bond with "Star Trek" and its loyal followers.

Man it sucks to get old.

Question to ponder-- if Scotty beams us up, who beams Scotty up?

CR

GrantDawg
09-02-2004, 10:14 PM
I met him at convention several years ago. A drunk jerk would be the nice way to describe him.

Draft Dodger
09-02-2004, 10:18 PM
I met him at convention several years ago. A drunk jerk would be the nice way to describe him.

many nights, that would be a nice way to describe me too! :cool:

Ksyrup
09-02-2004, 10:23 PM
I just don't get the whole Star Trek thing.

druez
09-02-2004, 10:37 PM
... those will be some of the best memories he never had..

I think its fucked up and not funny.

DeToxRox
09-03-2004, 07:38 AM
I think its fucked up and not funny.

but if it were charlton heston, it'd probably be a whole nother story.

rkmsuf
09-03-2004, 07:44 AM
It's like a funeral or something.

Franklinnoble
09-03-2004, 10:25 AM
I met him at convention several years ago. A drunk jerk would be the nice way to describe him.
Same here. I dunno about the "jerk" part, but Scotty had definately had a little too much of the ol' Romulan Ale before sitting down to sign autographs.

Ksyrup
09-03-2004, 10:27 AM
You try being the only Irishman in space.