Analysis: Shatner goes — boldly or otherwise — in directions skeptics couldn’t have foreseen
Although it was early in my journalistic career, I can recall coming away with two thoughts: Shatner was kidding himself if he thought he could ever step out from under the yoke of “Star Trek,” and the odds were he was unlikely to be associated with another hit of that magnitude.
As it turned out, I was right and wrong. Shatner will always be best remembered for the iconic role of Captain Kirk. But he managed to mount a third act to his career that has been truly impressive, in part by leaning into the character’s swaggering, swashbuckling image and laughing at himself.
Directing, it turned out, didn’t represent the route to Shatner’s future. His opportunity to direct the fifth “Star Trek” movie, “The Final Frontier,” was generally considered among the low points in the series.
Yet the actor pivoted thereafter into a number of shrewdly chosen vehicles, making the unlikely transition from leading man — a mantle he still bore in the 1980s series “T.J. Hooker” — to savvy second banana, with supporting roles in movies like “Miss Congeniality,” or guest-star bits such playing as the Big Giant Head in “3rd Rock From the Sun.” He also hosted the popular reality show “Rescue 911,” keeping himself in the public eye.
Shatner then parlayed a stint on “The Practice” into his Emmy-winning part on “Boston Legal” as Denny Crane, the pompous, eccentric attorney who enjoyed a good cigar and claimed never to have lost a case.
Shatner also joined in the “Star Trek” jokes, as he had on that “SNL” sketch. That included a 2006 Comedy Central roast, where he good-naturedly endured one jab after another about his overacting and more.
That set the stage for his later-in-life run, starring in the short-lived but memorably titled sitcom “$#*! My Dad Says” and continuing to work steadily, recently romancing Jean Smart in the independent comedy “Senior Moment.”
Nice try, but we all know what legendary banner Shatner is carrying with him. Yet what easily could have been his final frontier, as it turns out, was just the start of a journey that has taken him — boldly or otherwise — in directions that skeptics couldn’t have foreseen.