This reflex serves two purposes: 1. - it preserves the tactile sensory experience of interacting with a living and true part of your being rather than a toupee 2.- it avoids the unwelcome possibility of displacing or otherwise unnecessarily interfering with the placement of the toup. A possible third motivation is to subtly smooth down the lower rear edge of the toup.
Below is an example from Bill Shatner's appearance on The Mike Douglas Show on the 25th February 1969, shortly after the final Star Trek episode was filmed. Mike Douglas also seems to be wearing a hairpiece.
The full sequence, which involves another hair stroke by Shats can be seen below:
If you watch the behind the scenes supplement to Free Enterprise, there's a bit where Shatner is scratching the top of his head and you can hear his fingernail scraping against the base of his rug.
ReplyDeleteA ratty toupee, by thw way. You can see the tail of it contrasting with the real hair
ReplyDeleteIt's not as good as his TOS ones. But it isn't bad, compared to the ones that followed.
ReplyDeleteDid Selma Diamond give Shat any additional tips on being a woman?
ReplyDeleteIn this clip, though, Shatner only touches his hair when the subject of the female role he played in Star Trek is mentioned by the host.
That hair stroke would look cooler if he had a cigarette hanging out of his mouth while he did it.
ReplyDelete