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Friday, June 30, 2017

Catching Up with Deborah Lacey, Sisko's Mom

Just as the presence of Jake Sisko helped humanize Benjamin Sisko on Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, so too did the arrival of Sisko's mother, Sarah, spectral and possessed though she may have been for the most part. Deborah Lacey played Sarah in five seventh-season DS9 episodes – "Image in the Sand," "Shadows and Symbols," "Penumbra," "Til Death Do Us Part" and the series finale, "What You Leave Behind" – and she did lovely work bringing a complex character to life. More recently, Lacey delivered touching performances on Mad Men in the recurring role of Carla, the Drapers' housekeeper. StarTrek.com chatted with Lacey last week, discussing DS9 and Mad Men, and everything in between, as well as her upcoming appearance at Star Trek Las Vegas, which will be held August 2-6 at the Rio Suites. Here's what she had to say…


Catch everyone up. Where do you live and what are you working on at the moment?

Deborah Lacey

I live in the Pasadena area of California. Since DS9 I've recurred on Mad Men as Carla, the Drapers' housekeeper, for the first four seasons. I recurred for two seasons on The Fosters as Mary, an adoption attorney, and have done many other episodics. I also had a cameo in the feature film, Straight Outta Compton, and I co-starred opposite Michael Douglas and Matt Damon in HBO's Behind the Candelabra. I've also been starring as the lead actress in several short films that have been seen around the country in film festivals. And I'm back in the theater now.

What are you up to when you're not acting?

My day usually starts with some form of exercise. I eat protein in the morning and head to the gym for Yoga and/or equipment exercise, or I take a two-mile walk around my neighborhood. I enjoy exercise. I'm a big fan of Turner Classic Movies; the old movies are my acting classes. I also enjoy bowling, political debates, but only if they're civil. I love going to movies, the theater, and I'm a cook. And I do enjoy social media.

If someone reads this, isn't aware of your previous work and wants to check it out, what are some of your performances in films and shows that you're proudest of?

I'm definitely proud of my work as Carla on Mad MenThe Closer, The Gregory Hines Show, The Five Heartbeats feature film. I had fun with my character on Bones, and I'm proud of my very first starring role opposite Harry Hamlin and Beah Richards in the HBO series The Hitchhiker. There are so many others. I'm very proud of the film I shot on location in Ghana, West Africa in 1989... African Timber, about the smuggling of the most expensive wood in the world, mahogany. I played an African heiress.

Your Twitter introduction references The Miki Howard Story. What's that about? Whom do you play? What's happening with the film?

Deborah Lacey

This a TV movie for TVOne that tells the inspiring story of R&B singer Miki Howard and her struggle to overcome her battles with drug addiction, domestic violence. and a mother who kicked her out at 16. That's when she comes to stay with my character, Tressie, who takes her in and helps her with her two boys. The movie can be seen OnDemand.


How familiar, or not, were you with Star Trek in general and DS9 specifically when the opportunity to play Sarah Sisko came along?

I was familiar with Star Trek. I had been watching since The Original Series. I watched some TNG as well, and I watched DS9, too. I was actually very excited to see Avery Brooks starring in it, and I really wanted to work with him. I had been auditioning for other roles on other Star Treks, so when this role of Sarah Sisko came along, the producers were well aware of me. I believe they had me in mind for her because at my audition I remember one of the producers said to me, "I can't believe you're the Sisko's mom." I'm still not sure why he said that, though, but I was flattered and it made me feel I had the part.


What did they tell you about the role, her backstory? And did you know it would be recurring?

They told me Sarah, the Prophet, had taken the human body of Benjamin's mother, Sarah, in order to make him the Sisko, to give a story as to why he was chosen to be the leader of a people he was not a part of. They told me Sarah was linear. I did know there would be other episodes, but not how many.


We first saw you in "Image in the Sand." How did they shoot that bit with your face in the sand? And what was it like for you to see that striking image?

