
He has a lean build and said "having to wear all that thick padding did little to improve my fragile teenage self-esteem." Wheaton said that it was especially hard on his psyche. Most of the cast didn't talk about it but Wil Wheaton listed it as one of the reasons the suits were so uncomfortable. In the first and second season of the show, the male members of the main cast wore padded muscle suits to help fill out the lines. It's nice to know that the costumes on the show were as unforgiving to the men as it was to the women on the cast.Ĭostume designer Robert Blackman said, "Spandex is unforgiving, so if you have any sorts of body issues, they are there." Marina Sirtis says she's not sure who wore them but maybe some of her "fellow thespians" wear them. "Star Trek: The Next Generation: Dressing the Future" Marina Sirtis She points out the men can't have a VPL (Visible Panty Line) and the briefs help define them. Then she moves on to a bin where she introduces the "men's support briefs". She laughs that they "add inches where there are none". Sirtis said she's partly responsible for " every woman on the show" wearing them. Her fearless sense of humor starts out with a joke about the sign warning that it's "drafty" in Southern California before moving on to the costumes.Īt about the 2-minute mark, she introduces what she calls the "Industrial Strength Starfleet Regulation Brassiere" that we've talked about before in our article on Deanna Troi's costume. It was included in the bonus video for the Star Trek: The Next Generation Season 7 DVD special feature "Dressing The Future Year Seven" ("The Process"). In 1994 Marina Sirtis, who played Counselor Deanna Troi on " Star Trek: The Next Generation", several movies and shows shared a behind-the-scenes look at the costumes for the show. A recently uncovered behind-the-scenes video shows what was underneath those uniforms.
