custom ad
March 31, 2017

LOS ANGELES -- The starship Enterprise has a new five-year mission: to boldly go and raise money to help a quirky museum live long and prosper. The Hollywood Science Fiction Museum recently took possession of life-sized wax figures of all seven crew members from the original "Star Trek" TV series, including Capt. Kirk...

By ROBERT JABLON ~ Associated Press
Steve Greenthal adjusts the wax head of Star Trek character Uhura on its body next to a figure of Capt. Kirk on Saturday at the Fullerton Airport in Fullerton, California.<br>The Hollywood Science Fiction Museum recently took possession of wax figures of all seven crew members from the 1960s "Star Trek" TV series.
Steve Greenthal adjusts the wax head of Star Trek character Uhura on its body next to a figure of Capt. Kirk on Saturday at the Fullerton Airport in Fullerton, California.<br>The Hollywood Science Fiction Museum recently took possession of wax figures of all seven crew members from the 1960s "Star Trek" TV series.Nick Agro ~ The Orange County Register via AP

LOS ANGELES -- The starship Enterprise has a new five-year mission: to boldly go and raise money to help a quirky museum live long and prosper.

The Hollywood Science Fiction Museum recently took possession of life-sized wax figures of all seven crew members from the original "Star Trek" TV series, including Capt. Kirk.

The figures and a replica of the Enterprise bridge had spent a decade in storage.

"This is kind of a holy grail of Trek fandom," museum founder Huston Huddleston said in an online museum video.

The figures were crafted for the Movieland Wax Museum, a Buena Park tourist attraction. Around 10 years ago, the defunct museum auctioned off its contents, including the figures that had drawn generations of Trekkies.

Steve Greenthal places the wax head of Star Trek character Sulu on its body Saturday at a hangar in the Fullerton Airport in Fullerton, California. Greenthal and friend Chris Liebl purchased the group of figures more than a decade ago from the old Movieland Wax Museum in Buena Park.
Steve Greenthal places the wax head of Star Trek character Sulu on its body Saturday at a hangar in the Fullerton Airport in Fullerton, California. Greenthal and friend Chris Liebl purchased the group of figures more than a decade ago from the old Movieland Wax Museum in Buena Park.Nick Agro ~ The Orange County Register via AP

"As far as anyone knew, it was lost," Huddleston said Wednesday of the Trek tableau. "It was either in a rich person's house and never seen again, or it was destroyed. ... Nobody knew."

In fact, the intrepid crew had been rescued.

At the museum auction, Steve and Lori Greenthal ponied up $40,000 for Kirk, Spock, Sulu, Uhura, Dr. "Bones" McCoy, Chekov and engineer Scott.

They wanted to keep the set from being broken up.

"We took them home and put them in our dining room," Lori told the Orange County Register.

Steve Greenthal adjusts the wax head of Star Trek character Scotty on Saturday at the Fullerton Airport in Fullerton, California.
Steve Greenthal adjusts the wax head of Star Trek character Scotty on Saturday at the Fullerton Airport in Fullerton, California.Nick Agro ~ The Orange County Register via AP

Steve didn't like the way their life-like eyes stared.

"We put paper bags over their heads," he said.

Steve called a buddy, Chris Liebl of Anaheim, California, and they hatched a plan to make money from the figures. Liebl offered to pay half the purchase price and together they spent another $40,000 building a 20-by-30-foot mockup of the Enterprise bridge, complete with sound effects from the TV show.

Receive Daily Headlines FREESign up today!

They took the set to Las Vegas for a 40th Star Trek anniversary gathering and sold about 800 photographs of people posing with the figures. George Takei, who played Sulu, and Nichelle Nichols, who portrayed Uhura, even stopped by to pose with their alter egos.

But the venture didn't make money and the setup was cumbersome.

Steve Greenthal puts on the head of his Captain Kirk wax figure Saturday at the Fullerton Airport before donating them to the Hollywood Science Fiction Museum in Fullerton, California.
Steve Greenthal puts on the head of his Captain Kirk wax figure Saturday at the Fullerton Airport before donating them to the Hollywood Science Fiction Museum in Fullerton, California.Nick Agro ~ The Orange County Register via AP

So the figures eventually were dismantled and the wax heads and hands placed in cold storage. The bridge set was stored in a hangar at the Fullerton airport.

However, the airport now needs the hangar for other things.

Three months ago, the owners donated the set and its wax crew to the museum. On a recent weekend, they held a party to say goodbye.

"I've been on an emotional roller coaster," Lori Greenthal told the Register. "I'm happy they're going to be together and on display. It brings such joy to so many people."

The museum held a successful Kickstarter campaign to pay for about $14,000 to cover the expected costs of restoring the figures.

Steve Greenthal, left, and Chris Liebl work to set up their Star Trek wax figures Satuday in a hangar at the Fullerton Airport before donating them to the Hollywood Science Fiction Museum, in Fullerton, California.
Steve Greenthal, left, and Chris Liebl work to set up their Star Trek wax figures Satuday in a hangar at the Fullerton Airport before donating them to the Hollywood Science Fiction Museum, in Fullerton, California.Nick Agro ~ The Orange County Register via AP

"Most of them are in great shape," Huddleston said. "The only damage is their hair was messed up over the years and also 30 years of really harsh light on them had made their paint fade off."

Spock's figure already has been restored. Among other things, that meant removing a "terrible, tacky wig" that someone had stuck on top of the figure's original hair, which was composed of individual strands painstakingly punched into the wax, Huddleston said.

The not-for-profit museum, which has no permanent home, plans to take the figures on a five-year North American tour beginning later this year in Los Angeles, Huddleston said.

The tour will help raise money to give the museum a home in North Hollywood.

Meanwhile, the Spock and McCoy figures will be introduced at the Wondercon convention in Anaheim that begins today, Huddleston said.

Huddleston called the figures "true pieces of art."

"I'm living a nerd's dream," he said.

Story Tags
Advertisement

Connect with the Southeast Missourian Newsroom:

For corrections to this story or other insights for the editor, click here. To submit a letter to the editor, click here. To learn about the Southeast Missourian’s AI Policy, click here.

Advertisement
Receive Daily Headlines FREESign up today!