Deborah Lacey

This experience was so exciting for me. There was a clay mask made of my face. I had to go to the makeup department at Paramount and sit in a chair with my hair covered, eyes closed and straws through my nose so I could breathe. They placed the clay over my face and I sat for a little while until it hardened. I don't think it was very long. They made two of them. The masks were clay colored, so they had to apply makeup to match my skin tone and makeup for masks to make them look like my face. They looked like a sculpture of my face... pretty amazing. I still have one of two that were made. These masks were used to create the special effect of seeing my face appear in the sand. So, on a sound stage on the lot, they made a medium sandbox and they first filmed the masks in the sandbox. They had both masks to work with where my eyes were closed. After they shot the mask in the sand, I was then asked to lay down face up in the sandbox, and they shot my face in a very tight closeup, just to get my eyes to open. So, I did a few takes of opening my eyes, with the direction that I was opening them to speak for the first time. So, this is the amazing work of the special effects (team), who then interchanged the opening of my eyes with the shots of the masks in the sand to make it look like there was a face in the sand that opened its eyes. Pretty cool. I was blown away when I saw it. It felt so real, and it really helped set me up for the performance of a celestial being. I loved it, and it was spooky at the same time. The masks look exactly like me, like seeing myself in a quiet peace.


You had to play Sarah as both ethereal and human, there and not there. How did you wrap your head around that and then bring her to life when the camera rolled?

Well, it helped that I had played a spirit being before on Roc, the live sitcom on Fox starring Charles Dutton. So, I knew how to play feeling distant from other people. It's a feeling of living in outer space, of knowing you're not a part of this existence, feeling you're in a better place even, removed from their world. I was directed to play Sarah in the beginning as "searching for words," not really sure of the words. So, it's a little "choppy." That's what I tried to do. I relied on that direction, and searched for communication. I imagined what it would be like if I struggled to communicate in a foreign language and only had my senses to work with. You'd find a way to express yourself.


How did you enjoy working with Avery Brooks?

Deborah Lacey

Wow. Just wow. I don't have a better word. He is, hands down, the best actor I've ever worked with. And I'm pretty proud of the actors I've starred with. Avery is a generous actor. He cares so much about the art of performance. He's intense, so you can't help but feel engulfed by him. He makes you perform at sis level. So, he definitely made me a better actor. I absolutely adore him. Every moment in his presence was like a gift, the gift of working with a master thespian. I'll never forget it.


We'll talk about the series finale in a moment, but what do you recall most vividly about making the episodes "Shadows and Symbols," "Penumbra" and "Til Death Do Us Part"?

Deborah Lacey

"Shadows and Symbols was awesome." My first scenes with Avery, we had so much fun. It started when we met in the makeup trailer. He was so funny and he was so kind to me. We talked about Sarah and the God versus mother relationship I had in store for me, and he really helped me understand the Prophets. I remember being determined that I would perform with him on his level, so I focused on everything he had to say, absorbing it. When we got on set there was a natural rhythm, a dance that seemed to be created between us. I remember the director saying that and how much he liked it. I remember how intense Avery was. I remember how profound some of my dialogue was, how it stuck with me, how it still sticks to me today, that line that says because there could be no one else so powerful.

Deborah Lacey

"Penumbra" was a lot of fun too, I remember being given the note to search for the words because they wouldn't come very easily, and this is the episode where I was playing being present but distant, hovering like a spirit being and yet being human enough to try and connect. I used my voice to sound far away and I remember Avery reminding me that I was a god, so nothing he could say could intimidate me. We were dancing again. It came so natural, and then Sarah started showing signs of attachment, of love for her son, and she says, "You are a part of me." I remember feeling so touched by those words. I loved that I got to touch him to show that affection, how our mother and son bond was beginning to happen. I remember feeling the shift in emotions happening for Sarah.

Deborah Lacey

"Til Death Do Us Part" was a power episode for me. I remember focusing on the god I was in trying to control Sisko, trying to warn him not to go against me, this feeling of chastising my son, protecting him from danger. It was a haunting feeling, but then giving in to him because she was trying to understand but still very concerned. Another one of favorite lines was in this episode, which is, "Be careful, my son…" There were tears in my eyes and I was very moved when I grabbed his face and put it to my chest.


Sarah is a key part of the end, for now, of Sisko's journey in "What You Leave Behind." How pleased were you to figure in that on such an important, emotional level?

Deborah Lacey

I'm very pleased that Sisko made it through his journey to complete his destiny and found his mother again. By that episode, I was feeling Sarah Sisko had made that connection of mother and son, and the bond was sealed. She's proud of her son, as any mother would be. It was a journey of love. They found each other, and I thought it was great she wanted him with her.


If you could have had one more scene as Sarah, what would you like for it to have been? What would you have want to learn about her and/or her relationship with her son?

