At his FanX convention panel on Saturday evening, William Shatner shared a couple of his personal experiences visiting Utah.
Shatner, the actor best known for his role as Captain Kirk on the “Star Trek” series, told the Salt Lake City audiences he has been coming to Utah “for years” to go skiing.
He said that whether he was traveling alone, with his wife or with their children, he would stay at hotels in downtown Salt Lake City and ski at the local resorts.
As a kid who grew up in Montreal, Canada, Shatner said he “did very well” on the slopes and even skied for his school’s team.
“I probably enjoyed skiing more than anything else in sports,” Shatner told the audience. “I played football and that kind of thing, but skiing was my skill.”
He continued, “So I just would come here and be so happy to be in Salt Lake City.”
Shatner, who is 94 years old, said he continued skiing all the “great areas” in Utah for years, but as he got older, he decided to stop, following a minor fall.
Ahead of a spring skiing trip in Utah, a friend told Shatner sometimes snowboarders will fall, face-plant in the snow and, unable to get up, they will struggle to breathe and sometimes die.
“So I am spring skiing, when I fall, and I face-plant and I can’t breathe,” Shatner said. “I can’t get up because I am no longer the strong man I once was — I was no longer Captain Kirk."
Thankfully, Shatner said, two skiers passed by and helped him get to his feet, but the experience marked the end of skiing for the aging actor.
“That was the last time I skied, but Salt Lake City is one of the great places in the world,” Shatner told the audience, “I come here as often as I can to those mountains.”

Shatner followed his experiences skiing in Utah with another memory from time spent in Salt Lake City.
During one of his many visits to The Beehive State, Shatner went to an art gallery recommended to him by a friend.
At the gallery, a man told Shatner he had an original sketch from Rembrandt, the Dutch artist. He offered the actor a price Shatner described as “not expensive at all.”
“I said, ‘How do I know it’s real?’ He said, ‘Well, I’m selling it. It’s real,’” Shatner recalled.
Shatner purchased the piece of art with a check and told the man at the gallery he planned to get it authenticated — if it turned out to be a fake, Shatner said he would cancel the check.
He took the sketch to the head of the art department at the University of Southern California. When the man saw it, he started laughing in Shatner’s face, the actor told the audience.
“I said, ‘What are you laughing at?’” Shatner remembered. “He says, ‘This is the worst imitation of a Rembrandt I’ve ever seen.’”
“I called up the guy and said, ‘Will you tear up the check?’” Shatner said, laughing. “So Salt Lake City is in my mind!”