Legendary Star Trek actor Leonard Nimoy is being honored by his hometown of Boston with an official day being declared in his memory. According to The Boston Globe, outgoing Mayor Martin J. Walsh has designated March 26, the late actor's birthday, to be Leonard Nimoy Day. This upcoming March 26th would have been Nimoy’s 90th birthday.

Nimoy’s daughter, Julie, shared her enthusiasm for the news on Twitter by posting the official proclamation, which goes on to detail the Boston native's accomplishments and legacy. According to the proclamation, Nimoy nurtured his acting talents through the neighborhood at The Elizabeth Peabody House and The West End Boys Club. In his teenage years, Nimoy received a summer scholarship for acting lessons at Boston College, where he received an honorary degree later in his life. The proclamation goes on to say "Leonard Nimoy, through his fictional character, Mr. Spock — half-human, half-Vulcan — gave the immigrant, the refugee, and the oppressed, a hero for ‘the Outsider.'”

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Nimoy was born and raised in the West End of Boston, the son of Jewish-Ukrainian immigrants. He began his acting career in the 1950s, but it wasn’t until 1966 that Nimoy would get the role of a lifetime. Nimoy is perhaps most famous for his role as the logical half-human half-Vulcan Mr. Spock in the original Star Trek series and was the only member of the main cast to have actually appeared in the original pilot. He would go on to reprise the role in many of the subsequent films, including the 2013 J.J. Abrams reboot where he starred alongside Zachary Quinto, who played a younger version of the character. Nimoy was also an accomplished filmmaker, having directed both Star Trek III: The Search For Spock and Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home as well as the 1987 comedy Three Men and a Baby.

By all accounts, Nimoy was an incredibly charitable and gracious person, having spent his life standing up for the rights of others, even famously advocation for his Star Trek co-star Nichelle Nichols to get equal pay on the show. Sadly, Nimoy passed away in 2015 at the age of 83, but his legacy lives on. Spock is by far one of the most famous and beloved characters in Star Trek history. His signature “Vulcan Salute” is a recognizable symbol to fans around the world and was actually contributed by Nimoy himself as a reference to his Jewish heritage, a true testament to the actor's kind heart and efforts to represent those who are unseen in media.

While Nimoy is no longer with us, the character Spock endures on Star Trek: Strange New Worlds. Actor Ethan Peck, who made his first appearance in the role in Star Trek: Discovery, is returning for the upcoming series.

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds will be released exclusively on Paramount Plus.

MORE: 10 Spock Memes Only True Star Trek Fans Will Understand

Source: Boston Globe