Monday, March 23, 2015

A00080 - Leonard Nimoy, Spock of "Star Trek"

Continue reading the main storyVideo
PLAY VIDEO|2:29

The Man Who Was Spock

The Man Who Was Spock

Leonard Nimoy, best known for playing the character Spock in the Star Trek television shows and films, died at 83.
Video by Robin Lindsay on Publish DateFebruary 27, 2015. Photo by NBC, via Photofest.
Leonard Nimoy, the sonorous, gaunt-faced actor who won a worshipful global following as Mr. Spock, the resolutely logical human-alien first officer of the Starship Enterprise in the television and movie juggernaut “Star Trek,” died on Friday morning at his home in the Bel Air section of Los Angeles. He was 83.
His wife, Susan Bay Nimoy, confirmed his death, saying the cause was end-stage chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Mr. Nimoy announced last year that he had the disease, attributing it to years of smoking, a habit he had given up three decades earlier. He had been hospitalized earlier in the week.
His artistic pursuits — poetry, photography and music in addition to acting — ranged far beyond the United Federation of Planets, but it was as Mr. Spock that Mr. Nimoy became a folk hero, bringing to life one of the most indelible characters of the last half century: a cerebral, unflappable, pointy-eared Vulcan with a signature salute and blessing: “Live long and prosper” (from the Vulcan “Dif-tor heh smusma”).
Continue reading the main storyVideo
PLAY VIDEO|2:45

Nimoy Explains Origin of Vulcan Greeting

Nimoy Explains Origin of Vulcan Greeting

As part of the Yiddish Book Center Wexler Oral History Project, Leonard Nimoy explains the origin of the Vulcan hand signal used by Spock, his character in the “Star Trek” series.
 Video by Yiddish Book Center on Publish DateFebruary 27, 2015. Photo by Yiddish Book Center’s Wexler Oral History Project.
Mr. Nimoy, who was teaching Method acting at his own studio when he was cast in the original “Star Trek” television series in the mid-1960s, relished playing outsiders, and he developed what he later admitted was a mystical identification with Spock, the lone alien on the starship’s bridge.
Yet he also acknowledged ambivalence about being tethered to the character, expressing it most plainly in the titles of two autobiographies: “I Am Not Spock,” published in 1975, and “I Am Spock,” published in 1995.
In the first, he wrote, “In Spock, I finally found the best of both worlds: to be widely accepted in public approval and yet be able to continue to play the insulated alien through the Vulcan character.”
“Star Trek,” which had its premiere on NBC on Sept. 8, 1966, made Mr. Nimoy a star. Gene Roddenberry, the creator of the franchise, called him “the conscience of ‘Star Trek’ ” — an often earnest, sometimes campy show that employed the distant future (as well as some special effects that appear primitive by today’s standards) to take on social issues of the 1960s.
His stardom would endure. Though the series was canceled after three seasons because of low ratings, a cultlike following — the conference-holding, costume-wearing Trekkies, or Trekkers (the designation Mr. Nimoy preferred) — coalesced soon after “Star Trek” went into syndication.
The fans’ devotion only deepened when “Star Trek” was spun off into an animated show, various new series and an uneven parade of movies starring much of the original television cast, including — besides Mr. Nimoy — William Shatner (as Captain Kirk), DeForest Kelley (Dr. McCoy), George Takei (the helmsman, Sulu), James Doohan (the chief engineer, Scott), Nichelle Nichols (the chief communications officer, Uhura) and Walter Koenig (the navigator, Chekov).
When the director J. J. Abrams revived the “Star Trek” film franchise in 2009, with an all-new cast including Zachary Quinto as Spock, he included a cameo part for Mr. Nimoy, as an older version of the same character. Mr. Nimoy also appeared in the 2013 follow-up, “Star Trek Into Darkness.”
His zeal to entertain and enlighten reached beyond “Star Trek” and crossed genres. He had a starring role in the dramatic television series “Mission: Impossible” and frequently performed onstage, notably as Tevye in “Fiddler on the Roof.” His poetry was voluminous, and he published books of his photography.
He also directed movies, including two from the “Star Trek” franchise, and television shows. And he made records, singing pop songs as well as original songs about “Star Trek,” and gave spoken-word performances — to the delight of his fans and the bewilderment of critics.
But all that was subsidiary to Mr. Spock, the most complex member of the Enterprise crew, who was both one of the gang and a creature apart, engaged at times in a lonely struggle with his warring racial halves.
In one of his most memorable “Star Trek” performances, Mr. Nimoy tried to follow in the tradition of two actors he admired, Charles Laughton and Boris Karloff, who each played a monstrous character — Quasimodo and the Frankenstein monster — who is transformed by love.
In Episode 24, which was first shown on March 2, 1967, Mr. Spock is indeed transformed. Under the influence of aphrodisiacal spores he discovers on the planet Omicron Ceti III, he lets free his human side and announces his love for Leila Kalomi (Jill Ireland), a woman he had once known on Earth. In this episode, Mr. Nimoy brought to Spock’s metamorphosis not only warmth, compassion and playfulness, but also a rarefied concept of alienation.
“I am what I am, Leila,” Mr. Spock declares after the spores’ effect has worn off and his emotions are again in check. “And if there are self-made purgatories, then we all have to live in them. Mine can be no worse than someone else’s.”
Born in Boston on March 26, 1931, Leonard Simon Nimoy was the second son of Max and Dora Nimoy, Ukrainian immigrants and Orthodox Jews. His father worked as a barber.
From the age of 8, Leonard acted in local productions, winning parts at a community college, where he performed through his high school years. In 1949, after taking a summer course at Boston College, he traveled to Hollywood, though it wasn’t until 1951 that he landed small parts in two movies, “Queen for a Day” and “Rhubarb.”
Continue reading the main storySlide Show
SLIDE SHOW|12 Photos

