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Spocks Are In The News

Yes, you read that right: Spocks.

And StarTrek.com brings you the logical conclusion.

Zachary Quinto has been making the awards show rounds on behalf of his film Margin Call, which he starred in and co-produced, and which just received an Oscar nomination in the Best Original Screenplay category.

E! caught up with him the other day at the Producers Guild Awards in Beverly Hills and got him to talk about the sequel to Star Trek (2009) for a few moments. “It’s been really great,” he said. “We’ve been shooting for a week and a half, and it’s been an incredible return to that world.” And, speaking of his new co-stars Benedict Cumberbatch, Peter Weller and Alice Eve, Quinto stated, “All of them have folded in so beautifully and brought a whole new level of intelligence and sensitivity.”

As for the original Spock, Leonard Nimoy tweeted the following message this morning: “I’ve been invited to visit the set of the new Star Trek film. Hope to do that next week. LLAP.”

What do you think? Will J.J. Abrams and Quinto convince Nimoy to don Vulcan ears and make a cameo?

To read our recent interview with Quinto, click HERE and HERE, and to read our recent interview with Nimoy, click HERE, HERE and HERE.

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45 years of Star trek: Part 3


Star Trek officially debuted 45 years ago this week, with the episode “The Man Trap.” No one quite realized it at the time — how could they? — but life would never be the same after that. Gene Roddenberry’s so-called “Wagon Train to the Stars” went on to become iconic, one of the most important and influential entertainment franchises in history.

Leonard Nimoy, William Shatner, Nichelle Nichols, George Takei and Walter Koenig have graciously agreed to help StarTrek.com commemorate Star Trek’s 45th anniversary by each answering several questions in person, by phone or via email.

And here’s question number five:

What’s your most cherished Star Trek keepsake?

Nimoy: I cherish the pair of Spock ears which are encased in a frame and sit on my desk. They’re last pair I wore on The Original Series.

Nichols: Uhura’s original earpiece… so lovingly presented to me on the last day of shooting in 1969 by Prop Master Supreme Irving Feinberg. Subsequently, I was presented with a second earpiece in 2009 under a display globe that reads “Nichelle Nichols – Uhura – Thank you for communicating your special message of love and peace.”

Koenig: The only thing I have, really, is the leather outfit from The Voyage Home. And I’m trying to sell that! But that’s the only I have. I have the full outfit — the pants, the jacket.

Takei: The Captain Sulu uniform from Star Trek IV. They gave me the uniform. I thought, “I should not keep this in my closet. I need to share it with a larger public.” I’m a board member and former chairman of the board of the Japanese-American National Museum. So I donated the uniform to the museum, and we got a lot of Star Trek traffic. They may not have been interested in Japanese-American history, but they came to see the Captain Sulu uniform.

Shatner: You know, I don’t have any. I’ve been remiss on any of that kind of thing.

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45 Years of Star Trek: Part 3

Star Trek officially debuted 45 years ago today, on September 8, 1966, with the episode “The Man Trap.” No one quite realized it at the time — how could they? — but life would never be the same after that. Gene Roddenberry’s so-called “Wagon Train to the Stars” went on to become iconic, one of the most important and influential entertainment franchises in history.

Leonard Nimoy, William Shatner, Nichelle Nichols, George Takei and Walter Koenig have graciously agreed to help StarTrek.com commemorate Star Trek’s 45th anniversary by each answering several questions in person, by phone or via email.

And here’s today’s question:

When did it truly hit you that Star Trek had become a cultural icon?

Shatner: I was skiing at Mammoth, a ski area up here (in California). Somebody schussed up to me and asked if I’d seen this funny series of shots from the show that was playing at a local bar. I went to see it and they were the bloopers, the things where we make idiots of ourselves on film. It was a blooper reel, and I thought, “What is this doing out there three or four years later?” That’s when I knew.

Koenig: I’d heard the stories about the picketing between the first year and second year of TOS and then I saw it between the second year and the third year. I thought that was really quite amazing. But when I heard we were cancelled I was pretty well convinced that was the end of it. The resurrection of Star Trek was insidious, almost. It was a slow, growing thing that happened over time. So it was hard to say there was any one thing that made me think we were back and going to be doing more shows and movies, etc. But if I had to say there one was one moment, it’d be that big New York City convention, which I did not appear at, but every other actor did, as did writers and wardrobe people and others. That was the late 70’s, and over 30,000 people showed up at a hotel for it. The crowds were around the block. When you start to hear about those kinds of massive numbers, you have to believe something is afoot, and that’s when I started to think maybe we weren’t done. But that’s pretty much in hindsight.

Nichols: The first time that NASA sent a scientist/representative, Dr. Jesco von Puttkamer, to attend a Star Trek convention, which became the first time that over 5,000 fans descended upon Chicago’s Hilton Hotel to celebrate the Wonderment and Promise of a Star Trek Universe in our lifetime.

Nimoy: Within the first two months after we went on the air the mail for Spock was arriving in special delivery sacks. I knew something magical was happening.

Takei: I guess that would be when I saw that Star Trek conventions were going international. The first convention I did in England was in Leicester. Then there was that huge convention in Germany, FedCon. When it started going international like that, that’s when I knew there was more ahead for us.

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