WOMEN OF STAR TREK - STAR TREK THE NEXT GENERATION - STEPHANIE BEACHAM as Countess Barthalomew in "Ship In A Bottle" - Hand Signed Limited Edition Autograph Card - Rittenhouse Archives - 2016


Stephanie Beacham (born 28 February 1947) is an English television, radio, film and theatre actress. She is known for her television roles in the BBC drama Tenko (1981–82), the ITV drama Connie (1985), and for playing Sable Colby in the ABC soap operas The Colbys (1985–87) and Dynasty (1988–89). Her film appearances include Dracula A.D. 1972 (1972), Schizo (1976) and Troop Beverly Hills (1989).

Beacham began appearing on British television in 1967 and made her big screen debut in the 1970 film The Games, before starring opposite Marlon Brando in the 1971 film The Nightcomers. She was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for her role in the NBC sitcom Sister Kate (1989–90). Her other television roles include Phyl Oswyn in the ITV prison-based drama series Bad Girls (2003–06), Martha Fraser in the long-running ITV soap opera Coronation Street (2009), and Lorraine in the Sky One sitcom Trollied (2012). On stage, she starred as Maria Callas in a 2010 UK touring production of the play Master Class.

Early life

Beacham, one of four siblings, was born in Barnet, Hertfordshire, England, the daughter of Joan, a housewife, and a father who was an insurance executive and the managing director of the Grosvenor estate. She attended Barnet's Queen Elizabeth's Girls' Grammar School and later travelled to Boulogne-Billancourt in Paris, France, to study mime with Étienne Decroux, before attending Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA) in London.

Career

Her initial goal was to teach dance movement to deaf children, but she began a career in modelling and then began acting in television. Her first screen role was in the BBC series The Queen's Traitor in 1967, in which she played Mary, Queen of Scots. During an interview, thinking Barnet sounded uninteresting, she told a reporter from the Northern Echo she was born in Casablanca, where her favourite Bogart/Bergman film was set.

After many further guest appearances in television series such as The Saint, Callan, and UFO, Beacham's first film roles were in The Games directed by Michael Winner, and Tam Lin directed by Roddy McDowall, both released in 1970. She would work with Winner again in 1971's The Nightcomers, in which she starred opposite Marlon Brando. Beacham appeared nude in one scene, during the filming of which Brando wore Y-fronts and wellington boots under the bed clothes to ensure Winner did not film anything lower than was necessary. Horror would be a genre that Beacham appeared in often during this period, and she was subsequently cast as Jessica Van Helsing in Hammer's Dracula A.D. 1972 alongside Peter Cushing.

Beacham continued to appear in film, television and on stage. Her next role was as a repertory player with the Nottingham Playhouse, where she played several lead and feature roles, including the role of Nora in the Henrik Ibsen play A Doll's House. In 1973, she played Georgina Layton in Thames Television's daytime drama Marked Personal. The same year, she made an Italian film, Si può essere più bastardi dell'ispettore Cliff? The film was released in the US in 1977 as Mafia Junction and in the UK as Blue Movie Blackmail. It was later released on home video, now retitled as Super Bitch as the producers of the film attempted to capitalise on the success of the Joan Collins film The Bitch. Beacham also continued to work in horror films, including And Now the Screaming Starts (1973), House of Mortal Sin (1975), Schizo (1976) and Inseminoid (1981) – a film she admits taking for the fee.

From 1981 to 1982, Beacham featured as a member of the ensemble cast of the BBC series Tenko, about a group of women prisoners of war held captive by the Japanese after their invasion of Singapore in 1942. Following this, she continued working in theatre and television before landing the lead role in the 13-part ITV drama series Connie (1985). Her roles in Tenko and Connie helped to springboard her into one of her most well-remembered roles, that of the devious matriarch Sable Colby on the television series The Colbys (1985–87). The Colbys was a spin-off of the opulent prime-time soap Dynasty which had been the highest rating programme in the USA that year. Beacham was cast opposite Charlton Heston as the tent-pole couple of the new show. The Colbys never experienced the success of its parent show and was cancelled after two seasons, though in 1988, Beacham was invited to reprise the role of Sable on Dynasty, playing opposite Joan Collins in a season-long "battle of the bitches" scenario.

