Star Trek is honored at the EMP Museum for its 50th anniversary as the bridge of the Starship Enterprise looks as if it was beamed down from the 23rd century in Seattle. But up close, you can tell it’s a 50-year-old Star Trek movie prop, with rocker switches from the ’60s and bits of plastic peeling off the control console.
In a weird way, that’s a big part of the golden-anniversary exhibition’s appeal, the Seattle Post Intelligencer reports. When the TV show had its premiere in 1966, “Star Trek” was all about a bright and shiny future. It still is, but the exhibition also casts a spotlight on the social issues and foibles that have shaped the saga over the course of five decades.
As Star Trek is honored at the EMP Museum, it reminds everyone that the move is famous not only for its optimistic vision of spaceflight and technology, but also for its allegorical references to the civil rights movement and cultural diversity, East-West tensions and the rise of environmentalism, gender identity and same-sex relationships.
“All these are ingredients that you can see get funneled into ‘Star Trek,'” museum curator Brooks Peck said today during a preview of the exhibit. And they’re funneled into the exhibition as well. The events planned for this weekend’s opening should give a giddy thrill to even the most Spock-like of “Star Trek” fans.
On Friday night, there’s a sold-out “Landing Party” with DJs and dancing, drinks and games, plus a Q&A with “Next Generation” stars Brent Spiner (who played Data, an android struggling to understand humanity) and Denise Crosby (a.k.a. Lieutenant Tasha Yar, the Enterprise-D’s security chief). On Saturday, the EMP museum hosts an autograph and photo session with Crosby and Spiner, a workshop for educators, and a showing of the fan documentary “Trekkies” that’s followed by a Q&A with Crosby, The Seattle Times reported.
It’s the Star Trek exhibit at the EMP Museum opening weekend as it winds up on Sunday night with a 7:30 p.m. screening of “Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan” in the museum’s mammoth Sky Church, which may well be the closest thing you can get to an outdoor movie indoors. Peck promises that there’ll be more “Star Trek” shindigs ahead, particularly when the official 50th anniversary hits in September. But you don’t have to wait until then to beam up.
There are costumes from not just one, but two Khans - the original Ricardo Montalban version, and the Benedict Cumberbatch reboot. You can even go into a booth and stand in for William Shatner to record the scene where Kirk yells “Khaaaaaaan!”
But the Star Strek exhibit at the EMP Museum isn’t just about what’s on the screen: One display focuses full-bore on the cultural impact that “Star Trek” has had: Don’t miss the groovy picture of the cast gathered around the space shuttle Enterprise in 1976, or the Vulcan foam fingers that served as a Red Sox giveaway last year. And be sure to spin up some of the “Star Trek” tunes from Five Year Mission and Warp 11.
Another interactive set lets you play a scene in which you beam down to the surface of a planet, blast a baddie with a phaser, then beam back up to the museum’s transporter room. In both cases, you can have the resulting video clip emailed to yourself, or to your friends.
The bridge from the original series has been recreated with console props and screens that reflect 1960s technology in well-used condition. You can feast your eyes on artifacts from pretty much all of the “Star Trek” saga’s TV and film incarnations, including a model Enterprise that was rescued from “Star Trek: Phase II,” a series that never made it to prime time.
The costumes run the gamut from the miniskirt that Lt. Col. Uhura wore in the original series to the sensible pantsuit that Captain Kathryn Janeway donned for “Star Trek: Voyager.” “We have a costume for every captain,” Peck said.
The Sudbury Star said that while Star Trek is honored at the EMP Museum, one of Peck’s favorites is Captain James Kirk’s sparkly, sleeveless uniform from an episode titled “Mirror, Mirror,” in which Kirk and other officers switched places with their evil counterparts from a parallel universe. “In person, it’s like ‘Disco Mirror Kirk,'” Peck joked.