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Saturday, December 31, 2016

Looking Ahead at Trek in 2017

Star Trek will head boldly into 2017, with a wide variety of exciting happenings, including a new show, events of all kinds and much, much more. StarTrek.com breaks it all down:

Star Trek: Discovery

Star Trek: Discovery will premiere in May 2017. The show's hero ship is called the U.S.S. Discovery (NCC-1031) and the action will take place 10 years before Star Trek: The Original Series. The main character will be Number One, a woman, but not a captain, and, yes, there will be a gay series regular character, as well as Klingons. Season one will consist of 13 episodes, with the show as a whole serialized and playing out like a novel.

Michelle Yeoh is set to play Captain Georgiou, the Starfleet captain aboard the starship Shenzhou.

Doug Jones will play Lt. Saru, a Starfleet science officer and an alien species new to the Star Trek universe.

Anthony Rapp will beam aboard as Lt. Stamets, an astromycologist, fungus expert and Starfleet science officer on the starship Discovery.

Chris Obi will play T'Kuvma, the Klingon leader seeking to unite the Klingon houses.

Shazad Latif is set to portray Kol, commanding officer of the Klingons and protégé of T'Kuvma.

Mary Chieffo rounds out the latest wave of additions with her role as L'Rell, the battle deck commander of the Klingon ship.

Discovery will air on CBS All Access, following the premiere on the CBS Television Network. And the show will be distributed concurrently on Netflix in 188 countries and through Bell Media in Canada.


Star Trek: The Next Generation's 30th Anniversary

Star Trek: The Next Generation did the impossible when it debuted in 1987. It captured lightning in a bottle and set the stage for a Star Trek resurgence that carries on to the present day. Fans can expect TNG cast reunions and special events at conventions around the world, as well as new TNG collectibles, games and stories. And, speaking of stories, a TNG mirror universe comic book series is on the way from IDW Publishing. As previously reported here at StarTrek.com, Star Trek: The Next Generation -- Mirror Broken, with its very, very memorable cover, will be part of Free Comic Book Day 2017.


Star Trek Las Vegas 2017

Star Trek Las Vegas is set to be held August 2-6, 2017, at the Rio Suites Hotel, and Creation Entertainment has already confirmed 34 Trek guests on the way to meeting their goal of 100. The list spans from the iconic TOS faces of the franchise, a la William Shatner, Nichelle Nichols and Walter Koenig, to series regulars and guest stars from other Trek shows and movies, including Nana Visitor, Jonathan Frakes, Linda Park, Deborah Lacey, David Warner and Julia Nickson. Go to www.creationent.com for details and to order tickets.


Star Trek. 50 Artists. 50 Years

 

The popular touring art exhibition Star Trek. 50 Artists. 50 Years. features Trek-inspired works by 50 artists from 10 countries around the globe, including one by Leonard Nimoy. The exhibition, which will continue touring through the summer of 2017 -- includes original 2D and 3D pieces by the artists, who selected a variety of mediums -- illustrations, photographs, sculptures, paintings, graphics and more -- to express their love of the franchise and the inspiration gained from it. The exhibition is currently at the Dornier Museum in Friedrichshafen, Germany, and will be there until June 18, when it will then tour to other cities.


Free Comic Book Day

On May 6, 2017, fans will have their choice of 50 titles on Free Comic Book Day. The Trek title, from IDW Publishing, will be Star Trek: The Next Generation – Mirror Broken, written by Scott Tipton and David Tipton, with art by J.K. Woodward. Here's the synopsis:

Space… The Final Frontier. These are the voyages of the I.S.S. Enterprise. Its continuing mission: to conquer strange new worlds, to enslave new life and new civilizations… to boldly go where no one has gone before! Return to the Mirror Universe with The Next Generation crew in a way you've never seen them before in this prequel to the upcoming Star Trek: The Next Generation miniseries, Mirror Broken. Captain Jean-Luc Picard will stop at nothing to get his hands on the Terran Empire's newest starship, the Enterprise-D. And no one had better stand in his way.


Star Trek Cruise

The first-ever Star Trek Cruise will set sail from Miami on January 9, 2017, heading toward the Caribbean. A fully immersive experience to be produced by Entertainment Cruise Productions LLC., it will kick off with William Shatner, Trek's Captain Kirk himself, welcoming fans aboard the ship and then socializing with them and leading the celebration during the cruise. In addition to Shatner, other Trek celebrities confirmed to set sail include Marina Sirtis, Denise Crosby, John de Lancie, Terry Farrell, Robert Picardo, James Darren, Armin Shimerman, Kitty Swink, Max Grodenchik, Robet O'Reilly, Vaughn Armstrong, Steve Rankin, Casey Biggs and Joe Piscopo. And all of the talent will perform: with Shatner headlining "An Evening with William Shatner," Marina Sirtis and Terry Farrell teaming up for Love Letters, and Casey Biggs hosting wine tastings. Other planned activities include concerts by James Darren and the Enterprise Blues Band, and Robert Picardo playing Star Trek Family Feud and hosting both a cocktail party and a private dinner.

Quintessential locations from the Trek series (think Risa) and films will be recreated aboard the ship, while events will be built around key characters and their defining traits, and ship crew will be dressed in distinctive uniforms from across the franchise. Every venue on the ship will pay homage to favorite Trek haunts and destinations, with parties and gaming inspired by pivotal moments in Trek history. Quark's Bar will serve such cocktails as a Risa Colada and a Borg Queen, while fans can also hang out at Deck 10 or play three-dimensional chess at Ten Forward. Fans will also be able to experience events featuring experts exploring Trek's impact on social issues, technology and scientific development. Further, the Cruise will offer Star Trek Under the Stars, utilizing a large LED screen on the back deck that will let the 2,200 fans on board share in the communal experience of watching Trek films and episodes each and every evening. Keep an eye on StarTrek.com for coverage from aboard the ship.


