StarButterfly (Star vs.The Forces of Evil en version originale), est une sĂ©rie créée par Daron Nefcy et produite par Disney Television Animation.Le premier Ă©pisode de Star Butterfly a Ă©tĂ© diffusĂ© sur la chaĂźne Ă©tasunienne Disney Channel le 18 janvier 2015, avant que le reste de la saison ne soit diffusĂ© sur Disney XD entre le 30 mars et le 21 septembre de laCet article date de plus de sept ans. Le comĂ©dien qui incarnait le cĂ©lĂšbre monsieur aux oreilles pointues de Star Terk, Spock, est mort. Leonard Nimoy avait 83 ans. Article rĂ©digĂ© par PubliĂ© le 27/02/2015 1720 Mis Ă jour le 27/02/2015 2124 Temps de lecture 1 min. Monsieur Spock est mort. L'interprĂšte du cĂ©lĂšbre personnage aux grandes oreilles de Star Trek, Leonard Nimoy, est dĂ©cĂ©dĂ© ce vendredi Ă Los Angeles, apprend-on du New York Times . Il Ă©tait ĂągĂ© de 83 ans. Il avait annoncĂ© l'annĂ©e derniĂšre souffrir d'une maladie pulmonaire liĂ©e Ă la cigarette. Il avait d'ailleurs appelĂ© ses fans Ă "ne pas fumer " dans un tweet de 2012. Sa mort a profondĂ©ment Ă©mu des millions de fans Ă travers le monde, dont le premier d'entre eux, le prĂ©sident amĂ©ricain Barack Obama, qui a publiĂ© un communiquĂ© dans la soirĂ©e, usant d'une formule touchante pour lui rendre hommage. "J'adorais Spock" Barack Obama Le rĂŽle de sa vie, celui de l'extra-terrestre mi-humain mi-vulcain aux oreilles pointues Ă la froide logique, Monsieur Spock, a permis de le faire connaitre dans le monde entier. Il avait notamment Ă©crit de son personnage "Avec Spock, j'ai trouvĂ© le meilleur des deux mondes. Etre largement acceptĂ© par le public et continuer Ă jouer un alien isolĂ© ". Il a incarnĂ© Mr Spock Ă partir de 1966 et jusqu'en 2009, lorsque le rĂ©alisateur JJ Abrams relance Star Trek au cinĂ©ma. Nimoy passe alors symboliquement le flambeau Ă l'acteur Zachary Quinto, qui interprĂšte la version jeune de Spock. En plus de son mĂ©tier d'acteur, il faisait de la photo, de la poĂ©sie et de la musique. Le dernier tweet de Leonard Nimoy "La vie est un jardin. On peut vivre des moments parfaits mais pas les garder, Ă part dans la mĂ©moire ". A life is like a garden. Perfect moments can be had, but not preserved, except in memory. LLAPâ Leonard Nimoy TheRealNimoy February 23, 2015 Un Ă©pisode de Star Trek des annĂ©es 60. Leonard Nimoy est devenu M. Spock en 1966 La mort de Spock dans Star Trek II "La colĂšre de Khan" en 1982 Extrait du film Star Trek de JJ Abrams oĂč Leonard Nimoy apparaĂźt en 2009 Prolongez votre lecture autour de ce sujet tout l'univers Culture TheMan Trap ( littĂ©ralement le piĂšge Ă homme ), bien qu'il fut le cinquiĂšme Ă©pisode par ordre de tournage, eut l'heureux privilĂšge d'ĂȘtre le premier Ă©pisode Star Trek jamais diffusĂ© Ă la tĂ©lĂ©vision, le 8 septembre 1966. Le premier jet du scĂ©nario fut complet le 13 juin 1966 pour une version finalisĂ©e rendue trois jours plus tard. 2 saisons Nouveaux Ă©pisodes S2 E10 - Le dĂ©partS2 E9 - Cache-cacheS2 E8 - Compassion Regarder maintenant NoteGenresScience-Fiction , Action & Aventure , Drame Casting RĂ©sumĂ©Les nouvelles aventures de Jean-Luc Picard, capitaine de l' Enterprise dans la sĂ©rie Star Trek la nouvelle Star Trek Picard streaming - toutes les offres VoD, SVoD et ReplayEn ce moment, vous pouvez regarder "Star Trek Picard" en streaming sur Amazon Prime Video ou l`acheter en tĂ©lĂ©chargement sur Apple iTunes. Ca pourrait aussi vous intĂ©resser Prochaines sĂ©ries populaires Prochaines sĂ©ries de Science-Fiction StarTrek : Discovery streaming: sur quel service VoD/SVoD regarder les saisons ? Toutes les offres de Netflix, OCS Go et 21+ autres . Accueil NouveautĂ©s Populaires Watchlist Sports. Se connecter. SĂ©rie. Track show. Tout vu. J'aime. Je n'aime pas. Connectez-vous pour synchroniser la Watchlist. Note. 79% . 