The mask used by Michael Myers in the original 'Halloween' was actually a Captain Kirk mask painted white.
Michael Myers' Mask Is Actually Captain Kirk's Face
One of the most iconic images in horror history—Michael Myers' blank, emotionless face in the original Halloween—wasn't the result of careful design or expensive special effects. It was a $2 Captain Kirk mask that production designer Tommy Lee Wallace found in a Hollywood Boulevard costume shop.
Director John Carpenter's 1978 slasher classic had an infamously tiny budget. When it came time to create a mask for the killer, they couldn't afford custom work. Wallace was sent shopping with basically no money, tasked with finding something that would give Myers that perfect "blank, emotionless" look Carpenter envisioned.
From Starship Enterprise to Haddonfield
The mask Wallace found was manufactured by Don Post Studios and molded from a life cast of William Shatner's face created for his 1975 horror film The Devil's Rain. As a licensed Star Trek product, it was mass-produced for Halloween costumes—complete with Shatner's distinctive features, eyebrows, and sideburns.
Wallace's modifications were simple but transformative:
- Spray-painted the entire mask white
- Cut the eye holes larger and rounder
- Removed the eyebrows and sideburns
- Teased up the hair to look "demented and strange"
- Spray-painted the hair black
The result was unsettlingly perfect. That "blank face" quality Wallace had been searching for came through—something human enough to be recognizable, but empty enough to be terrifying.
Shatner's Surprise
William Shatner didn't learn about his inadvertent contribution to horror cinema until years later. When a reporter finally told him, his reaction was: "Is that a joke? Are they kidding?" He's since embraced the bizarre legacy, occasionally joking about how Captain Kirk became a serial killer.
The original mask still exists and has been carefully preserved. Over the decades, it's become one of the most recognizable props in film history—worth exponentially more than the two bucks Wallace paid for it.
A Legacy of Terror
Later Halloween sequels struggled to recreate the exact look of that original mask, which only added to its mystique. The 1978 version had a particular texture and expression that proved nearly impossible to duplicate, partly because of how the latex aged and partly because of Wallace's specific modifications.
It's a perfect example of creative constraint breeding innovation. With a Hollywood budget, they might have commissioned an elaborate custom mask that wouldn't have been nearly as effective. Instead, financial desperation led to one of the most brilliant accidental choices in horror history—turning the face of Star Trek's optimistic hero into the expressionless visage of pure evil.