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"He himself could be a movie-of-the-week. I can recall one day when Leonard was almost clutching his chest, and I'm saying, "I hope you DIE!""
– John S. Pike, Paramount Television Executive, on Maizlish (Chaos on the Bridge)
"David, go do it, go push that bastard out of the window, they'll give you a medal!"
– David Gerrold, Writer/Producer, thinking to himself when chancing upon Maizlish before an open window (Chaos on the Bridge)
"And honestly, who needs Klingons, Romulans, and Borg when you've got a real life villain like Leonard Maizlish?"
– Justin Olson, TrekCore Editor (5 July 2015)

Described by reference author Joel Engel as Gene Roddenberry's "point man and proxy," Leonard Murray Maizlish (7 February 19327 September 1994; age 62) had been Roddenberry's life-long attorney. Though Maizlish had been a lurking background presence throughout the entire Roddenberry-era Star Trek production history, he fully emerged into the open when Roddenberry, upon being contracted for The Next Generation, brought him along to serve "on staff" and was given his own personal office on the studio lot in February of 1987, which he moved into full-time, even though he had no official production function or any formal say in the production whatsoever. Roddenberry, still smarting over the fact that he had been removed by the studio from creative control over the Star Trek films five years earlier, was determined not to allow this to happen again, and he reasoned that he would have a better chance of accomplishing this if he had his attorney at hand at all times during the production. (Gene Roddenberry: The Myth and the Man Behind Star Trek, p. 238) "Leonard was carrying the "Wrath of Gene" for all these years," John Pike further clarified in the 2014 documentary Chaos on the Bridge, "because Gene felt he had gotten screwed on the Original Series," which had not been entirely unjustified actually. This time around however, and much to the chagrin of the studio (as evidenced by Pike's above-quoted remark), Maizlish managed to negotiate a very advantageous deal for his client.

While the subsequent events were discussed in detail in Chaos on the Bridge, it was David Gerrold who had already, for nearly a decade, vocally recounted the events in numerous publications and at several Star Trek conventions, in no uncertain terms, be they in writing and/or speech. Summarizing, Gerrold had explained, "Gene's lawyer (Leonard Maizlish) was making it impossible for anybody to do any real work. He was rewriting scripts. He was committing (Writers) Guild (of America) [WGA] violations. People were very unhappy. It was one of the worst working environments I'd ever been in. So when my contract came up for renewal, I asked Gene not to [renew it]." [1] Elaborating that Maizlish went even as far as surreptitiously rifling through the desks of writers in search of scripts he could illegally redact, (Rick Berman, well acquainted with Roddenberry's handwriting, has recalled, "Leonard Maizlish, Gene's lawyer, would hand me a script saying these were Gene notes. I'm pretty sure they were Leonard's notes." [2]), Gerrold has labeled Maizlish a "(…) scumbag of a Human being. I cannot say enough things – he was a truly evil Human being." [3] Maizlish was banned from the studio lot at the start of the second season, but he sneaked back in the evenings to continue his illicit practices. Nonetheless, Cinefantastique reporter Mark Dawidziak was able to divulge Maizlish's name in connection to the behind-the-scenes turmoil in his 1989 article for the magazine's Vol. 19, #3 issue (p. 27), yet was unable to get formal confirmation – not even from Gerrold himself – as the issue was at that point under advisement of the WGA.

