What William Shatner Would Put on His Gravestone
The modern-day Renaissance man, known for his work on the stage and the screen, provides insights from the Tao of Captain Kirk
- By Jeff Greenwald
- Smithsonian.com, July 17, 2012, Subscribe
Few performing artists of the past 60 years are as iconic, or as mystifying, as William Shatner. The captain of the Starship Enterprise cut a heroic figure in the 1960s, when I watched the pilot episode of “Star Trek” as a preteen. Today, the hale and engaging actor, director, documentarian, author, singer, sportsman and rapper —who turned 81 in March—still seems possessed of boundless energy and bluster.
In many of his stage and screen appearances (and certainly in his music), Shatner often appears to teeter on the edge of self-parody. Face to face, he’s a warm hearted raconteur who inhabits his affable egoism without explanation or apology. I interviewed Shatner in June, shortly after the whirlwind national tour of his one-man show, Shatner’s World: We Just Live in It. On July 28 his new documentary about “Star Trek” fans, “Get A Life!”, premieres on Epix.
So how long do I have you for? How fast do I have to talk?
No; it is I who have to talk fast. It’s you who have to think fast. Half an hour?
Then we better get started!
I thought we already were.
You’re almost as well-known for your singing as for your acting. Did you grow up around music?
No, there was very little music in the house, little common music. My father would come home on Saturday afternoon, after six days of work. He’d grab a bite, lie down for a couple of hours, and play the Metropolitan Opera. That was the only music in the house: The Met from New York. So I never sang, or played an instrument. It was only when I got to McGill University that I began to write and direct and act in college musicals, and to admire Al Jolson and think: "God, if only I could do that."
What qualities in a song inspire you to create an interpretation?
I turn to my conservative Canadian, simplistic, uncomplicated background in music. I like to be able to hum the song and understand the lyrics. I love the musicality of words. Think about children's fairy tales. Fairy tales are supposed to be stories of inherent fears, dramatizations of human nightmares and cares and worries. The words "Once upon a time"—don't they suggest music? Sometimes words carry their own rhythm. I love to say the words and have the music enhance the words so that it aids and abets and supplants and supports those rhythms.
Some actors are like blank slates. I think of Meryl Streep in The Iron Lady. You can dress that woman up any way you like, and she will embody a totally different character. In your work, though—from the early Twilight Zone episode Nightmare at 20000 Feet through Shatner’s World— there's a substrate; like the base layer artists use to prepare a canvas.
What an interesting simile.
Can you define the single quality that unites all of your work?
That's me. Because my opinion is that even Meryl Streep, as wonderful as she is, can only bring herself to the role. For example, let’s look at you: a curly-haired guy who's athletic and intellectual, now being the observing reporter. I can play that. But I bring to it me, because all I’m doing now is imitating you. So even in The Iron Lady: Meryl puts on the wig, learns the smile and assumes—assumes—the persona. But she cannot bring anything else but her.
In your roles there's often a commanding tone; you’re cast as the man in charge. Is that who you really are?
It never used to be. But what has happened is, though I still realize I don't know what I’m doing, I've come to the conclusion that nobody else does, either—[nobody] knows what they're doing or knows what I’m doing. So in that mass confusion, there has to be a voice saying, "Well, here's where I am.”
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Comments (6)
Many think only of James T. Kirk, Shatner's most famous character, as a hero. My hero is William A. Shatner. He personifies Winston Churchill's famous saying, "Never give up. Never, never, never."
Posted by John B. Sutter on August 11,2012 | 12:54 AM
I have another one for the toomstone: MAKE GOOD MEMORIES. MEMORIES LIVE FOREVER. Gene
Posted by Gene Moore on July 21,2012 | 06:03 PM
The truth is out there Captain Kirk, and all you have to do to find it, is to want it and really truly search for it.
Posted by Chaz on July 20,2012 | 09:38 AM
Fascinating.
Posted by C. Gray on July 18,2012 | 12:52 PM
The philosopher Shat.
Posted by Phil Esteen on July 18,2012 | 11:43 AM
The philosopher Shat.
Posted by Phil Esteen on July 18,2012 | 11:43 AM