7.0 (121k) Genres. Science-Fiction , Action & Aventure , Drame . The Man Trap 1 1966-09-08 /en/show/77526/episode/248304 Charlie X 2 1966-09-15 /en/show/77526/episode/248305 Where No Man Has Gone Before 3 1966-09-22 /en/show/77526/episode/248306 Thursday at 2030 âą NBC âą 3 seasons âą Ended Star Trek is a 60 minute science fiction-drama-adventure-action starring William Shatner as James T. Kirk, Leonard Nimoy as Mr. Spock and DeForest Kelley as Leonard H. . The series premiered on Sat Oct 15, 1988 on NBC and Turnabout Intruder S03E24 last aired on Tue Jun 03, 1969. & 66,695 people follow this show Episodes TĂ©lĂ©chargercette image : STAR TREK, Susan Oliver, qu'un jeune esclave Orion dans l'Ă©pisode pilote, 'la cage' (rĂ©pĂ©tĂ© en saison 1, La MĂ©nagerie) - HDB80W depuis la bibliothĂšque dâAlamy parmi des millions de photos, illustrations et vecteurs en haute rĂ©solution. Star Trek 1966ĂąâŹâ1969 Season 1 Capt. Pike is held prisoner and tested by aliens who have the power to project incredibly lifelike illusions. 8 Sep. 1966 The Man Trap Dr. McCoy discovers his old flame is not what she seems after crew members begin dying from a sudden lack of salt in their bodies. 22 Sep. 1966 Where No Man Has Gone Before The flight recorder of the 200-year-old Valiant relays a tale of terror-a magnetic storm at the edge of the galaxy! The crew is infected with a mysterious disease that removes people's emotional inhibitions to a dangerous degree. 6 Oct. 1966 The Enemy Within A transporter malfunction splits Captain Kirk into two halves one meek and indecisive, the other violent and ill tempered. The remaining crew members stranded on the planet cannot be beamed up to the ship until a problem is fixed. The Enterprise picks up untrustworthy entrepreneur Harry Mudd accompanied by three beautiful women who immediately put a spell on all the male crew members. 20 Oct. 1966 What Are Little Girls Made Of? Nurse Chapel is reunited with her fiancĂ©; but his new obsession leads him to make an android duplicate of Captain Kirk. 3 Nov. 1966 Dagger of the Mind Kirk and psychiatrist Helen Noel are trapped on a maximum security penal colony that experiments with mind control and Spock must use the Vulcan mind-meld to find a way to save them. After the Enterprise is forced to destroy a dangerous marker buoy, a gigantic alien ship arrives to capture and condemn the crew as trespassers. 17 Nov. 1966 The Menagerie Part I Spock kidnaps the crippled Capt. Pike, hijacks the Enterprise and then surrenders for court martial. 24 Nov. 1966 The Menagerie Part II At Spock's court martial, he explains himself with mysterious footage about when Capt. Pike was kidnapped by powerful illusion casting aliens. 8 Dec. 1966 The Conscience of the King While Captain Kirk investigates whether an actor is actually a presumed dead mass murderer, a mysterious assailant is killing the people who could identify the fugitive. The Enterprise must decide on its response when a Romulan ship makes a destructively hostile armed probe of Federation territory. Dajserait un des deux androĂŻdes. Et câest lĂ quâintervient le second rebondissement. Ă la fin de lâĂ©pisode 1, Picard apprend quâil est possible que Daj soit lâun des deux androĂŻdes jumeaux en chair et en os. Peut-ĂȘtre créé par le vieux copain de La rĂ©fĂ©rence de la Culture Geek 201717K membres 4 saisons 57 Ă©pisodes. SixiĂšme aventure tĂ©lĂ©visĂ©e, Star Trek : Discovery dĂ©barque dans un monde qui n'a plus rien Ă voir avec celui de la sĂ©rie originale. On se place bien des annĂ©es avant la saga originale, alors que la FĂ©dĂ©ration mĂšne une exploration paisible de la galaxie, loin des problĂšmes. 