Arlene Martel, Spock's Bride-to-Be on 'Star Trek,' Dies at 78
She was not on the list.
The actress guest-starred on dozens of other TV shows,
including 'Twilight Zone,' 'Bewitched' and 'Hogan's Heroes,' and had a romance
with James Dean
Actress Arlene Martel, an exotic beauty who played the
prospective bride of Leonard Nimoy’s Mr. Spock in the only episode of NBC’s
Star Trek set on the planet Vulcan, has died. She was 78.
Martel died Tuesday from complications of a heart attack at
St. John’s Health Center in Santa Monica, her son, Jod Kaftan, told The
Hollywood Reporter.
In the episode “Amok Time,” which opened Star Trek’s second
season on Sept. 15, 1967, a feverish Spock is compelled to return to his home
planet, where he must “mate or die.” Martel’s character, T’Pring, was betrothed
to him as a child, and the outcome of a fight between Spock and Captain Kirk
(William Shatner) will decide whether she marries the logical first officer on
the Starship Enterprise.
“I was just so happy to be working and playing a part that
was so challenging in terms of what I had done before,” Martel said in Tom
Lisanti’s 2003 book Drive-in Dream Girls: A Galaxy of B-Movie Starlets of the
Sixties. “I had no idea it would continue to this day. Fans purchase my Star
Trek photos at conventions, where I sign autographs. I had no idea that T’Pring
would be so memorable to people.”
Said Nimoy on Twitter: “Saying goodbye to T’Pring, Arlene
Martel. A lovely talent.”
A native of the Bronx who was frequently billed as Arline
Sax, her birth name, Martel also appeared on two episodes of The Twilight Zone,
on five Hogan’s Heroes installments as French underground contact Tiger and two
on Bewitched as the scary witch Malvina.
Playing women of various nationalities and ethnicities, she
guest-starred on such shows as Death Valley Days, The Detectives, Route 66, The
Untouchables, Cheyenne, The Man From U.N.C.L.E., My Favorite Martian, The
Monkees, The Outer Limits, The Young and the Restless, Columbo, Battlestar
Galactica and Brothers & Sisters.
In the 1957 Warner Bros. documentary The James Dean Story,
directed by Robert Altman, Martel said she was romantically involved with the
actor for years. “Once I told him I loved him, but he pretended he didn’t
hear,” she says in the film. “Then he said, ‘You can’t love me. I don’t think
anyone can yet.’ ”
As a teenager, Martel was accepted into the High School for
the Performing Arts in New York City (where her classmates included future Bob
Newhart Show actress Suzanne Pleshette) and appeared on Broadway in the 1956-57
comedy Uncle Willie opposite Norman Fell.
On the big screen, Martel appeared with Rod Taylor in Hong
Kong (1961), had the lead in The Glass Cage (1964) and played a biker chick in
Angels From Hell (1968). More recently, she had a small role in Adam Shankman’s
A Walk to Remember (2002).
Martel was married three times, including to actors Boyd
Holister and Jerry Douglas, a longtime player on the CBS soap opera The Young and
the Restless.
In addition to Jod, survivors include daughter Avra Douglas,
a former assistant of Marlon Brando’s and an executor of the actor’s estate;
son Adam Palmer; and grandchildren Molly Rose and Dashiell.
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