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Christine Chapel | |
---|---|
Star Trek character | |
![]() Promotional image ofMajel Barrett as Christine Chapel inStar Trek: The Original Series | |
First appearance | |
Created by | Gene Roddenberry |
Portrayed by | Majel Barrett (1966–1986) Jess Bush (2022–present) |
Voiced by | Majel Barrett (Star Trek: The Animated Series) Jess Bush ("Those Old Scientists") |
In-universe information | |
Full name | Christine Chapel |
Species | Human |
Title | Nurse Doctor Commander |
Affiliation | United Federation of Planets Starfleet |
Significantothers | Roger Korby (ex-fiancé; deceased) Spock (love interest) |
Origin | Earth |
Christine Chapel is a fictional character who appears in all three seasons of the American science fiction television seriesStar Trek: The Original Series, as well asStar Trek: The Animated Series and the filmsStar Trek: The Motion Picture andStar Trek IV: The Voyage Home. Portrayed byMajel Barrett, she was the ship's nurse on board theStarfleet starshipUSSEnterprise. A younger version of Chapel appears in the 2022 seriesStar Trek: Strange New Worlds, portrayed byJess Bush.
Barrett had previously been cast under her real name asNumber One in the first pilot for the series, "The Cage", during her romantic relationship with the series creatorGene Roddenberry. But following feedback from network executives, she was not in the cast for thesecond pilot.
The character made her first appearance in "The Naked Time" following a re-write of the script by Roddenberry. He had been inspired after Barrett dyed her hair blonde for a potential role in the episode "What Are Little Girls Made Of?", which convinced him thatNBC executives might not notice if he recast Barrett as a different character inStar Trek. However, the executives immediately recognized Barrett. The character was featured in several episodes covering several broad themes, such as showing her feelings forSpock (Leonard Nimoy) and why she joinedStarfleet. By the time ofThe Motion Picture, Chapel was shown as a fully trained Starfleet doctor, and byThe Voyage Home, she was stationed at Starfleet Command.
Executive producerRobert H. Justman was initially critical of Barrett's performance as Chapel, but recanted this opinion after her appearance asLwaxana Troi in theStar Trek: The Next Generation. Barrett herself was not fond of the Chapel character, andDavid Gerrold felt that she only served to demonstrate Spock's emotionless behavior. Critics saw the character as being a degradation for Barrett compared to her first character. While the position of nurse was seen as a stereotype, the character's promotion to doctor was praised. Certain episodes featuring her were criticized, such as "Amok Time", where the plot prevented her from having a relationship with Spock, and "What Are Little Girls Made Of?", where it was suggested she was featured to the detriment of other characters. Among fans, she was initially unpopular due to her feelings for Spock, but prior to the 2009 filmStar Trek, there was a desire to see her return.
Prior to working onStar Trek,Gene Roddenberry had been developing a variety oftelevision pilots forScreen Gems. One actress he auditioned was Majel Leigh Hudec, later to use the nameMajel Barrett.[1] Later when he created the drama seriesThe Lieutenant, he cast her in the episode "In the Highest Tradition". They quickly became friends, and entered into a romantic relationship although Roddenberry was married at the time.[2][3] During the development of the first pilot forStar Trek: The Original Series ("The Cage"), Roddenberry wrote the part ofNumber One (the ship's second in command) specifically for Barrett.[1][4] There was reluctance from theNBC executives to agree to an actress who was almost unknown.[5] Roddenberry did see other actresses for the part, but no one else was considered.[4]
Executive producerHerbert Franklin Solow attempted to sell them on the idea that a fresh face would bring believability to the part, but they were aware that she was Roddenberry's girlfriend. Despite this they agreed to her casting, not wanting to upset Roddenberry at this point in the production.[5] After the pilot was rejected,[6] a second pilot was produced.[7] While it was generally explained that the network disliked a female character as the second-in-command of theEnterprise, Solow had a different opinion of events. He explained that "No one liked her acting... she was a nice woman, but the reality was, she couldn't act."[8] "Where No Man Has Gone Before" successfully tookStar Trek to a series order.[9] Barrett had been given the role of voicing the computer on theUSSEnterprise, but was demanding that Roddenberry write her into the main cast.[10]
After seeing the initial proposal for "What Are Little Girls Made Of?", Barrett felt that she could play the woman who went into space to find her fiancé. She dyed her hair blonde in an attempt to fit the role.[11] Barrett sought to surprise Roddenberry at his office, but he walked right past her, not recognizing who she was. It was only when he came back out to give his secretary some papers that he realized it was Barrett. They had the idea that it might get her past the NBC executives and back onto the show.[12] The character of Christine Ducheaux was subsequently changed to Christine Chapel by Roddenberry, as a play on theSistine Chapel. No other actresses were considered for the role.[10]
