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Majel
Lee Hudec was born in Cleveland, Ohio, where she grew up. When
she was ten, she enrolled in a acting workshop. She continued
her interest in acting at Shaker Heights High School but went
to college with the intent of becoming a legal clerk. Majel
attended law school for a year, but after receiving an 'F' in
contract law, she moved to New York and landed parts in,
"Models By Season," which was staged in Boston. Then she did a
nine month run in "The Solid Gold Cadillac," which toured New
Orleans, Texas, Oklahoma and San Francisco, California.
Deciding the competition was too stiff in New York, Majel
moved to California and the Pasadena Playhouse. There she got
a role in, "All for Mary." In the late fifties, she worked in
various Paramount films, including, "Black Orchid," "A Young
as We Are," and "The Buccaneer." Then she decided that the
real progress was happening in television and that's where she
wanted to be.
After appearing in several series, like, Westinghouse
Desilu Playhouse, Window on Main Street,
Bonanza, and Pete and Gladys, she met Lucille
Ball at an acting class and was signed to a contract with
Desilu. Soon after she appeared in an episode of the Lucy
Show, called "Lucy is a Kangaroo for a Day."
In 1964, when she was no longer under exclusive contract,
Majel accepted a guest role on the new MGM series, The
Lieutenant, produced by Gene Roddenberry. Majel became
good friends with Gene and ultimately, years later, became his
wife.
Later in 1964, Roddenberry cast her in a co-starring role
in "The Cage," the pilot for his science fiction series,
Star Trek. She played 'Number One,' second in command
on a fictitious starship. However, the character's strength
and authority in the Star Trek universe was unsettling
to NBC and they ordered a second pilot made, without the
woman, Number One.
Moving on with her career, Majel began doing more guest
spots on television, such as; Dr. Kildare, 77 Sunset
Strip, The 11th Hour, and Leave it to
Beaver.
When Roddenberry sold his second Star Trek pilot to
the network, he remembered Majel's work in 'The Cage" and
hired her as Nurse
Christine Chapel. Instead of the dark-haired M. Leigh
Hudec that they had disliked in the other pilot, she now used
the name Majel Barrett and wore a blond wig as Chapel. Majel
remains the only actor to have contributed to every facet of
the Star Trek phenomenon.
In 1967 Majel appeared in "Guide for the Married Man,"
starring Walter Matthau and directed by Gene Kelly. Other
guest spots were done on, "Wackiest Ship in the Army," "Please
Don't Eat the Daisies," and "The Second Hundred Years."
On August 6, 1969, Majel married Gene Roddenberry in Japan,
in a traditional Buddhist-Shinto ceremony. On February 5th,
1974, Majel gave birth to a healthy boy, Eugene Wesley
Roddenberry, Jr., known affectionately as "Rod."
On Star Trek: The Next Generation, she created the
role of Deanna Troi's mother, Lwaxana Troi. She is loud and
bossy and as far away from Christine Chapel as anything could
be. Majel has carried that role over to Star Trek: Deep
Space Nine.
Majel owns and operates Lincoln Enterprises, a mail order
business that she and Gene started to deal with the mountain
of requests for Star Trek-related materials. Some of
her hobbies include golf, gold working, gourmet cooking and
gem cutting.
In 1991, Majel lost her husband, Gene Roddenberry, to a
debilitating illness.
Filmography
"Track of Thunder" "The Domino Principle" "Love in a
Goldfish Bowl" "The Quick and the
Dead" "Sylvia" "Westworld" "Star Trek The Motion
Picture" "Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home" "Star Trek VI:
The Undiscovered Country" "Genesis II" "Planet
Earth" "Spectre" "The Questor Tapes"
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