Star Trek: Operation Enterprise

"Star Trek: Operation Enterprise," a Trek-themed roller coaster, will blast into action in Movie Park Germany at some point in 2017. The new coaster will be the world's first dedicated Trek coaster and, for Movie Park Germany, in Bottrop, it not only will be the second-highest construction in the park, but it will have the rare distinction of having been built in Germany. Company Mack Rides, the largest German manufacturer of roller coasters and amusement park attractions, is constructing the coaster.

The coaster, which will be located directly at the entrance of Movie Park Germany, will be what is referred to as a launch coaster. That means guests will begin the experience with an accelerated catapulting and not first drawn over a hill with a respective drop. Work continues on "Star Trek: Operation Enterprise" even as you read this.


The Starfleet Academy Experience in Calgary

Star Trek: The Starfleet Academy Experience offers visitors the chance to experience life as a Starfleet Academy cadet, as they attend the Academy's Career Day in the 26th century. After student orientation, cadets visit nine zones focused on the training center's specialties: Language, Medical, Navigation, Engineering, Command and Science. Following these interactions, cadets were assigned a specialty and a demeanor based on their individual training. Trek fans will surely recognize many of the props and costumes on display from the television shows. In addition, there are plenty of interactive activities and unique technology, including Leap Motion, voice recognition to communicate in Klingon, a Medical Tricorder table with RFID sensors, planet projection mapping, holograms and a target game using Star Trek's iconic phasers. Fans can beam over to the Starfleet Academy Experience at Telus Spark in Calgary, Canada, from January and until early June, 2017.


via Star Trek Latest News

Yelchin's Trollhunters Makes Its Debut

Trollhunters, which debuted December 23 on Netflix, represents one of Anton Yelchin's final projects. The actor, who played Chekov in Star Trek (2009), Star Trek Into Darkness and Star Trek Beyond, died on June 19, 2016, when he was crushed by his own car in a tragic accident at home. He, around that time, had been recording his voice role as James "Jim" Lake Jr., the main character in Trollhunters.

A computer-animated series from Guillermo del Toro, Trollhunters follows Jim and a group of pals who discover a fantastical new world beneath their hometown, Arcadia. Jim, with the help of a magical amulet, becomes the Trollhunter, protector of the trolls down below. Yelchin had not yet completed all his work on the show's 26-episode first season, and so another actor was brought in to close the gaps.

In addition to Yelchin, Trollhunters features the voices of Charlie Saxton, Lexi Medrano, Steven Yeun, Lauren Tom and Tom Hiddleston, as well as Trek veterans Ron Perlman, Kelsey Grammer and Clancy Brown.


via Star Trek Latest News

Friday, December 30, 2016

2016's Top Trek Stories

What were the biggest Star Trek stories of 2016? They actually come very quickly to mind. Star Trek celebrated its 50th anniversary. Star Trek Beyond beamed into theaters across the globe. Fans welcomed the official word that a new series, Star Trek: Discovery was in the works, and also learned the identities of much of the cast. Plus, fans all over America and the world attended a number of special 50th anniversary events. And, sadly, we bid farewell to Anton Yelchin, who died far too young, at just 27 years old, in a horrific accident. We paid tribute to Yelchin on Wednesday in our Remembering Those We Lost in 2016 feature. So, please join us as StarTrek.com recaps Trek in the News 2016:


Discovery

Star Trek: Discovery is on the way in May 2017, with the show's hero ship called the U.S.S. Discovery (NCC-1031). Series co-creator Bryan Fuller revealed the details and debuted a logo in July, during a standing-room-only "Star Trek 50th Anniversary" panel in Hall H at San Diego Comic-Con that also featured William Shatner, Brent Spiner, Jeri Ryan, Scott Bakula and Michael Dorn. Fuller -- who in the early morning served fans in line donuts and coffee -- treated Hall H attendees to an exclusive first-look video of the test flight of the U.S.S. Discovery, the newest Starfleet ship in the storied franchise's return to television.

"There are so many reasons why we settled on Discovery," Fuller told StarTrek.com. "But the chief one amongst them was that I couldn't think of a more Star Trek-themed name for a ship than Discovery."

Over the ensuing weeks and months, Nicholas Meyer, Kirsten Beyer and others came aboard the creative team, join Fuller and co-creator Alex Kurtzman. Fuller, in the fall, exited as show runner, and his longtime collaborators, Gretchen Berg and Aaron Harberts, took over. Later, at the end of November, Doug Jones, Michelle Yeoh and Anthony Rapp were announced as the first cast memembers. A couple of weeks later, it was revealed that Chris Obi, Shazad Latif and Mary Chieffo had been confirmed to play Klingons.

Discovery will air on CBS All Access, following the premiere on the CBS Television Network. And the show will be distributed concurrently on Netflix in 188 countries and through Bell Media in Canada.


Star Trek Beyond

In May, more than 500 people joined Beyond director Justin Lin, producer J.J. Abrams and co-stars Zachary Quinto, Chris Pine and Karl Urban in kicking off the Beyond juggernaut at the exclusive Star Trek Beyond Fan Event on Stages 31 and 32 on the Paramount Pictures lot. Among the highlights, Simon Pegg, via video, introduced the new trailer, a street on the lot was named in honor of Leonard Nimoy, and J.J. Abrams announced that the Beyond premiere would be held at Comic-Con in San Diego, adding that everyone in attendance at the Fan Event was invited to the premiere in July. Lin also revealed that Beyond would be presented as the first-ever open-air IMAX world premiere, with special appearances by him, the Beyond filmmakers and cast, as well as a live concert performance of Michael Giacchino's film score by the San Diego Symphony Orchestra.

