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Leonard Nimoy originated the role of the ever-logical Mr. Spock, and Zachary
Quinto of Heroes braves the bowl cut for the latest Star Trek
film – and so does Nimoy, thanks to some sci-fi plot twists. PEOPLE was all ears
as the two actors mind-melded about playing the famous Vulcan.
What was your first meeting like?
Nimoy: We met in the elevator. I said to him, 'Do you have any idea
what you're getting into?'
Quinto: You did tell me the stories about the people who would call you in your
hotel room when you'd get somewhere. You'd get all these messages from people
that found out where you were staying.
Nimoy: I called
[director] J.J. [Abrams] and I said, 'I think he's terrific. I think the
resemblance works. Most importantly, he has an interior life.' That's very
essential to the character. Then we had some very good conversations and I think
that we come from the same kind of ethos as far as the work is concerned. I feel
very comfortable with him. He's also a smart guy. I like smart people.
Leonard, was it fun to see someone else have to deal with the Vulcan ears,
eyebrows and haircut?
Nimoy: Yeah, it was! I didn't have the severe problem with the eyebrows because
mine weren't so prominent to begin with. I would pencil in the missing portion
of the eyebrows so that I could get away with it.
Quinto: The eyebrows for me were probably the biggest challenge, just because my
eyebrows are such a big part of my face. There's really no way around it and to
lose three-quarters of them for six months...! Did you have any irreparable
eyebrow damage over the years? Did they always grow back?
Nimoy:
I asked about that before they shaved them: Will they grow back? They told me
that they would and they did, but I think that over the years the more and more
I shaved them the less and less they came back!
Do you have a favorite encounter with the intensely devoted fans of Star
Trek – or Heroes?
Nimoy: People talk about the positive influence that Star Trek and the
character have had on their lives. A lot of people will tell me that they're in
the sciences because of Spock, [or] that during adolescence they used Spock as a
role model on how to function with some dignity and equilibrium, dealing with
the logic versus the emotional issues that all of us feel sometimes. It's just
good to hear that.
Quinto: We spent a day [in Kuwait] screening the film for the troops. There was
one encounter that I had with a soldier who told me that she would ration her
episodes of Heroes and she would only watch them at a half-hour at a
time on her breaks when she was in the thick of fighting a war because it was
something that she really looked forward to and really, really took her out of
the horror that she was in.
Where you surprised by Spock's emergence as a sex symbol, both then and now?
Nimoy: Are you going to write about that? I think that my wife might get upset!
[Laughs] There's a truth in that, yeah. I didn't see that coming. I really
didn't see that coming.
Quinto: It's really a fascinating thing to have happen when it's the last thing
that you would ever expect. I've already gotten messages from people that I know
either well or not so well saying, "If you put on those ears, I don't even know
–!" It's a strange phenomenon.
Leonard, what did you take away from your Star Trek experience that you also
hope Zach gets to enjoy?
Nimoy: Ever since the show went on the air in 1966 I've had all kinds of
wonderful opportunities. I've never had to search for work or be concerned with
work. I've gotten to have work of all kinds beyond my wildest dreams. I've acted
all over the place and in all kinds of characters that aren't as well known as
Spock. The opportunity that's going to come to him is going to be extraordinary. |