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Sunday, December 31, 2017

A Look Ahead: Star Trek in 2018

What's on the way for Star Trek fans in 2018? StarTrek.com previews the events, anniversaries and more set to occur over the next 12 months. Check it out:

Discovery Returns

star trek discovery, captain lorca, jason isaacs

Chapter Two of Star Trek: Discovery's first season will continue on January 7 with "Despite Yourself." Trek alum Jonathan Frakes directed the episode, the show's 10th hour. And here's the official synopsis:

While in unfamiliar territory, the U.S.S. Discovery crew is forced to get creative in their next efforts to survive opposing and unprecedented forces and return home.

Keep any eye on StarTrek.com for an exclusive preview interview with Frakes.

Star Trek: The Cruise II

Star Trek: The Cruise

Thousands of fans will set sails on not one, but two Star Trek-themed cruises in 2018. Star Trek: The Cruise II will welcome fans aboard the Norwegian Cruise Line's Norwegian Jade from January 5-11 and 11-17, 2018, and set sail from Miami to Roatan (Honduras), Harvest Caye (Belize) and Costa Maya (Mexico).

Star Trek: The Cruise, Robert Picardo and Jordan Bennett

Each six-day voyage will feature special Trek-themed shows, events, programs and even drinks, while celebrity guests will include Brent Spiner, Nana Visitor, Karl Urban, Jonathan Frakes, LeVar Burton, Gates McFadden and many more. StarTrek.com will be aboard both treks and posting highlights each and every day.

A Troika of Cons

Fans around the world will be treated in 2018 to a trio of official Star Trek conventions, to be held in Dortmund (Germany), Birmingham (UK) and Las Vegas.

Destination Star Trek Germany, L'Rell, Lorca, Kirk, Dax

Destination Star Trek will return to Germany on April 27-29, 2018, at The Messe Westfallenhallen in Dortmund. William Shatner will headline the event and be joined by a 25th anniversary reunion of many of the main cast from Deep Space Nine, and other fan favorites, including Jason Isaacs, Kenneth Mitchell, Mary Chieffo, Robert Duncan McNeill and Walter Koenig. Along with autographs, photo ops and panels, fans will be able to see props and costumes in the Destination Star Trek Museum. Go to Destination Star Trek Germany for details and to purchase tickets.

Destination Star Trek Birmingham, Kol, Kirk, Riker

Destination Star Trek Birmingham will be held at the National Exhibition Centre (NEC) in Birmingham, England, from October 19-21, 2018. Guest so far will include William Shatner, astronaut Fred Haise, Walter Koenig, Jonathan Frakes, Mary Chieffo, Kenneth Mitchell, Nana Visitor, Armin Shimerman, Marina Sirtis, Rene Auberjonois, Terry Farrell, Linda Park, Nicole de Boer, and more. Along with autographs, photo ops and panels, fans attending both events will be able to take command of the bridge on the U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701 and NCC-1701-D, plus see props and costumes in the Destination Star Trek Museum. For additional details and to buy tickets, visit Destination Star Trek Birmingham.

star trek las vegas, sarek, kirk, seven of nine, data

Star Trek Las Vegas will take place from August 1-5, 2018 at the Rio Suites Hotel. Creation Entertainment has already locked in more than 50 guests spanning the entire franchise, including William Shatner, Jeri Ryan, Wilson Cruz, Mary Chieffo, James Frain, Kenneth Mitchell, Michael Dorn and Brent Spiner. Among the announced events so far, the Nevada Pops Orchestra will return to perform a Saturday night concert, while Gary Graham and his group, The Sons of Kirk, will once again serve as the house band. Keep an eye on StarTrek.com for news of additional guests and events, and go to Star Trek Las Vegas for more information and to purchase tickets.

Deep Space Nine Turns 25

star trek deep space nine 25th anniversary

Star Trek fans the world over will be spending much of 2018 celebrating the 25th anniversary of Deep Space Nine, which debuted on January 3, 1993. Look to StarTrek.com throughout the year as we interview the show's makers and cast, looking back at specific episodes and building up to the release of the documentary, What We Left Behind: Looking Back at Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. According to the doc's producers, What We Left Behind will take a detailed look at the historic series and consider the reasons DS9 went from a family outcast to Trek mainstay. The film will also contain a "what if" segment in which the original writers brainstorm a theoretical 8th season of the show.

