DALLAS, TX.- The original USS Enterprise has completed its voyage home.
On Saturday,
Heritage Auctions Executive Vice President Joe Maddalena returned the 3-foot-long model of the Federations flagship, used in the original Star Trek series opening credits, to Eugene Rod Roddenberry Jr., son of Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry and caretaker of his fathers legacy. The handoff occurred at Heritage Auctions Beverly Hills location, where the Enterprise was stored for safekeeping.
This Enterprise was also used in Star Treks original pilot episode, The Cage, and became the prototype for the 11-foot-long starship famously on display at the Smithsonians National Air and Space Museum. Its believed the ship was lost in the 1970s when Gene loaned it to the makers of Star Trek: The Motion Picture.
Last fall, an individual discovered the long-lost model and brought it to Heritage for authentication. Heritage then reached out to Roddenberry Jr. to coordinate the return of the Enterprise.
Once our team of experts concluded it was the real thing, we contacted Rod because we wanted to get the modelback to where it belonged, Maddalena says. Were thrilled the Enterprise is finally in dry dock.
After five decades, Im thrilled that someone happened upon this historic model of the USS Enterprise. I remember how it used to adorn my dads desk, said Rod Roddenberry, CEO of Roddenberry Entertainment. I am tremendously grateful to Heritage Auctions for facilitating the return of this iconic piece of Star Trek history to my family. I cant wait to figure out how we are going to share it with my extended family, Star Trek fans around the world. We look forward to making that announcement.
The USS Enterprise was famously designed by Star Treks art director, Walter Matt Jefferies, the namesake for the Jefferies tubes referenced in numerous episodes throughout the franchises storied history.
In the 1968 book The Making of Star Trek, co-written by Stephen Whitefield and Gene Roddenberry, Jefferies said that the Enterprise design was arrived at by a process of elimination, based partly on designs hed seen at NASA, Douglas Aircraft and other aerospace engineering outfits.
We didnt want the Enterprise to look like something currently planned for our space program, Jefferies said in the book. We knew that by the time the show got on the air, this type of thing would be old hat. We had to go further than even the most advanced space scientists were thinking. Jefferies said he aimed only to create something instantly recognizable.
Jefferies said Roddenberry wanted the Enterprise to be large enough to carry a crew of several hundred people. According to Jeffries, Roddenberry had very specific instructions: No flames, no fins, no rockets and make it look like its got power.
Jefferies said the series creator wanted everything to be believable, which forced Jefferies to base his design on fairly solid scientific concepts, projected into the future. They sketched out myriad possibilities and filled walls with conceptual renderings which Roddenberry didnt like except for a piece of this one or a small part of that one, Jefferies said. Over time, everyone involved in the production, even the sales department and a representative from the Rand Corporation, got involved. Meanwhile, the studio wondered what was taking so long.
My feeling was that if you didnt believe in the spaceship, Roddenberry wrote in The Making of Star Trek, if you didnt believe you were in a vehicle traveling through space, a vehicle that made sense, whose layout and design made sense, then you wouldnt believe in the series.
That sentiment continues to be integral to Roddenberry Entertainment, which recently launched the video podcast Does It Fly? based on Genes original desire to make the USS Enterprise scientifically sound. The podcast, hosted by scientist Hakeem Oluseyi and pop culture aficionado Tamara Krinski, discusses and debates the real-life viability of todays favorite entertainment conceits.
Once Roddenberry and Jefferies finally settled on the basic design for the ship christened NCC-1701, a prototype was made using balsa wood and cardboard. Custom-scale model-maker Richard Datin Jr. fabricated a 33-inch wood, hand-painted model used for The Original Series opening credits and in the pilot episode The Cage the model that has now been returned to Roddenberry so that it may live long and prosper.