Region 4

Also known as the 4th Fleet STARFLEET , The International Star Trek Fan Association, Inc.

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Entertainment

USS Angeles beams onto Enterprise-D, goes ‘Back to the Future’

Editor’s note: This is original content written for the Region 4 website. This same story appears on the USS Angeles’ website, ussangeles.org, but with different photos.

By Commodore Dave Mason

UNIVERSAL CITY, California — Red alert!

Lisa Sobien, Christopher Mulrooney and I had just boarded the Enterprise-D when we discovered the ship was in trouble. You could see the panic in the face of the doctor in Sick Bay.

We went from there to the Enterprise-D bridge: the actual set that was used for filming in “Star Trek: Picard” during its third and final decision. We got there just in time. The ship was still in danger!

Fortunately, we not only surived, but thrived as we explored Enterprise-D areas such as Engineering and went “Back to the Future” during Universal Studios’ Fan Fest Nights.

The USS Angeles mission on April 26 at the Los Angeles area theme park began with Chris and I meeting at Quark’s Bar and Grill on Universal’s upper lot, where Chris enjoyed some of the “Star Trek”-themed food offered by Universal Studios. Dishes vary from Vulcan Fritters to Klingon Targ Legs and the Tribble Truffle Trio, a treat featuring chocolate and butterscotch.

From there, we went on the studio tram, which took us into the back lot and the Courthouse Square where “Back to the Future” was filmed. That’s where we saw actors re-enact a scene from the movie in which George McFly defends Lorraine from the evil Biff. We also were entertained by Marvin Berry and the Starlighters playing at the Enchantment Under the Sea prom in front of Hill Valley High School. Later in the same block as the school, gas station attendants sang with a smile around a 1950s car. Talk about a full service station!

Lisa later joined us at the square, where we ran into Doc Brown and other characters from the 1950s, played by Universal Studios cast members. We remembered the tram guide’s advice to avoid mentioning anything from 2025 and use terms like “nifty.” In addition, many fans came dressed in the orange vest jacket that Michael J. Fox wore as he played Marty McFly, the outfit that caused a malt shop owner to think Marty was in the Navy.

Back on the upper lot, we saw the special activities at the Wizarding World of Harry Potter, where we posed for photos with a small but clever fantastic beast and its handler. We also saw special projections on the Hogswarts castle.

Universal Fan Fest Nights, which continues May 16-28, features “Back to the Future: Destination Hill Valley,” “Star Trek: Red Alert,” “Dungeons & Dragons: Secrets of Waterdeep,” “Jujutsu Kaisen: Hunger of the Cursed,” “One Piece: Grand Pirate Gathering,” and special additions to The Wizarding World of Harry Potter and Super Nintendo World. For more information, see www.vcstar.com/story/news/local/california/2025/01/29/universal-fan-fest-nights-takes-guests-back-to-the-future-and-beyond/78013179007.

More photos from the Universal Studios event will appear soon at ussangeles.org.

A Starfleet physician reacts to the sound of red alert in the sickbay on the Enterprise-D at Universal Studios Hollywood. USS Angeles members beamed aboard the ship during Fan Fest Nights on April 26. (Photos by Dave Mason/USS Angeles/Angels Flight)

Starfleet officers stand ready for action the Enterprise-D bridge set from “Star Trek: Picard,” which is on display at Universal Studios Hollywood for Fan Fest Nights. USS Angeles members explored the set April 26.

Christopher Mulrooney of the USS Angeles takes command of the Enterprise-D bridge at Universal Studios Hollywood.

Biff gets angry with one of his classmates after losing a fight to George McFly, who defended his future wife Lorraine in a re-enactment from “Back to the Future.” The re-enactment took place in the Courthouse Square, the Universal Studios Hollywood area where the first two “Back to the Future” movies were filmed.

USS Angeles member Lisa Sobien sits in the Enterprise-D captain’s chair at Universal Studios Hollywood.