Sure enough, Comic-Con was the place to be for Star Trek fans, and Embarcadero Marina Park played host to the Beyond world premiere. And this was no ordinary screening. We're talking IMAX outdoors, on a picture-perfect evening, with the San Diego Symphony performing the score live to screen. We're talking a dazzling pre-screening fireworks and laser display. Conan O'Brien cracked the crowd with a mini-routine and with his introductions of the cast and crew. Then, one by one the actors, Lin and producers Abrams and Lindsey Weber took the stage and greeted the appreciative audience of several thousand fans. Urban noted that the black Starfleet delta badge he sported was in tribute to Anton Yelchin, who'd died the month before. Quinto paid tribute to his friend and Spock predecessor, Leonard Nimoy, and recounted sharing the spotlight with Nimoy at Comic-Con in 2007, while Abrams shared memories about Yelchin and forcefully said "He should be here tonight," then noted that Yelchin's parents, Irina and Viktor, were in attendance at the screening. Then, at Abrams' request, everyone observed a moment of silence.

 

Further, thousands of fans enjoyed a variety of pre-screening activities, freebies and a suprise appearance by Star Trek's original Uhura, Nichelle Nichols. On screens adjacent to the main screen, "The Corbomite Maneuver" played to an enthusiastic response, as did Rihanna's "Sledgehammer" video. There was free ice cream, and giveaways of seat cushions and more. Meanwhile, just outside the enclosed screening area, the stars and filmmakers engaged in pre-screening red carpet festivities, chatting with media from all over the world, including StarTrek.com.

Beyond opened on July 22 to mostly favorable reviews. The adventure went on to gross $159 million in the U.S. and another $184.5 million overseas, for a worldwide total of $343.5 million.


50th Anniversary Celebrations

The Beyond-centric events at Comic-Con weren't the only major festivities celebrating Star Trek's landmark 50th anniversary. Fans turned out by the thousands for Star Trek Las Vegas, Destination Star Trek Europe (in Birmingham, UK) and Star Trek: Mission New York. Also, people flocked to Star Trek: The Ultimate Voyage, a special musical event designed to bring five decades of Star Trek to concert halls in more than 100 North American cities, and to Star Trek -- Live In Concert, which beamed into the legendary Hollywood Bowl on July 8 and 9. Attendees enjoyed under-the-stars screenings of Star Trek (2009) accompanied by Michael Giacchino's score performed live by the Los Angeles Philharmonic and conducted by David Newman. Star Trek -- Live in Concert, with screenings of both Star Trek (2009) and Star Trek Into Darkness, went on to touch down in numerous other cities.

Another ongoing event was Star Trek. 50 Artists. 50 Years, a new art exhibition that features Trek-inspired works by 50 artists from 10 countries around the globe, including one by Leonard Nimoy. The exhibition -- which is still ongoing, actually -- includes original 2D and 3D pieces by the artists, who selected a variety of mediums -- illustrations, photographs, sculptures, paintings, graphics and more -- to express their love of the franchise and the inspiration gained from it. 50 Artists. 50 Years debuted at Michael J. Wolf Fine Arts in San Diego's historic Gaslight Quarter during Comic-Con, and went on to New York, England, Germany.

And, from July to October, the Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum in New York City served as the home to the interactive exhibition Star Trek: The Starfleet Academy Experience. It offered visitors the chance to experience life as a Starfleet Academy cadet, as they attended the Academy's Career Day in the 26th century. After student orientation, cadets visited nine zones focused on the training center's specialties: Language, Medical, Navigation, Engineering, Command and Science. Following these interactions, cadets were assigned a specialty and a demeanor based on their individual training. Trek fans surely recognized many of the props and costumes on display from the television shows. In addition, there was plenty of interactive activities and unique technology, including Leap Motion, voice recognition to communicate in Klingon, a Medical Tricorder table with RFID sensors, planet projection mapping, holograms and a target game using Star Trek's iconic phasers. The Starfleet Academy Experience will move on to Telus Spark in Calgary, Canada, in January and run until early June, 2017.


Facebook Like Buttons

Facebook, starting on September 8 and running for a limited time, took their Like buttons to the final frontier. The Love button was represented by Spock's Vulcan greeting gesture. Also represented were Kirk (Haha), Spock (Wow), Geordi (Sad) and a Klingon (Angry). Fans could Trek-ify their profile picture with a custom frame. 


via Star Trek Latest News

Remembering TNG & Enterprise Guest Star Barbara Tarbuck, 1942-2016

Apparently, the Grim Reaper isn't finished with 2016 just yet. StarTrek.com is saddened to report the passing of Barbara Tarbuck. The actress, whose many credits included Star Trek: The Next Generation and Star Trek: Enterprise, died in Los Angeles on December 27 at the age of 74.

Born in Detroit, Tarbuck was just a child when she started performing in radio dramas. She later pursued a career as a professional actress and, on stage, television and film appeared in The Incredible Hulk, Brighton Beach Memoirs, Dallas, Newhart, Cagney & Lacey, Death of a Salesman, Falcon Crest, Moonlighting, Short Circuit, Six Characters in Search of an Author, Curly Sue, ER, NYPD Blue, Cold Case, Walking Tall (playing the mother of Dwayne Johnson's character), Journeyman, General Hospital, Glee, American Horror Story and Dexter. She also directed plays and taught at Rutgers University, University of Wisconsin, Marymount College and UCLA Extension Entertainment Studies.

The actress made her Star Trek debut in 1991, when she guest starred as Leka Trion, leader of Peliar Zel, in the fourth-season TNG episode "The Host." She returned to the Trek fold in 2002 with the Enterprise hour, "Shadows of P'Jem," which cast her as Kalev, Chancellor of the Coridan government.

Tarbuck had most recently directed a production of the stage comedy, Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike, which ran from October until earlier this month at the Edgemar Center for the Arts in Santa Monica, California. "Teaching and acting and directing all feed one another in me," Tarbuck wrote on her personal website. "I am as stimulated and questioned by the young people in my life as I am by new material or a famous director's notes. On stage, before the camera, and in the classroom are the questions, demands, disappointments, delights that feed my soul. Mine is a life of continual change and upheaval. It is freedom and renewal and an underlying belief in the strength and dignity of human expression."

