A Star Trek-themed attraction will be part of the 74-hectare Red Sea Astrarium project, which will begin development next year.
And a familiar name will be part of the investment group funding the attraction, King Abdullah II of Jordan.
(more…)
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A Star Trek-themed attraction will be part of the 74-hectare Red Sea Astrarium project, which will begin development next year.
And a familiar name will be part of the investment group funding the attraction, King Abdullah II of Jordan.
(more…)
For Linda Park, being offered the role of Hoshi Sato in Star Trek: Enterprise meant deciding whether to accept that part, or to fulfill a dream by taking a role in a play that was being performed in her home town.
Raised in San Jose, Park had been offered a role in Cyrano de Bergerac in 2001, but Hollywood beckoned. “I was fresh out of drama school, and I really didn’t know what the right thing to do was,” said Park “My agent said I was crazy. This was a TV gig, and I could always do a play.”
Star Trek: Enterprise‘s Linda Park will be appearing in Love in American Times, a new play to debut next month.
Park will be appearing with J. Michael Flynn, who is best-known to Star Trek fans for his guest roles on Star Trek: The Next Generation (Zayner in The Hunted) and Star Trek: Enterprise (Nijil in The Aenar, United and Babel One. Mazarite official in Fallen Hero).
Although she liked the cast of Star Trek: The Next Generation, Linda Park would have preferred a finale that centered more on the Star Trek: Enterprise crew.
According to Park, in the finale, she felt “like an extra in a TNG story.” These Are the Voyages wasn’t “a finale that you’d hope and dream for,” said Park, “but it was a fun finale for an actor just to be on because there were great friends around.”
When Linda Park began working on Star Trek: Enterprise in 2001, she was a young 23, but by the time the show ended, she was ready for roles that were more aggressive and tough than that of Hoshi Sato.
Although other actors lamented the early end of Enterprise, Park is not one of them. “Well, I guess I didn’t feel it ended to abruptly just because, personally, I’d never been on a show before (as a regular) and four years was an epically long time for a twenty-something,” she said. “So, personally I didn’t feel that it ended abruptly, and I felt that there was some circular movement in storylines, that we’d kind of gone over some things – maybe not quite finished them, but there wasn’t anything I was itching to finish, if that makes any sense.”