• Stumble Upon
  • Reddit
  • Digg
 

Christie's Auctions Star Trek Memorabilia

Trekkies Gather at Christie's auction in New York
Margot Adler/NPR

Star Trek fans gather to bid on memorabilia in New York.

Enterprise Bridge
Enlarge Courtesy: Christie's

The bridge from the Starship Enterprise will be auctioned off by Christie's. It was built to replicate the bridge featured in the original Star Trek series. The original does not exist today.

Enterprise Bridge
Courtesy: Christie's

The bridge from the Starship Enterprise will be auctioned off by Christie's. It was built to replicate the bridge featured in the original Star Trek series. The original does not exist today.

Tribbles
Courtesy: Christie's

Tribbles, furry little alien animals that reproduce like mice, are now available at Christie's auction. The creatures were featured in an episode from the original series called, "The Trouble with Tribbles."

Klingon Bird-of-Prey
Enlarge Courtesy: Christie's

Klingon Bird of Prey, lot 983. Christie's has rooms full of alien memorabilia and weapons.

Klingon Bird-of-Prey
Courtesy: Christie's

Klingon Bird of Prey, lot 983. Christie's has rooms full of alien memorabilia and weapons.

text sizeAAA
October 5, 2006

One of the largest auctions Christie's has ever produced got under way Thursday morning in New York. Four thousand items of Star Trek memorabilia are being sold to the highest bidder. For fans, it's like Bloomingdale's in outer space -- costumes, models, furniture, weapons and more, from all the shows and movies. The auction continues over three days, breaking apart a collection that some Trekkies says should stay together.

Five warehouses at CBS Paramount originally stored the memorabilia that is now available to the public. The items include weapons from alien species, 50 intricate models of spaceships, various Starship Enterprises, the Klingon Bird of Prey, the space station Deep Space Nine, and countless others. Many of these models are part of a dying art form as films turn to digital production.

The Enterprise D is Captain Picard's starship in the TV series Next Generation. You can also bid on his costume, his wooden flute and even two empty bottles labeled Chateau Picard, from the Vineyard that Picard's family owns in France -- that is, in the Next Gen world. The wardrobe room is filled with cases of jewelry, and military medals and racks of clothes.

"These are gorgeous, gorgeous pieces of clothing -- incredible pieces of art," says Cathy Elkies, Christie's director of special collections.

Wolf Jefferson, an independent filmmaker attending the auction, says the merchandise brings him closer to the show.

"I started touching everything -- this was Lieutenant Uhura's; this was Captain Kirk's. You get that feeling, when you are right next to something… It is like you are right there on the set," Jefferson says.

 
  • Stumble Upon
  • Reddit
  • Digg
 

Podcast and RSS Feeds

PodcastRSS

  • Pop Culture
     
  • All Things Considered
     
 
 

Comments

Discussions for this story are now closed. Please see the Community FAQ for more information.

 

Arts & Life

Sarah Ruhl's comedy does involve an electrical gadget — but it's actually a play about intimacy.

'The Vibrator Play': Why Yes, It Is About Exactly That

Sarah Ruhl's comedy does involve an electrical gadget — but it's actually a play about intimacy.

View a gallery of Tim Burton's sketches from an exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art.

Tim Burton's Drawings On Display

View a gallery of Tim Burton's sketches from an exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art.

Guest stint by <em>Pineapple Express</em> star is meant to help "freshen the image of daytime."

James Franco Checks In To 'General Hospital'

Guest stint by Pineapple Express star is meant to help "freshen the image of daytime."

The flamboyant emotionality that marked the first <em>Twilight</em> film is missing in the second.

Under A 'New Moon,' A Surprising Lack Of Passion

The flamboyant emotionality that marked the first Twilight film is missing in the second.

John Lee Hancock's julep-sweet film turns a well-told true story into a feel-good liberal fantasy.

In 'Blind Side,' A Tunnel-Vision Take On A True Story

John Lee Hancock's julep-sweet film turns a well-told true story into a feel-good liberal fantasy.

It's charming as a holiday decoration, but Asiatic bittersweet is strangling trees in the Northeast.

Berry Bad: Threat To Trees Lurks On Holiday Tables

It's charming as a holiday decoration, but Asiatic bittersweet is strangling trees in the Northeast.

Try to figure out where and how these ghostly images were made.

Mystery Ghost Photos

Try to figure out where and how these ghostly images were made.

more