Tarbuck was predeceased by her husband, James Denis Connelly, who died in 2005, and, according to The Wrap, is survived by her daughter, Jennifer Lane Connelly, son-in-law Samuel Chawinga and grandsons Cianan and Cuinn Chawinga. Please join StarTrek.com in offering our condolences to Tarbuck's family, friends, colleagues and fans.


via Star Trek Latest News

Thursday, December 29, 2016

Best Trek Products of 2016

Ask Star Trek fans what their favorite Trek product of 2016 was and you'll get a wide variety of replies. And that's because, for Trek's 50th annivesary, licensees came up with a galaxy of cool stuff, from bears to books, makeup to Air Hogs, and more. Below, check out just a few of the most-popular Trek-inspired products released in 2016...

Air Hogs, this summer, introduced a U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701-A quadcopter. Modeled after the Kirk's beloved ship as seen in Star Trek: The Motion Picture, the Enterprise boasts four 3 1/2"-diameter propellors built into its hull, enabling whomever captains her to guide the ship forward, backward, up, down or sideway. Six-axis stabilization provides superior flight stability, allowing the ship to be tossed into the air and throttled up simultaneously. Its four-channel 2.4 GHz remote provides digital proportional control of rotor speed for flights from 200 feet away. Also, the ship plays 10 sounds from Star Trek: The Original Series, including photon torpedoes and red alert, and its 10 LEDs replicate the ship's hull and nacelles' lights. A rechargeable battery provides up to seven-minute flights from a one-hour charge via its USB cable. The product also comes with a display stand and remote control (which requires four AA batteries). The Air Hogs U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701-A is available at www.AirHogs.com. It costs $129.99.

We were so excited about this story we could barely bear it. In June, Build-A-Bear Workshop unveiled Star Trek 50th Anniversary Bears. There's the Spock Bear and the Star Trek 50th Anniversary Bear. The Spock Bear features Spock's iconic ears and the Vulcan greeting. One paw says "Live long and prosper," and the other is emblazoned with the Star Trek 50th Anniversary logo. He can be dressed up in a Star Trek Blue Uniform, with the blue top boasting a delta shield, and the shirt is paired with black pants. Also available is a phaser, which comes with an elastic band so that, logically, it will stay in your furry friend's hand. The Spock Bear costs $28, while the uniform costs $15 and the phaser sells for $5.

The Star Trek 50th Anniversary Bear is a limited-edition black bear that has the gold Star Trek insignia on its chest, with the Star Trek logo on one paw and the 50th anniversary logo on the other paw. Red and Gold Uniforms are available, and they're both paired with black pants. And, as with the Spock Bear, fans can add a phaser. The 50th Anniversary Bear costs $28, while the uniform costs $15 and the phaser sells for $5. And to finish off any of the three Star Trek Bear options, fans can add the original Star Trek theme music to their bear. That will cost $7.00. The bears can be purchased now at the Build-A-Bear nearest you or at www.buildabear.com.

MAC, in September, introduced a collection of makeup inspired by Star Trek and, more specifically, Deanna Troi, Uhura, Seven of Nine and the Orion Girl, Vina. The 25-piece special deco collection encompasses lip, eye and face products. Lipglass is available in Pleasure Planet (muted gold shimmer), Khaaannnn! (berry with red reflects), Set to Stun (light silver with gold pearl) and Warp Speed Ahead (plum with blue and pink reflects). Each Lipglass costs $17.00 US and $20.50 CAD.

Lipstick options include The Enemy Within (neutral gold shimmer -- frost), Where No Man Has Gone Before (pink with gold pearl -- lustre), Kling-It-On (deep purple with fine pink glitter -- frost) and LLAP (icy rose champagne -- frost). Each lipstick will cost $18.50 US and $22.50 CAD.  Haute & Naughty Too Black Lash, in black, sells for $23 US and $28 CAD.

MAC Studio Nail Lacquer signature styles are Skin of Evil (yellowish green with black chunks -- frost), Holla-Deck (gold sparkle -- frost) and Enterprise (silver chrome -- frost). Each nail lacquer is priced at $14 US and $16.50 CAD. The lash product, Wink of an Eye, costs $16 US and $19.50 CAD.

Two brush choices are available, including 184 Duo Fibre Fan Brush ($25 US and $30 CAD) and 246 Synthetic Fluffy Eye Brush (also $25 US and $30 CAD). Next, be on the lookout for a trio of Superstick Liquid Eye Liners. There's On the Hunt (true black), Nocturnal (bright silver pearl) and Pure Show (bright yellow gold pearl). Each eye liner costs $22 US and $25.50 CAD. Then, available only in North America, there are Trip the Light Fantastic Powders. They include Luna Luster (sheer wash of soft rose shimmer), Strange New Worlds (sheer wash of golden coral pearl) and Highly Illogical (sheer wash of golden plum with fine pearl). The powders sell for $34 US and $39.50 CAD.

And, lastly, MAC offers -- also only in North America -- Pressed Pigment Eye Shadows. Keep your hailing frequencies open for To Boldly Go (reddish copper with sparkle -- frost), Midnight (cobalt blue with pearl sparkle -- frost), Bird of Prey (dark olive green with sparkle -- frost), The Naked Time (taupe pearl with sparkle -- frost). Each eye shadow sells for $23 US and $27.50 CAD.

All of the products are available in MAC stores and www.maccosmetics.com.

To mark the fiftieth anniversary of the iconic original Star Trek TV series, artists from all around the world, as well as famous fans, and even the late, great Leonard Nimoy, contributed lovingly made posters, photos, sculptures, comic strips, textiles and much more to a special commemorative Star Trek art collection entitled Star Trek. 50 Artists. 50 Years. The original art has been -- and continues to be -- on an international, and has spawned a varity of 50 Artists. 50 Years products.

Chief among the products is the Star Trek. 50 Artists. 50 Years hardcover book. Specially commissioned by CBS, the book celebrates moments, characters, storylines and episodes from the show in a variety of different styles. Plus, the 50 unique artists share their work in progress, as well as fascinating insights into the inspiration for their pieces. The book is priced at $39.95 and is available in the Star Trek Shop here at StarTrek.com, where you can also purchase other products in the Star Trek. 50 Artists. 50 Years line, including posters, mugs, a calendar, tee-shirts, puzzles and more. 