At the same time, story editorJohn D.F. Black wrote the initial script for "The Naked Time", also early in thefirst season.[13] The story featured a virus being transmitted among the ship's crew, which removed their inhibitions.[14] One element of Black's story featured the addition of a nurse in sickbay, working with DoctorLeonard McCoy.[15] Chapel was written into both these episodes by Roddenberry.[11] The deception did not work, with NBC executiveJerry Stanley commenting simply "Well, well – look who's back" to Solow.[10] Roddenberry saw to it that the character of Christine Chapel would become a recurring one throughout the series, on-par withUhura.[10] She remained unsatisfied with the role, but appreciated that since NBC had already fired her once, Roddenberry could not expand the role.[16]
ForStar Trek: The Animated Series, Barrett was initially set to reprise the role of Chapel as well as voicing Uhura. LikewiseJames Doohan was to voice both his ownScotty as well asHikaru Sulu. However, following the intervention ofLeonard Nimoy,Nichelle Nichols andGeorge Takei were both brought back to voice their own characters.[17] Barrett returned inStar Trek: The Motion Picture as Chapel, which she described as a "very minimal role",[18] saying that "If no one had called me Commander Chapel, the audience wouldn't really know that I was there."[18] Barrett said in the film franchise Chapel got lost along the way, not appearing in thesecond orthird films despite her view that she was a main character inThe Original Series. Nimoy brought back the character forStar Trek IV: The Voyage Home, and Barrett was grateful for his decision.[18] The character was subsequently mentioned in the 2009 filmStar Trek,[19] which saw the characters fromThe Original Series re-cast.[20] Chapel was one of the suggested possibilities forAlice Eve to play in the sequel,Star Trek Into Darkness.[19] It was later revealed that she was portrayingCarol Marcus.[21]
InStar Trek: Strange New Worlds the Chapel-character returned to the franchise, this time played by Australian actressJess Bush. Bush chooses not to use her native Australian accent for the performance, a choice she states that helps her get into character physically and mentally.[22]
In speaking with The Daily Beast in mid-2023 about Star Trek: Strange New Worlds' LGBTQ+ representation—and her portrayal of a bisexual character—Bush unhesitatingly told the interviewer, "I'm queer".[23] Bush said about the role: "I am so delighted that there's more representation for all expressions of sexuality and gender inStar Trek. That’s really exciting to me, and I’m really proud to be a part of that representation."[23]
In 2022 Bush was nominated for her role for aSaturn Award forBest Supporting Actress in a Streaming Series.[24]
In "What Are Little Girls Made Of?", it is explained that Chapel abandoned a career in bioresearch for a position inStarfleet. She had hoped that this would reunite her with her fiancé Dr. Roger Korby (Michael Strong), incommunicado following his expedition to the planet Exo III. Five years after Korby's disappearance, Chapel is assigned to the USSEnterprise where she serves as head nurse, working under Dr. McCoy (DeForest Kelley).[25]
While on board the ship, she begins to develop feelings forSpock (Leonard Nimoy), admitting as much in "The Naked Time". Her actions in that episode resulted in the Psi 2000 intoxication unwittingly being further spread among the crew.[26] The ship reached Exo III in "What Are Little Girls Made Of?". Captain Kirk (William Shatner) and Chapel beam down and discover Korby had been exploiting a sophisticated android manufacturing technology on the planet. After Chapel is horrified to find out that Korby had transplanted his personality into an android replica, he kills himself in despair.[25] Roddenberry later co-wrote inThe Making of Star Trek that the actions of that episode resulted in Chapel breaking her ties to Earth and devoting herself to Starfleet service.[27]
After Korby's death, Chapel doubts if she should stay aboard but elects to remain with theEnterprise throughout the five-year mission.[25] Chapel's feelings for Spock were revisited and alluded to only a few times in the series, most notably in "Plato's Stepchildren". In the episode, the Platonians telekinetically force Chapel and Spock to kiss passionately. This humiliates Chapel despite her long-standing feelings for him.[28] In the episode "Amok Time", she brings Spock some soup to help him through a sacred Vulcan ritual, thePon farr. He angrily refuses the soup and throws it at the wall, but later thanks Chapel for her thoughtfulness.[29]
Chapel appeared in two of theStar Trek films featuringThe Original Series cast. InStar Trek: The Motion Picture, Chapel had become a doctor on board theEnterprise.[18] Her second appearance was inStar Trek IV: The Voyage Home, where she andJanice Rand (Grace Lee Whitney) were stationed in Starfleet Headquarters in San Francisco.[30] In the 2009 filmStar Trek, a Nurse Chapel is mentioned by McCoy (Karl Urban). In the 2013 filmStar Trek Into Darkness, Carol Marcus (Alice Eve) tells Kirk (Chris Pine) that after being with him, Chapel left to become a nurse.[31]