After Dynasty was cancelled in 1989, Beacham landed the lead role in the children's fantasy film The Wolves of Willoughby Chase, playing an evil governess. She was then cast in the US sitcom Sister Kate, taking the lead role as a nun taking care of children in an orphanage. The series lasted for one season and was cancelled in 1990, though she earned a Golden Globe nomination for the role. She then returned to Britain to play Mrs. Peacock in an ITV game show version of the board game Cluedo (1990). Reuniting with Dynasty producer Aaron Spelling, Beacham also had a recurring guest role in the popular teen drama Beverly Hills, 90210, playing Iris McKay, the estranged mother of Luke Perry's character Dylan. Beacham appeared in six different television series produced by Spelling, including Dynasty, The Colbys, The Love Boat, Beverly Hills, 90210, Burke's Law, and Charmed. In 1993, Beacham signed on to play Dr. Kristin Westphalen in the NBC science fiction series seaQuest DSV, produced by Steven Spielberg. Her character was the chief oceanographer and medical doctor for the submarine seaQuest, however Beacham left the programme after its first season. Throughout the 1990s, she continued to make guest appearances on television programmes, working in both the UK and the US. In 1996, she starred in the BBC drama No Bananas which was set during the war years.

In 2003, Beacham returned to the UK to take a role in the ITV prison drama Bad Girls. She played inmate Phyllida "Phyl" Oswyn for four years, partnered with Beverly "Bev" Tull (played by Amanda Barrie) as the "Costa Cons". She remained with the series to the end in 2006. She also appeared in the 2006 movie Love and Other Disasters. She returned to stage work and toured the UK in 2007 as a lead in the Noël Coward play Hay Fever. Later that year, she competed in the 2007 series of the BBC's Strictly Come Dancing with professional partner Vincent Simone, though she was eliminated early in the competition (the second of fourteen celebrities) on 14 October 2007.

On 27 November 2008, it was announced that Beacham had joined the cast of ITV's Coronation Street portraying Martha Fraser, a love interest for Ken Barlow (played by William Roache).[7] She made her first appearance on 26 January 2009 and her last on 4 May 2009.

On 17 February 2010, Beacham appeared in the final episode of the BBC series Material Girl. On 3 April 2010, she made a guest appearance in the long-running BBC hospital drama series Casualty.

In October 2011, Beacham released her autobiography Many Lives in which she discusses her life and career. The book includes a foreword written by her Coronation Street co-star William Roache.

In 2012, Beacham reunited with her Dynasty co-star Joan Collins in a UK television advert for Snickers, however the ad was later re-edited and Beacham's appearance cut. She also appeared as store manager Lorraine Chain in Sky1's supermarket-based sitcom Trollied for eight episodes between August 2012 and October 2012. The same year, she also appeared in three episodes of Sky Living's Mount Pleasant as Aunty Pam.

In January 2013, Beacham was a guest on ITV's daytime chat show Loose Women to promote her appearance on the first episode of the second series of Death in Paradise which aired on 8 January 2013.

In recent years, Beacham has appeared in Christmas pantomime. In 2006, she played the Wicked Witch in a production of Snow White and the Seven Dwarves in Guildford. She appeared there again the following year in a production of Jack and the Beanstalk.

On 3 January 2010, Beacham entered Channel 4's seventh and final series of Celebrity Big Brother as a housemate; she was the only female to make it to the final and finished in fifth place on 29 January 2010.

Beacham was involved in launching the Sense-National Deafblind and Rubella Association Fill in the Gaps campaign which aims to give the elderly the support they need to maintain a good quality of life. She also attended the Parliamentary launch of the campaign in June 2006.

In September 2016 Beacham was a guest on BBC Radio 2's Graham Norton Show and discussed her forthcoming role as Princess Margaret. The new play, A Princess Undone by Richard Stirling, will premiere at the Cambridge Arts Theatre in October and is "set to scandalise admirers of the Royal family".

Personal life

Beacham is partially deaf, having been born with no hearing in her right ear and 80% hearing in her left ear.

She married actor John McEnery in 1973; she became pregnant shortly after the wedding but suffered a miscarriage when she was three months pregnant because she fell. Beacham and McEnery separated in 1979 but stayed married for over another 10 years. They have two daughters, Phoebe (1974) and Chloe (1977). She dated Imran Khan, then a cricketer and playboy, in the 1980s and later a politician who became Prime Minister of Pakistan in 2018.

Beacham was successfully treated for skin cancer in 2009. She had a recurrence of the disease in 2011 but has again recovered.

In March 2016 Beacham told The Sunday Telegraph that she had been raped, when she had been an up-and-coming actress, in her twenties.

