In 1990 or 1991 (I think) the Smithsonian held a Star Trek symposium, hosting several speakers on the history and cultural significance of Trek. William Ware Theiss was one of the speakers. I attended, although I recall very little. (I taped the whole thing on cassette, and I need to find those tapes.) The one thing that I do recall, however, involved Theiss.
He had delivered a speech and then segued into a Q&A session. One fellow walked past me to get in line to ask a question.Although the tone and the purpose of the symposium definitely leaned toward the academic, this guy was the 90s image of the fanboy, in this case wearing a TNG uniform stretched very tight across his stomach. When his turn at the mic came, he ignored the academic tone withh a question that I would have expected at a con. I can't quote him, but the gist of his question was that the phaser was on the right side of the uniform in TOS, which made sense for right-handed people, but he wanted to know why it had moved to the left side of the uniform for TNG, and I do recall him using the term "tactically disadvantageous" in an accusatory tone, as if Theiss had to justify his choice.
Theiss didn't miss a beat. Again, I can't quote him, but overall his answer was something on the order of "I designed and made costumes. If the director or the prop manager needed to hang a prop on the costume then I asked them 'Where do you want it?' and that's where I put it."
The entire audience was laughing.
He had delivered a speech and then segued into a Q&A session. One fellow walked past me to get in line to ask a question.Although the tone and the purpose of the symposium definitely leaned toward the academic, this guy was the 90s image of the fanboy, in this case wearing a TNG uniform stretched very tight across his stomach. When his turn at the mic came, he ignored the academic tone withh a question that I would have expected at a con. I can't quote him, but the gist of his question was that the phaser was on the right side of the uniform in TOS, which made sense for right-handed people, but he wanted to know why it had moved to the left side of the uniform for TNG, and I do recall him using the term "tactically disadvantageous" in an accusatory tone, as if Theiss had to justify his choice.
Theiss didn't miss a beat. Again, I can't quote him, but overall his answer was something on the order of "I designed and made costumes. If the director or the prop manager needed to hang a prop on the costume then I asked them 'Where do you want it?' and that's where I put it."
The entire audience was laughing.