Leonard Nimoy Dies at 83

Leonard Nimoy Dies at 83

CreditJerry Mosey/Associated Press
He continued to be cast in little-known movies, although he did presciently play an alien invader in a cult serial called “Zombies of the Stratosphere,” and in 1961 he had a minor role on an episode of “The Twilight Zone.” His first starring movie role came in 1952 with “Kid Monk Baroni,” in which he played a disfigured Italian street-gang leader who becomes a boxer.
Mr. Nimoy served in the Army for two years, rising to sergeant and spending 18 months at Fort McPherson in Georgia, where he presided over shows for the Army’s Special Services branch. He also directed and starred as Stanley in the Atlanta Theater Guild’s production of “A Streetcar Named Desire” before receiving his final discharge in November 1955.
He then returned to California, where he worked as a soda jerk, movie usher and cabdriver while studying acting at the Pasadena Playhouse. He achieved wide visibility in the late 1950s and early 1960s on television shows like “Wagon Train,” “Rawhide” and “Perry Mason.” Then came “Star Trek.”
Mr. Nimoy returned to college in his 40s and earned a master’s degree in Spanish from Antioch University Austin, an affiliate of Antioch College in Ohio, in 1978. Antioch University later awarded Mr. Nimoy an honorary doctorate.
Mr. Nimoy directed the movies “Star Trek III: The Search for Spock” (1984) and “Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home” (1986), which he helped write. In 1991, the same year that he resurrected Mr. Spock on two episodes of “Star Trek: The Next Generation,” Mr. Nimoy was also the executive producer and a writer of the movie “Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country.”
He then directed the hugely successful comedy “Three Men and a Baby” (1987), a far cry from his science-fiction work, and appeared in made-for-television movies. He received an Emmy nomination for the 1982 movie “A Woman Called Golda,” in which he portrayed the husband of Golda Meir, the prime minister of Israel, who was played by Ingrid Bergman. It was the fourth Emmy nomination of his career — the other three were for his “Star Trek” work — although he never won.
Mr. Nimoy’s marriage to the actress Sandi Zober ended in divorce. Besides his wife, he is survived by his children, Adam and Julie Nimoy; a stepson, Aaron Bay Schuck; six grandchildren and one great-grandchild; and an older brother, Melvin.
Though his speaking voice was among his chief assets as an actor, the critical consensus was that his music was mortifying. Mr. Nimoy, however, was undaunted, and his fans seemed to enjoy the camp of his covers of songs like “If I Had a Hammer.” (His first album was called “Leonard Nimoy Presents Mr. Spock’s Music From Outer Space.”)
From 1977 to 1982, Mr. Nimoy hosted the syndicated series “In Search Of ...,” which explored mysteries like the Loch Ness monster and U.F.O.s. He also narrated “Ancient Mysteries” on the History Channel and appeared in commercials, including two with Mr. Shatner for Priceline.com. He provided the voice for animated characters in “Transformers: The Movie,” in 1986, and “The Pagemaster,” in 1994.
In 2001 he voiced the king of Atlantis in the Disney animated movie “Atlantis: The Lost Empire,” and in 2005 he furnished voice-overs for the computer game Civilization IV. More recently, he had a recurring role on the science-fiction series “Fringe” and was heard, as the voice of Spock, in an episode of the hit sitcom “The Big Bang Theory.”
Mr. Nimoy was an active supporter of the arts as well. The Thalia, a venerable movie theater on the Upper West Side of Manhattan, now a multi-use hall that is part of Symphony Space, was renamed the Leonard Nimoy Thalia in 2002.
He also found his voice as a writer. Besides his autobiographies, he published “A Lifetime of Love: Poems on the Passages of Life” in 2002. Typical of Mr. Nimoy’s simple free verse are these lines: “In my heart/Is the seed of the tree/Which will be me.”
In later years, he rediscovered his Jewish heritage, and in 1991 he produced and starred in “Never Forget,” a television movie based on the story of a Holocaust survivor who sued a neo-Nazi organization of Holocaust deniers.
In 2002, having illustrated his books of poetry with his photographs, Mr. Nimoy published “Shekhina,” a book devoted to photography with a Jewish theme, that of the feminine aspect of God. His black-and-white photographs of nude and seminude women struck some Orthodox Jewish leaders as heretical, but Mr. Nimoy asserted that his work was consistent with the teachings of the kabbalah.
His religious upbringing also influenced the characterization of Spock. The character’s split-fingered salute, he often explained, had been his idea: He based it on the kohanic blessing, a manual approximation of the Hebrew letter shin, which is the first letter in Shaddai, one of the Hebrew names for God.
“To this day, I sense Vulcan speech patterns, Vulcan social attitudes and even Vulcan patterns of logic and emotional suppression in my behavior,” Mr. Nimoy wrote years after the original series ended.
But that wasn’t such a bad thing, he discovered. “Given the choice,” he wrote, “if I had to be someone else, I would be Spock.”

