Kirstie Aℓℓey was born January 12, 1951 in Wichita, Kansas. Her career breakthrough came when she ℓanded her feature-fiℓm debut in Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan (1982). She foℓℓowed the part with a major roℓe in the TV miniseries North and South. But it wasn't untiℓ she was seℓected to repℓace Sheℓℓy Long in the popuℓar sitcom Cheers in the ℓate 1980s that her rise to stardom began. » When I pℓay baℓℓ I pℓay hardbaℓℓ. I'm just a crazy fangirℓ who happens to be madℓy in ℓove with this briℓℓiant woman ❧
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How can somebody as beautiful as I am be such a loser?
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I don’t completely understand this photo but I love it. Bill Shatner miming being stabbed by De Kelley as Kirstie Alley and Merritt Butrick watch and enjoy some cake. Oh and a disco ball in the background.
It was likely (not certain) a birthday party for someone during filming of the Genesis cave scenes judging by the away mission jacket Alley is wearing. (Both Alley & Kelley had birthdays during filming.)
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Women of Scream Queens ➝ Ingrid Hoffel
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A video capture from behind the scenes footage of Star Trek II. I have no context for the shirt, but it’s been said that Kirstie Alley was so fond of the ears that she slept in them.
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Kirstie Alley in Starlog Magazine, June 1982:
“When I was a little kid I used to watch Star Trek on TV. Every week, every episode, I’d sit there thinking, ‘I should play Spock’s daughter.’ I mean, I could arch my eyebrows as good as Leonard Nimoy! Get 'em waaaay up there. Whenever I’d watch the show I’d write dialogue for myself so I could actually take part in the story. When Leonard said a line I’d respond.
"When my manager told me about this part, I thought, 'Perfect! It’s not Spock’s daughter but it’s pretty close.’”
And this was an interesting observation on the challenge of portraying an emotionless female and worrying how the audience might react:
“The most difficult aspect of the job was developing Saavik in a believable, acceptable way. With a man, it’s easier to adapt to an emotionless personality than it is with a woman. When you’re trying to show no emotion as a woman, you can come off as being cold and unlikeable if you’re not careful. It was hard to be unemotional and yet remain feminine.”
This made me think about how we tend to think of women as more emotional and men as more rational/logical, which means it’s easier to accept men in a range of roles, but also makes it harder for men in real life to express a full range of emotions for fear of it seeming “unmanly” .
For women, that assumption of women=emotion/men=reason is a lose-lose - if you’re emotional you ’re irrational or overly sensitive, but if you’re unemotional you’re “cold and unlikeable” or “unfeminine”. I think that overall issue persists in society, even though characters like Saavik and T'Pol and other women Trek characters like B'Elanna, Dax and Janeway, help us challenge that underlying assumption.
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ALICIA’S ENDLESS LIST OF FAVORITE MOVIES → Look Who’s Talking (1989)
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Polaroids of Emma and Kirstie on set.
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No matter how hard you try, you can’t close your heart forever. And the minute you open it up, you never know what’s going to come in. But when it does, you just have to go for it! Because if you don’t, there’s not point in being here.
Kirstie Alley (via quotebook-in)
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I said I think you gave me rabies!
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