Shatner Returns to the Set

star trek the original series, william shatner, set tour

It'll be "Captain on the bridge!" once again when William Shatner beams down to Ticonderoga, New York for a special appearance at the Star Trek: The Original Series Set Tour this spring. Shatner will be on hand on May 4th and 5th, and is set to sign autographs, pose for photo ops, and participate in a unique meet-and-greet event and a Q & A. Go to Star Trek Original Series Set Tour for details.


via Star Trek Latest News

Series Crew You'd Most Want to Serve With Is...

Which series crew would you most want to serve with? That's the question StarTrek.com posed for our latest weekly poll. Thousands of fans replied, selecting from The Original Series, The Next Generation, Deep Space Nine, Voyager, Enterprise and Discovery, and here are the results:

The Next Generation (40%)

Voyager (19%)

The Original Series (17%)

Deep Space Nine (16%)

Enterprise (7%)

Discovery (2%)

Don't forget to vote in this week's new poll.


via Star Trek Latest News

Saturday, December 30, 2017

Remembering Those We Lost in 2017

It's almost time to flip the page to 2018, but before we do so, StarTrek.com is taking a moment to pay final tribute to the members of the Star Trek universe who passed away in 2017. Each and every one left an indelible imprint on Star Trek, and to them we say, "Thank you, and farewell."

Len Wein

Len Wein, who co-created the characters Wolverine and Swamp Thing, wrote or edited for DC Comics and Marvel Comics for many years, and, in 1971, penned eight issues of Gold Key's Star Trek comic-book adventures, died on September 10 at the age of 69. Wein's Gold Key Trek titles included The Legacy of Lazarus, The Brain Shockers, The Enterprise Mutiny and Day of the Inquisitors. Later, between 1986 and 1987, he wrote several installments of DC's Star Trek comics, including Maggie's World (with Tony Isabella), The Apocalypse Scenario!, and Mudd's Magic! Beyond his prolific output as a comic-book writer, Wein penned episodes of such animated series as Spider-Man, X-Men, Marvel Super Hero Squad and Batman: The Animated Series. He also made a cameo appearance in X-Men: Days of Future Past and was inducted to the Will Eisner Comic Book Fall of Fame in 2008.

Miguel Ferrer

Miguel Ferrer, an actor best known for his roles on NCIS: Los Angeles, Crossing Jordan, Twin Peaks, Mulan and RoboCop, and who entered the Trek universe when he played the executive officer of the U.S.S. Excelsior in Star Trek III: The Search for Spock, died on January 19, at the age of 61, succumbing to throat cancer. Born in Santa Monica, Ferrer was the son of actor Jose Ferrer and singer Rosemary Clooney. He initially gravitated toward music, performing with his mother, Bing Crosby and even Keith Moon of The Who. Ferrer also was part of a band, The Jenerators, with his friend and fellow actor-musician (and Deep Space Nine guest star) Bill Mumy, who cast him in his first role, as a drummer, in the series Sunshine. By the early 1980s, Ferrer had set his sights on an acting career, and he went on to appear on stage and in dozens of films and TV shows, among them Magnum P.I., T.J. Hooker, Hot Shots! Part Deux!, Tales from the Crypt, The Stand, Traffic, The Manchurian Candidate (the 2004 remake), Psych, Desperate Housewives and Iron Man 3. His gravelly voice – and few people could sound more intimidating than Ferrer – was heard in numerous animated films and shows, as well as videogames. Along with Mulan, his voiceover work included Superman: The Animated Series, Halo 2, Robot Chicken, The Batman and Rio 2. Despite his illness, Ferrer acted until the very end. In addition to episodes of NCIS: Los Angeles, Ferrer completed Teen Titans: The Judas Contract, an animated direct-to-video feature. He also reprised his Twin Peaks and Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me role as pathologist Albert Rosenfeld in the recent Twin Peaks continuation.