4 saisons Nouveaux Ă©pisodes S4 E13 - Retour au bercailS4 E12 - L'EspĂšce 10-CS4 E11 - Rosetta Regarder maintenant NoteGenresScience-Fiction , Action & Aventure , Drame Casting RĂ©sumĂ©AprĂšs un siĂšcle de silence, une guerre Ă©clate entre la FĂ©dĂ©ration et l'Empire klingon. Au cĆur de ce conflit, un officier en disgrĂące...Regarder Star Trek Discovery streaming - toutes les offres VoD, SVoD et ReplayVous pouvez acheter "Star Trek Discovery" sur Google Play Movies, Microsoft Store en tĂ©lĂ©chargement. Ca pourrait aussi vous intĂ©resser Prochaines sĂ©ries populaires Prochaines sĂ©ries de Science-Fiction
Thefirst season of the original Star Trek aired Thursdays at pm on NBC from September 8, 1966 to April 13, 1967.
On a 1968 episode of âStar Trek,â Nichelle Nichols, playing Lt. Uhura, locked lips with William Shatnerâs Capt. Kirk in whatâs widely thought to be first kiss between a Black woman and white man on American television. The episodeâs plot is bizarre Aliens who worship the Greek philosopher Plato use telekinetic powers to force the Enterprise crew to sing, dance and kiss. At one point, the aliens compel Lt. Uhura and Capt. Kirk to embrace. Each character tries to resist, but eventually Kirk tilts Uhura back and the two kiss as the aliens lasciviously look on. The smooch is not a romantic one. But in 1968 to show a Black woman kissing a white man was a daring move. The episode aired just one year after the Supreme Courtâs Loving v. Virginia decision struck down state laws against interracial marriage. At the time, Gallup polls showed that fewer than 20% of Americans approved of such relationships. As a historian of civil rights and media, Iâve been fascinated by the woman at the center of this landmark television moment. Casting Nichols, who died on July 30, 2022, created possibilities for more creative and socially relevant âStar Trekâ storylines. But just as significant is Nicholsâ off-screen activism. She leveraged her role on âStar Trekâ to become a recruiter for NASA, where she pushed for change in the space program. Her career arc shows how diverse casting on the screen can have a profound impact in the real world, too. A triumph of modern-day TVâ In 1966, âStar Trekâ creator Gene Rodenberry decided to cast Nichols to play Lt. Uhura, a translator and communications officer from the United States of Africa. In doing so, he made Nichols the first Black woman to have a continuing co-starring role on television. The Black press was quick to heap praise on Nicholsâ pioneering role. The Norfolk Journal and Guide hoped that it would âbroaden her raceâs foothold on the tube.â The magazine Ebony featured Nichols on its January 1967 cover and described Uhura as âthe first Negro astronaut, a triumph of modern-day TV over modern-day NASA.â Yet the famous kiss between Uhura and Kirk almost never happened. After the first season of âStar Trekâ concluded in 1967, Nichols considered quitting after being offered a role on Broadway. She had started her career as a singer in New York and always dreamed of returning to the Big Apple. But at an NAACP fundraiser in Los Angeles, she ran into Martin Luther King Jr. Nichols would later recount their interaction. âYou must not leave,â King told her. âYou have opened a door that must not be allowed to close ⊠you changed the face of television forever. ⊠For the first time, the world sees us as we should be seen, as equals, as intelligent people.