Interview with activist, star trek icon george takei

Interview with activist, star trek icon george takei

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THE STONEWALL RIOTS THAT POWERED THE GAY RIGHTS MOVEMENT HAPPENED IN NEW YORK IN 1969. WHERE WERE YOU? I was in Los Angeles at, as a matter of fact, a gay bar. Oh, the news spread like


electricity through all the gay bars. I was pursuing an acting career, and the climate was totally different in those days. To be gay was to essentially give up any kind of public career. I


knew I wouldn't be hired again after _Star Trek _if I came out. I was protecting my career. On June 28, 1969, a police raid at a nightclub leads to riots outside the Stonewall Inn in


Greenwich Village, New York City. Photo by NY Daily News Archive via Getty Images WHAT DOES STONEWALL REPRESENT TO YOU? The Stonewall riots went on for days. That kind of total commitment


was inspiring to me. It's profoundly important. My father said that this country is an amazing country. It's a people's democracy. In 50 years gays have gone from being looked


at with contempt and disgust to a point where we have a credible gay candidate for the presidency. Fifty years in America can do amazing things, inspiring things. IT WAS A PAINFUL TIME FOR


YOU. WHY? I saw these young men and women campaigning for what was called gay liberation, and giving up everything — their jobs, careers and families — to campaign for equality for us. It


was very difficult for me. Here I was campaigning for civil rights or the peace movement during the Vietnam War, but I was silent on the one issue that was organic to me, that was very


personal. During that period I was weighted down by that sense of guilt and not participating. WHEN DID YOU COME OUT? It wasn't until the California legislature passed the marriage


equality bill, in 2005. It was a thrilling moment! We partnered with the Human Rights Campaign, and I went on a nationwide speaking tour. That's when I felt like I was a whole person.


STAR TREK, George Takei, Walter Koenig, 1966-69 Paramount/Courtesy: ©Everett Collection 1969 WAS ALSO THE LAST YEAR OF _STAR TREK_... We were low rated back then. Every season was a


cliffhanger — Are we going to be canceled? And sure enough, in 1969, our third season, we were. But _Star Trek_ went into syndication. They aired us five nights a week, and that's when


we finally found our audience and the ratings soared. DO YOU HAVE A FAVORITE EPISODE? "_The Naked Time_” [Season 1, Episode 4], where I demonstrate my fencing prowess shirtless.


[Laughs.]