The photographs and other items, are official photographs and items that have been gathered over 40 years and are always guaranteed authentic. Just send it back for a return!!!! 

Guaranteed!


My mom has been a  Star Trek fan and has been to almost every comicon, vulkon, fantisticon, sea trek and more that I can’t remember. Every time there  were more autographed photos. 

8x10 headshot photo features Victor Lundin, an actor who played a Klingon character in the original series.

The photographs and other items, are official photographs and items that have been gathered over 40 years and are always guaranteed authentic. Just send it back for a return!!!! 

Guaranteed!


My mom has been a Star Trek fan and has been to almost every comicon, vulkon, fantisticon, sea trek and more that I can’t remember. Every time there were more autographed photos.

- All of the photographs listed were obtained at conventions we obtained authentic hand-signed autographs from actors on these official photographs

- [ ] These are AUTHENTIC AUTOGRAPHS, nice and clear, and NOT a copy or preprint.

- [ ] No visible signs of wear and tear.








While pursuing his acting career, Lundin also worked as a salesman and a food distributor. He became known for his portrayal of tough men on screen, as well as Native Americans. By Lundin's own estimation, he made more than a 100 different film and television appearances from the late 1950s to the late 1960s.[2] These included such roles as Machine Gun Kelly in the 1960s film Ma Barker's Killer Brood. During the early 1960s, he worked with two Academy Award winning directors, Robert Wise and George Stevens. With Wise, he appeared in the director's 1962 film Two for the Seesaw, and in Stevens' The Greatest Story Ever Told in 1965. Lundin also appeared in a number of other films around this same period, including Promises! Promises! (1963) and Beau Geste (1966). In 1964, he also starred in one of the lead roles in Robinson Crusoe on Mars as Friday.[3] During this period, he also worked as a singing coach, working with Lucille Ball for a period, but he said "I couldn't teach her anything. She was such a heavy smoker; she was like a basso profundo".[2]

Lundin appeared in several 1960's science fiction and superhero television series, such as Batman as one of the Penguin's henchmen, and as Chief Standing Pat in separate episodes. In 1967, he appeared in the Star Trek: The Original Series episode "Errand of Mercy",[3] the first time that the Klingons made an appearance in the Star Trek franchise. Lundin portrayed the Klingon Lieutenant, and became the first Klingon to be seen on screen by virtue of walking into frame moments before John Colicos' Kor.[4] Lundin had previously auditioned for the role of Spock, which wound up going to Leonard Nimoy instead.[2] He also appeared in other series such as The Time Tunnel and later in his career in Babylon 5.[4] He was a regular at science fiction conventions, and continued to sing professionally, including making an appearance on a cruise in the early 2000s