Filmography

Film

Year

Title

Role

1970

The Games

Angela Simmonds

1970

Tam-Lin

Janet Ainsley

1971

The Nightcomers

Miss Jessel

1972

Dracula A.D. 1972

Jessica Van Helsing

1972

The Aries Computer


1973

Super Bitch

Joanne

1973

And Now the Screaming Starts!

Catherine Fengriffen

1975

House of Mortal Sin

Vanessa Welch

1976

Schizo

Beth

1981

Inseminoid

Kate

1989

Troop Beverly Hills

Vicki Sprantz

1989

The Wolves of Willoughby Chase

Letitia Slighcarp

1990

Harry and Harriet

Christine Petersen

1996

Wedding Bell Blues

Tanya's Mother

2000

Relative Values

Elizabeth

2002

Unconditional Love

Harriet Fox-Smith

2002

Would I Lie to You?

Amaelia

2006

Seven Days of Grace

Dana

2006

Love and Other Disasters

Felicity Riggs-Wentworth

2006

The Witches Hammer

Madeline

2007

Plot 7

Emma Osterman

2015

Wild Oats

Tammy

Television

Television

Year

Title

Role

Notes

1967

Out of Town Theatre

The Girl

1 episode "The Picnic"

1967

The Queen's Traitor

Mary Queen of Scots

TV Movie

1968

ITV Playhouse

Lisa Wendle

1 episode "Bon Voyage"

1968

The Saint

Penny

1 episode "Legacy for the Saint"

1968

The Jazz Age

Charlotte Tonn

1 episode "Black Exchange"

1969

Armchair Theatre

Linda

1 episode "On Vacation"

1969

Public Eye

Shirley Marlowe

1 episode "My Life's My Own"

1969

The Distracted Preacher

Lizzy Newberry

TV Movie

1970

Callan

Beth Lampton

1 episode "God Help Your Friends"

1970

Sentimental Education

Rosanette

1 episode "The Philanderer"

1970

UFO

Sarah Bosanquet

1 episode "Destruction"

1971–1972

ITV Sunday Night Theatre

Jenny Draper/Anna Trenton

2 episodes

1972

Jason King

Cora Simpson

1 episode "Chapter One: The Company I Keep"

1972

Man at the Top

Paula Fraser

2 episodes

1973

The Adventurer

Contessa Maria

1 episode "Icons Are Forever"

1973

The Protectors

Chrissie

1 episode "Your Witness"

1973

Special Branch

Sue Arden

1 episode "Threat"

1973

Jane Eyre

Blanche Ingram

1 episode "Part 3"

1973

Ego House

Adèle Hugo

TV Movie

1973–1974

Marked Personal

Georgina Layton

62 episodes

1975

Whodunnit?

Helen Brent

1 episode "Too Many Cooks"

1975

Prometheus: The Life of Balzac

Fanny Lovell

TV Mini-series

1976

Hadleigh

Susan Debray

1 episode "Film Story"

1976

Forget Me Not

Jeanne Teliot

1 episode "Rich"

1978

Rainbow

Special Guest Narrator

1 episode "Wild Animals"

1979

I vecchi e i giovani

Nicoletta

4 episodes

1981–1982

Tenko

Rose Millar

19 episodes

1984

Sorrell and Son

Florence Palfrey

1 episode

1984

Hammer House of Mystery and Suspense

Rosemary Richardson

1 episode "A Distant Scream"

1985

Connie

Connie

13 episodes

1985–1987

The Colbys

Sable Scott Colby

49 episodes

1985; 1988–1989

Dynasty

Sable Colby

Guest Role (Season 6), Main Role (Season 9) 23 episodes

1986

The Love Boat

Elaine Riskin

1 episode "The Shipshape Cruise"

1987

Napoleon and Josephine: A Love Story

Therese Tallien

3 episodes

1988

French and Saunders

Doreena Petherbridge

1 episode

1989–1990

Sister Kate

Sister Katherine 'Kate' Lambert

19 episodes

1990

Cluedo

Mrs. Peacock

6 episodes

1990

Lucky/Chances

Susan Martino Santangelo

TV Mini-series

1990

The Lilac Bus

Judy

TV Movie

1991; 1993–1994

Beverly Hills, 90210

Iris McKay

8 episodes

1992

Secrets

Sabina Quarles

TV Movie

1992

To Be The Best

Arabella

TV Movie

1993

Star Trek: The Next Generation

Countess Bartholomew

1 episode "Ship in a Bottle"

1993

Foreign Affairs

Rosemary Radley

TV Movie

1993

Riders

Molly Carter

TV Movie

1993

Blossom

Mrs. Robinson

1 episode "Hunger"

1993–1994

seaQuest DSV

Dr. Kristin Westphalen

23 episodes

1994

Burke's Law

Victoria Lancer

1 episode "Who Killed Skippy's Master?"

