Star Trek™: The Next Generation Dr. Beverly Crusher Ornament
$19.99
Details
Chief medical officer of the U.S.S. Enterprise starship, Dr. Beverly Crusher was a valued member of Captain Jean-Luc Picard’s inner circle of senior staff. This Christmas tree ornament features the red-headed, empathetic physician and commanding officer from “Star Trek: The Next Generation” wearing her blue lab coat and carrying a medical tricorder.
Additional Details: Plastic Christmas ornament features hanger attachment.
Includes: One 2024 Keepsake Ornament in gift box for easy gift giving, preservation and storage.
Star Trek™: Strange New Worlds Captain Christopher Pike Ornament With Sound
$21.99
Details
“Our mission? We explore.” With those words, Captain Christopher Pike set the tone for the crew from his center seat of the U.S.S. Enterprise as they began their duties in “Star Trek: Strange New Worlds.” Press the button on this Christmas tree ornament to hear memorable lines from the show as the Federation starship makes the jump to warp speed. Battery operated.
Key Features: Press the button on the Magic Sound ornament to hear dialogue. Ornament plays memorable lines from “Star Trek: Strange New Worlds.”
Additional Details: Plastic Christmas ornament features hanger attachment.
Includes: One 2024 Keepsake Ornament in gift box for easy gift giving, preservation and storage. Requires two (2) LR44 replaceable batteries (included).
Dr. Beverly Crusher“Unification II”Captain Christopher PikeU.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701-BN.S.E.A. ProtectorSpockU.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701 refitThe Keeper
To celebrate Star Trek: The Next Generation, we have two ornaments:
—Dr. Beverly Crusher from the series available in October. This ornament features the Enterprise’s Chief Medical Officer in her lab coat rushing to a medical emergency tricorder in hand. This is the first non-Magic Keepsake Ornament produced of an Enterprise-D crew member since 1997 and it’s certainly time to get back in the habit of doing so.
—Spock and Data in a scene from the Season 5 episode “Unification II” available in October. This ornament features sound from a conversation the two share in the episode that aired in November 1991.
To celebrate the five-year anniversary of Anson Mount assuming the role, we have Captain Christopher Pike from Star Trek: Strange New Worlds available in October. This ornament features dialogue and sound effects from the final moments of “Strange New Worlds,” the pilot episode of the series.
To celebrate the 30th anniversary of Star Trek Generations, we have the U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701-B available in October. (Yes, finally.) This ornament features light effects activated by pushing a button.
To celebrate the 30th anniversary of GalaxyQuest, we have the N.S.E.A. Protector available in October. Is this a Star Trek ornament? Well, no. Will Star Trek fans want to add this to their tree? Absolutely.
To celebrate the 45th anniversary of Star Trek: The Motion Picture, we have two ornaments:
—Spock wearing the standard duty Starfleet uniform introduced in the mid-2270s as a miniature ornament available in October.
—The U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701 refit as a miniature ornament available in October.
To celebrate the 60th anniversary of the completion of “The Cage,” Star Trek’s first episode, we have The Keeper available in July.
Okay, that’s a fair “con.” I can’t confirm this but I believe this began life as a concept for a tabletop to fast-follow the 2016 To Boldly Go. It might even have had Riker or another character on it, too. Then things got scaled down and it is what it is.
Yeah, someone I know made a bit of a fuss over Chekov being left out of the series. It was a decision that had been made based on lower than anticipated sales, and when that someone learned of the decision too late to help get it reinstated for the following year, that someone threw a fit. That someone said no fan or collector would trust Hallmark to finish out a crew in a series again if we did six cast members without doing at least the seventh (resigned to the likelihood of extending to nine being near impossible). When told later it couldn’t happen because the series had been announced as ended, another fit commenced saying our credibility was on the line here and that fit lasted until a path to adding Chekov—the “inspired by” path—was settled upon.
I can explain! Well, I can at least speak to your contra of the pro et contra. (See? And no one thought my 19 college hours of Latin would pay off.)
When this was in development, I did lobby for battle scarring on the C in stores. The argument against it was presented thusly: Many of these ornaments are purchased as gifts. While a self-purchaser would know why it looked “dirty,” a gift buyer might not know and could pass on the purchase. So we went with the “fresh from Utopia Planitia” version for retail. It took us a couple of years but we finally did set the record straight. 😉