Hmmm... I would have liked to see her as the human Sarah, the wife, the mother. I would have loved to work with Brock Peters and Cirroc Lofton. Maybe some kind of flashback before the Prophet took over that would show Sisko's memories of his mom. And it would've been pretty cool to see Sarah interact with her grandson, just what she looked like being a human being. Also, how she loved him (Benjamin) as a child, where the nurturing began. I'm sure she loved him then, and that memory is shared between them. So, they have it to rely on. That's what first comes to mind.


You will be at Star Trek Las Vegas in August. How many conventions have you done in the past, and how eager are you to meet the fans and share your memories of DS9?

Deborah Lacey

Yes, I'll be there, and this is the very first time I've been asked to join in, my first Star Trek convention. I'm over-the-moon excited to be there. I'm very much looking forward to meeting the fans and sharing stories and memories. I can't wait. This is definitely one of the highlights of my career, another wow. Just hearing the question sends chills through me. I'm honored. I'm proud. I'm amazed. I'm soooo grateful. It means a lot to me because I've always believed in what Star Trek stands for. For me, I always saw stories and characters that were about tolerance of differences, of struggles of human dignity and human rights, of leadership, of values that uplift and inspire, of overcoming controversies with mutual resolve, and a whole lot of fun and laughter. This is the legacy of Star Trek for me, and why it's such a phenomenon, because it is a legacy of inclusion.

Visit Star Trek Las Vegas for more information and tickets.


via Star Trek Latest News

Remembering Enterprise Background Performer Joseph Billingiere, 1948-2017

StarTrek.com is saddened to report the passing of veteran stuntman, martial artist, photo double and actor Joe Billingiere, who passed away on June 15 at the age of 68 in Ventura, California. Billingiere appeared in at least two episodes of Star Trek: Enterprise, playing a Klingon in one and an Enolian prisoner in "Canamar."


Beyond his Trek credits, Billingiere also worked on such film and TV projects as Exit Wounds, Half Past Dead, Reno 911!, Everybody Hates Chris, Jonah Hex, John Carter and Drunk History. Prior to his passing, he'd completed the upcoming features Moon Creek Cemetery and Damsel, the latter with Robert Pattinson and Mia Wasikowska. 


Billingiere's family and friends will celebrate his life and legacy at 5 p.m. on Thursday, July 6 at Amigo's Cantina in Ventura, California. Please join StarTrek.com in offering our condolences to Billingiere's loved ones.


via Star Trek Latest News

J.G. Hertzler Joins the Cast of Star Trek Online

"How is it that I have only one eye, but I can see more clearly than anyone around me?" –Martok, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine.

Star Trek Online is very pleased to announce the newest addition to our cast... J.G. Hertzler, reprising the role of Martok, the former Klingon Chancellor that he made famous on the beloved series DS9.

Star Trek Martok


Martok was originally brought into DS9 as a brief guest star, but Hertzler's portrayal led to him becoming a fan favorite who eventually became a recurring character. The Klingon General proved instrumental in the war with the Dominion, helping Worf and the crew of Deep Space 9 fend off legions of Jem'Hadar ships, and even endured three years of torture at the hands of the Dominion's elite soldiers. Martok gained such renown in the war that then-Chancellor Gowron considered him a threat to the throne, and attempted to discredit and, eventually, kill him. Worf challenged Gowron and defeated him, but turned down the honor of becoming Chancellor, instead granting it to his friend, Martok.

Star Trek Martok
As far as the Galaxy knows, Martok is dead – having been killed in an honor duel for the position of Chancellor by J'mpok in 2393. Where has he been for the last 18 years? And what role will he play in the world of 2411? All of this will be revealed in an upcoming update to Star Trek Online.

Check out our interview with J.G. Hertzler, where he talks about returning to the role of Martok and how Klingons are like football players, right here...


via Star Trek Latest News

Thursday, June 29, 2017

SDCC-Exclusive The Bakersfield Expedition Action Figures

Fans of the hit sitcom The Big Bang Theory know that the boys love Star Trek. The boys also love attending comic conventions. So, in the season-six episode, "The Bakersfield Expedition," it was no surprise they try to attend Bakersfield comic con in full Star Trek: The Next Generation cosplay gear. On their way, the guys stop at the famous Vasquez Rocks to take some photos recreating vintage Star Trek scenes. That's when their car stolen is stolen, and a new adventure begins. Now Bif Bang Pow! has captured that moment with a The Big Bang Theory/Star Trek: The Next Generation 3 3/4-Inch Figures Set - Convention Exclusive.