If you love Star Trek and the game Trivial Pursuit, then USAopoly has the most perfectly logical item for you: Star Trek 50th Anniversary Trivial Pursuit. It's a collector's edition version of the venerable board game, and it features 1,200 questions about all five Star Trek television series and the first 10 Star Trek movies spanning over 50 years. And that's not even the best part: the cards come in a collectible Galileo NCC 1701/7 Enterprise Shuttlecraft, along with custom die. Star Trek Trivial Pursuit is available now in the Star Trek Shop, priced at $29.95.

Mattel celebrated Trek's 50th anniversary with a trio of Barbie Collector Star Trek 50th Anniversary Dolls inspired by Captain Kirk, Mr. Spock and Uhura. The dolls, for adult collectors, are sculpted in the images of William Shatner, Leonard Nimoy and Nichelle Nichols, with the individual dolls featuring a fully articulated body and sporting an authentic replication of their respective TOS costumes. The Kirk doll comes with a communicator and phaser, while the Uhura doll depicts her with a communicator in one hand and a tricorder strapped over her shoulder. The Spock doll makes the Vulcan salute with one hand and hold a communicator in the other. Each doll costs $34.99 and is available in a box that measures 13"H by 3.3"W by 7"L. Go to http://ift.tt/1UFIXwF to order.

 

Mega Bloks/Mattel unveiled their Star Trek Collector Construction Sets. The sets included the finely detailed U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701 Signature Series, the Klingon D7 Battlecruiser, an Away Team Figure Pack, the Classic Bridge, and a Transporter Room. The products. The Klingon D7 Battle Cruiser collector construction set, for example, is a buildable ship that features deluxe printed detail and twin disruptor cannons firing green disruptor beams. The ship comes with a swiveling display stand, printed nameplate and a premium fabric standard bearing the Klingon insignia. Meanwhile, a highly detailed, super-poseable Kor micro action figure comes with removable armor and an authentic disruptor weapon accessory. Collect and combine with other Mega Bloks Star Trek sets and build the voyage. The Klingon D7 Battle Cruiser costs $44.00 and is available in the Star Trek Shop.

Star Trek got the Mad Libs treatment courtesy of Penguin Books/Price Stern Sloan. It features 21 stories written by Eric Luper and inspired by The Original Series and the TOS features. Star Trek Mad Libs costs $4.99 in the U.S. and $6.50 in Canada. Go to http://ift.tt/1IiaeoM to order it.

 

The revised and expanded Star Trek Encyclopedia: A Reference Guide to the Future at long last arrived in October via Harper Collins. Authors Michael Okuda and Denise Okuda have painstakingly updated the Encyclopedia for the first time since its initial release in 1999. It includes a fully new design, illustrations and exhaustively researched and detailed entries on the ships, characters and events from the most recent 17 years of Star Trek television shows and movies. In other words, over the span of its generous 1,056 pages -- 300 of which will feature new entries -- the updated Encyclopedia now also covers Star Trek: Voyager seasons 4-7, Star Trek: Enterprise seasons 1-4 and Star Trek Nemesis, as well as recent J.J. Abrams big-screen adventures Star Trek (2009) and Star Trek Into Darkness.

Officially referred to as The Star Trek Encyclopedia Revised and Expanded Edition, the book comes in an authoratative two-volume hardcover edition that features a deluxe slipcase. It is priced at $150 but available for as low as $90 at www.amazon.com.

 

The Wand Company's Star Trek Original Series Universal Remote Phaser and Bluetooth Handset Communicator are the most accurate replicas ever made, designed using the first-ever structured-light 3D scans taken of the Alpha Hero Prop and crammed full of advanced technology. The communicator is the first fully working wireless communicator with Bluetooth handset for pairing with Bluetooth-enabled mobile phones. Together, the Phaser and Communicator offer new levels of action and immersion for Star Trek fans of all ages. The Star Trek: The Original Series Bluetooth Communicator is available now via Best Buy and ThinkGeek.


via Star Trek Latest News

Believe It or Not, "Shore Leave" Turns 50 Today

One of Star Trek: The Original Series' most-entertaining, most-outlandish and most-colorful episodes, "Shore Leave," debuted on December 29, 1966 -- or 50 years ago today. And so, StarTrek.com twists the lens of our microscope on to 'Shore Leave," sharing with fans a variety of anedotes, factoids and figures about the episode.

  • "Shore Leave" was the seventeenth episode of TOS' first season.

  • The action starts at Stardate 3025.3

  • The episode was the first and only TOS hour directed by Robert Sparr, whose other TV and film credits included Batman, The Wild Wild West, Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, Lawman (with DeForest Kelley), Lassie, More Dead Than Alive and Once You Kiss a Stranger. He perished in a plane crash in August, 1969, at the age of 53.

  • Memorable line of dialogue #1: "On my planet, to rest is to rest," Spock says to Kirk. "To cease using energy. To me, it is quite illogical to run up and down on green grass using energy instead of saving it."

  • "Shore Leave" was one of two episodes scripted by the legendary sci-fi author Theodore Sturgeon. His other contribution was the Hugo-nominated "Amok Time."

  • Sturgeon's working title for the episode was "Finagle's Planet."

  • Who can recall which TOS regular did NOT appear in this hour? The answer is James Doohan.

  • As per Memory Alpha, "The preview of this episode shows Yeoman Barrows being accosted by Don Juan while wearing her princess costume. This scene was not used in the final cut."

  • According to the Star Trek Compendium, "Shore Leave" went over schedule -- seven shooting days vs. the usual six -- as Gene Roddenberry, on set during production, typewriter in hand, raced to rework the script in an effort to keep it both somewhat believable and within budget.

