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Trek: Voyager
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Star trek voyager)
Original run
January 16, 1995–May 23, 2001
No. of episodes
172 (List of episodes)
Preceded by
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (1993–1999)
Followed by
Star Trek: Enterprise (2001–2005)
Official website
IMDb profile
TV.com summary
Star Trek: Voyager is a science fiction television series set in the Star
Trek universe, and the fifth Star Trek. It was produced for seven seasons
from 1995 to 2001, and is the only Star Trek series to have a female captain,
Kathryn Janeway, as a lead character. The show was created by Rick Berman,
Michael Piller, and Jeri Taylor and based on the 1960s series Star Trek,
created by Gene Roddenberry. It is sometimes shortened to ST:VOY, ST:VGR,
VOY or VGR. Spike TV is scheduled to begin airing reruns of the series
on December 18, 2006. [1]
The series follows the adventures of the Starfleet ship the USS Voyager
and her crew who become stranded in the Delta Quadrant, seventy thousand
light-years from Earth. At warp speed, it will take Voyager seventy-five
years to return to the Alpha Quadrant, and more specifically, Earth. Along
the way they encounter numerous new species, some friendly, like the Talaxians,
but others hostile, like the Kazon, Hirogen, and the deadly Borg.
Contents
[hide]
1 Plot overview
2 Themes
3 Reactions
4 Cast
4.1 Main characters
4.2 Recurring characters
4.3 One-time, cameos or infrequent spots
4.4 Recurring alien races
5 Book relaunch
6 Trivia
7 See also
8 External links
[edit] Plot overview
Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.
The USS Voyager
In the pilot episode, “Caretaker,”, the USS Voyager is sent
on a mission to locate a ship piloted by a cell of the Maquis(a terrorist
organization created in protest of a treaty between the Federation and
Cardassians) Tom Paris (a former member of the Maquis) is brought out
of prison to help find the ship, and discovers that his reputation as
a troublemaker has turned the ship's First Officer and Medical Officer
against him. During a chase through the dangerous Badlands, both ships
are transported to the Delta Quadrant in the other side of the galaxy
by an ancient alien known as the Caretaker. While being pulled across
the galaxy, several members of Voyager's crew are killed, including the
ship's first officer, Chief engineer and all medical staff including the
ship's doctor.
Both ships are attacked by Kazon raiders intent on capturing the Caretaker's
Array. Rather than using the Caretaker's Array to return home, Captain
Janeway decides to destroy it to prevent it from being misused.
The Maquis ship collides in a successful attempt to destroy one of the
Kazon ships, but not before its crew are able to transport safely to Voyager.
The Starfleet and Maquis crews are forced to integrate and work together
as they begin the long journey home. Chakotay, the leader of the Maquis
group, becomes first officer. B'Elanna Torres, a half-human, half-Klingon
female Maquis member becomes chief engineer, much to the dismay of Lieutenant
Carey, a less qualified Starfleet crewman who should have been next in
line for the position. The Vulcan Tuvok is revealed to be a spy on the
Maquis ship under the command of Captain Janeway and resumes his duties
as a security officer. The Emergency Medical Hologram (EMH Mark I), designed
for short term use only, becomes ship's only doctor after the death of
the entire medical staff. In the Delta Quadrant the crew gains new additions
to the crew such as Neelix (a member of the Talaxian race that was nearly
wiped out and scattered through out the galaxy) and Kes (member of the
Ocampa race that lives with the aid of the entity known as the Caretaker).
The Delta Quadrant is unexplored by any Federation vessel, and at its
fastest, the ship will still take 75 years to get back to Earth. Along
the way home, the crew must contend with many hostile species, including
the organ-harvesting Vidiians, the warrior Kazon, the half mechanical,
half organic Borg (a Borg named Seven of Nine joins the crew), and the
extra-dimensional Species 8472.
The USS Voyager returns home in the series finale Endgame.
The conflict between the fiercely independent Maquis revolutionaries and
the by-the-book Starfleet crew is a central theme of the first season,
but by the second season, it has largely been worked out. Only Janeway
remains anguished for the entire run of the series over the consequences
of her decision to destroy their only known way home.
[edit] Themes
Voyager crew, Season 6
Voyager Communicator Pin
Voyager continues the themes presented in the original Star Trek series
and Star Trek: The Next Generation, such as explorations of space and
of the human condition. It also demonstrates democratic principles (peace,
openness, freedom, cooperation, and sharing) and philosophical issues
such as the sense of self and what it means to be human. In the Star Trek
series, the examination of humanity is typically explored by contrasting
non-human characters with human ones (for instance, the Earth-born Kirk
and McCoy against the Vulcan Spock). On Voyager, these non-humans include
the Emergency Medical Hologram (The Doctor), who is actually a computer
program, Vulcan security officer Tuvok, Talaxian Neelix, half Klingon/half
Human B'Elanna Torres, Ocampa Kes, and the former Borg drone Seven of
Nine (although, biologically speaking, Seven is Human; having been a Borg
drone for most of her life means that she has not developed normal human
behavior patterns when she first becomes part of Voyager's crew). Voyagers
bio-mechanical computers allowed the ship to relate to the ever expanding
crew in unique ways, and adapt to new situations.