Since he was, for nearly a decade, virtually the sole, highly critical voice on these events, some of the more purist elements of Star Trek fandom have been skeptical of Gerrold's sincerity on several internet blogs, among others those of TrekMovie.com and TrekBBS.com, interpreting these as being personally motivated, and some even confusing them with Gerrold harboring resentment against Roddenberry himself. Gerrold had, indeed, had some issues with Roddenberry that had stemmed from the Original Series days; however, those issues had since then long been resolved. But they were correct in their assessment that there was also a personal element involved, which stemmed from Gerrold's script draft for the ultimately unrealized episode "Blood and Fire," an allegory on AIDS that featured gay characters. Much to the dismay of the gay community, Star Trek had until then shied away from gay issues (in all honesty, mirroring the prevalent attitude towards gay issues in American society at the time), [4] something Gerrold tried to redress with this episode, with the implicit backing of Roddenberry. According to Gerrold: "So now Gene and I appeared at a Star Trek convention in November of 1986 and somebody asked "will there be gay people aboard the Enterprise?" And Gene – to give him credit for knowing the right thing to say at the right time – said, "Yes, it is time, we should show gay people on board the Enterprise." This got a lot of applause." Yet Roddenberry backtracked on his promise, likely persuaded to do so by the studio in the arguable guise of "raging homophobe" Rick Berman, as per Gerrold. [5] Unfortunately, however, Roddenberry had a well-known character flaw of being absolutely unable to be the bearer of any bad news, and instead he dispatched Maizlish to deliver the decision to Gerrold. This Maizlish did in a particularly vulgar manner, as recounted by Gerrold: "The last time I saw [Maizlish] I was helping Herb Wright [remark: who had tried to tone down the script into the equally unrealized "Blood and Ice" variant, under strict instructions from Maizlish not to let Gerrold work on the script, only to become another victim of Maizlish] pack up his office. The lawyer came to make sure we weren't stealing anything. To my face, he called me "an AIDS-infected cocksucker. A fucking faggot."" ([6]; Gene Roddenberry: The Myth and the Man Behind Star Trek, p. 249)

It was not the only time that Maizlish spoke in harsh terms to or of Gerrold, and the latter, shortly after he had left the production, decided to fight fire with fire by seeking out legal counsel of his own: "Later, I found out that Maizlish was telling people what a troublemaker I was, that I'd been fired because I was mentally ill, that I never did anything useful for the show – real character assassination of the worst sort. So my lawyer called him up and said, "You keep talking and we're going to own your car, your house, your dog, etc.", and that shut him up real fast. Maizlish was a disgraceful man. Fortunately, my lawyer was a Hollywood heavyweight, and when he said, "Hmmm," that was a very expensive "Hmmm," especially to the target." [7] Maizlish's remarks to and of Gerrold were indicative of a very boorish nature, which was to an extent corroborated by author Engel, when describing Maizlish's presence on the production, "[Maizlish had] become Roddenberry's point man and proxy, often writing memos on scripts and outlines, and sitting in on most story meetings, often without Roddenberry. He once fell asleep during a casting session, snoring loudly as an actress auditioned for her part. Sometimes he attempted to rewrite scripts. He worked on Michael Michaelian's "Too Short A Season", Roddenberry admitted to [Robert] Lewin [remark: who incidentally, was hired by Maizlish personally without studio consent, as Hurley was – which however, backfired, as Roddenberry himself clashed violently with Hurley later on – and both promoted by him above the Original Series writing staff], "just to help my thinking on it." Inasmuch as Maizlish was a lawyer, not a writer or producer – or even on staff in any official capacity – this was a contravention of Writers Guild rules." (Gene Roddenberry: The Myth and the Man Behind Star Trek, p. 238)

The uncouth act by Maizlich of falling asleep during a casting session was, as a matter of fact, witnessed by Producer Robert H. Justman, and it marked the only time that he actually had any words with Roddenberry, with whom he had otherwise had a warm and close personal relationship, hastening his decision to leave the production: "One day, I drove over to his house after Leonard Maizlish fell asleep in the middle of a casting session, right in full view of the actor who was reading for us. I was furious, and stopped the casting session, jumped in my car and rode over to Gene's house and screamed at him. It wasn't long after that I decided, "Wait a second, I can't let this happen!" I knew the show was going to be successful, it was a terrific show, but I was lucky that I didn't have to remain at work there. I gave away a lot of money by not coming back, but I think I also kept some hold of what little sanity remains to me, and physically, it was my salvation. I just decided to be happier and have less." (Star Trek Magazine Special 2014, p. 20)

