Yours appears to have a taller stopper.
Don't even bother with getting a new stopper. Nobody will notice unless they take screen grabs from the original series and from ST:P2 and make a nitpicky comparison. Gregg, I think you're the only one with the perseverance to do it, so unless you need to satisfy your own need for perfection...![]()
Wow, talk about devotion! Is any of that tax deductible, since this is a non-profit operation? In any case, I hope the joy you get out of it makes it all worth while.Well, I am a bit of an anal-retentive obsessive compulsive guy when it comes to these props. Believe me: I see a too tall stopper every time I look at the thing. But I also need to keep things in perspective. There is *a lot* of stuff I pay for and obtain for the production--from flat screen monitors for the bridge to hundreds of yards of costume material dyed to proper Bill Theiss color fomula specifications, to plane tickets and lodging for our guest stars, to, well, so much more. So yes, better stoppers will probably have to wait--but they are on my To Do list. They're just way at the bottom.
Well, this next little goodie was only in one episode--and it was the pilot episode at that: "Where No Man Has Gone Before." In the very first scene of "Where No Man Has Gone Before," in the Recreation Lounge, Captain Kirk and Mister Spock are playing three dimensional chess. In the background, some extras are engaged in a variety of recreational activities. In some shots, you can see some books on the tabletop. (Reading will always be a pleasant way to pass some leisurely hours.) You can see a three dimensional checker board (which I'll get into in some other post). But you also see a translucent cube-thing over Kirk's shoulder. Here's the best shot of it from the actual episode:There's actually another picture of it in a publicity shot that was taken during the filming of "Where No Man Has Gone Before" that appears in the book The Making of Star Trek by Stephen E. Whitfield and Gene Roddenberry. It's a little better, but not much:
So what is this translucent cube-thing that is probably recreational in nature? (It was just seen in this one episode.) Well, it's a Milton Bradley game/toy called "Try-it." It's a three dimensional, clear plastic cube-like maze. You place a marble in the hole on one side and you hold the cube in your hands and you keep flipping the thing around ninety degrees and rattling it, hoping to maneuver the marble through the maze, and ultimately at some point to extricate the marble and get it to come out the hole on the other side eventually. The game of the future is here--today! Such 23rd Century fun! Here are some shots of my 1959 vintage "Try-it" maze:![]()
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You can also find a web page that analyzes the maze pattern of the "Try-it" maze here: http://www.roarbush.com/mb3dmaze/index.htm So, it's not one of the more spectacular Star Trek props, but then, not all of them are. Slide show is here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/10901121@N06/sets/72157605018953115/show/![]()
Aesthetically, I prefer the one with the green liquid in it. But they're both quite nice.
Nice crystal ware. Although all I can think of is didn't that ship get tossed around all the time. Who's job would it have been to sweep up all the broken glass...?
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