The stunning Lt. Uhura will take her final flight into the deep cosmos.
Nichelle Nichols, a “Star Trek” pioneer, passed away on July 30 at 89. The beloved actress died of heart failure, BLACK ENTERPRISE previously reported.
Though transitioned, Nichols’ ashes and DNA sample are set to embark on a “once-in-a-lifetime” memorial spaceflight organized by the Houston-based spaceflight company Celestis Inc,
KTLA reported.Known as the Enterprise Flight, the Celestis mission will launch Nichols and other members of Star Trek’s first family “on an endless journey in interplanetary space,” per the company press release.
“Launching later this year on board United Launch Alliance’s aptly named Vulcan rocket, along with other participants, Nichols will be joining ‘Star Trek’ creator Gene Roddenberry, his wife and ‘First Lady of Star Trek’
Majel Barrett Roddenberry, beloved ‘Star Trek’ actor James’ Scotty’ Doohan, and VFX maestro and Hollywood icon Douglas Trumbull, among others, making this a once-in-a-lifetime ‘Star Trek’ Reunion flight,” Celestis announced, according to KTLA.Nichols’ son, Kyle Johnson, contributed his DNA to the mission after Celestis co-founder Charles Chafer approached him with the idea to honor his late mother.
“I was kind of in a state of shock, alternately crying my eyes out or feeling kind of numb,” Johnson said. “And then we were contacted by Charlie and the crew, and informed of this and invited to participate. The timing could not have been better, and it was a really amazing thing to contemplate.”
Nichols earned her fame
and glory as Uhura, the Starship Enterprise’s translator and communications officer. She was crowned as one of the first leading recurring Black female characters on U.S. television and notably made history for sharing television’s first interracial kiss.After her Star Trek days, Nichols’ championed for women and minorities to join NASA and apply for astronaut duty, a longtime effort that will continue to inspire generations.
“Nichelle’s advocacy transcended television and transformed NASA,” NASA Administrator Bill Nelson said, per the news outlet.
“After Apollo 11, Nichelle made it her mission to inspire women and people of color to join this agency, change the face of STEM and explore the cosmos. Nichelle’s mission is NASA’s mission. Today, as we work to send the first woman and first person of color to the Moon under Artemis, NASA is guided by the legacy of Nichelle Nichols.”