Yet what many Gerrold detractors had overlooked, however, was that Justman himself had already confirmed Maizlish's detrimental influence to a large extent in his own 1996 reference book, Inside Star Trek: The Real Story, having called his creative meddling "destructive" and also being the prime responsible agent for the earliest departure of one of the most important production staffers, Post-Production Producer Edward K. Milkis, which, however, opened up the way for Rick Berman and, more specifically, Peter Lauritson. (1997, pp. 433-434) Just prior to the publication of the book, Justman had already delved into that in somewhat more detail in a magazine interview:

"Well, Maizlish made my life hell. My deal was for a year with a year's pick-up. but by the time I was halfway through the first season. I knew I didn't want to do a second season. I spent half my days being angry at Gene's lawyer. I felt I could have stayed, but with him riding shotgun, filling in for Gene, or so he thought. I felt that I didn't need that kind of grief. He was getting in my way and causing me big problems. My blood pressure rose suddenly – I've always had a great heart – and I decided I didn't want to do it anymore.

"So, well before the end of the season, I had my agent go up and say, "Hey, let him out [of his contract]." I made the offer where I would finish the season's last eight shows on more of a consultant basis, where I would just do the casting and story and editing. And all the other stuff would be left to someone else – Rick Berman and David Livingston. And I voluntarily took a cut in pay, half of what I was making. We finished out the season, the last eight shows, I finished my editing chores on them and that was it.

"(…) By that time, David was gone from the show, as was Dorothy, and they were very angry. I don't know what the heck went on between David and Gene and Dorothy and Gene, but it was evidently something. Other people had since come and gone, too. What was going on? I don't know. All I know is there was a lot of backbiting and crazy politicking going on over there; but very little of it touched me.

"Long before I left the show, Leonard Maizlish came to me and said, "I want you to know, Bob" – this is practically an exact quote – "that Gene and I appreciate all you've done creatively for Star Trek: The Next Generation, and we're going to see to it that you get a small piece of the show." I said, "Oh, great!" And he said, "However, it'll have to wait until Eileen Roddenberry's lawsuit [regarding how much eventual Trek profit was owed to her under the couple's divorce] is over, to see exactly what the piece would be." Well, as far as I know, the lawsuit is still continuing, Maizlish died some years after that and I'm still waiting for that piece. Know what? I don't think I'm going to get it!" (Starlog, issue 228, pp. 58-59)

Staunch Roddenberry supporter Dorothy Fontana had remained silent throughout the years on what exactly transpired during this period until Chaos on the Bridge, in which she revealed that she caught Maizlish red-handed one evening in the act of rifling through her office. "Nobody liked him," she stated, immediately adding, "In particular, I didn't like him." Richard Arnold added on the same occasion, "I think he thought he was speaking with Gene's voice, but I think Gene never heard the way he spoke to other people. Gene had these wonderful relationships with people who worked with him on the Original Series, like Dorothy Fontana, and Leonard was horrible to Dorothy." Regardless of whether Maizlish truly had his ailing client's interests at heart by over-zealously playing upon his client's increasing paranoia of being removed from creative control, he had done him a great disfavor, as the departure of the Original Series veterans had a profound effect on Roddenberry, according to Gerrold: "Gene was crying because all of his friends were gone. It was because Maizlish chased them away." It confirmed Arnold's assessment that the most vicious clashes had been with Maizlish, not with Roddenberry in person. [8] Considering the deep emotional attachment Roddenberry had for his Original Series friends, who were the very first staffers he had brought in to form the original production nucleus for The Next Generation in October of 1986, this made Maizlish's attitude towards Gerrold, Fontana, Justman, and Milkis all the more inexplicable. The now isolated and friendless Roddenberry was subsequently left dangerously exposed to studio politics, at which he was notoriously inept; he never fully recovered personally or professionally, and the stress from that bereavement could easily have hastened his 1991 death from cardiac problems. Maizlish was, after another series of clashes with the subsequent writing staff, definitively removed from the production at the end of the second season, as Roddenberry was from creative control due to his failing health. "Gene didn't like Rick [Berman] at all. But Rick was installed on the show by the studio as a way to keep a control on the show… to keep the budgets in line, make sure that the scripts were done. Ultimately, Berman ended up in control rather than Maizlish because Berman played the politics of the studio more effectively," Gerrold concluded – and this was unsurprising, as Berman was already a seasoned tenured studio executive at the time, something Maizlish was most definitely not. [9]