  • "Shore Leave" represented the first of five TOS episodes scored by Gerald Fried. Speaking to StarTrek.com in 2013, Fried recalled, "I kind of marveled that it was supposed to be science-fiction and outer space and all of that, but that the story was also so pertinent and insightful to us humans on Earth. Theodore Sturgeon wrote that and I love him for his introspection. I was able to do different kinds of music, because of the fantasy, and that was kind of fun. It was a chance to show off some versatility."

  • Memorable line of dialogue #2: "No animals, no people... no worries," Sulu marveled to Dr. McCoy. "Just what the doctor ordered."

  • Frequent TOS utility player William Blackburn voiced the White Rabbit and was in the rabbit costume. According to Memory Alpha, he "got the costume from Ice Capades for free."

  • Perry Lopez, who played Lt. Esteban Rodriguez, gained a greater measure of fame a few years later when he played Lt. Lou Escobar in the Oscar-winning film, Chinatown. He reprised the role in the sequel, The Two Jakes. He passed away in 2008.

  • Memorable line of dialogue #3: "You stupid underclassman!" Finnegan shouted as Kirk as they tussled. "I've got the edge! I'm still twenty years old. Look at you! You're an old man!"

via Star Trek Latest News

Wednesday, December 28, 2016

Remembering Those We Lost in 2016

As the world turns the calendar page to 2017, it's time for StarTrek.com to remember the members of the Star Trek universe – actors, special effects wizards, book editors and more – whom we lost in 2016, Trek's landmark 50th anniversary year. Each and every one helped contribute to making Star Trek the pop-culture phenomenon it is, and to them we say "Thank you.":

Anton Yelchin, who played Pavel Chekov in Star Trek (2009), Star Trek Into Darkness and Star Trek Beyond, died on June 19, at the age of 27. The actor was killed in a freak accident at home in Los Angeles by his own car. Yelchin was born in St. Petersburg, Russia, and moved with his figure-skater parents, Irina and Viktor Yelchin, to the United States when he was just six months old. He was already one of Hollywood's most-exciting young talents -- a screen natural -- when he signed on to play Chekov in Star Trek (2009), having logged film and TV credits that included ER, Hearts in Atlantis, The Practice, Curb Your Enthusiasm, Alpha Dog, Huff and Charlie Bartlett. Since playing Chekov in the first J.J. Abrams blockbuster, he'd appeared in Terminator Salvation, The Beaver, Fright Night, Only Lovers Left Alive, Experimenter and Green Room, in which he co-starred with Patrick Stewart. In addition to Beyond, he'd completed several projects set for release in the near future, among them We Don't Belong Here, Porto, Rememory and Thoroughbred.

StarTrek.com spoke with Yelchin in 2011 about playing the young Chekov and the likelihood he'd be playing Chekov over the course of several films. Asked if he felt his version of Chekov served as a bridge to Walter Koenig's, Yelchin replied, "I don't know if it builds to Walter's Chekov, that if we make more films then suddenly it'll totally become that guy. I just think that I tried to capture as close as possible all of the great qualities that Walter brought to his Chekov. So I hope there's a continuity. I don't know if it's necessarily an evolution, but I hope there's a continuity where you can say, 'Oh, yeah, I buy that person being that age.'"

Don Marshall, who played Lt. Boma -- the astrophysicist who clashed with his superior officer, Spock -- in the Star Trek: The Original Series episode "The Galileo Seven," passed on October 30. The actor also made his mark in several other sci-fi projects; he was a regular on the series Land of the Giants, co-starred with Rosie Grier and Ray Milland in the cult classic film The Thing with Two Heads, and guest starred on The Bionic Woman, Buck Rogers in the 25th Century and The Incredible Hulk.

StarTrek.com spoke to Marshall in 2012. During that conversation, Marshall addressed one of the most-impactful aspects of his TOS appearance, which was that Lt. Boma's skin color meant nothing in the scheme of the episode. "That was beautiful," he said. "That was Gene Roddenberry, and I'd worked for him once before. I did an episode of The Lieutenant for him," Marshall said, referring to "To Set It Right," a racially charged hour that also featured Gary Lockwood, Dennis Hopper and, in her TV acting debut, Nichelle Nichols as the fiancee of Marshall's character. "That's the way the guy was. He didn't see color. He saw situation and he had a vision, more so than most people. You could really see that with Star Trek. People learned from Star Trek. This guy created something special. A lot of people went into engineering because of Star Trek. I've been told that by many, many engineers. People became astronauts and went into the space program because of the show. You look back and you think, 'What a visionary Gene was,' or 'What a beautiful person he was.' I wish everybody was that way, but of course we don't have that."

Gary Hutzel, who passed away suddenly on March 1 at the age of 60, was the Emmy Award-winning visual effects artist who served as visual effects coordinator and supervisor on the first five seasons of Star Trek: The Next Generation and the entire run of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. He introduced many technical innovations to Trek's visual effects, helped create the USS Defiant and supervised visual effects in the fan-favorite "Trials and Tribble-ations," blending the cast of DS9 into scenes from TOS. Hutzel was also widely recognized by Trek fans for his award-winning visual effects on numerous other series, including Battlestar Galactica, Caprica and Defiance. Additionally, he rendered covers for several non-fiction Trek books and, with Terry J. Erdmann and Paula M. Block, co-wrote The Magic of Tribbles: The Making of Star Trek Deep Space Nine -- "Trials and Tribbles-ations."

Born in Ann Arbor, Michigan, Hutzel originally began studying Mechanical Engineering at the University of Michigan. Hutzel decided to change his career to the motion picture industry and moved to Santa Barbara, California to study photography. His Hollywood career began with a job as a driver and video camera operator for a commercial production house. It was there, at Filmfair, that he became interested in visual effects. Hutzel went on to freelance for CBS on the new Twilight Zone series before he was approached in 1987 to work on TNG.

