Where Is William Shatner Now?

By Nick Thomas | June 9th, 2015

The pair shared on-screen time the following year when Star Trek V: The Final Frontier, was released


Still of Melanie and Bill Shatner on Star Trek V The Final Frontier - Paramount Pictures

Her father commanded a spaceship in the ’60s iconic television series Star Trek.

Two decades later, in 1988, Melanie Shatner was featured alongside her dad in an Oldsmobile TV commercial revealing her own desire to zoom around in something “space age.” But it wouldn’t be the last time father and daughter acted together.

The pair shared on-screen time the following year when Star Trek V: The Final Frontier, was released. Directed by her father, William Shatner – aka Star Trek’s Captain Kirk – Melanie can be seen wandering the Enterprise’s bridge throughout the film.

“I actually auditioned for another part, but was completely wrong for it,” recalled Melanie – now Melanie Shatner Gretsch after marrying actor Joel Gretsch in 1999. “My dad called and said I didn’t get the part but there was another small role for the captain’s yeoman if I wanted it, and I said, of course.”

It launched her somewhat short adult acting career, which included two dozen movie and television roles over the next 10 years.

“I didn’t fully enjoy acting,” she admitted. Instead, she opened Dari Boutique on Ventura Boulevard, in Studio City, Calif., 16 years ago. Stocked with cutting-edge fashions, Dari quickly became a popular destination for trendy shoppers.

Melanie says her dad wasn’t too disappointed. “He was probably relieved because acting can be a brutal profession. But really, anything I wanted to do was OK by him. He even helped by loaning me the money to get the store started.”

GREAT MEMORIES ON THE SET

Shatner agrees. “She was always the kid wearing smart clothes,” recalled Shatner, who goes by Bill, from his home in Studio City. “She just knew about style. Her sisters and all the other kids used to ask her for fashion advice.”

Although growing up with a busy, famous father had its drawbacks, Melanie gives her dad high marks as a parent. “Ever since I was born he’s been on television and his office was a movie or television set. When we were younger, he’d take one sister at a time away on location for a whole week. We all have such great memories of getting to hang out with him and watching him work.”

Shatner and his first wife were divorced in 1969, but Melanie says she and her two older sisters – Lisabeth and Leslie – remained close with their father.

“We spent the weekdays with my mother and the weekends with him. He would do whatever it took to get home to see us, even if it meant driving all night. I think that illustrates what a wonderful, committed father he was and is.”

“All divorces are traumatic,” added Shatner. “But the girls have turned out to be wonderful, smart women. Each is talented in some area – Melanie with Dari’s, Lisabeth is a lawyer, and Leslie works in advertising. We get together often as a family.”

In 2005 Melanie’s sister, Lisabeth, married Andy Clement, who says he was a little surprised when told who her father was.

“But the first time I had dinner with them all, he welcomed me into the family even though Liz and I hadn’t been dating long,” Clement recalled. “It was incredible to see someone so attached to his kids.”

Clement, who founded Creative Character Engineering in Van Nuys and whose recent movie work includes special effects for Interstellar, says he is also amazed by his father-in-law’s inventive, restless mind. “He really is a dynamo and his mind just never stops working. He always wants to get involved with a production to make it better. So many actors just turn it on when the cameras are rolling, but he’s always cranking.”

A FATHER’S ADVICE

Like most in the business, Shatner has had his share of project clunkers over the years. But, said Melanie, “working is what keeps him young, excited and creative. You’ve got to give him points for always trying something new.”

And if there’s a lesson Bill Shatner has earned in over 50 years as an actor, it’s one he willingly shares as a father.

“You can only pass on endurance,” he advised. “Everybody has to make their own mistakes and learn from them.

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