A00079 - Harve Bennett, Quiz Kid and "Star Trek" Producer



Photo

Harve Bennett, left, and Leonard Nimoy on the set of “Star Trek III: The Search for Spock.”CreditParamount Pictures, via Photofest

Harve Bennett, who navigated a rocky path from childhood stardom to youthful disaffection to adult success as a producer of four “Star Trek” films and an Emmy-winning TV movie, died on Feb. 25 in Medford, Ore. He was 84.
A friend, Terry Lee Rioux, said the cause was complications of a recent fall.
From shortly before his 11th birthday to the age of 16, Harve Fischman, as he was then known, was a regular on “The Quiz Kids,” the wildly popular 1940s radio show that taxed a panel of pint-size intellectuals with questions sent in by listeners. (“Would a bathtub drain quicker if you continue to sit in the tub after pulling the plug?”; “If you dug a hole from Denver to sea level and jumped in, how long would it take you to hit bottom?”)
Scores of young panelists served on “The Quiz Kids” over the years, but Harve was among the most renowned, appearing nearly 200 times. A “jack of all knowledge,” as he was described in the press, he was an authority on American history in general and presidential history in particular.

Photo

Clockwise from top, Mr. Bennett (then known as Harve Fischman), Ruthie Duskin, Gerard Darrow and Joan Leslie.CreditNBC, via Photofest