Still, for all the vilification, what Maizlish had brought to the table was not entirely all bad. Rick Berman has credited him with suggesting actor John de Lancie for the part of Q, who went on to become one of the most popular recurrent characters on The Next Generation, in no small measure due to the way de Lancie portrayed his character. (Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion (3rd ed., p. 25)) And indeed, de Lancie himself has always remained grateful to Maizlich for his intervention on his behalf. (The Center Seat: "Queue for Q") Concurrently, it was Maizlish who convinced Roddenberry to keep the name Data, as was begrudgingly conceded by Gerrold, and who himself had opposed the name. [10] And even his illegitimate hiring of Maurice Hurley, the detrimental effect it had on Roddenberry notwithstanding, eventually resulted in the acclaimed episode "Q Who" This had the effect of introducing the hugely popular villains, the Borg. Berman himself, incidentally, has stated that it had been Maizlish who persuaded him to leave the executive position he held at Paramount in order to assume the producer role on The Next Generation, adding that the lawyer had taken a personal liking to him. (Stardate Revisited: The Origin of Star Trek - The Next Generation)

Though Maizlish was loathed, reviled, and universally held responsible for the departure of all Original Series veterans, Chaos on the Bridge marked the first time that both Justman's and Gerrold's accounts of Maizlish's machinations were corroborated by a wider range of former The Next Generation production staffers, ranging from studio executive, through producers, to writing staff.

Career[]

Maizlish being typified as a "scumbag" by Gerrold was not entirely unfounded, as he was already, in 1964, under investigation by the Securities And Exchange Commission (SEC) for "(…) filing contained material misrepresentations and omissions which he reasonably should have known were false and misleading concerning interim loans and losses affecting the financial condition of the company [remark: Casa Electronics Corporation] and the use of proceeds from the public offering." Sensing the writing on the wall, Maizlish recused himself on 23 November 1964, effectively disbarring himself from litigating before the SEC, to avoid legal punitive measures. [11] Nevertheless, he was readmitted to litigate before the SEC on 10 June 1965. [12]

Hailing from the East Coast, Maizlish started his lifelong association with Gene Roddenberry when the latter incorporated his production company, Norway Corporation, Inc., on 13 February 1959, [13] through which Roddenberry handled his business dealings with the motion picture industry. Maizlish was hired to look after the legal aspects of Roddenberry's dealings, and his presence was already felt during the production of the Original Series, as Roddenberry habitually forwarded a copy of internal studio memos to him when communicating with the upper echelons of the studio and/or network. (Inside Star Trek: The Real Story; Star Trek Phase II: The Lost Series)