Bernie Casey

Bernie Casey, actor and Deep Space Nine guest star, passed away September 19 at the age of 78, following a brief, sudden illness, Casey started out as a NFL wide receiver and made the transition to acting full time after retiring early from a Pro Bowl football career. His many film and TV credits included Brian's Song, Boxcar Bertha, Cleopatra Jones, The Man Who Fell to Earth, Never Say Never Again, Bay City Blues, Revenge of the Nerds, The Martian Chronicles, I'm Gonna Get You Sucka, Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure, Under Siege and Girlfriends. Back in 1994, Casey portrayed Lt. Commander Calvin Hudson in the DS9 episodes "The Maquis, Part I" and "The Maquis, Part II." Hudson, the Starfleet attache to Federation colonies within the newly established Demilitarized Zone, formed and led the Maquis, in the process clashing with his old friend, Sisko (Avery Brooks). Casey was also a respected poet and painter whose art was displayed in galleries worldwide.

Skip Homeier

Skip Homeier, the two-time Star Trek: The Original Series guest star who played Melakon in "Patterns of Force" and Dr. Sevrin in "The Way to Eden," passed away on June 25 at the age of 86. Homeier started his career as a child actor, going by the name Skippy Homeier. On stage and on TV and film, he often played tough kids and villains, making a particularly memorable mark as a Nazi youth in Tomorrow, the World! in 1944. mong his many subsequent films and TV credits were Halls of Montezuma, two episodes of Alfred Hitchcock Presents, The Ghost and Mr. Chicken, The Millionaire, Dan Raven, The Addams Family, The Outer Limits, Bonanza, Mission: Impossible, Helter Skelter, The Greatest, Fantasy Island and two episodes of Quincy M.E., one of which was directed by future Trek writer-producer Jeri Taylor. He retired from acting in 1982 after appearing in the film Quell and Co

Stewart Moss

Stewart Moss, an actor, writer and director who twice guest starred on TOS, died in September, exact date unannounced, at the age of 79. Moss played Joe Tormolen in "The Naked Time" and Hanar in "By Any Other Name." Moss's life and career intersected with everyone from Marilyn Monroe, John Wayne, Alfred Hitchcock and Frank Sinatra to Rock Hudson, Robin Williams, Hugh Hefner and more than a few Playboy Playmates, that last fact courtesy of his directing shows for the then-fledgling Playboy Channel, as well as Marianne McAndrew, his wife of 50 years. As an actor, Moss counted among his film and TV credits Raise the Titanic, Topaz, In Harm's Way, The Bat People (with his wife), The Missiles of October, Hogan's Heroes, Mannix, Quincy, Ironside, Cagney and Lacey, Rockford Files, T.J. Hooker, The Six Million Dollar Man, Perry Mason, Punky Brewster and The Fall Guy. He also acted in a total of 64 stage productions on Broadway, off-Broadway, regionally and in dinner theater.

Lawrence Montaigne

Lawrence Montaigne, the veteran actor who played the Romulan, Decius, in the TOS episode "Balance of Terror" in 1966 and returned a year later to portray Stonn, a Vulcan, in "Amok Time," died on Friday, March 17, at the age of 86. Born in Brooklyn, New York, and raised in Rome, Montaigne featured in such films as The Great Escape, Tubruk, The Power, Captain Sinbad, Damon & Pythias, The Mongols and Escape to Witch Mountain. By his own count, Montaigne appeared in more than 200 TV episodes, among them The Outer Limits, The Fugitive, I Spy, The Time Tunnel, Batman, The Man from U.N.C.L.E., Mission: Impossible and Dallas. According to various sources, including Montaigne himself, the producers of TOS were ready to tap him to replace Leonard Nimoy as Spock when negotiations with Nimoy seemed unlikely to pan out; they did, however, and Montaigne was invited to play Stonn. The actor was also an author and longtime popular guest at Star Trek conventions. 

Mark La Mura

Mark La Mura, an actor whose many credits included the role of John Doe in "Transfigurations," a third-season episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation, succumbed to lung cancer on September 11 at the age of 68. The actor, who hailed from Perth Amboy, New Jersey, was best known for his long-running, Daytime Emmy-nominated role as Mark Dalton on the soap opera All My Children. His other credits included Kojak, The Russia House, Law & Order, The Sopranos, Army Wives and, most recently, the HBO movie, The Wizard of Lies.