Star Trek Big Bang Theory Convention Figures
The box includes four figures with five points of articulation each, including neck, shoulders and hips. The set includes: Sheldon dressed as Commander Data, Leonard as Captain Picard, Raj as Lt. Worf, and Howard as the Borg. Prototypes were made by Gentle Giant to capture all the fine details of the figures. The packaging includes a pop-out diorama of the scene depicted in the episode.

Star Trek Big Bang Theory Convention Figures
This convention-exclusive set is a must-have for fans of either show and is limited to 2,288 pieces. The first opportunity fans can grab this individually numbered and limited-edition exclusive will be at San Diego Comic-Con on July 20, 2017 in the Entertainment Earth booth (#2343).

Not attending San Diego Comic-Con 2017? *Pre-order the Exclusive Figure Set at Entertainment Earth now.

(*NOTE: This item will first be sold during San Diego Comic-Con 2017 at the Entertainment Earth Booth #2343. If supplies remain after the show, pre-orders will be filled and shipped to you then, in August 2017.)

Continue to check Entertainment Earth for the latest convention-exclusive news.


via Star Trek Latest News

Discovery Panel Set for Comic-Con

Get ready, everyone, as cast and creatives from Star Trek: Discovery are set to beam into Comic-Con International on Saturday, July 22nd, 2:30 p.m. PST in Ballroom 20.  Keep an eye on StarTrek.com for more details.

Discovery will follow the voyages of Starfleet on their missions to discover new worlds and new lifeforms, and one Starfleet officer who must learn that to truly understand all things alien, you must first understand yourself. The series will feature a new ship, new characters and new missions, while embracing the same ideology and hope for the future that inspired a generation of dreamers and doers.

Discovery premiere this September and will be available in countries around the world.

Star Trek Discovery CBS All Access

Star Trek Discovery Space Channel CraveTV

Star Trek Discovery Netflix


via Star Trek Latest News

Star Trek Beyond Wins Saturn Award

The 43rd Annual Saturn Awards were handed out on Wednesday, June 28th in Burbank, California, by the Saturn Awards Organization, and Star Trek enjoyed a solid showing. 

Congratulations Star Trek Beyond: Monica Hupert and Joel Harlow for Best Film Make-Up.

Star Trek Beyond
Star Trek Beyond


Great job Star Trek Beyond, and the rest of the winners! 


via Star Trek Latest News

Wednesday, June 28, 2017

Preview: The 5th Wing Patrol Ship (Repaint)

The Jem'Hadar are back as a terrifying threat to the Federation.

This July, WizKids/NECA will release Star Trek: Attack Wing Wave 31, and StarTrek.com has the exclusive First Look at the ships in the upcoming expansion packs, continuing with the 5th Wing Patrol Ship (Repaint).

The 5th Wing Patrol Ship is an agile Jem'Hadar attack ship that utilized advanced weapons and tactics during the Dominion War. The Jem'Hadar ships are known for powerful upgrades that can fire past an opponent's shields, as well as advanced tactics that include devastating suicide attacks against larger ships.

The Captain of the 5th Wing Patrol Ship is Weyoun. As a 6-skill level, Captain Weyoun may be disabled to prevent one of your Crew Upgrades from being disabled or discarded this round. It is most famously used in conjunction with Varel (R.I.S. Apnex Expansion Pack) in the early meta as a way to negate attacks. Even though those days have mostly past, Weyoun is still a valuable addition to your fleet.

Any weapon that can ignore an opponent's shields is a powerful one. Phased Polaron Beam is exactly that type of weapon. Limited to range 1-2, this 3-die attack ignores opposing ship's shields. If you can find a way to boost your attack dice, you will have a truly fearsome weapon at your command!

The final highlight of this expansion pack is a card that is not only powerful, but one that will catch your opponents off-guard. Suicide Attack allows you to make a 1 Straight Maneuver; if your ship overlaps an enemy ship, you may destroy your ship and roll 8 attack dice against that enemy ship. As noted by some savvy players, this card has no restrictions regarding the Elite Talent Cheat Death (Enterprise Expansion Pack). You can add Cheat Death, which allows you to use Suicide Attack to survive the explosion. This gives you the ability to continue and potentially do it again!

Even if you already own the 5th Wing Patrol Ship, you are going to want to purchase the new repaint both for the dynamic new paint job as well as the ability to create a swarm of Dominion patrol ships. Make sure to contact your local game store to reserve your copy now.