1994

A Change of Place

Marie

TV Movie

1995

Legend

Vera Slaughter

1 episode "Birth of a Legend"

1995

High Society

Stella, the acting coach

1 episode "We Ought to Be in Pictures"

1996

No Bananas

Dorothea Grant

10 episodes

2000

Charmed

Martha van Lewen

1 episode "Reckless Abandon"

2002

Having It Off

Vernice Green

1 episode "Perms of Endearment"

2003–2006

Bad Girls

Phyllida Oswyn

Seasons 5–8 • 40 episodes

2006

New Tricks

Rhoda Wishaw

1 episode "Wicca Work"

2007

Strictly Come Dancing

Herself

Voted out on 2nd week

2009

Free Agents

Wendy

1 episode

2009

Coronation Street

Martha Fraser

21 episodes

2010

Celebrity Big Brother

Herself

Left in 5th place in the final

2010

Material Girl

Sylvie Montrose

1 episode

2010

Casualty

Monica Shapiro

1 episode "Love of a Good Man"

2012

Mount Pleasant

Aunty Pam

3 episodes

2012

Trollied

Lorraine

Main role • Season 2 • 8 episodes

2013

Death in Paradise

Nicole Seymour

1 episode

2014–2016

Boomers

Maureen

Main role

2018

The Real Marigold Hotel

Herself


Awards and nominations

Year

Award

Nominated work

Category

Result

1986

Soap Opera Digest Award

The Colbys

Outstanding Villainess on a Prime Time Serial

Nominated

1988

Soap Opera Digest Award

The Colbys

Outstanding Villainess: Prime Time

Nominated

1990

Soap Opera Digest Award

Dynasty

Outstanding Lead Actress: Prime Time

Nominated

1990

Golden Globe Award

Sister Kate

Best Actress – Television Series Musical or Comedy

Nominated




Star Trek: The Next Generation (abbreviated as TNG and ST:TNG) is an American science fiction television series in the Star Trek franchise created by Gene Roddenberry that ran between 1987 and 1994. Roddenberry, Maurice Hurley, Rick Berman, Michael Piller and Jeri Taylor served as executive producers at different times throughout its production.


The series involves a starship named Enterprise and is set in the nearby regions of the Milky Way galaxy, the Alpha Quadrant. The first episode takes place in the year 2364, 100 years after the start of the five-year mission described in the original series, which began in 2264. It features a new cast and a new starship Enterprise, the fifth to bear the name within the franchise's storyline. An introductory statement, performed by Patrick Stewart and featured at the beginning of each episode's title sequence, stated the starship's purpose in language similar to the opening statement of the original series, but was updated to reflect an ongoing mission, and to be gender-neutral:

Space: the final frontier. These are the voyages of the starship Enterprise. Its continuing mission: to explore strange new worlds, to seek out new life and new civilizations, to boldly go where no one has gone before.

TNG premiered the week of September 28, 1987, drawing 27 million viewers, with the two-hour pilot "Encounter at Farpoint". In total, 176 episodes were made (including two which were two-parters), ending with the two-hour finale "All Good Things..." the week of May 23, 1994.

The series (1987–94) was broadcast in first-run syndication with dates and times varying among individual television stations. Further Star Trek spin-offs followed The Next Generation: Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (1993–99), Star Trek: Voyager (1995–2001), Star Trek: Enterprise (2001–2005) and Star Trek: Discovery (2017-Present). The series formed the basis for the seventh through to the tenth of the Star Trek films, and is also the setting of numerous novels, comic books, and video games.

In its seventh season, Star Trek: The Next Generation became the first and only syndicated television series to be nominated for a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Drama Series. The series received a number of accolades including 19 Emmy Awards, two Hugo Awards, five Saturn Awards, and a Peabody Award.