Loren Janes

Legendary Hollywood stuntman and stunt coordinator Loren Janes died on June 24 at the age of 85. Janes was Steve McQueen's longtime stunt double and handled stunts for the likes of Jack Nicholson, Paul Newman, Robert Wagner, Jack Lemmon, Charles Bronson, Frank Sinatra, Kirk Douglas, Michael Douglas and, believe it or not, Esther Williams and Debbie Reynolds. TOS twice tapped his talents, as he doubled William Shatner in "Charlie X" and Richard Tatro in "I, Mudd." Janes, in 1961, co-founded (with Dick Deary) the Stuntmen's Association of Motion Pictures and Television, and he was also the National Chair of the Screen Actors Guild Stunt and Safety Committee. Over the years, the former Marine amassed an impressive array of film and TV credits that included The Ten Commandments, The Magnificent Seven, The Getaway, Planet of the Apes, The Towering Inferno, Blazing Saddles, Escape from New York, Beverly Hills Cop, MacGyver, Wild at Heart, Out to Sea, The Practice, America's Sweethearts and Spider-Man. According to CNN, he won a Golden Boot, the Stuntmen Association's lifetime achievement award, in 2001, but in more recent years had battled Alzheimer's Disease.

Jack Blessing

Jack Blessing, who succumbed to pancreatic cancer on November 14 at the age of 66, played Dulmur, a particularly humorless Department of Temporal Investigations agent, in the DS9 episode "Trials and Tribble-ations." His many other credits included Heaven's Gate, Family Ties, Moonlighting, The Golden Girls, The Naked Truth, Murder One, Profiler, The X-Files, George Lopez, Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby, and Mike & Molly. Blessing also lent his voice to countless projects, among them games, shows and movies spanning from Rambling Rose, The Chronicles of Riddick, Shrek Forever After and Bee Movie to Megamind, ParaNorman. The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part I and II, and the Chris Pine drama, Hell or High Water.


via Star Trek Latest News

Friday, December 29, 2017

Build Your Own Colony, Add Statues, in STO

Star Trek Online, the free-to-play online RPG set in the future of the Star Trek universe, allows players to form their own fleets and journey together into the Final Frontier. As part of this system, players can team up to build fleet holdings like starbases, research labs, and our newest addition, Dranuur Colony. On Dranuur Colony, Captains can bring together two long-lost sister races to begin the healing process, and discover what they can do together.

Following the events of "Mirrors and Smoke," the Lukari and Kentari began efforts to work together. The culmination of this effort is the Dranuur Colony in the Alpha Quadrant. With Season 14: Emergence, Dranuur Colony will become available as a new 5-tier joint Lukari-Kentari-themed Fleet Holding, available to all Fleets in Star Trek Online.

Dranuur Colony will also feature many unlockable projects to improve both its visual appearance, as well as many standard conveniences for Captains at the colony. Fleets can also unlock inter-fleet shuttle capabilities that will allow for quick and easy access to Dranuur Colony.

Project 7 – Colony Beautification – Statues

Completing this project will add some statues commemorating the joint Lukari-Kentari colony.


via Star Trek Latest News

WATCH: Picardo's Planetary Post Bloopers

Hello again, StarTrek.com readers:

In the world of Star Trek, blooper reels are as traditional as rubber foreheads, heavy hairspray and technobabble. In this month's post, I look back at some of my favorite topics covered and bloopers uttered. I hope it brings you some holiday cheer.

See you in the New Year!

Learn more about The Planetary Society by going to www.planetary.org. And just tell them the Doctor sent you.


via Star Trek Latest News

The Fuzzies? Celebrating 50 Years of "The Trouble with Tribbles"

"The Trouble With Tribbles," written by David Gerrold, is one of the very best episodes of Star Trek: The Original Series. Although it's different from other, more-serious TOS episodes, such as "The City on the Edge of Forever" and "Space Seed," "The Trouble With Tribbles" is perfectly at home with them because it shines with an element that's also an important Star Trek staple: great comedy. After all, who hasn't chuckled at Scotty's reply to Kirk when he finally tells him why he threw the first punch at the Klingons? Or to Mr. Spock's dry announcement to his captain concerning how many Tribbles likely were in the grain compartment as they were falling on his head?

Since today is the 50th anniversary of the first broadcast of "The Trouble With Tribbles," we thought we'd take a look at the development of the episode from its initial story premise to the final product. However, since a detailed examination would require more discussion than we have space for, we'll just skim the surface or, in other words… we'll just sample one of everything at the buffet.

Story Premise

"The Trouble With Tribbles" started as a premise called "The Fuzzies," one of five that Gerrold submitted to Star Trek in February, 1967. As the title implies, Tribbles were initially named Fuzzies, and the plot elements in the story were somewhat different from those that ended up in "The Trouble With Tribbles."