Visit WizKids/NECA at WizKids.com/Attack Wing for additional information about Star Trek: Attack Wing. And keep an eye on StarTrek.com for more First Looks and previews coming soon.


via Star Trek Latest News

Tuesday, June 27, 2017

2018 Ships of the Line Calendar Available Now

The Star Trek Ships of the Line 2018 wall calendar is available now from Universe Publishing. The panoramic calendar spans 24 pages and opens horizontally to maximize the detail and drama of each stunning piece of art. As always, the calendar is dedicated to showcasing spectacular images of the most famous vessels from the iconic franchise in a variety of iconic scenes and settings. Among those contributing to the 2018 calendar are Doug Drexler, John Eaves, D.M. Phoenix, Gabriel Koerner, Matt Boardman, Michael Wiley and Alain Rivard.

Star Trek 2018 Wall Calendar

Star Trek 2018 Wall Calendar

Priced at $14.99, the Star Trek Ships of the Line 2018 wall calendar can be purchased at www.amazon.com.


via Star Trek Latest News

Celebrate Audiobook Month with Enigma Tales & Hearts and Minds

June is officially "Audiobook Month," and Simon & Schuster Audio celebrates the occasion today by releasing a recording of Star Trek: Enigma Tales. Enigma Tales comes on the heels of Hearts and Minds, which was released a few weeks ago. StarTrek.com is pleased to share details about both adventures, as well as audiobook excerpts featuring narrator Robert Petkoff.

Star Trek, Robert Petkoff


Enigma Tales
comes from author Una McCormack, the New York Times bestselling author of The Fall: The Crimson Shadow, Typhon Pact: Brinksmanship and The Missing. Here's the official synopsis of the suspenseful story of politics and power set in the universe of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine:

Star Trek Deep Space 9: Enigma Tales


Elim Garak has ascended to Castellan of the Cardassian Union...but despite his soaring popularity, the imminent publication of a report exposing his people's war crimes during the occupation on Bajor looks likely to set the military against him. Into this tense situation come Dr. Katherine Pulaski—visiting Cardassia Prime to accept an award on behalf of the team that solved the Andorian genetic crisis—and Dr. Peter Alden, formerly of Starfleet Intelligence. The two soon find themselves at odds with Garak and embroiled in the politics of the prestigious University of the Union, where a new head is about to be appointed. Among the front-runners is one of Cardassia's most respected public figures: Professor Natima Lang. But the discovery of a hidden archive from the last years before the Dominion War could destroy Lang's reputation. As Pulaski and Alden become drawn into a deadly game to exonerate Lang, their confrontation escalates with Castellan Garak—a conflicted leader treading a fine line between the bright hopes for Cardassia's future and the dark secrets still buried in its past...

Listen to the Soundcloud excerpt of Enigma Tales here:

Purchase the audiobook at Audible or iTunes.

And then there's Hearts and Minds, a Star Trek: The Next Generation story by veteran Trek author Dayton Ward, like McCormack, a New York Times bestselling writer. Here's the official synopsis.

Star Trek TNG, Hearts and Minds


2031: United States Air Force fighter jets shoot down an unidentified spacecraft and take its crew into custody. Soon, it's learned that the ship is one of several dispatched across space by an alien species, the Eizand, to search for a new home before their own world becomes uninhabitable. Fearing extraterrestrial invasion, government and military agencies which for more than eighty years have operated in secret swing into action, charged with protecting humanity no matter the cost...

2386: Continuing their exploration of the Odyssean Pass, Captain Jean-Luc Picard and the crew of the Starship Enterprise discover what they at first believe is a previously uncharted world, with a civilization still recovering from the effects of global nuclear war. An astonishing priority message from Starfleet Command warns that there's more to this planet than meets the eye, and Picard soon realizes that the mysteries of this world may well weave through centuries of undisclosed human history...

Listen to the Soundcloud excerpt of Hearts and Minds here:



And purchase the audiobook at Audible or iTunes.


via Star Trek Latest News

Monday, June 26, 2017

Catching Up with TNG and DS9 Guest Star, Deirdre Imershein

Deirdre Imershein produces documentaries these days, but for more than a decade, encompassing all of the 1990s, she acted in films and television shows, amassing credits that included Dream On, Dallas, Blackbelt, Cheers, Scanner Cop, Silk Stalkings and one episode each of Star Trek: The Next Generation and Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. She, in the former, played the lovely Risian female who offered a shocked Captain Picard jamaharon, and for the latter appearance, Imershein portrayed Lt. Watley in "Trials and Tribble-ations." By the early 2000s, Imershein exited acting in order to produce documentaries, among them Brushes with Life: Art, Artists and Mental Illness, and Scene Smoking: Cigarettes, Cinema & the Myth of Cool. She's set to make her first-ever convention appearance at Star Trek Las Vegas, which will take place August 2-6 at the Rio Suite Hotel, and that upcoming event provided the perfect opportunity to catch up with Imershein.