“Back to the Future” fans visit the Courthouse Square, where the “Back to the Future” I and II were filmed, at Universal Studios Holllywood. USS Angeles members beamed down there April 26 for Fan Fest Nights.

EntertainmentStar Trek News

USS Angeles explores ‘Oscars museum’

Editor’s note: This story originally appeared in the March edition of Angels Flight, the USS Angeles’ newsletter. The Region 4 website welcomes articles and photos from all chapters. You can submit them to Chief of Communications Dave Mason at davemason1701@gmail.com.

By Commodore Dave Mason

LOS ANGELES — Jeremy Kranz and I found the Oscars.

We discovered the statues that the winners held. They were behind glass in a small gallery at the mammoth Academy Museum of Motion Pictures, a four-story building across the street from a site of previous USS Angeles away missions: the Petersen Automotive Museum on Los Angeles’ Miracle Mile. 

It was the USS Angeles’ first visit to the Academy Museum, which opened in 2021 in the former May Co. building on Wilshire Boulevard. Jeremy and I found countless treasures from Hollywood’s past and present at the museum, which was featured in a brief segment on the March 2 Oscars telecast on ABC.

During our Feb. 1 mission, Jeremy and I discovered treasures such as Sam’s golden yellow piano with a flowery design from the 1942 black-and-white film “Casablanca.” This little upright piano, by the way, has just 58 keys. Pianos usually have 88.

Dooley Wilson, the actor and singer who portrayed Sam, had great musical skills, but he was a drummer, not a pianist. So he only pretended to play, and the actual piano heard in the song “As Time Goes By” was played off-camera by either Elliot Carpenter or Jean Plummer and added to the soundtrack. But it is Wilson singing.

By the way, Rick (Humphrey Bogart) never said, “Play it again, Sam.” 

He said, “Play it!” 

Earlier in the film, Ilsa (Ingrid Bergman) asks Sam, “Play it once, Sam. For old times’ sake.”

Elsewhere at the museum, Jeremy and I journeyed into the future. We saw the models from sci-fi movies such as the spaceships from “Interstellar” (2014). I was excited to see the model that was used as a spherical shuttle on the moon in “2001: A Space Odyssey” (1968). This “miniature” is large enough that one person can’t lift it without help.

The “2001” model is a rare treasure, given that director Stanley Kubrick ordered the destruction of all the models, props and blueprints to prevent their re-use in other directors’ films.

And Jeremy and I enjoyed sitting down and watching clips from different sci-fi movies, everything from “The Day the Earth Stood Still” to the “Star Trek” and “Star Wars” films, play around us on a 180-degree screen. 

The museum’s futuristic exhibits extended to its “Cyberpunk: Envisioning Possible Futures Through Cinema” exhibit, which focused on movies such as two classics from 1982, “Blade Runner” and “Tron.” A section on the “Terminator” movies featured sketches used in planning the look of Arnold Schwarzenegger as an android with some of his skin exposed.

The exhibit also explored later films such as  “Alita: Battle Angel” (2019). The title character of “Alita” was played by Rosa Salazar, who portrayed Capt. Lynne Lucero in the Tribble-inspired “Star Trek” short “The Trouble with Edward,” also from 2019.

Other exhibits explored the histories of animation, Los Angeles filmmaking, the use of color and, of course, the Oscars.

One large room was dedicated to a timeline for the Academy Awards, from the ceremony’s beginning on May 16, 1929 at the Roosevelt Hotel in Hollywood to its current home across Hollywood Boulevard and just down the block at the Dolby Theater. 

Visitors in the Oscars timeline room walked around a giant table as they followed the history. Behind visitors was one long wall covered by videos of acceptance speeches. The videos were magically turned on, one grateful speech at a time.

Nearby exhibits were devoted to movies such as “Boyz N The Hood” (1991), which starred Cuba Gooding Jr., Ice Cube, Morris Chestnut (now starring as the title character of CBS’ “Watson”) and Laurence Fishburne.