Above: The Fuzzies/Tribbles and their uncontrolled breeding proclivities share some similarities with the flat cats in Robert A. Heinlein's "The Rolling Stones" (Charles Scribner's Sons, 1952) and the guinea pigs in Ellis Parker Butler's "Pigs Is Pigs" (American Illustrated Magazine, 1905, and McClure, Phillips & Co., 1906).

"The Fuzzies" told the tale of Kirk protecting a warehouse of grain at a trading post on the planet Barth, a peaceful planet with a frontier culture similar to 1870's Earth. The grain itself was owned by a company under the direction of Damon Jones, and a competing company on the planet, the Barth Corporation (selling neo-corn), was very jealous.

Kirk's mission started fairly uneventfully, but it quickly was upended when Cyrano Smith, a planet locator who was a conman, arrived at the trading post with his small, furry Fuzzies. Similar to what happened in the finished episode, Smith sold his Fuzzies to various shopkeepers, and when one was brought on board the Enterprise — by Janice Rand in Gerrold's premise — it produced "pups" that continued to breed until the crew was hip-deep in them. In fact, there were so many around that the cook told Kirk that they were even in the flour stores on the ship.

Wait. Flour? Can't you make flour from grain? Ah-ha!

When the cook mentioned to Kirk and Spock that the Fuzzies had gotten into the flour, they suddenly realized that the Fuzzies may have gotten into the grain in the warehouse on Barth… so they immediately beamed to the planet and confirmed that they not only had gotten into it but they had also consumed it. Shockingly, they also found that the Fuzzies that had eaten it were dead.

Searching for answers to the mystery of the Fuzzies, their deaths, and the grain, Kirk tracked down Smith — who had fled the planet — and he confessed to knowing that the Fuzzies bred fast when fed; however, he knew nothing about the grain on the planet. Shortly thereafter, Kirk learned that the Fuzzies were killed by a poison in the grain and, with the help of Smith, he was able to finger Damon Jones' assistant – a covert employee of the Barth Corporation – as the one who masterminded the poisoning. With all the major plot points now wrapped up, the treatment ended with a new shipment of grain en route to Barth, Smith remaining on the planet to catch all the Fuzzies, and Janice Rand sporting a new pair of fluff-ball earrings — which Kirk initially mistook as Fuzzies — in what was hoped to be a humorous tag.

Above: David Gerrold's book, The Trouble With Tribbles (Ballantine, 1973), presents the fascinating history of the making of "The Trouble With Tribbles." It's filled with a wealth of information and photos (including the one shown above of William Shatner jokingly dropping tribbles on David Gerrold's head), and it even includes instructions on how to make your own Tribble. It's required reading for TOS fans.

Story Outline

After receiving feedback about the premise from the production company (mainly from Producer Gene Coon), Gerrold wrote an outline entitled "A Fuzzy Thing Happened To Me…" that was turned in on June 17, 1967. At 35 pages, it was one of the longer outlines for a TOS episode, mainly because Gerrold included a substantial amount of dialogue – a lot of which survived to the broadcast version. This outline had all the major parts contained within the final episode with only a few major differences:

  • Deep Space Station K7 was called Topsy and it was comprised of randomly joined modules
  • The Enterprise was on its way to Topsy for a variety of reasons, including picking up the mail for the crew
  • Sherman's planet is named Barger's planet
  • Sulu accompanies Uhura to the space station, not Chekov, and he's interested in the quadro-triticale because he's a botanist
  • Cyrano Jones is Cyrano Day Jaymin in the outline and he's a planetary scout (locator)
  • The Tribbles are called Fuzzies
  • Cyrano, not a Tribble, is the one who reveals that Arne Darvin is a Klingon spy
  • Scott's famous line "Where they'll be no Tribble at all" is not present at the end

First Draft Script

Gerrold received comments and critiques on the outline from the production company and then went to work writing a first draft. Ultimately, one was completed on July 21, 1967. Overall, the first draft is quite close to what finally ended up in the shooting draft (the revised final draft) and on the screen except for:

  • The teaser neither takes place in the briefing room nor contains Chekov and Spock's "extremely little" joke. Rather, the teaser takes place on the bridge and involves a discussion of the disputed nature of Sherman's planet
  • Sulu has Chekov's part in Act I
  • Some proper names are different. For example, Korax compares Kirk to a Sirian Blood Worm instead of a Regulan Blood Worm
  • Kirk asks Ensign Freeman, a part Gerrold wrote for himself, to have someone gather up the Tribbles on the Enterprise
  • Cyrano Jones leaves deep space station K7 on his ship after Kirk finds the tribbles in the grain compartment. Kirk has to chase him down
  • Lurry is the person who recognizes that the Tribbles that ate the grain in the warehouse are dying
  • Scott's famous line "Where they'll be no Tribble at all" is not present at the end. Instead, Kirk expresses his surprise at the Tribble solution and suggests that he might give Scott a raise for it.

Above: Early versions of this episode didn't exactly treat the Tribbles as you would a pet. For example, in the first draft, McCoy dissected one in sickbay to determine how their biology worked (in contrast to what he said he wouldn't do in the final version) and Scott pulled a dead and smoking one from his engines after he tried to start them.

Revised Final Draft Script and Shooting

Since the first draft script for the episode was close to being shootable, the final changes dictated by the producers were relatively minor, so they were quick and easy to make. Thus, the revised final draft script was completed on August 1, 1967 (some minor revisions were made later, out to August 21) and principal photography was done from August 22 until August 29. The script was essentially shot as written, and most of it wound up in the broadcast version. (To see some material that was not included in the final episode, check out the Roddenberry Vault Blu-ray discs that were released in 2016 by CBS Home Entertainment and Roddenberry Entertainment.)

Publicity

Unlike many other episodes of TOS, there wasn't much publicity for "The Trouble With Tribbles" when it was released. For whatever reason, Desilu and the NBC network didn't hire still photographers to take pictures of the guest stars — either the Tribbles or the actors playing the guest roles — and they didn't send out any significant advance publicity information. Advertising appears to have been limited to the simple storyline released to the media by Desilu's public relations company.

Above: The cover and page excerpt from the December 23, 1967 TV Guide – the Christmas issue—showing the original listing for "The Trouble With Tribbles."

Until next time!

Biographical Information

David Tilotta is a professor at North Carolina State University in Raleigh, NC and works in the areas of chemistry and sustainable materials technology. You can email David at david.tilotta@frontier.com. Curt McAloney is an accomplished graphic artist with extensive experience in multimedia, Internet and print design. He resides in a suburb of the Twin Cities in Minnesota, and can be contacted at curt@curtsmedia.com. Together, Curt and David work on startrekhistory.com. Their Star Trek work has appeared in the Star Trek Magazine and Star Trek: The Original Series 365 by Paula M. Block with Terry J. Edrmann.


via Star Trek Latest News

Thursday, December 28, 2017

A Look Back: Star Trek in 2017

2017 will go down in history as a banner year for Star Trek. It began with the final celebrations of Star Trek's 50th anniversary, followed by events marking the 30th anniversary of Star Trek: The Next Generation. And, in the midst of all that came the buildup to and then debut of the newest Star Trek series, Discovery. So, please join StarTrek.com as we look in the rearview mirror at 2017's Star Trek highlights…

Star Trek: The Cruise

Star Trek: The Cruise set sail on January 9-15, 2017, with the Norwegian Pearl – under a UFP flag, mind you -- departing from Miami, Florida, and heading to Cozumel (Mexico), Nassau (Bahamas) and the private island of Great Stirrup Cay (Bahamas) as it sent Trek's 50th anniversary out in style.

Two thousand two hundred fans got in on the fun, with tons of Trek celebrities, Trek-themed activities and drinks and… well, everything was Trek-ified. Those weren't elevators whisking everyone up and down, but rather turbolifts. The wine of choice came from Chateau Picard.

And the celebrities on board immersed themselves in the experience: Yes, that was Marina Sirtis hosting a blackjack tournament, Ethan Phillips performing standup comedy, Robert Picardo playing Star Trek Family Feud, Terry Farrell leading poolside yoga sessions, Joe Piscopo hosting bingo and James Darren serenading fans during Showtime: A Night at Vic Fontaine's.

And did we mention Jordan Hoffman recording a live Engage: The Official Star Trek Podcast with Denise Crosby, Terry Farrell and Joe Piscopo? Or John de Lancie headlining Q's Masquerade Ball? Or the cruise's host, William Shatner, performing Showtime: An Evening with William Shatner? 