Star Trek, Deirdre Imershein

What lead you to leaving acting behind? And how did you get involved in producing documentaries?

From the start of my career, directors that I worked with urged me to look into producing. The late Leonard Katzman (Dallas) would always discuss scripts with me and say that he thought I was a lovely actor, but that I had more to offer. And so, by my early 30s, I did become frustrated with just acting, and I moved into producing. Documentaries, as is true for so many women in the business, proved an easier entry point, and then I just got hooked.

Let's talk Trek. How familiar, or not, were you with Star Trek in general and The Next Generation specifically when the opportunity to play Joval in "Captain's Holiday" came along?

Star Trek, Deirdre Imershein, TNG

I was very familiar with all things Star Trek. My upstairs neighbor in L.A. actually was Gene's personal assistant. I met Rene Echevarria in New York when we were both at the start of our careers. Or we may have met in L.A. when I first relocated there. Friends sat us next to each other because we were both such huge fans of The Original Series, and we became friends right then and there. We kept making references to the show and sort of verbally sparred back and forth. So, I knew the show really well. In addition, most classically trained actors, when they made the move to L.A., knew that TNG often hired theater actors. If you have handled any classical text, you are pretty adept at making language that sounds "foreign" conversational and believable. I think I booked TNG my first week in L.A., as I recall. My agents sent me out and that was that. I was concurrently appearing in A Midsummer Night's Dream for the L.A. Shakespeare Festival that same week.

How nervous/excited were you about your big scene with Patrick Stewart?

Star Trek, Deirdre Imershein
I was nervous to meet Patrick. I was a big fan and the costume I was in was very revealing. It was odd to be dressed so skimpily and try to talk Shakespeare between takes. He was a consummate gentleman and professional.

The script notes say that Joval's comments are spoken very matter of fact, without any hint of salaciousness and no trace of servitude. How tricky was that to pull off?

That was not hard at all. If you watched the show, the idea that you are playing someone from another culture, and in this case, a culture where pleasure is just a way of life, made this easy. The irony of it was great fun.

You mentioned the bathing suit. What did you make of it, and also that funky hover ball?

The bathing suit took a leap of faith, because it was far more revealing in person than on camera. But the director assured me that the lights hit the fabric so that it became opaque, which it did. The hover ball was a complete failure at first. They tried having it on a wire, but that didn't quite work, so then they tried to just throw it around. In the end, I think they made it work and cut away, so all you see is me retrieving the hover ball and calling it back to me.

The night the episode premiered, did you watch it with family and friends? Alone? How was that experience?

I honestly do not remember. I started working on Dallas not long after that.

Several years went by and you then returned to Paramount to play Lt. Watley in "Trials and Tribble-ations." How did that opportunity come about? Did they recall that you'd been on TNG?

Star Trek, Deirdre Imershein, DS9

This goes back to Rene, and is actually a pretty funny story. Rene and I would go months without seeing each other. Every once in a while, I would get a call, and he was clearly in a busy writers' room, and he would say "Tell me how you pronounced Jamaharon? No one believes me!" And he would hang up. Well, I was already dating my husband and Rene called and said, "Deirdre, it's Rene", and I was like who is this guy bothering me? And I honestly said "Rene who?" I quickly realized who I was speaking with, and he explained they were doing this episode of Deep Space Nine, and there was a small role of a female officer in the turbo lift, and they were auditioning women and none of them were good. He said, "They are all very Carol Merrill," who was the gal I think on Let's Make a Deal that would show you what you won. So, he said, "You get to wear the old costume with the beehive hair and everything, and I will pay your day rate." So, I said, "Sure." I would have done it anyway.

Tell us about that great hair and costume, and those retro sets? It was so very reminiscent of The Original Series

It was an original costume, as I recall. The bra, which is metal, was borrowed from the lead actress wardrobe who played the first officer? I can't remember the character's name. The actual blue mini-dress was original and pulled from the vault. It was a task to get on. You step into it, and then the top sort of goes over and across you. I seem to remember Rene walking me around the whole thing. It was a real treat for a fan like me!

Any other anecdotes you can share about "Trials and Tribble-ations"?