Fritz Weaver, who died on November 26 at the age of 90 at his home in Manhattan, portrayed Kovat, the Cardassian public conservator who represented O'Brien, in the DS9 episode "Tribunal." Born in Pittsburgh, the veteran character actor's many film and TV credits included two episodes of The Twilight Zone, Fail Safe, Mission: Impossible, The Day of the Dolphin, Marathon Man, Demon Seed, The Legend of Lizzie Borden (earning Weaver an Emmy nomination), Holocaust (earning him another Emmy nomination), The Martian Chronicles, Creepshow, The X-Files, The Thomas Crown Affair, The Cobbler and The Congressman, the latter two released respectively in 2014 and 2016. He was also a respected stage actor, winning the Tony Award in 1970 as Best Actor in a Play for his performance in Child's Play, and narrated numerous History Channel productions.

Angela Paton, who died on May 26 at age 86, played Aunt Adah in "Caretaker," the Star Trek: Voyager pilot. However, she was best known for her role as the sweet, patient and accommodating Mrs. Lancaster, innkeeper at the Punxsutawney bed and breakfast where Phil Connors (Bill Murray) stayed in Groundhog Day. Paton passed away in Oakland, California, where she was in hospice care following a heart attack.

Paton's career spanned 40-plus years. After starting out on the stage, she amassed film and TV credits that, in addition to Voyager and Groundhog Day, included Dirty Harry, Falcon Crest, Flatliners, Quantum Leap, ER, Lolita, The Wedding Singer, Boston Public, The X-Files, Curb Your Enthusiasm, Red Eye and Medium. One of her other best-known roles was that of Grandma to Jason Biggs' character in American Wedding. Her most recent stage appearance was in 2012, in the Broadway production of Harvey.

Ron Thornton, a groundbreaking veteran visual effects supervisor and cinematographer, who counted among his credits DS9, Voyager, Star Trek: Enterprise, Star Trek Nemesis and the director's edition of Star Trek: The Motion Picture, as well as, to a lesser degree, TNG, died on November 21, following a long illness. He received an Emmy Award nomination (shared with John Allardice, Eric Chauvin, Arthur J. Codron, Dan Curry, Don Greenberg, Sherry Hitch, Greg Rainoff, Mitch Suskin, John Teska and Robert Bonchune) in 1999 for the Voyager episode "Timeless," and also helped create Voyager's Species 8472 and the Voyager's spectacular crash landing.

Thornton, who was born in England, worked on such other TV shows and films as Doctor Who, Blake's 7, The Tripods, Captain Power and the Soldiers of the Future, Spaceballs, Babylon 5, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, The Crazies and the pilot of Nashville. According to his longtime friend and associate Michael Okuda, Thornton was at the forefront of digital visual effects and pioneered the use of "render farms" of inexpensive personal computers to deliver sophisticated CG effects for television in the 1990s through his company, Foundation Imaging, which he formed in 2002.

Brian Demonbreun, who served as a background actor in more than 50 episodes of DS9 during its seven-year run and also appeared in a few episodes of TNG, died on December 1 at the age of 57 following a long illness. Beyond his time in the Trek universe, the California native appeared, uncredited (as either a background extra or behind the scenes as a stand-in), in such other films and TV shows as The Hanoi Hilton, NCIS, Even Money, Balls of Fury and Year of the Dog. He most recently was David Hasselhoff's photo double in Ted 2. Also a videographer and graphic artist, he'd been doing architectural illustrations since 1980 and in 1989 formed his own company, Art Patrol, for which he specialized in black and white and color renderings of houses, existing and from plans.

Ron Glass, the Emmy-nominated actor whose credits included a long run as Det. Ron Harris on Barney Miller, as well as the series-regular role of Shepherd Derrial Book on Firefly (and in the film Serenity), and one trip to the Trek universe – playing Loken in the Voyager episode "Nightingale" -- was 71 at the time of his passing on November 25. In "Nightingale," Loken was a Kraylor who faked being a doctor, fooling Harry Kim. It turned out that Loken was actually a scientist who'd created a cloaking device that his people could use in their effort to overcome a blockade of their planet by the Annari.

Beyond Voyager, Barney Miller and Firefly/Serenity, Glass appeared in such other films and television shows as Sanford and Son, Hawaii Five-O, All in the Family, The Bob Newhart Show, The New Odd Couple, Amen, Family Matters, Houseguest, Friends, Lakeview Terrace, Shark, CSI: NY, Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., Major Crimes and CSI: Crime Scene Investigation. He also lent his voice to the popular animated series Rugrats and All Grown Up!

David G. Hartwell, a respected science-fiction writer and editor who, among his many career highlights, was the former Pocket Books editor credited with creating the publisher's Star Trek line, died at age 74 on January 20. He'd suffered a massive brain bleed on January 19 following a fall and hospitalization, and succumbed to its effects the next day.

Beyond his Trek work at Pocket, he founded their Timescape imprint (of which Trek was a part). He also edited at Signet, Berkley and Tor/Forge, served on the board of directors at the World Fantasy Convention and administered the Philip K. Dick Awards (with Gordon Van Gelder). He earned a total of 41 Hugo Award nominations, winning Best Professional Editor in 2006 and Best Editor Long Form in 2008 and 2009, and taught at Harvard, Clarion West, Clarion South and New York University. Further, he published several dozen anthologies, including The Dark Descent and The Science Fiction Century, and the annuals Year's Best SF and Year's Best Fantasy, as well as attended countless conventions, sold rare books, wore blindingly loud ties and shepherded/encouraged the careers of many aspiring writers.

William Schallert -- veteran character actor, former president of the Screen Actors Guild and TOS and DS9 guest star -- passed away on May 8 at the age of 93. Schallert is best remembered by Trek fans for his role as Nilz Baris in the popular TOS episode "The Trouble with Tribbles." Schallert later turned up, via archive footage, as Baris in the DS9 hour "Trials and Tribble-ations," and then in another full-fledged guest star spot as Varani in the DS9 episode "Sanctuary."