 

Star Trek: Discovery

Star Trek: Discovery debuted September 24 on the CBS Television Network before making the leap (in the U.S.) to CBS All Access. In Canada, the show premiered on Space Channel and on Netflix in the rest of the world. It was the payoff to a period of tremendous anticipation, as details were dropped slowly but steadily via trailers, press releases, news stories, tweets, casting announcements, interviews and more, not to mention the appearances by cast and creatives at San Diego Comic-Con, Star Trek Las Vegas, New York Comic-Con and the Paley Center in New York City.

And speaking of the Big Apple, we at StarTrek.com particularly loved it when, on September 23, the U.S.S. Discovery made a special appearance in advance of the Discovery premiere, flying across the river and continuing north up the Hudson, before turning around right before the George Washington Bridge. The U.S.S. Discovery made a second appearance, flying along the Manhattan skyline before returning to spacedock. Check it out below:

StarTrek.com, of course, delivered much of the news to you, the fans, chatting on red carpets with the show's actors, writers and producers, venturing out to Toronto for a set visit and to Los Angeles for the star-studded Discovery world premiere, hosting panels at Star Trek Las Vegas, and reporting on Discovery novels, comic books, apparel and more.

And fans are tuning into Discovery, as it set new CBS All Access records for subscriber sign-ups in a single day, week and month. That, in turn, set the stage for an October 23rd announcement that CBS All Access had renewed Discovery for a second season.

TNG 30

Star Trek: The Next Generation premiered on September 28, 1987, and the 30th anniversary of that landmark occasion did not go unnoticed in 2017. Licensees unveiled TNG 30 coins, posters, pins, ship models, plates, apparel and more. The celebratory highlight, of course, was the near full-cast reunion held on August 4 during Star Trek Las Vegas. It featured Patrick Stewart, Brent Spiner, Marina Sirtis, LeVar Burton, Gates McFadden, Michael Dorn, John de Lancie and Denise Crosby. Jonathan Frakes was scheduled to join them, too, but a canceled flight put the kibosh on that. The old friends and colleagues, as usual, poked fun at each other, shared anecdotes about making TNG and, well, teased each other some more.

"The characters became very quickly a blend of the character and the actor," Stewart noted. "We were encouraged to use our own personalities and sometimes even our own strongest feelings. It's a little hard for me to answer questions about Jean-Luc Picard because they refer to myself."

Dorn offered the following advice to the Discovery cast: "Appreciate where you are, because you are extremely fortunate."

"I actually had a brain scan a few days ago," Stewart told the SRO audience of fans. Sirtis didn't miss a beat, cracking, ""Well... Did they find it?"

Nichols & Koenig Visit The Original Series Set Tour

It was déjà vu all over again for Nichelle Nichols and Walter Koenig when, in late August, the TOS icons joined several popular guest stars (BarBara Luna, Michael Dante, Lee Meriwether, Mary Linda Rapelye and Charlie Brill) and plenty of dedicated fans for a weekend event at the Star Trek: The Original Series Set Tour in Ticonderoga, New York. Everyone toured the painstakingly re-created TOS sets, explored the corridors, sickbay, briefing room, captain's quarters, transporter room, engineering department and the bridge, as well as enjoyed Q&As, autograph sessions, trivia and cosplay contests, and more.


via Star Trek Latest News

Nichelle Nichols Talks Turning 85

It's impossible to believe and she certainly doesn't look it, but Nichelle Nichols, Uhura of Star Trek: The Original Series, turns 85 years old today. She's celebrating with a party in Los Angeles tonight, and welcoming a few lucky fans to join her. StarTrek.com chatted last week with the legendary actress, who sounded energized, engaged and ready for 2018. Here's what she had to say:

Happy almost birthday. We're so glad to be talking to you.

I'm happy to have a birthday!

Aren't we all? What does it mean to you to turn 85 years old? How amazing is that?

To turn what?

What does it mean to you to turn 85 years old?

To turn what?

You're funny. That's hysterical. You got us. But all joking aside, you've been on this Earth a very long time and you're still going. Tell us about your birthday celebration. You're opening it up for a few fans…

Well, every year my friends get together and throw me one heck of a birthday party. But this year, we had the great idea of getting the fans involved, too. The fans have given me so much over the years, and it feels wonderful to give back when I can. They'll get to join us at a restaurant, get a photo or two with me, be with me for dinner. That's what it's setting up to be.

