Commander William Riker is many things. A tactical leader. A bearded charmer. Even a jazz aficionado. And though he won’t be born for another 300 years â and he’s a fictitious character â Riker just might be the most famous person born in Valdez.
To âStar Trek: The Next Generationâ fans, the first officer aboard the Enterprise was a highlight of the showâs adventures in seeking out new life and new civilizations in space: the final frontier.
Now, a group of fans want to honor the characterâs roots with a bronze statue in his hometown: the Last Frontier.
Cameron Harrison is spearheading the effort. Like Riker, he also grew up in Valdez. A lifelong science fiction fan, he said the story goes that Gene Roddenberry, the creator of âStar Trekâ, was inspired to make one of his main characters an Alaskan after visiting the state.
âTo know that Gene Roddenberry was so impressed and taken with Alaska that he purposefully made one of his characters from here is something I think we should pride ourselves on and celebrate,â Harrison said.
Harrison lives in Portland, Ore., now, but he and other like-minded Alaska Trekkies are working to build a life-sized bronze statue of Riker in Valdez. The group even formed a nonprofit â Riker Maneuver â to get the project done. Itâs named for a pose the Starfleet officer was famous for, lifting his leg up on a rock, stool or chair while he spoke with people.
âIt’s such an iconic pose, we were like, âWell, it has to be that,ââ Harrison said. âAnd then my idea was always, I wanted him to be doing that on a bench. One, I liked functional art, so let’s add a bench. Two, that gives great photo opportunities for people either to sit next to him, to do the pose next to them.â
Jessie Desmond, one of the other organizers with Riker Maneuver, helped put together the project proposal. She said theyâve already found a local Alaskan to build the statue, Patrick Garley of Palmer, and estimate the total cost would be around $125,000.
âOnce we had more of a finalized proposal, we were able to approach the city of Valdez with it, and actually start discussions with them,â Desmond said.
Harrison said theyâve not only pitched it as a tourist attraction, but also a monument to a character the organization believes embodies Alaska values.
âHe’s kind of fly by the seat of your pants, rugged, into fishing and sports and a team player, but also does his own thing, which I think is very Alaskan,â Harrison said. âWe all have to work together to survive up there, but we’re all definitely individuals.â
Desmond, whoâs in the process of getting her master’s degree in space management, said thereâs also the space connection.
âAlaska is home to the Pacific Spaceport Complex, which is out in Kodiak,â Desmond said. âWe have a Space Force Base, which not everywhere has one of those yet.â
Desmond said another way Riker fits with Alaska values has to do with his eagerness to interact with aliens from other cultures. She said people living in Alaska â many of whom come from somewhere outside the state â have a similar trait.
And intentional or not, even some of Rikerâs turns of phrase suggest a man whoâs well versed in Alaskaâs wildlife.
âSome days you get the bear, and some days the bear gets you,â Riker quipped in a season four episode where the crew of the Enterprise finds itself caught in a trap set by the antagonistic Romulan Empire.
Riker Maneuver organizers say theyâve gotten support for their project from local community members and even officials with CBS, the company that owns âStar Trekâ. At this point, the prospect of the statue lies with the city of Valdez and its Parks and Recreation department.
âWell, I mean, I come from the Star Wars background,â said Ken Wilson, Valdezâs director of Parks and Rec and Cultural Services. âSo it’s a little different for me.â
Wilson said his department has received the Riker Maneuver proposal. And while he hasnât watched âThe Next Generationâ, he says he knows there are dedicated Trekkies out there and sees the projectâs potential as a tourist attraction.
âFrom a, you know, economic development standpoint, and a possibility for drumming up additional tourism and economic impact within the community, I think it’s a viable project,â Wilson said.
The statue proposal now needs to go up the cityâs chain of command and the city council has to agree to it. If approved, it would go through a public comment process before moving into fundraising. Organizers say they intend to crowd fund the project.
Similar statues have been built in Riverside, Iowa– the future birthplace of Captain James Kirk from the original âStar Trekâ series — and Bloomington, Ind., where Captain Kathryn Janeway of âStar Trek: Voyagerâ hails from. Even the coincidentally named Vulcan, Alberta dedicated a bust to Spock, the iconic âStar Trekâ Vulcan played by Canadian actor Leonard Nimoy.
Nimoy and Janeway actress Kate Mulgrew even visited their statues as part of local festivities.
Harrison is hoping for a similar guest appearance in Valdez. Heâs already planning for the statueâs unveiling. Of course, he said, Jonathan Frakes, the actor who plays Riker, would be invited.Â
âI have a dream of Jonathan Frakes playing the Star Trek theme on his trombone at the unveiling,â Harrison said. âThat’s the goal.â
While Frakes did not respond to a request for comment for this story, Harrison said he met the actor at Comic-Con and he was all for the project.
…
Continue reading this article at; alaskapublic.org
Author : Wesley Early, Alaska Public Media – Anchorage
Alaska Public Media
Economy,News,Top Stories
#Hometown #hero #Valdez #lifesized #statue #âStar