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Seattle’s EMP Museum celebrates ‘Star Trek’ at 50 with artifacts, tribbles

By DONNA GORDON BLANKINSHIP, Associated Press
Published: May 21, 2016, 5:00am
15 Photos
A foam finger in the shape of the Vulcan salute is displayed along with a photo of President Barack Obama and actress Nichelle Nichols, who played Lt. Uhura in &quot;Star Trek,&quot; in a display for the exhibit, &quot;Star Trek: Exploring New Worlds&quot; at the EMP Museum in Seattle. The exhibit opens today.
A foam finger in the shape of the Vulcan salute is displayed along with a photo of President Barack Obama and actress Nichelle Nichols, who played Lt. Uhura in "Star Trek," in a display for the exhibit, "Star Trek: Exploring New Worlds" at the EMP Museum in Seattle. The exhibit opens today. (Elaine Thompson/Associated Press) Photo Gallery

It’s been 50 years since the Starship Enterprise began its five-year mission to boldly go where no man had gone before, and Seattle’s EMP Museum is marking the anniversary with an exhibition honoring “Star Trek” and its influence on pop culture and society.

“Star Trek: Exploring New Worlds” opens today and is filled with geeky artifacts from all the “Star Trek” series and movies — from sections of the original Enterprise bridge to a costume worn by Benedict Cumberbatch in the latest movie.

One uniform worn by every captain and one of only two phasers still in existence from the original series is on display among more than 100 props and artifacts. Keep an eye out for the tribbles that apparently escaped from their display case. There are half a dozen scattered around.

Some of the set pieces are clearly showing their age, which curator Brooks Peck says is a sign of the less-than-ideal way some of them have been stored in garages and transported from collector to collector.

If You (Boldly) Go

What: “Star Trek: Exploring New Worlds” exhibit.

When: Opens today. Daily 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Where: The EMP Museum, on the Seattle Center campus, 325 Fifth Ave. N., Seattle.

Cost: Museum admission for adults is $22 if purchased online. The “Star Trek” exhibit costs an additional $5.

Information: www.empmuseum.org

But the new exhibit is much more than artifacts and costumes. The museum does its best to illustrate how “Star Trek” was both a reflection of its times and a catalyst for social change — from a starring role by a black actress to a Russian character featured during the Cold War and interracial and same-sex relationships.

The show’s influence on popular culture and even architecture is also on display, including a place to listen to “Star Trek”-inspired bands, a “Picardigan” sweater that looks like Captain Picard’s uniform, and a giant red foam Vulcan salute that was given out on “Star Trek” night at a Boston Red Sox game.

The exhibit opens the same week that CBS released a teaser for the new “Star Trek” TV series and a couple of months before a new “Star Trek” movie premieres.

Visitors are asked to wrestle with some of the “Star Trek’s” ethical themes, such as what makes us human, in interactive display screens called “Away Team Encounters.”

Although the objects cannot be touched, there’s plenty of opportunity to explore in other ways: put yourself in a scene from “The Wrath of Khan” movie, crawl through a Jeffries tube, create your own “Star Trek” story line and take your picture in a Borg regeneration station.

An opportunity to act out a scene involving a transporter and then have the scene emailed home was not available at the press preview, because of technical difficulties. The curator of the exhibit joked that people who volunteer for the transportation experience will do so at their own risk.

Even the most ardent “Star Trek” fans might see something new at this exhibit, including a cardboard model of the set that was used to plan out scenes. And they might learn something, too, including the role Lucille Ball played in creating the original series.

If you don’t know the answer to that “Star Trek” trivia, this exhibit is for you.

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