Since the start of theStar Trek: Strange New World series in 2022, the Chapel character has appeared in all but one of the episodes in the first two seasons.[32]
Executive producerRobert H. Justman did not care for Chapel; he described her as a "wimpy, badly written, and ill-conceived character."[33] He added that the additional camera lenses used by directorJerry Finnerman in that episode for close-ups of her quivering lip only "served to emphasize the lack of character written into the character."[33] He had complained to Roddenberry of Barrett's acting skills, but stopped when he became aware of their relationship. It was only after Barrett's first appearance asLwaxana Troi in theStar Trek: The Next Generation episode "Haven", that he came to realize that it was the Chapel character he disliked, not Barrett herself, and told her that his opinion had changed.[33] Barrett also did not care for the character of Chapel, saying "I've never been a real aficionado of Nurse Chapel, I figured she was kind of weak and namby-pamby."[11]
WriterDavid Gerrold, who worked with the staff ofThe Original Series following his work on the episode "The Trouble with Tribbles",[34] described Chapel as being one of a second-tier set of characters including Uhura, Scotty, and Sulu, who were not given as much exposure during the series as the main characters of Kirk, Spock, and McCoy.[35] He explained that she was the only one of the second level of characters whose motivations were explored, but her primary focus on board the ship was simply to be in love with Spock. Gerrold explained that there was a need to demonstrate the "aloofness" of the Vulcan character, and so this resulted in a character whose love of him needed to be rebuffed, thus giving Chapel her purpose.[36] He suggested that this caused the fandom to dislike Chapel because "female fans saw her as a threat to their own fantasies and male fans saw her as a threat to Spock's Vulcan stoicism."[37] Gerrold added that those fans were surprised when they met Barrett atscience fiction conventions, as they found her likable in person.[37] By the time of the 2009 filmStar Trek, the character had become more popular among fans, who were asking if she would appear in the new films.[31]
In her essay "The Audience as Auteur. Women,Star Trek and 'Vidding'" in the bookGene Roddenberry's Star Trek: The Original Cast Adventures,Francesca Coppa said that she saw the switch from Number One to Chapel for Barrett as "degradation on every level: role, status and image".[38] The role was described as "consolation" in Cary O'Dell's bookJune Cleaver Was a Feminist!: Reconsidering the Female Characters of Early Television,[39] but it was felt that Barrett "made the most of it".[39] The position of a nurse was described by O'Dell as a traditional female role, but that Chapel would stand up to McCoy's orders when required.[39] Her promotion to Doctor inThe Motion Picture was praised by author Gladys L. Knight in her bookFemale Action Heroes: A Guide to Women in Comics, Video Games, Film, and Television.[40]
Reviewers were critical of her relationship with Spock, with Jan Johnson-Smith describing Chapel inAmerican Science Fiction TV as "a woman condemned to forever lust after the elusive Vulcan" and noting that she is one of several female characters in the series who are "depicted as recognizable stereotypes".[41] Coppa also discussed this, calling the character as being a typicaldamsel in distress, existing "merely to pine".[38] But the relationship was also seen positively, with Torie Atkinson, atTor.com, said of Chapel in "Amok Time" that "her affection is so transparent and sweet."[29] InThe Making of Star Trek by Roddenberry and Stephen E. Whitfield, her feelings toward Spock are said to not be unique since they are shared by many of the female crew on board theEnterprise. It is also further explained that McCoy is aware of her feelings, but displays "fatherly affection" towards her and never "chides" her for this.[27]
Her appearances in episodes were commented on, with Wei Ming Dariotis critical of the single-mindedness of the plot for "Amok Time" in not allowing Spock to have sex with Chapel, or any other woman, and thus solve the problem of his Pon farr.[42] But Eugene Myers at Tor.com praised Chapel, saying that the most interesting part of "What Are Little Girls Made Of?" was that it was based primarily on her,[25] whileKeith DeCandido said that this resulted in the episode being the "Kirk-and-Chapel show" to the detriment of the other characters.[43]
In 2016, Nurse Christine Chapel was ranked as the 60th most important character ofStarfleet within theStar Trek science fiction universe byWired magazine, out of 100 characters.[44]
Heavy described Jess Bush's latest interpretation of the character as "very different [...] fun, irreverent, and a bit of a live wire." On the difference between her own portrayal of Chapel and Barrett's Bush noted: "I think that when I watched Majel's performance, what I distilled most from that, what I took from that, was her candor and her humor and her wit. But those things were just little seedlings. In the 2021 rebirth of her, there's so much more to her, I think. [...] She's got this lust for life and this mischievous nature that I love to embody. She's been through some stuff, actually.[45]
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