Celia Lovsky
Celia Lovsky (21 February 1897–12 October 1979; age 82) was the Austrian actress who played T'Pau in the Star Trek: The Original Series second season episode "Amok Time". Lovsky filmed her scenes between Wednesday 14 June 1967 and Monday 19 June 1967 at Desilu Stage 10.
Life and career
Lovsky was born Cäcilia Josefina Lvovsky in Vienna on February 21, 1897. Her father was a classical music composer, originating from what is currectly Czechia. She studied at the Austrian Royal Academy and went on to appear in stage plays in Austria and Germany until meeting her sencond husband, Hungarian actor Peter Lorre. She was instrumental in getting him cast as the child murderer in M (1931). After their divorce, she sought out theater and film roles, but was hampered by her heavy Austro-Hungarian accent. She did get a number of character and exotic roles.
She played the mother of Lon Chaney, who herself was a deaf-mute, in Man of a Thousand Faces, where she used American Sign Language. (Hollywood Speaks: Deafness and the Film Entertainment Industry, [page number? • edit] John S. Schuchman, Illini Books, 1999) Late-night viewers probably remember her in this role or as Apache Princess Saba in an obscure 1955 film, Foxfire. Both films were directed by Joseph Pevney, who recommended Lovsky for the role of T'Pau in "Amok Time" after reading Theodore Sturgeon's script. He and Leonard Nimoy agreed that Lovsky would be "perfect". (Captains' Logs: The Unauthorized Complete Trek Voyages, p. 53) Proving unable to perform the Vulcan salute naturally for "Amok Time", she manipulated the fingers of her left hand into the correct position before raising it into range of the camera (the salute is usually performed with the right hand).
She had many guest-starring television roles on such favorites as Bonanza, The Twilight Zone, and Alfred Hitchcock Presents. Lovsky and Susan Oliver appeared together in the Michael Shayne episode "The Heiress" and The Gene Krupa Story (1959). She also appeared in Soylent Green (1973), which featured Whit Bissell, Leigh Taylor-Young, Robert Ito, Roy Jenson, Meg Wyllie, and Brock Peters, and was photographed by Richard H. Kline.
Lovsky died of natural causes in Los Angeles, California, in 1979, aged 82.