Voyager was probably more reminiscent of the original Star Trek series
than Star Trek: The Next Generation (although greatly technologically
advanced, the size of the ship is almost identical to the original series'
Constitution class Enterprise. Seven of Nine's post also grew similar
to that of Science Officer, as held by Spock in the original series.)
The show was often grittier than Star Trek: The Next Generation, with
the members of the thrown-together crew often clashing in ways that would
have been almost unthinkable on Picard's Enterprise.
Another of Voyager's distinguishing elements is the departure from the
"best and the brightest" theme of Star Trek: The Next Generation
in particular. Rather than a group of ace Starfleet Academy graduates,
the characters in this series included an ex-convict, former terrorists,
a notably unseasoned captain, and an unusually militant Vulcan. As a full-blooded
Vulcan, Tuvok did not suffer from Spock's angst regarding his "half-breed"
status and was consequently impatient with the emotions of those around
him. Also, as head of security, he was more likely to suggest an aggressive
course of action. Compared to the Next Generation characters, the Voyager
crew on the whole had more personal issues, with Torres struggling with
her Klingon/human heritage, Paris working to overcome his criminal past,
Neelix haunted by memories of his race's near-extinction, and so on.
The most common plot theme is the implications of being stranded far from
home. Voyager has only limited resources and no easy way to replenish
them; its crew is cut off from the normal chain of command and institutions
of its society. Janeway often expresses that though they are cut off from
Starfleet, it is still their duty to live by Starfleet values and regulations,
and this philosophy often brings her into conflict with Chakotay, Tuvok
and other members of her crew who are more willing to make compromises
in order to get home. Their situation frequently faces them with difficult
choices of necessity versus idealism. Unlike the other Star Trek series,
the crew of the Voyager cannot just stop at a starbase for repair or resupply.
They often have to make trades with alien cultures or find completely
new solutions to unforeseeable problems. They are also stuck with each
other, which makes for new plot twists - for example, shipboard romances
are not discouraged - but it also means that promotions are very rare,
leading to some resentment. To overcome their claustrophobia the crew
rely on the holodeck more than other Starfleet crews, with some of their
holodeck adventures becoming ongoing plotlines, such as Tom Paris' Captain
Proton serial, or Janeway's recurring trips to the home of Leonardo da
Vinci. Some of these recurring holodeck stories end up behaving in much
unexpected (and sometimes dangerous) ways due to alien interference or
holodeck malfunction.
In the concluding seasons, the ship's isolation is partially relieved
when Lt. Reginald Barclay, back at Starfleet Command on Earth, developed
a means for Starfleet to be in regular contact with the ship.
[edit] Reactions
This article or section does not cite its references or sources.
Please help improve this article by introducing appropriate citations.
(help, get involved!) This article has been tagged since December 2006.
Ratings dropped throughout Voyager's run, suggesting that the audience
reaction was not positive.
One obstacle that the show faced was that Voyager was the first Trek series
to air on a single television network (rather than be syndicated) since
the original series. It is speculated by fans of the show that this factor
stripped Voyager's writers and producers of a certain amount of creative
control. However, there were some non-network affiliates that carried
Voyager until the end of Season Five, when UPN ceased first-run syndication
rights of the series.
The central character of Captain Kathryn Janeway brought praise and criticism.
Although female captains had been featured as guest characters in each
of the previous Star Trek series as well as in several theatrical movies,
Janeway was the first female captain to star in a Star Trek series. Some
women who watched the show claimed Janeway as a role model, and many male
viewers also admired her. But while Kate Mulgrew's acting on the show
was often regarded as superb, some (including short term writer Ronald
D. Moore) criticized what they saw as the inconsistent command style of
Captain Janeway and Mulgrew's rather regal manner (it is notable that
Janeway preferred to be called "Captain" or "Ma'am",
although Starfleet captains are generally called "sir" regardless
of their gender). While Janeway was generally a more empathetic captain
than the Trek norm, she was also capable of aggression when the occasion
demanded and was very definite about maintaining her authority when other
characters overstepped their bounds.
Janeway has also been praised as the most "human" captain since
James T. Kirk of the original Star Trek. She was not idealized like Jean-Luc
Picard, and often had conflicts with her first officer over many choices
made. This was reminiscent of the conflict seen in the original Star Trek,
where the first officer and other members of the crew didn't always agree
with their captain, making the show much more relatable.
Voyager fans praised the show's humor, which usually resulted from odd
couple character pairings. The contrast between Neelix and Vulcan security
officer Tuvok was often featured, as was the contrast between hot-headed
chief engineer (B'Elanna Torres) and calm and cool ex-Borg (Seven of Nine):
"The Borg wouldn't know fun [even] if they assimilated an amusement
park." The Doctor's angst and frustration over his development and
treatment as a hologram was also often played for laughs, although it
was also the source for drama and the occasional A-story (as in "Flesh
and Blood").