Episodes

Main article: List of Star Trek: The Next Generation episodes

Season

Episodes

Originally aired

First aired

Last aired


1

26

September 28, 1987

May 16, 1988


2

22

November 21, 1988

July 17, 1989


3

26

September 25, 1989

June 18, 1990


4

26

September 24, 1990

June 17, 1991


5

26

September 23, 1991

June 15, 1992


6

26

September 21, 1992

June 21, 1993


7

26

September 20, 1993

May 23, 1994

The series follows the adventures of a space-faring crew on board the starship USS Enterprise (NCC-1701-D), the fifth Federation vessel to bear the name and registry and the seventh starship by that name. (See Starship Enterprise for other ships with the name and/or registry). The series is set about 70 years after the final mission of the original Enterprise crew under the command of James T. Kirk. The Federation has undergone significant internal changes in its quest to explore and seek out new life, adding new degrees of complexity and controversy to its methods, especially those focused on the Prime Directive. The Klingon Empire and the United Federation of Planets have ceased wartime hostilities and become galactic allies, while more sinister foes such as the Romulans and the Borg take precedence on the series.

The Enterprise is commanded by Captain Jean-Luc Picard and is staffed by first officer Commander William Riker, second officer/operations manager Data, security chief Tasha Yar, ship's counselor Deanna Troi, chief medical officer Dr. Beverly Crusher and her son Wesley Crusher, conn officer Lieutenant Geordi La Forge, and junior officer Lieutenant Worf. The death of Lieutenant Yar in the series' first season prompts an internal shuffle of personnel, making Worf official chief of security. In season 2, La Forge is promoted to chief engineer and Katherine Pulaski briefly takes over for Beverly Crusher.

The series begins with the crew of the Enterprise-D put on trial by an omnipotent being known as Q. The god-like entity threatens the extinction of mankind for being a race of savages, forcing them to solve a mystery at nearby Farpoint Station to prove their worthiness to be spared. After successfully solving the mystery and avoiding disaster, the crew officially departs on its mission to explore strange new worlds.

Subsequent stories focus on the discovery of new life and sociological and political relationships with alien cultures, as well as exploring the human condition. Several new species are introduced as recurring antagonists, including the Ferengi, the Cardassians, and the Borg. Throughout their adventures, Picard and his crew are often forced to face and live with the consequences of difficult choices.

The series ended in its seventh season with a two-part episode "All Good Things...", which brought the events of the series full circle to the original confrontation with Q. An interstellar anomaly that threatens all life in the universe forces Picard to leap from his present, past, and future to combat the threat. Picard was successfully able to show to Q that humanity could think outside of the confines of perception and theorize on new possibilities while still being prepared to sacrifice themselves for the sake of the greater good. The series ended with the crew of the Enterprise portrayed as feeling more like a family and paved the way for four consecutive motion pictures that continued the theme and mission of the series.

Production

Background

By 1986, 20 years after Star Trek's debut on NBC, the franchise's longevity amazed Paramount Pictures executives. Chairman Frank Mancuso Sr. and others described it as the studio's "crown jewel", a "priceless asset" that "must not be squandered". The series was the most popular syndicated television program 17 years after cancellation, and the Harve Bennett-produced Star Trek films did well at the box office. William Shatner and Leonard Nimoy's salary demands for Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home (1986) caused the studio to plan for a new Star Trek television series, as it had thought to do in 1977 with Star Trek: Phase II before making the films. Paramount executives worried that a new show could hurt the demand for the films, but decided that it would increase their appeal on videocassette and cable, and that a show with unknown actors would be more profitable than paying the films' actors' large salaries. Roddenberry initially declined to be involved, but came on board as creator after being unhappy with early conceptual work. Star Trek: The Next Generation was announced on October 10, 1986, and its cast in May 1987.

Paramount executive Rick Berman was assigned to the show at Roddenberry's request. Roddenberry hired a number of Star Trek veterans, including Bob Justman, D. C. Fontana, Eddie Milkis, and David Gerrold. Early proposals for the series included one in which some of the original series cast might appear as "elder statesmen", and Roddenberry speculated as late as October 1986 that the new series might not even use a spaceship, as "people might travel by some [other] means" 100 years after the USS Enterprise (NCC-1701). A more lasting change was his new belief that workplace interpersonal conflict would no longer exist in the future; thus, the new series did not have parallels to the frequent "crusty banter" between Kirk, Spock, and Leonard McCoy. According to series actor Patrick Stewart, Berman was more receptive than Roddenberry to the show addressing political issues.