In adulthood, Mr. Bennett was best known for producing four of the original six “Star Trek” movies, starting with “Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan” in 1982 and ending with “Star Trek V: The Final Frontier” in 1989. His death came two days before that of Leonard Nimoy, who played Spock in all six films and the original TV series, but was announced only this week.
Mr. Bennett also produced several noted mini-series, among them “Rich Man, Poor Man” (1976), starring Peter Strauss and Nick Nolte, and “From Here to Eternity” (1979), starring Natalie Wood and William Devane. He received an Emmy Award as the executive producer of “A Woman Called Golda” (1982), a TV dramatization of the life of Golda Meir, starring Ingrid Bergman.
The son of a father who was a lawyer and a mother who was a newspaper reporter — a rare calling for a woman of the period — Mr. Bennett was born in Chicago on Aug. 17, 1930. His parents’ aspirations for him were inscribed in his very name: Harvard Bennett Fischman.
At 10, on his own initiative, Harve (the name rhymes with “carve”) auditioned for “The Quiz Kids” and soon became a household commodity.
Broadcast nationwide from Chicago on NBC, the show made celebrities of its panelists, who were held up by American parents as shining exemplars of precocity and diligence and resented by American children on precisely the same grounds. They made frequent public appearances, traveled the country to raise money for war bonds and were the subjects of a thicket of coverage in newspapers and magazines.
At 16, the show’s mandatory “retirement” age, its young stars faded off the air and, in some cases, into obscurity. (One panelist, however, James D. Watson, would go on to map the molecular structure of DNA with Francis Crick and Maurice Wilkins, work that earned them a Nobel Prize in 1962.)
After Harve aged out of the show, he found himself at loose ends.
“There was a time when my time on the show troubled me greatly,” Mr. Bennett told The New York Times in 1982. “ ‘The Quiz Kids’ was part of the reason I dropped my last name, and partly it was my Jewishness, part of being a bright Jewish kid, having expectations heaped upon me.”
As a young man, he earned a bachelor’s degree in theater arts from the University of California, Los Angeles, and served stateside in the Army during the Korean War. But he nonetheless felt directionless, he later said, for quite some time.
Though Mr. Bennett was too old to appear on the television incarnation of “The Quiz Kids,” which began in 1949 and never rivaled the success of the radio version, he did eventually build a career in TV. He was the producer or executive producer of a string of shows in the 1970s and afterward, including “The Mod Squad,” “The Invisible Man,” “The Six Million Dollar Man” and “The Bionic Woman.”
His other credits as an executive producer include a short-lived television revival of “The Quiz Kids” in 1981; “The Jesse Owens Story,” a 1984 TV movie starring Dorian Harewood; and, with Steven Spielberg, “Invasion America,” a 1998 animated science-fiction series.
Mr. Bennett, who moved to Oregon after retiring from Hollywood, was divorced three times. Survivors include his fourth wife, Jani, and four children from previous marriages: a son, Christopher, and three daughters, Susan Bennett, Callie Bennett and Samantha Bennett-Stephenson.
In an interview with The Times in 1980, Mr. Bennett was philosophical about his formative years as a Quiz Kid.
“Over the long run,” he said, “the fame and success, I believe, had a totally positive effect on me. But I went through a period of several years after leaving the show when I suppose I was experiencing a classic letdown, like a lot of child actors, who have achieved too much, too soon.”