The scenes I had were never meant to be that long. I think I was only meant to tell them that their tricorder was open. The day was running long, but the episode was running short, so Rene came to me and asked if I could stay late, which meant running into what we call "golden time," and he would write an added scene for me. The additional piece about me possibly being his mother, and maybe if he didn't take me up on my offer, he would never be born, was all added by Rene at the last minute. I am forever grateful to him for allowing me to be another part of Star Trek history that way.

What do you recall of working with Alexander Siddig and Colm Meaney?

Star Trek, Alexander Siddig, Colm Meaney

Again, such nice guys. I remember asking Alexander how he had escaped playing all bad guys as an actor with an Arabic background and him explaining that he just refused to take the roles. Amazing we are still having those conversations in casting.

You will be at Star Trek Las Vegas in August. How many conventions have you done in the past, and how eager are you to meet the fans and share your Trek memories?

I have never done a convention. Never. I am so excited to finally attend one and maybe run into some old friends. There are many actors who have done Star Trek who I know from other jobs, theater and just as friends. When a show has such a legacy and you have many friends in the business, it is inevitable that some of you have done a Star Trek from one of its many iterations.

Lastly, and you've touched on this a bit, but Star Trek recently celebrated its 50th anniversary. What does it mean to you to be a part of the Trek phenomenon and legacy?

I don't know if I can convey what I big deal this is to me. I was such a fan of the original show that I could guess the episode from just a few seconds in, sometimes even just during the opening chord of music. I would dream as a kid that I was a part of the crew, and I would watch the reruns endlessly in college late at night. I would anticipate the release of each new film. So, working on an episode, and then another that actually was reminiscent of a great episode? And attending such an important anniversary event as the TNG 30th anniversary convention is just too much to put into words. I am very grateful to have had a very small part in the legacy of what is truly the greatest American franchise to have ever existed.

For additional details about Star Trek Las Vegas, go to www.CreationEnt.com.


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Catching Up with Guest Star, Deirdre Imershein

Deirdre Imershein produces documentaries these days, but for more than a decade, encompassing all of the 1990s, she acted in films and television shows, amassing credits that included Dream On, Dallas, Blackbelt, Cheers, Scanner Cop, Silk Stalkings and one episode each of Star Trek: The Next Generation and Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. She, in the former, played the lovely Risian female who offered a shocked Captain Picard jamaharon, and for the latter appearance, Imershein portrayed Lt. Watley in "Trials and Tribble-ations." By the early 2000s, Imershein exited acting in order to produce documentaries, among them Brushes with Life: Art, Artists and Mental Illness, and Scene Smoking: Cigarettes, Cinema & the Myth of Cool. She's set to make her first-ever convention appearance at Star Trek Las Vegas, which will take place August 2-6 at the Rio Suite Hotel, and that upcoming event provided the perfect opportunity to catch up with Imershein.

Star Trek, Deirdre Imershein

What lead you to leaving acting behind? And how did you get involved in producing documentaries?

From the start of my career, directors that I worked with urged me to look into producing. The late Leonard Katzman (Dallas) would always discuss scripts with me and say that he thought I was a lovely actor, but that I had more to offer. And so, by my early 30s, I did become frustrated with just acting, and I moved into producing. Documentaries, as is true for so many women in the business, proved an easier entry point, and then I just got hooked.

Let's talk Trek. How familiar, or not, were you with Star Trek in general and The Next Generation specifically when the opportunity to play Joval in "Captain's Holiday" came along?

Star Trek, Deirdre Imershein, TNG

I was very familiar with all things Star Trek. My upstairs neighbor in L.A. actually was Gene's personal assistant. I met Rene Echevarria in New York when we were both at the start of our careers. Or we may have met in L.A. when I first relocated there. Friends sat us next to each other because we were both such huge fans of The Original Series, and we became friends right then and there. We kept making references to the show and sort of verbally sparred back and forth. So, I knew the show really well. In addition, most classically trained actors, when they made the move to L.A., knew that TNG often hired theater actors. If you have handled any classical text, you are pretty adept at making language that sounds "foreign" conversational and believable. I think I booked TNG my first week in L.A., as I recall. My agents sent me out and that was that. I was concurrently appearing in A Midsummer Night's Dream for the L.A. Shakespeare Festival that same week.

How nervous/excited were you about your big scene with Patrick Stewart?

