Practice Klingon at a new hot spot

“Klingon ambassadors” hold a presentation of Klingon culture in a Stockholm theater. Through March, the “ambassadors” will promote tourism to their home planet of Qo’noS.
“Klingon ambassadors” hold a presentation of Klingon culture in a Stockholm theater. Through March, the “ambassadors” will promote tourism to their home planet of Qo’noS.

STOCKHOLM -- In search of a new and different vacation spot, with great food and cultural delights? Look no further.

A theater in Stockholm is playing host to a Klingon delegation seeking to promote tourism to Qo'noS (pronounced "Kronos"), the home planet of the ruthless yet honorable race of warriors from the cult TV franchise Star Trek.

The event shows off the best of the race's culture, including opera, martial arts and culinary delights such as Gagh -- a delicacy of well-seasoned live worms -- and blood wine.

Along with a stage presentation -- offered four times a week in English and Klingon -- the lobby of the Turteatern has displays offering vacation packages to Qo'noS, extolling the merits of Klingon culinary tours ("the best kept secret of the Beta Quadrant"), and seeking to attract students to courses at the military academy ("find your inner warrior in outer space").

Star Trek fans were out in force Feb. 3 for the show's premiere, eager for first contact with Klingons. "I think it was a really good show," said Urban Andersson, chairman of the Stockholm Trekkers association, dressed in his Star Fleet uniform.

Many fans were relieved to see that the visitors from Qo'noS resembled the Klingons from the 1990s Star Trek: The Next Generation, rather than from Star Trek: Discovery, the latest installment produced by CBS.

"They are exactly the way I expected them to be," said Snoret Linden, dressed as a Star Fleet "Trill," a humanoid species from the planet Trill.

It was a point stressed by the Klingons themselves, who had a message for Quentin Tarantino, director of the forthcoming Star Trek movie.

"We have seen Discovery. We do not approve of this malicious portrayal of Klingons," said Ambassador Ban'Shee of the House of Duras.

"Treat our race honorably in your forthcoming picture and we will let you lick our feet. Fail, and pray for mercy."

The show runs at 7 p.m. through March 24 and tickets are 170-280 Swedish krona, or about $21-$34.

For more information, visit turteatern.se.

photo

AP/DAVID KEYTON

A man in a Star Trek Star Fleet uniform distributes tickets to a presentation on Klingon Culture at Stockholm’s Turteatern theater.

Travel on 02/25/2018

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