Actually, the first recorded "victim" of Roddenberry's and Maizlish's legal machinations fell during the production of the second season of the series. Finding himself on the receiving end was series theme composer Alexander Courage. As related by Herb Solow: "When Sandy Courage was given his contract to write the Star Trek music, he was unaware of a two-sentence clause toward the end of the agreement. Thinking it was more of the usual boilerplate, Sandy signed the agreement without reading it fully. The clause, inserted by Gene's attorney, Leonard Maizlish, gave Gene the right to write lyrics to Courage's theme [remark: which he did, but which have never been featured for the very simple reason that they were bad, as Roddenberry had no musical skills whatsoever]. Almost two years later, after NBC put Star Trek on its schedule, Sandy received a call from Leonard Maizlish: "Listen, from now on we will be collecting one-half of your royalties." Sandy, confused as to how this could happen, spoke to Desilu Music Department head Wilbur Hatch and Desilu attorney Ed Perlstein. "They told me there was nothing that could be done, legally," said Sandy, and when he questioned Roddenberry, Gene explained, "Hey, I have to get some money somewhere. I'm sure not going to get it out of the profits of Star Trek." A livid Courage left the production immediately, never to return let alone for two third-season episode scores as a courtesy to Justman. In his twilight years, however, Courage, who had mellowed over those years, left the blame squarely on Maizlish's shoulders: "There wasn't any rift, really, with Gene. What happened with Gene was a I got a phone call once… it was Gene's lawyer, [Leonard] Maizlish. He said, "I'm calling you to tell you that since you signed a piece of paper back there saying that if Gene ever wrote a lyric to your theme that he would split your royalties on the theme." Gene and I weren't enemies in any sort of way. It was just one of those things… I think it was Maizlish, probably, who put him up to doing it that way, and it's a shame, because actually if he'd written a decent lyric we could have both made more money." [14]

The duo had concurrently tried to do something similar with Leonard Nimoy's first vinyl album recording, Mr. Spock's Music From Outer Space, which marked the beginning of the descent into animosity of the relationship, which had started amicably enough at the beginning of the series, between Roddenberry and Nimoy. (Inside Star Trek: The Real Story, 1997, p. 185) Nimoy, however, retaliated in 1991, when he torpedoed the publication of the reference book, Star Trek: The First 25 Years, and for which Roddenberry was to have received a co-author credit. Fully aware that his legal consent – which Nimoy had only secured in March of 1978 after a long and bitter fight with Paramount Pictures and Roddenberry himself (see: Star Trek: The Motion Picture production history) – was needed for the celebratory book, he was purposely late in signing off on photos of him in the book, and subsequently wanted editorial changes made to the text of the book. A closed-door meeting was held with Roddenberry, Maizlish, Nimoy, and his attorney, but that closed-door meeting excluded co-author Susan Sackett, who was afterwards informed by Maizlish "that the book was on hold because Leonard Nimoy didn't think the prose 'lofty enough,' as Maizlish had put it, and wanted it more in the style of someone like Bill Moyers." Nimoy was far from being of a mind to further contribute to what former Desilu executive Herb Solow had dubbed "The Roddenberry Myth," or his coffers for that matter. (Inside Trek: My Secret Life with Star Trek Creator Gene Roddenberry, p. 181) Nimoy had actually waited for the latest possible moment in time to torpedo the book, as it was already geared for general dissemination.

Maizlish played an equally dubious legal role when he agreed, in 1967, to become party to the deception surrounding the foundation of Lincoln Enterprises (now "Roddenberry Store"), the Star Trek memorabilia sales company of Roddenberry and his soon-to-be wife Majel Barrett. Roddenberry wanted to hide his legal footprints in order to obscure the questionable origins of some of his early production-used Star Trek merchandise, as well as to hide the proceeds from these sales from his then still-wife, Eileen. By transferring legal title to his attorney (who, when legally registering the company, had somehow managed to antedate the company's establishing date to 6 April 1962 – hence Barrett's below-mentioned "has been in existence for probably almost a hundred years" remark – in the process also changing the original, short-lived company name "Star Trek Enterprises" into the new one [15]), Roddenberry had thrown up a smokescreen if the studio ever decided to pursue the matter legally, which it never did. Barrett-Roddenberry herself had actually admitted to this state of affairs, even though somewhat indirectly, when she later elaborated in a 1993 interview, with contradictory half-truths interlaced: "Lincoln has been in existence for probably almost a hundred years. It was originally Lincoln Publishing and it was owned by another gentleman many, many years before. His attorney was Leonard Maislich [sic.]. For some reason or another he gave the incorporation to Leonard. I don't know how it basically happened, but it really belonged to Leonard Maislich until he gave it to me in the early eighties. It [Lincoln] was merely set up for Gene to handle fan mail for Star Trek.'" (Strange New Worlds magazine, issue 10, Oct/Nov 1993) Unsurprisingly, perhaps, and not entirely unjustified as the original Roddenberry couple was still legally married at the time of the incorporation of Lincoln Enterprises, Eileen found out later, and sued all involved parties for damages, resulting in Maizlish, this time, actually being found guilty of "conspiracy to commit fraud" for his part in the deception, though it assessed no punitive damages against him. Incidentally, an unintended victim of Maizlish was Roddenberry's accountant, Morton Kessler, who had not been involved with the original deception. However, he became implicated when, in good faith, he attached his name to the obligatory registration renewals, and he therefore decided to settle out-of-court with Eileen. [16] It was for this reason that Maizlish has sometimes been referred to as Roddenberry's "business partner" in various reference works, among others by Justman in his book, Inside Star Trek: The Real Story.

