Original series and films Hikaru Sulu was born in
San Francisco, and is of
Japanese heritage. His birthdate has not been established definitively, but the book
Star Trek Chronology by
Michael Okuda and
Denise Okuda speculates that he was 29 at the time of the first season of
Star Trek (as was the actor himself), putting his birth in the year 2237. An early
Paramount press release described this initial conception of his character as follows: "Physicist Sulu is the trim, soft-spoken chief of the ''Enterprise's'' Astro Science Department. Frequently it is his assessment of the conditions on unexplored planets that finally determines when and how they will be approached, or if they can be explored at all." However, throughout the rest of the series, he served as third officer and senior
helmsman, holding the rank of
lieutenant.
fencing, and ancient weaponry. In the episode "
The Naked Time" (1966),
Spock observes that Sulu "is at heart a
swashbuckler out of the 18th century".
Reboot films plays Sulu in the Star Trek films in the "Kelvin timeline".
John Cho portrays an alternative Sulu in the 2009 film
Star Trek.
J. J. Abrams was concerned about casting a Korean-American as the character, but Takei explained to the director that Sulu was meant to represent all of Asia on the
Enterprise, so Abrams went ahead with Cho. Cho acknowledged that being an Asian-American, "There are certain acting roles that you are never going to get, and one of them is playing a cowboy. Playing Sulu is a realization of that dream—going into space." He cited the masculinity of the character as being important to him, and spent two weeks fight training. Cho suffered an injury to his wrist during filming, although a representative noted it was "no big deal".
James Kyson Lee was interested in the part, but because
Zachary Quinto was cast as Spock, the producers of the TV show
Heroes did not want to lose another cast member for three months. Cho portrays a younger Sulu in the 2009 film, though he is actually older than Takei was when he portrayed the role in the original series; Cho was 36 while Takei was 29. Cho also portrays Sulu in the 2013 sequel
Star Trek Into Darkness, taking up the role of acting captain on the USS
Enterprise when both Kirk and Spock were absent. At the film's climax Sulu admits to Kirk that he wouldn't mind being a captain, referencing his role as captain of the
USS Excelsior in the original film series. In the third film,
Star Trek Beyond, Sulu is portrayed as a gay man with a husband and daughter. Writer
Simon Pegg and director
Justin Lin made the decision as a nod to original actor George Takei, who had become a prominent
LGBT rights activist since portraying the character in the original series. Takei disliked the idea, and attempted to persuade the filmmakers to create a new gay character rather than revealing Sulu as
closeted, saying, "Unfortunately, it's a twisting of Gene's creation, to which he put in so much thought." Pegg replied that he felt it was unfortunate that "the most inclusive, tolerant universe in science fiction" had never featured an LGBT character, but that revealing an existing character as gay avoided creating the impression of
tokenism. Pegg also said that Sulu had never been closeted, but that his sexuality had simply never come up, and suggested that Roddenberry would have explored LGBT themes in the original series if he had had the opportunity.
Guest appearances Takei reprised the role of Sulu, as part of
Star Treks 30th anniversary, in the
Star Trek: Voyager episode "
Flashback" aired in 1996. In the episode,
Captain Sulu appears in
Tuvok's flashbacks of his time serving aboard the USS
Excelsior, during events depicted in
Star Trek VI.
Other media The
Lost Era novel
The Sundered depicts a USS
Excelsior mission under Sulu's command. The novel
Forged in Fire depicts an earlier USS
Excelsior mission prior to Sulu's assuming command of the ship. The novelization of
Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home includes an encounter in 1986 San Francisco intended to be included in the final film but ultimately cut between Sulu and a young Japanese-American boy who asks, "What are you doing here, Uncle Hikaru?" After conversing with the boy and learning his name, Sulu realizes that the boy is his great-great-grandfather. In another part of the novel as he borrows a helicopter to deliver the whale tank materials, it is revealed that Sulu is part
Filipino, as he converses about the Philippine
People Power Revolution which had just occurred earlier in 1986.
Simon & Schuster Audioworks released three non-canon
Captain Sulu Adventures, featuring voice acting by Takei and various others, in the mid-1990s:
Transformations,
Cacophany, and
Envoy. The reference book
Federation: The First 150 Years, by
David A. Goodman, contains an audio introduction by Admiral Hikaru Sulu, indicating that at some point Sulu is promoted to admiral, although this is non-canonical. In the
William Shatner Star Trek novels, it is revealed that Sulu is elected to an unprecedented three terms as President of the
United Federation of Planets. In the TV show
Scrubs,
Turk wants to be married by a priest who looks like Sulu. The priest is actually played by Takei. Takei reprised the role of Captain Sulu in the PC game
Starfleet Command 2, released in December 2000. The introduction video features Takei, as Captain Sulu on board the USS
Excelsior, describing the outbreak of an interstellar war between several galactic powers as part of his ''
Captain's Log''. Later updates to the game also included several bonus voice-scripted missions, that again featured Takei as Sulu. In scientific illustrator
Jenny Parks' 2017 book
Star Trek Cats, Sulu is depicted as a
Japanese Bobtail. ==Reception==