Next to that area was an exhibit devoted entirely to Lourdes Portillo, a filmmaker known for her poignant documentaries about Latin America and social justice. The exhibit, which includes a Día de los Muertos (Day of the Dead) altar, tells the story of the Chihuahua, Mexico native, who grew up in Los Angeles and went on to create films such as “Las Madres: The Mothers of Plaza de Mayo” (1985), “La Ofrenda: The Days of the Dead” (1988) and “Señorita Extraviada/Missing Young Woman” (2001).  

Elsewhere, Jeremy and I entered the animation exhibit, which takes up an entire floor. The exhibit begins with a large room where families watch movies varying from the latest Disney movies to the 1914 animated black-and-white short “Gertie the Dinosaur.”

Another room in the exhibit shows models, such as one created for the robotic title character of Disney/Pixar’s “WALL-E” (2008). Animators often use physical models as a guide to creating drawings or, as in the case of “WALL-E,” computer-generated images.

One area was devoted to “Skeleton Dance,” one of Disney’s Silly Symphonies, which were cartoon shorts without dialogue and set entirely to music. The exhibit featured a screening of “Skeleton Dance” and the sheet music. Near it was the actual xylophone, consisting of windpipes, that was used for the music that accompanied an animated skeleton playing the bones of another skeleton’s back as if they were a xylophone.

Jeremy and I also learned about movie history in “Hollywoodland: Jewish Founders and the Making of a Movie Capital,” about the Los Angeles studios, including Warner Bros., 20th Century Fox, Columbia, Universal, MGM and Paramount. The exhibit shows how the major studios started and takes an honest look at the antisemitism that the industry’s founders faced.

Jeremy and I also explored “Color In Motion: Chromatic Explorations of Cinema.” The exhibit covered the history of color, beginning with its earliest use when colors were hand-painted directly onto film. 

The exhibit featured colorful costumes such as the green dress that Kim Novak wore in the 1958 Alfred Hitchcock classic “Vertigo” and classic technology such as early Technicolor cameras.

In one of the museum’s interactive segments, Jeremy and I waved our hands to control a projection of colors in motions. There was some applause from spectators as we and others made the colors move dramatically.

As we went through the museum, we stumbled upon a beautiful prop from one of my favorite comedies, “The Great Race” (1965).  It was the crown designated for Crown Prince Fredrick Hopenick’s coronation. Jack Lemmon played both the prince and the villain who impersonated him, the wicked Professor Fate. 

It was among the countless treasures in a museum that made me feel like singing the song, “Hooray for Hollywood.”

Jeremy Kranz stands in front of a scene of Marilyn Monroe in the 1956 blockbuster “Gentleman Prefer Blondes” on Feb. 1, 2025, at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures. The image promoted the Los Angeles museum’s exhibit on the use of color in movies. (Photo by Dave Mason/USS Angeles/Angels Flight)

A model from”2001: A Space Odyssey” (1968) stands Feb. 1, 2025, at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures in Los Angeles. This miniature was filmed as one of the shuttle that lands on the moon. (Photo by Dave Mason/USS Angeles/Angels Flight)

Brilliant costumes from a movie made in India grace the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures’ exhibit on the use of color in movies. (Photo by Dave Mason/USS Angeles/Angels Flight)

Dave Mason visits the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures Feb. 1, 2025. (Photo by Jeremy Kranz/USS Angeles/Angels Flight)

The Academy Museum of Motion Pictures stands in the renovated May Co. building at Fairfax Avenue and Wilshire Boulevard in Los Angeles. (Photo by Dave Mason/USS Angeles/Angels Flight)

EntertainmentStar Trek News

Panelists debate future of ‘Star Trek’

Editor’s note: This story originally appeared in the March 2025 issue of Angels Flight, the newsletter of the USS Angeles, with one update since its original publication. Region 4 welcomes submissions from all chapters. To submit stories and high-resolution photos, email them to Chief of Communications Dave Mason at davemason1701@gmail.com

By Commodore Dave Mason

LOS ANGELES — It’s time for “Star Trek” to put aside its history and truly focus on new adventures.