Beyond his Trek roles, he played Patty Duke's father on the classic sitcom The Patty Duke Show, appeared in many stage productions and was a familiar face in countless TV series and movies. A partial list of his credits includes the original Mighty Joe Young, Bonanza, The Incredible Shrinking Man, Father Knows Best, Get Smart, Pillow Talk, In the Heat of the Night, The Six Million Dollar Man, The Twilight Zone, The Partridge Family, The Strongest Man in the World, Twilight Zone: The Movie, Innerspace, Quantum Leap, Matinee, Melrose Place, Desperate Housewives, How I Met Your Mother and True Blood.

StarTrek.com spoke to Schallert in 2011. He was still acting and full of positive energy. And it was clear he appreciated his enduring Trek association. "People sure have known me from (the show) for a long time," he said. "They knew who I was on that show before I knew who I was on that show. I was invited to a very early Trek convention held at the Marriott at the airport (in L.A.). I arrived and went through the door into the main lobby, and it was loaded with aliens, with little antennae bouncing around on their heads. As I came through the door, they were saying, 'Nilz Baris!' I'm looking around and they said, 'No, that's you!' So that's how I learned my name from that show. There was no signing of autographs there. I was making a personal appearance. And there was a kid there who was, at the most, eight or nine. He had six months to live and was in a wheelchair, and this was the most important thing he could do in the last six months of his life, coming to this Trek convention. I thought, 'Wow, this is amazing. This show has a real hold on people.' He was thrilled to be there. He was being wheeled around and shaking hands with people. I was thinking, 'He's going to die, and this is the thing he had to do before he died.' It tells you something about the show."

Ronnie Claire Edwards, the actress who was best known for her role as Corabeth Walton Godsey on The Waltons and in several Waltons reunion telemovies, and who played Talur in the "Thine Own Self" episode of TNG, died on June 14 at the age of 83. Talur was the Barkonian teacher/scientist/healer who tried to help Data after the android completely lost his memory and wandered into a village carrying a container full of the radioactive metal.

In addition to TNG and The Waltons, Edwards -- whose credits dated back to 1963 -- appeared in such other films and shows as Boone, Dallas, Sara, Dynasty, Nobody's Fool, Designing Women, The Dead Pool and Inherit the Wind (the TV version with George C. Scott and Jack Lemmon). She also wrote plays, including Idols of the King, and published a book entitled The Knife Thrower's Assistant: Memoirs of a Human Target.

Larry Drake, veteran actor and Voyager guest star, passed away on March 17 at the age of 66. The two-time Emmy Award winner was best known for his roles as the gentle, mentally challenged office worker Benny on L.A. Law; the mental patient/Santa in a memorable episode of Tales from the Crypt; the baddie, Robert G. Durant, in Darkman and Darkman II: The Return of Durant; and the creepy title character in Dr. Giggles, directed by Manny Coto. He guest starred as Chellick, the Jye administrator of Hospital 4-2 on Dinaal, in the "Critical Care" episode of Voyager.

David Huddleston, the character actor who was best known for his role as the Big Lebowksi in The Big Lebowski, and who made his mark in the Trek universe as The Conductor in the TNG episode "Emergence," died on Tuesday, August 2, at age 85, succumbing to advanced heart and kidney disease in Santa Fe, New Mexico.

Huddleston's career spanned 50-plus years and his many stage, screen and TV credits included 1776, Bewitched, Rio Lobo, Brian's Song, Charlie's Angels, Blazing Saddles, Capricorn One, Santa Claus: The Movie, The Wonder Years (for which he earned an Emmy nomination), The West Wing, Gilmore Girls, It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia and Locker 13.

Richard Libertini, veteran actor and DS9 guest star, passed away on January 7 at the age of 82, following a two-year battle with cancer. He made his sole journey to the Trek universe when he played the Bajoran poet Akorem Laan in the fourth-season DS9 episode, "Accession."

Beyond Trek, Libertini amassed more than 100 stage, TV and film credits, and he also performed stand-up comedy early in his career. His credits included Catch-22, Quincy, Soap, Days of Heaven, The In-Laws, Fletch, Fletch Lives, Awakenings, Monk, Supernatural, Dolphin Tale and Sonny with a Chance. His final on-screen appearances came in 2015, when he guest-starred in two episodes of Aquarius, with one of the episodes directed by Voyager's Roxann Dawson. As noted, Libertini performed stand-up comedy at the start of his career, and his partner for a time was recurring DS9 guest star Paul Dooley.

Anthony Fredrickson, whose work as a scenic and graphic artist -- with an occasional assist on props -- helped bring to life much of the modern era of Trek, died suddenly on February 15 of a heart attack. He had lent his talents to TNG, DS9, Voyager, Star Trek: Enterprise, Star Trek: The Experience, Star Trek World Tour, Star Trek Generations, Star Trek: First Contact, Star Trek Insurrection and Nemesis, as well as the Star Fleet Medical Reference Guide.

"Our friend Anthony was an endlessly creative member of the Star Trek art department," Denise and Michael Okuda told StarTrek.com upon his passing. "We used to keep a box of random junk in the office. Anthony delighted in diving into that box to come up with something ingenious whenever we needed a last-minute prop or some unexpected bit of set dressing. We will miss him very much."

Fredrickson's death came less than two months after the passing of his wife, Penny Juday, the longtime Trek art department coordinator who served the franchise as an archivist. Juday died on December 19, 2015.

Barry Jenner, who played Admiral William Ross in a dozen DS9 episodes across the sixth and seventh seasons, including "A Time to Stand," "Tears of the Prophets," "The Changing Face of Evil" and "What You Leave Behind," died on August 9, succumbing to acute myeloid leukemia at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles. The actor, who was 75, also provided the voice of the character in the video game Star Trek: Deep Space Nine -- Dominion Wars, and was a familiar figure on the convention circuit.

Born in Philadelphia, Jenner counted among his other credits Another World, Knots Landing, Dallas, Highway to Heaven, Looker, Hart to Hart, V: The Series, Family Matters, Walker: Texas Ranger, JAG, Enough Said and, if IMDB is accurate, an upcoming film called The Caretaker. He also was a frequent celebrity guest on the game shows Super Password and The $10,000 Pyramid.


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