Shatner on Takei: "Psychotic" and "Sick"

Kevin

Code Monkey
Staff member
William "Capt. James T. Kirk" Shatner has always been known to have a bit of an ego but his response to not being invited to George Takei's civil marriage is just downright vile & mean. :eek:

From the UK's Daily Mail:
'Star Trek' icon William Shatner has branded former co-star George Takei 'sick' and 'psychotic' and claims he feels 'nothing but pity for him' in an astonishing attack.

In an internet video clip, the ex-Captain Kirk actor says nobody cared when gay Takei finally came out in 2005.

And he belittles Takei's role as Mr Sulu in the cult sci-fi series, claiming he barely knew him because he was only ever on set for a couple of days.

Shatner hit back after Takei deliberately made a point of not inviting him to his gay wedding last month.

Takei has admitted holding a long-standing grudge against Shatner for , in his opinion, having a huge ego and hogging the limelight on Star Trek.

Shatner says in the video: 'The whole thing makes me feel badly, poor man. There is such a sickness there.

'It's so patently obvious that there is a psychosis there. I don't know what his original thing about me was. I have no idea.

'I didn't read his book that was printed many years ago, but apparently I didn't let somebody have a close-up. I literally don't know him.

'I didn't know him very well on the series. He would come in for a day or two, as evidenced by the part he played. Then on the movies, there occasionally. I didn't know the man.

'But he has continued to speak badly about me for all these years. Obviously, hiding his homosexuality - talk about festering and not living the truth of your life and feeling badly about yourself - and being fearful somebody would find out about this terrible, terrible secret, so he thought.

'Finally at the age of, I think, 70, he decides to come out of the closet and say, "I'm gay."

'Like, who cares? Be gay. Don't be gay. That's up to you George.'

Shatner says he is baffled at why Takei has continued to hold a grudge against him.

He says: 'You would think there would be an epiphany at some point, where George might have said, "Poor Bill Shatner. He's such a lonely, desperate, unhappy man that he did all these terrible things to me."

'Which I can't remember. I presume he can remember all these terrible thing I must have done when I said, "Hello" or something to him.

'You would think he had this epiphany and say - because he and I don't have many years left in this world - "I wish him well. I'm so happy that I wish him well."

'But instead what he does is he makes this big deal about not inviting me to his wedding.

'If I was such a terrible force in his life - even some 40-odd years later, because I've not seen him - that I effect his marriage where he has to isolate it, what kind of sickness is going on in the man?'

Shatner, whose video appears on his YouTube page theshatnerproject.com, adds: 'There must be something else inside of George that is festering and makes him so unhappy that he takes it out on me - in effect a total stranger.

'Why would he go out of his way to denegrate me? It's sad that the man can't find enough peace in his life to either say "Be positive" and say "I forgive him, whatever those hurts were", or to shut up about it.

'It's sad. I feel nothing but pity for him.'
 
Takei Takes a Swat at Shatner's YouTube 'Silliness'

Takei Takes a Swat at Shatner's YouTube 'Silliness'

Wired said:
Star Trek actor George Takei describes as "silliness" William Shatner's recent YouTube clip claiming a snub over a wedding invitation.

"It is absolutely baffling to us, because, in fact, we did invite Bill, and we didn't hear from him," Takei told Entertainment Tonight.

Shatner claimed in his homemade video that Takei (pictured) and his longtime partner had failed to invite him to their wedding. Shatner also theorized that Takei is suffering from some kind of "psychosis" (but in a nice way).


Takei, who portrayed Sulu in the '60s television series as well as several Trek movies, said Shatner, who played Captain James T. Kirk, avoided many opportunities to get together with former inhabitants of the Enterprise bridge, even skipping the funeral of series creator Gene Roddenberry.

Chalk it up to Shatner's egomania and questionable stability, said Takei.


"Bill is the star of the show, and he likes to be the star of the show," Takei said. "He likes the attention.... It's a big, shining, demanding ego.... It's all typical of Bill. You have to consider the source."

[via The Dish Rag]

Photo: Diane Krauss/Wikipedia

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(Via Wired)
 
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