How are you feeling these days?

I'm ready for the next trip, wherever it takes me, baby. I was at the premiere of Discovery (in September). I recently made some guest appearances in movies, like Unbelievable, and we're in pre-production of Noah's Room. That's a feature film about a black family that takes in a white youth, and the mother changes his life and destiny forever. It's an amazing story. I think its time has really come in Hollywood.

And you're still designing your own line of jewelry, right?

Oh, yeah. When I was a kid, anything I wanted, I'd try to draw it or create it on paper and I'd take it to my dad. My mother would say, "You're spoiling her," becuase he'd then take it and have it designed.

If one other role in your career could have had the same impact as Uhura, what role would that be and why?

The role that I will play as a matriarch in a black family in Noah's Room. That's something that I'm prepared to do, that I'm ready for. I'm ready for it. I think I could have always done it, but the timing is really good now.

Then, speaking of Uhura, your Uhura, what do you think she's up to out there now in the galaxy?

Changing the whole damn galaxy, of course. And inspiring a lot more to follow in that dream. Hopefully inspiring a whole bunch of people.

If we could arrange for you to have one more scene as Uhura, what would you want her to do and to say?

How about we wait and see if that next role is coming? We can't leak any spoilers, now, can we?

So, you would play Uhura again if you had the chance?

I'm Uhura. Who else am I gonna play?

We all know the story of Dr. Martin Luther King convincing you to stay on Star Trek, but what we've always wondered is... did you ever have a conversation with him after you heeded his request and remained on the Enterprise? And if so, what was that conversation?

Well, sadly, I didn't get much more time with Dr. King. None of us did before he was taken away from us. But we just need to continue forward remembering those great lessons he taught us. I think he would have had more for me, to tell me, more what I call orders to complete. I just remember him as being a great man and a great friend.

You mentioned earlier in the conversation that you were at the Discovery premiere. How did you enjoy seeing Star Trek up on a screen again? And how did you enjoy meeting Sonequa Martin-Green? We know she was super excited to meet you…

Sonequa was so beautiful and so full of life. I think she's going to do amazing things in shaping the next series for a whole new generation. It was our first meeting with each other, you know. I hope to work with her soon on a project. I hope. And seeing Star Trek on a screen again? I really expected to see it, so it wasn't a huge surprise, but it was a huge satisfaction, you could say.

You helped advance people of color. It's now late 2017. You saw Dr. King's ascension and assassination. You've seen African American women become scientists and astronauts, and you inspired many of them. You've lived to see an African American Trek fan in the White House, and you met him there. Now, we have Sonequa, the African American female star of a new Trek show. How far have African Americans come and how far is there still to go?

I'm thinking long and hard about this question. I don't think there's any black boy or girl growing up today who can't find a role model to look at and think, "Wow. Anything really is possible." No, it won't be easy. And yes, there are still roadblocks that they'll all have to face, but they can be overcome. They can do anything. And they know it's possible. So, step up and do it, kids. Step up and do it. Also, prepare yourself. Prepare yourself as an actor or whatever it is that you want to be, a lawyer, a doctor, whatever it is. Prepare yourself while you're young. And get in there and study it, what it means, and get in there and do it.

What's still out there for you to accomplish? What have you not done yet that you're still itching to do?

Make my swan song feature film Noah's Room. I've really got one more story to tell. We're still in pre-production and still trying to get final funding on it. We've got several names that would like to be attached, two or three other well-known actors and actresses. Even with all of the wonderful black-themed films that have come over the last year or two, we're still hitting the usual roadblocks, but we're getting very close. We're pushing and we're going to make it.

Nichelle, are you a person who thinks about your legacy at all?

Oh, yeah.

Can you talk about that?

Absolutely. If you want to do something badly enough, strongly enough, there's nothing that can stop you. So, don't let anything stop you from going there. You really will be able to do it if you stay on top of it. I definitely am proof of it.

Thanks so much for talking to us, Nichelle. Again, happy birthday and happy holidays to you…

Thank you very much. And my blessings to you and to all the fans.

Last-minute tickets for tonight's Nichelle Nichols 85th Birthday Celebration are available now. Go to http://ift.tt/2C5B06B to get in on the fun. 


via Star Trek Latest News