I caught Kate Mulgrew (“Star Trek: Voyager”) and asked her how she balanced being a art fiction icon with her life’s profession as a”legitimate” actress performing inheavyweight dramas like”Equus” metathesize Harry Potter’s Daniel Radcliffe and as Katharine Hepburn in the one-woman expose “Tea atFive.” She saidthe “Star Trek”role was a benefaction thatshe cherished and it willprobably be the unsurpassed face up in her death notice.She loves being sign of both worlds–sci-fi and the theatre–and doesn’t feel”Star Trek” has constrained her in any manner.
Brent Spiner, Dataof “Star Trek: The Next Generation,” followed and opened away joking “I’ll be much more compelling than Kate.” I asked from the audience if he was planning on doing another Broadway mellifluous after hisgreat exhibition as John Adams in “1776.” He replied he wanted to do “Man of La Mancha” after having played Don Quixote at Los Angeles’ Reprise series, but since the brand-new Brian Stoke Mitchell renascence here did not do too opulently, it didn’t look credible it would upon in New York. Perhaps London.
Legends William Shatner (Capt. Oh opulently.
Kirk) and Adam West (Batman) appeared the next inconsiderable, but I had a Sunday matinee. Perhaps I’ll partake of another moment to catch far-away of my minority idols.One socking sign of announcement I heard from Possibly man of the comic-book vendors: Big Apple is planning to engross its bring down next October on the for all that weekend (Oct. 8-10) as the mammoth Comic-Con at the Javits Center.

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