Star Trek, Deirdre Imershein
I was nervous to meet Patrick. I was a big fan and the costume I was in was very revealing. It was odd to be dressed so skimpily and try to talk Shakespeare between takes. He was a consummate gentleman and professional.

The script notes say that Joval's comments are spoken very matter of fact, without any hint of salaciousness and no trace of servitude. How tricky was that to pull off?

That was not hard at all. If you watched the show, the idea that you are playing someone from another culture, and in this case, a culture where pleasure is just a way of life, made this easy. The irony of it was great fun.

You mentioned the bathing suit. What did you make of it, and also that funky hover ball?

The bathing suit took a leap of faith, because it was far more revealing in person than on camera. But the director assured me that the lights hit the fabric so that it became opaque, which it did. The hover ball was a complete failure at first. They tried having it on a wire, but that didn't quite work, so then they tried to just throw it around. In the end, I think they made it work and cut away, so all you see is me retrieving the hover ball and calling it back to me.

The night the episode premiered, did you watch it with family and friends? Alone? How was that experience?

I honestly do not remember. I started working on Dallas not long after that.

Several years went by and you then returned to Paramount to play Lt. Watley in "Trials and Tribble-ations." How did that opportunity come about? Did they recall that you'd been on TNG?

Star Trek, Deirdre Imershein, DS9

This goes back to Rene, and is actually a pretty funny story. Rene and I would go months without seeing each other. Every once in a while, I would get a call, and he was clearly in a busy writers' room, and he would say "Tell me how you pronounced Jamaharon? No one believes me!" And he would hang up. Well, I was already dating my husband and Rene called and said, "Deirdre, it's Rene", and I was like who is this guy bothering me? And I honestly said "Rene who?" I quickly realized who I was speaking with, and he explained they were doing this episode of Deep Space Nine, and there was a small role of a female officer in the turbo lift, and they were auditioning women and none of them were good. He said, "They are all very Carol Merrill," who was the gal I think on Let's Make a Deal that would show you what you won. So, he said, "You get to wear the old costume with the beehive hair and everything, and I will pay your day rate." So, I said, "Sure." I would have done it anyway.

Tell us about that great hair and costume, and those retro sets? It was so very reminiscent of The Original Series

It was an original costume, as I recall. The bra, which is metal, was borrowed from the lead actress wardrobe who played the first officer? I can't remember the character's name. The actual blue mini-dress was original and pulled from the vault. It was a task to get on. You step into it, and then the top sort of goes over and across you. I seem to remember Rene walking me around the whole thing. It was a real treat for a fan like me!

Any other anecdotes you can share about "Trials and Tribble-ations"?

The scenes I had were never meant to be that long. I think I was only meant to tell them that their tricorder was open. The day was running long, but the episode was running short, so Rene came to me and asked if I could stay late, which meant running into what we call "golden time," and he would write an added scene for me. The additional piece about me possibly being his mother, and maybe if he didn't take me up on my offer, he would never be born, was all added by Rene at the last minute. I am forever grateful to him for allowing me to be another part of Star Trek history that way.

What do you recall of working with Alexander Siddig and Colm Meaney?

Star Trek, Alexander Siddig, Colm Meaney

Again, such nice guys. I remember asking Alexander how he had escaped playing all bad guys as an actor with an Arabic background and him explaining that he just refused to take the roles. Amazing we are still having those conversations in casting.

You will be at Star Trek Las Vegas in August. How many conventions have you done in the past, and how eager are you to meet the fans and share your Trek memories?

I have never done a convention. Never. I am so excited to finally attend one and maybe run into some old friends. There are many actors who have done Star Trek who I know from other jobs, theater and just as friends. When a show has such a legacy and you have many friends in the business, it is inevitable that some of you have done a Star Trek from one of its many iterations.

Lastly, and you've touched on this a bit, but Star Trek recently celebrated its 50th anniversary. What does it mean to you to be a part of the Trek phenomenon and legacy?

I don't know if I can convey what I big deal this is to me. I was such a fan of the original show that I could guess the episode from just a few seconds in, sometimes even just during the opening chord of music. I would dream as a kid that I was a part of the crew, and I would watch the reruns endlessly in college late at night. I would anticipate the release of each new film. So, working on an episode, and then another that actually was reminiscent of a great episode? And attending such an important anniversary event as the TNG 30th anniversary convention is just too much to put into words. I am very grateful to have had a very small part in the legacy of what is truly the greatest American franchise to have ever existed.

For additional details about Star Trek Las Vegas, go to www.CreationEnt.com.


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