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R.I.P. Leonard Nimoy

Posted: 27 Feb 2015, 23:08
by fohat
What a huge influence he had on the world for half a century.

Posted: 27 Feb 2015, 23:12
by scottc
It could never be said that he did not indeed live long and prosper. RIP.

Posted: 27 Feb 2015, 23:31
by webwit
By Grabthar's hammer, what a sad day!

Posted: 27 Feb 2015, 23:33
by matt3o
it's like a bit of magic died today.

Posted: 27 Feb 2015, 23:35
by fohat
matt3o wrote: it's like a bit of magic died today.
Worse: a bit of logic

Posted: 27 Feb 2015, 23:48
by Hypersphere
Very sad to see this news. However, he had a long and productive life. It seems that he did not merely play a part -- he was synonymous with Spock -- that embodiment of Vulcan logic pitted against human emotion within an unforgettable character who presented us with a legacy of enviable and endearing traits and talents.

Posted: 28 Feb 2015, 11:29
by HAL
I very much enjoyed his apearance here http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dULOjT9GYdQ

Re: R.I.P. Leonard Nimoy

Posted: 28 Feb 2015, 12:12
by seebart
Seemed like a really nice guy. I always wonder if having one prominent role as an actor becomes a burden over the years or centuries in this case.

Posted: 28 Feb 2015, 17:14
by LLRnR
Mr. Spock was my childhood role-model... this is such sad news.

Posted: 28 Feb 2015, 23:15
by Muirium
Live Long And Prosper. He played a fine archetype we may well remember forever, and was a fine man.

And unexpectedly kinky as a photographer:

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/13/fashi ... wanted=all

His photo book, Shekhina, has an Amazon price that would make even Ellipse wince!

Image
http://www.amazon.com/Shekhina-Leonard- ... na+Project

Posted: 01 Mar 2015, 01:06
by ideus
"Mr. Nimoy was born in Boston to Russian Jews; he speaks and reads Yiddish. He began acting at 8, but his big break came at 17, when he was cast as Ralphie in a Boston production of Clifford Odets’s “Awake and Sing.” In 1966, he landed a gig on a little television show called “Star Trek,” which ran for only three seasons but would resonate for decades. He spent two seasons on “Mission Impossible” and in 1971 went to U.C.L.A. to study photography. He didn’t graduate, but he has a master’s in education and an honorary doctorate from Antioch College. He hasn’t acted since 1990, choosing to devote himself to art collecting, voiceover work and various philanthropic endeavors, including an artists’ foundation he and his wife run."

By ABBY ELLIN
Published: May 13, 2007

From: http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/13/fashi ... d=all&_r=0

Posted: 01 Mar 2015, 02:21
by fohat
ideus wrote:
He hasn’t acted since 1990,
This has been cited many times today, and it ain't quite true.

Posted: 01 Mar 2015, 04:59
by ideus
Yeah, he appeared in some movies, like the last ST more recent ones. However, I reproduced the reference textually.

Posted: 01 Mar 2015, 17:44
by Halvar
Muirium wrote: His photo book, Shekhina, has an Amazon price that would make even Ellipse wince!

Image
http://www.amazon.com/Shekhina-Leonard- ... na+Project
This might be a bit more affordable for some reason:

http://www.amazon.com/The-Full-Body-Pro ... V5EF8A50PM

Posted: 01 Mar 2015, 17:59
by Muirium
Yup. The New York Times story about that one (I linked it earlier) was what led me there.
As for whether people will think he has a fetish, he said he can’t help that. “I just have no way of dealing with that,” he said with a laugh. “People will think what they’re going to think. I understand that.”

And what of his own attitude toward fat women?

“I do think they’re beautiful,” he said. “They’re full-bodied, full-blooded human beings.”

He doesn’t necessarily find them sexually attractive. “But I do think they’re beautiful.”
Damn it, he even thought like Spock!