â King went on to say that he and his family were fans of the show; she was a âheroâ to his children. With Kingâs encouragement, Nichols stayed on âStar Trekâ for the original seriesâ full three-year run. Nicholsâ controversial kiss took place at the end of the third season. Nichols recalled that NBC executives closely monitored the filming because they were nervous about how Southern television stations and viewers would react. After the episode aired, the network did receive an outpouring of letters from viewers â and the majority were positive. In 1982, Nichols would tell the Baltimore Afro-American that she was amused by the amount of attention the kiss generated, especially because her own heritage was âa blend of races that includes Egyptian, Ethiopian, Moor, Spanish, Welsh, Cherokee Indian and a blond blue-eyed ancestor or two.ââ Space crusader But Nicholsâ legacy would be defined by far more than a kiss. After NBC canceled Star Trek in 1969, Nichols took minor acting roles on two television series, âInsightâ and âThe She would also play a madam in the 1974 blaxploitation film âTruck Turner.â She also started to dabble in activism and education. In 1975, Nichols established Women in Motion Inc. and won several government contracts to produce educational programs related to space and science. By 1977, she had been appointed to the board of directors of the National Space Institute, a civil space advocacy organization. That year she gave a speech at the instituteâs annual meeting. In it, she critiqued the lack of women and minorities in the astronaut corps, challenging NASA to âcome down from your ivory tower of intellectual pursuit, because the next Einstein might have a Black face â and sheâs female.â Several of NASAâs top administrators were in the audience. They invited her to lead an astronaut recruitment program for the new space shuttle program. Soon, she packed her bags and began traveling the country, visiting high schools and colleges, speaking with professional organizations and legislators, and appearing on national television programs such as âGood Morning America.â âThe aim was to find qualified people among women and minorities, then to convince them that the opportunity was real and that it also was a duty, because this was historic,â Nichols told the Baltimore Afro-American in 1979. âI really had this sense of purpose about it myself.â In her 1994 autobiography, âBeyond Uhura,â Nichols recalled that in the seven months before the recruitment program began, âNASA had received only 1,600 applications, including fewer than 100 from women and 35 from minority candidates.â But by the end of June 1977, âjust four months after we assumed our task, 8,400 applications were in, including 1,649 from women a fifteen-fold increase and an astounding 1,000 from minorities.â Nicholsâ campaign recruited several trailblazing astronauts, including Sally Ride, the first American woman in space, Guion Bluford, the first African American in space, and Mae Jemison, the first African American woman in space. Nichelle Nichols speaks after the Space Shuttle Endeavour landed at Los Angeles International Airport Friday in September 2012. AP Photo/Reed Saxon Relentless advocacy for inclusion Her advocacy for inclusion and diversity wasnât limited to the space program. As one of the first Black women in a major television role, Nichols understood the importance of opening doors for minorities and women in entertainment. Nichols continued to push for African Americans to have more power in film and television. âUntil we Blacks and minorities become not only the producers, writers and directors, but the buyers and distributors, weâre not going to change anything,â she told Ebony in 1985. âUntil we become industry, until we control media or at least have enough say, we will always be the chauffeurs and tap dancers.â This story has been updated from the original version published on April 15, 2021. oIJ2HD.