After the Original Series had been canceled, Maizlish became the legal keeper of "The Roddenberry Myth", which his client had began to spin around his person, already during the third season of the Original Series and as observed by Herb Solow. To this end, every single piece of copy or film dealing with Roddenberry and intended for publication be it in print – such as the above-mentioned Star Trek: The First 25 Years – or on film, had to go through Maizlish's office (located at 9255 W Sunset Blvd Los Angeles and heading a staff of two at the time [17]), to be signed off on by him personally. These even included the pieces written or edited by Roddenberry's personal assistant, the aforementioned Susan Sackett, who had faithfully and unwaveringly stood by her employer for decades. [18] And indeed, it turned out that dealing with Maizlish had been a heavy burden for Sackett as well, as she has related in her 2002 book, Inside Trek: My Secret Life with Star Trek Creator Gene Roddenberry, having called him an "unsavory character" in Chaos on the Bridge.

It was not only the Next Generation staff whom Maizlish managed to antagonize to no end; after he had been removed from the television production, it became movie director Nicholas Meyer who had his blood pressure raised by Maizlish when he was summoned to a meeting with Roddenberry over perceived racism exhibited in Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country (even though Roddenberry still had no creative say in that movie as well, and which went into pre-production during The Next Generation's third season) in regard to the Klingons. A very charged meeting followed, as Meyer was by no means a man to be outdone by the likes of Maizlish, which Meyer in later years came to regret: "His guys were lined up on one side of the room, and my guys were lined up on the other side of the room, and this was not a meeting in which I felt I'd behaved very well, very diplomatically. I came out of it feeling not very good, and I've not felt good about it ever since. He was not well, [remark: an ailing Roddenberry would indeed die only a short time later] and maybe there were more tactful ways of dealing with it, because at the end of the day, I was going to go out and make the movie. I didn't have to take him on. Not my finest hour." [19]

On 22 October 1991, Roddenberry was present at the avant-premiere screening of the nearly finished The Undiscovered Country, giving the assembly a thumbs up when he was wheeled back to his office. True to form, once there, he immediately instructed Maizlish to start legal actions against Leonard Nimoy and Nicholas Meyer at once to have fifteen minutes of the more militaristic aspects cut from the movie. But two days later, Maizlish's client was dead, and the Star Trek production staff was spared again having to deal with Maizlish himself, whom they had, only two years earlier, managed to expel. (Star Trek Movie Memories, 1995, p. 394)

As already touched upon by Robert Justman above, Maizlish had, aside from having presided over all Roddenberry's studio contract negotiations, also represented him during his original, bitter divorce proceedings from his first wife, Eileen, as well as all the subsequent, incessant alimony hearings which harassed Roddenberry until his dying day. [20]

Shortly after Roddenberry's death, Maizlish himself was struck with physical infirmity, and he survived his most famous client by only three years. (Inside Star Trek: The Real Story, 1997, p. 442) At the time of his own death, Maizlish was 62 years of age.

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