On Friday, 27 February 2015, Leonard Simon Nimoy died at his home in the Bel-Air district of Los Angles. He was aged eighty-three.
His artistic talents included poetry, photography and music and stretched far beyond the United Federation of Planets, but it was as Spock that Leonard became a cultural icon. He created and brought to life one of the most enduring characters of the last half century. A logical and emotionless pointy-eared half-Vulcan, half-human with a signature salute and a customary farewell of: “Live long and prosper.”
After Leonard’s final performance in Star Trek: Into Darkness, he had portrayed the same role on television and in films from 1966 until 2013. For forty-seven years, he was Spock.
This review gives an insight into Leonard Nimoy’s life and career. It is fully illustrated.
Other e-books available on KDP by the same author:
Sheldon Cooper’s Universe
Women of Star Trek
His artistic talents included poetry, photography and music and stretched far beyond the United Federation of Planets, but it was as Spock that Leonard became a cultural icon. He created and brought to life one of the most enduring characters of the last half century. A logical and emotionless pointy-eared half-Vulcan, half-human with a signature salute and a customary farewell of: “Live long and prosper.”
After Leonard’s final performance in Star Trek: Into Darkness, he had portrayed the same role on television and in films from 1966 until 2013. For forty-seven years, he was Spock.
This review gives an insight into Leonard Nimoy’s life and career. It is fully illustrated.
Other e-books available on KDP by the same author:
Sheldon Cooper’s Universe
Women of Star Trek