The series' music theme combined the fanfare from the original series theme by Alexander Courage with Jerry Goldsmith's theme for Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979). Some early episodes' plots derived from outlines created for Star Trek: Phase II. Additionally, some sets used in the Original Series-era films were redressed for The Next Generation, and in turn used for subsequent Original Series films. Part of the transporter room set in TNG was used in the original Star Trek's transporter set. Many production details, such as LCARS computer interfaces and starship design, were carried through in the production of subsequent spin-offs.

Syndication and profitability

Despite Star Trek's proven success, NBC and ABC only offered to consider pilot scripts for the new series, and CBS offered to air a miniseries that could become a series if it did well. That the Big Three television networks treated Paramount's most appealing and valuable property as they would any other series offended the studio. Fox wanted the show to help launch the new network, but wanted it by March 1987, and would only commit to 13 episodes instead of a full season. The unsuccessful negotiations convinced the studio that it could only protect Star Trek with full control.

Paramount increased and accelerated the show's profitability by choosing to instead broadcast it in first-run syndication on independent stations (whose numbers had more than tripled since 1980) and Big Three network affiliates. The studio offered the show to local stations for free as barter syndication. The stations sold five minutes of commercial time to local advertisers and Paramount sold the remaining seven minutes to national advertisers. Stations had to commit to purchasing reruns in the future, and only those that aired the new show could purchase the popular reruns of the original series.

The new show indeed performed well; the pilot's ratings were higher than those of many network programs, and ratings remained comparable to network shows by the end of the first season despite the handicap of each station airing the show on a different day and time, often outside prime time. By the end of the first season, Paramount reportedly received $1 million for advertising per episode, more than the roughly $800,000 fee that networks typically paid for a one-hour show; by 1992, when the budget for each episode had risen to almost $2 million, the studio earned $90 million from advertising annually from first-run episodes, with each 30-second commercial selling for $115,000 to $150,000. The show had a 40% return on investment for Paramount, with $30 to $60 million in annual upfront net profit for first-run episodes and another $70 million for stripping rights for each of the about 100 episodes then available, so did not need overseas sales to be successful.


Star Trek is an American media franchise based on the science fiction television series created by Gene Roddenberry. The first television series, simply called Star Trek and now referred to as The Original Series, debuted in 1966 and aired for three seasons on the television network NBC. It followed the interstellar adventures of Captain James T. Kirk (William Shatner) and his crew aboard the starship USS Enterprise, a space exploration vessel, built by the United Federation of Planets in the twenty-third century. The Star Trek canon of the franchise includes The Original Series, an animated series, five spin-off television series, the film franchise, and further adaptations several media.

In creating Star Trek, Roddenberry was inspired by the Horatio Hornblower novels, the satirical book Gulliver's Travels, and by works of western genre such as the television series Wagon Train. These adventures continued in the short-lived Star Trek: The Animated Series and six feature films. Four spin-off television series were eventually produced: Star Trek: The Next Generation followed the crew of a new starship Enterprise set a century after the original series; Star Trek: Deep Space Nine and Star Trek: Voyager set contemporaneously with The Next Generation; and Star Trek: Enterprise set before the original series in the early days of human interstellar travel. The most recent Star Trek TV series, entitled Star Trek: Discovery, premiered on CBS and later made available exclusively on the digital platform CBS All Access. The adventures of The Next Generation crew continued in four additional feature films. In 2009, the film franchise underwent a "reboot" set in an alternate timeline, or "Kelvin Timeline," entitled simply Star Trek. This film featured a new cast portraying younger versions of the crew from the original show; their adventures were continued in the sequel film, Star Trek Into Darkness (2013). The thirteenth film feature and sequel, Star Trek Beyond (2016), was released to coincide with the franchise's 50th anniversary.

Star Trek has been a cult phenomenon for decades. Fans of the franchise are called Trekkies or Trekkers. The franchise spans a wide range of spin-offs including games, figurines, novels, toys, and comics. Star Trek had a themed attraction in Las Vegas that opened in 1998 and closed in September 2008. At least two museum exhibits of props travel the world. The series has its own full-fledged constructed language, Klingon. Several parodies have been made of Star Trek. In addition, viewers have produced several fan productions. As of July 2016, the franchise had generated $10 billion in revenue, making Star Trek one of the highest-grossing media franchises of all time.

Star Trek is noted for its cultural influence beyond works of science fiction. The franchise is also noted for its progressive civil rights stances. The Original Series included one of television's first multiracial casts. Star Trek references may be found throughout popular culture from movies such as the submarine thriller Crimson Tide to the animated series South Park.