That’s what panelists suggested during a “Trek into Madness” panel at Gallifrey One in 35 Millimetre, the “Doctor Who” convention that took place Feb. 1-3 at the Marriott Los Angeles Airport.

USS Angeles members Joe Queen, Cassie Queen, Kristine Cherry, Dennis Cherry and I listened to the “Doctor Who”  convention panel evaluate the latest adventures in “Star Trek,” including the recent “Section 31” movie that disappointed many fans. 

But the panel also focused on the reboots of the franchise and the fact that familiar “Star Trek” characters such as Christopher Pike, James Kirk, Spock, Uhura and Scotty have now been played by three different actors each.

“Star Trek: Strange New Worlds,” which has the latest incarnations of the classic characters, shouldn’t limit itself to stories that set up the established timeline, panelist Larry Nemecek said. 

With five years between the “Strange New Worlds” series and the original “Star Trek” series, there are new stories to be told, Nemecek, a journalist covering “Star Trek” and a longtime USS Angeles honor member, told the audience at Marriott Los Angeles Airport. “There’s plenty of elbow room.”

Nemecek asked if it were really necessary to reprise characters such as Scotty a third time.

Panelist Robert Napton went a step further.

“I wish ‘Strange New Worlds’ had unbound itself from the classic series and said this is another J.J.-verse,” Napton said, referring to the alternate universe created by producer-director J.J. Abrams and his writers for his 2009 “Star Trek” movie.

Panelist Olivia Youngers said she would prefer “Star Trek” stay in the 25th century and proceed with plans for a “Legacy” spinoff from “Star Trek: Picard.” But she admitted her reasons are partly selfish.

Youngers portrayed Ensign Riggs on the USS Titan during the third and final season of “Picard.” She would like to reprise her character on “Legacy.” 

“Aren’t you dead?” panel moderator James Kerwin asked Youngers.

She explained she learned her character wasn’t killed, but simply knocked unconscious by the rogue Founders who boarded the Titan.

Paramount, meanwhile, hasn’t said whether it will proceed with a “Legacy” spinoff, which would bring back Jeri Ryan as now Capt. Seven of Nine on the new USS Enterprise-G. But at a convention in March in Burbank, Gates McFadden, who reprised her role as Dr. Beverly Crusher on “Picard,” said she doesn’t believe “Legacy” will happen. Stories on the Women in Sci Fi convention will appear soon on region4.org and ussangeles.org. (Each website will have a different story.)

Panelists at the “Doctor Who” convention discussed Paramount’s habit of letting shows run five seasons at 10 episodes a season, then canceling them regardless of popularity. They debated whether good shows shouldn’t be allowed to last longer or whether it was better to simply let new ideas thrive. They added they were puzzled about the fate of two animated series. “Star Trek: Lower Decks” on Paramount+ was canceled, and a third season wasn’t announced for another popular series, “Star Trek: Prodigy,” on Netflix.

“Animation is cheaper, isn’t it?” Youngers asked. (Most industry observers agree it is.)

Next up for the “Star Trek” universe are the 32nd-century “Academy” series and the third season of “Strange New Worlds.” 

The much anticipated “Section 31” fell flat with fans, although Nemecek noted it was enjoyed by those who watched it strictly to see Oscar winner Michelle Yeoh reprise her role of Phillipa Georgiou.

For more news about the USS Angeles, please see ussangeles.org.

James Kerwin, moderator of a “Star Trek” panel at Gallifrey One, talks to a fan after the discussion. Left of Kerwin are USS Angeles honorary member Larry Nemecek and “Star Trek: Picard” actress Olivia Youngers. (Photos by Dave Mason/USS Angeles/Angels Flight)

USS Angele members Cassie and Joe Queen attend their first Gallifrey One convention in Los Angeles. Cassie is dressed as companion Rose Tyler at the “Doctor Who” convention.