Saturday, March 14, 2015

A00078 - Robert Benmosche, Rescuer of A. I. G. After Bailout

Continue reading the main storyVideo
PLAY VIDEO|3:59

DealBook Portraits: Robert H. Benmosche

DealBook Portraits: Robert H. Benmosche

Robert H. Benmosche, the president and chief executive officer of American International Group, left retirement to take the helm of the troubled company. He reflects on his unlikely path to the top.
 Video by Mac William Bishop on Publish DateAugust 27, 2012. Photo by Doug Mills/The New York Times.
Robert H. Benmosche, a former MetLife chairman who engineered one of the greatest financial turnarounds in American corporate history when he took charge of the failed industry giant American International Group and restored it to health after it had been rescued by American taxpayers in a $182 billion bailout, died on Friday in Manhattan. He was 70.
His death, at NYU Langone Medical Center, was announced by A.I.G. The company said in 2010 that he had lung cancer. After the prognosis worsened in August, he was succeeded by Peter D. Hancock on Sept. 1.
Mr. Benmosche’s salvage operation began on a sunny afternoon in Croatia in July 2009. He was enjoying another day of retirement at his home on the outskirts of Dubrovnik, with the Adriatic Sea spread out before him and his vineyard in back, when he received a desperate phone call from New York. It was the executive search committee for A.I.G.’s board.
Once the largest insurance company in the world, A.I.G. became the worst casualty of the global financial crisis of 2008. It was labeled “the most hated company in America” after the bailout.
The search committee was calling Mr. Benmosche (pronounced ben-moh-SHAY), the former chairman and chief executive of another insurance giant, Metropolitan Life, to entreat him to come out of retirement and take the helm of A.I.G.
“My first response to them was, ‘You must think I’m crazy,’ ” Mr. Benmosche recalled in a 2012 interview. “But then I thought about it and said to myself, ‘You know, they’re right — the financial industry is in chaos, and I’ve got the skills.’ ”
The drama and self-regard were typical of Mr. Benmosche, a larger-than-life executive who was also an imposing physical presence at 6-foot-4. Not only did he restore A.I.G. to health by 2012, but he also repaid its entire debt to the American taxpayers and returned $22 billion in profit to them as well.
When he took over A.I.G., it was teetering on catastrophe after dominating global insurance for decades under its legendary chairman, Maurice Greenberg, known as Hank. Expanding beyond conventional property, casualty and life insurance, A.I.G. had plunged into esoteric financial products, most of them linked to mortgage-backed securities.
By 2007, it had built up a $500 billion portfolio of so-called credit-default swaps, which were supposed to insure the mortgage-backed securities of banks, pension funds and other insurers. Many of these mortgages were made to homeowners and businesses that could not afford them. When the mortgages went into default, the market in mortgage-backed securities collapsed, leaving A.I.G. with staggering insurance obligations that it could not cover.
But because A.I.G.’s demise would have toppled financial pillars worldwide and erased the assets held by pension funds for ordinary retirees, President George W. Bush and Congress felt obliged to save the company with the $182 billion bailout — in effect, nationalizing it.
A.I.G. further enraged Washington and the public by insisting on handing out $165 million in executive bonuses. The wrath was strikingly nonpartisan.
“How do they justify this outrage to the taxpayers who are keeping the company afloat?” President Obama, newly elected, asked. Senator Charles E. Grassley, an Iowa Republican, suggested that A.I.G. senior executives “resign or commit suicide.”
It was during this furor that Mr. Benmosche arrived in New York in August 2009 to take over the leadership of A.I.G. He was not an instant hit in Washington or on Wall Street. He demanded from A.I.G.’s board — which included representatives of the Treasury Department and the Federal Reserve Bank of New York — that he be permitted to keep his 500,000 MetLife shares, with options for 2.1 million more, although holding a stake in a rival insurer raised a potential conflict of interest. The board agreed. It also gave Mr. Benmosche use of a private plane.
In pep talks to thousands of A.I.G. employees, Mr. Benmosche vowed to fight the company’s critics in Congress — to tell them “to stick it where the sun don’t shine.” He later said his irascibility was part of a strategy to lift company morale.
Even government officials who cringed at Mr. Benmosche’s pugnacity agreed that it had motivated his employees.
“He got folks to realize that it’s not ‘Woe is me, I’m A.I.G.,’ but rather, ‘We’re here to stay and we’re going to make it through this very difficult time,’ ” Sarah Dahlgren, the New York Fed representative on an A.I.G. monitoring team, said in a 2012 interview with Institutional Investor.
Mr. Benmosche put in place a strategy to slim down A.I.G.’s bloated balance sheet and to raise profitability with new technology. Only three years after joining A.I.G., he cut its more than $1 trillion in assets in half and reduced its job rolls by 40,000 people, to 57,000.
In addition to cutting costs and losses, Mr. Benmosche encouraged his managers to make more use of A.I.G.’s vast database and advanced analytic tools to design and market more profitable insurance products. By the end of 2012, A.I.G. had again become the biggest, most valuable insurer in the United States. His survivors include his wife, Denise; two daughters, Nehama and Beth; a son, Ari; six grandchildren; and three siblings, Judith, Jayne and Michael. 
Robert Herman Benmosche was born on May 29, 1944, in Brooklyn, the grandson of a rabbi who moved to the United States from Lithuania a half-century before. The family moved to Monticello, N.Y., where young Bob’s father owned an unsuccessful motel in the Catskills. As a strapping teenager, Mr. Benmosche became a truck driver for Coca-Cola to pay his way through Alfred University, where he earned a degree in mathematics. He served in South Korea as a lieutenant in the Army Signal Corps.
After military service and several positions at a management consultancy, Mr. Benmosche joined Paine Webber, a brokerage firm, where he remained for 14 years. In 1995, he became a senior executive at the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company. Three years later, he was named MetLife chairman and chief executive. By then he already had a reputation for undiplomatic frankness.
“He spoke very candidly about everything,” recalled Helene Kaplan, a former director at MetLife. “He always says what’s on his mind, regardless of the impact.”