Because Voyager had such a specific premise, it was subject to criticism
when it frequently violated its own continuity. In the series' sixth episode,
one character declares that the ship has a non-renewable supply of 38
photon torpedoes, but by the end of the series' run an inexplicable 93
(at least) have been fired (fan site). Others have pointed out the fifteen
shuttlecraft lost by the crew, on a ship whose ability to construct new
shuttles en masse was never canonically established (crewmember Tom Paris
does custom-design and build a larger craft called the Delta Flyer, but
this is implied to be a one-time activity and requires collaboration from
many people). There are also inconsistencies in transwarp theory, Borg
technology and technological supremacy over the Federation, and astrometric
data, some technical and some not (the color of transwarp conduits changes
between the episodes "Dark Frontier" and "Endgame").
In addition, aliens that Voyager encountered thousands of light-years
away would reappear on the show. For example, in the seventh season episode
entitled "Homestead", Voyager encounters a Talaxian colony deep
in the Delta Quadrant. The Talaxians claim they fled the war that tore
their planet apart fifteen years ago and created this colony. However,
this colony is forty thousand light-years away from their homeworld; Voyager,
a state-of-the-art Alpha Quadrant ship, should have taken 40 years at
top speed (Warp 9.975) to make the trip, and accomplished it in seven
only due to short-cuts and help from friends.
The series made occasional use of the reset button technique, wherein
plot points critical to an episode are suddenly negated at the end of
the episode, returning all characters to the status quo. Examples of the
reset button include the "Year of Hell" two-parter, "Time
and Again", "Living Witness", and "Course: Oblivion".
A similar example is "Deadlock", where Harry Kim and Naomi Wildman
die but are replaced by alternate-dimension versions of themselves who
come through a rift in space-time (a fix first introduced in the DS9 episode
"Visionary"). Another episode begins with Commander Chakotay
en route in a shuttle to attend a planetary conference, but it was not
established how he heard about it if he was in a ship that was just passing
through.
During Voyager's run, science fiction fans were beginning to grow increasingly
dismissive of Trek in general, with escalating criticisms that the franchise
was getting tired. It is debatable whether Voyager was a factor in this
situation or a victim of it. Many fans saw the addition of the Seven of
Nine character as a condescending attempt to pander to a wider audience
by giving the show a sexier edge; others found her well-acted and well-characterized.
Actress Jeri Ryan moved to a regular role on Boston Public solely because
of work on Voyager.
[edit] Cast
[edit] Main characters
Picture
Character
Rank
Actor
Position
Kathryn Janeway
Captain
Kate Mulgrew
Commanding Officer
Chakotay
Commander
Robert Beltran
Executive (First) Officer
Tuvok
Lieutenant Commander
Tim Russ
Chief Security/Tactical officer
B’Elanna Torres
Lieutenant
Roxann Dawson
Chief Engineer
Tom Paris
Lieutenant
Robert Duncan McNeill
Chief Conn Officer (Pilot)/Head Medic (Seasons 4-7)
Harry Kim
Ensign
Garrett Wang
Chief Operations Officer
The Doctor
Chief Medical Officer
Robert Picardo
Emergency Medical Hologram, Emergency Command Hologram
Neelix
Chef & Morale Officer
Ethan Phillips
Voyager's Chef, diplomatic adviser and morale officer, close to the end
of the series Neelix becomes Ambassador for Starfleet in the Delta Quadrant.
Kes
No Rank
Jennifer Lien
Aeroponics gardener, medical aide/student
Seven of Nine
No Rank
Jeri Ryan
Astrometrics
[edit] Recurring characters
Actor
Role
Appearances
Anthony De Longis
First Maje Culluh, leader of the Kazon-Nistrim
Seasons 1–3
Martha Hackett
Ensign Seska, a Cardassian agent
Seasons 1–3 and 7
Alexander Enberg
Ensign Vorik, a Vulcan
Seasons 3–5 and 7
Scarlett Pomers
Naomi Wildman, the first child born on Voyager
Seasons 2–7
Tarik Ergin
Lieutenant Ayala
Seasons 1–7
John Tempoya
Nozawa Kashimuro
Seasons 1–4 and 7
Nancy Hower
Ensign Samantha Wildman, Naomi's mother
Seasons 2–6
Josh Clark
Lieutenant Joseph Carey
Seasons 1 and 5–7
Simon Billig
Lieutenant Hogan
Seasons 2 and 3
Christine Delgado
Lieutenant Susan Nicoletti
Seasons 1–4 and 7
Dwight Schultz
Lieutenant Reginald Barclay
Seasons 2 and 6–7
Raphael Sbarge
Ensign Michael Jonas
Season 2
Tom Virtue
Lieutenant Walter Baxter
Seasons 1–2 and 7
Manu Intiraymi
Icheb, formerly a Borg drone
Seasons 6–7
Alice Krige / Susanna Thompson
The Borg Queen
Seasons 5–7
Marley S. McClean
Mezoti
Seasons 6–7
Cody Wetherill
Rebi
Seasons 6–7
Kurt Wetherill
Azan
Seasons 6–7
Brad Dourif
Ensign Lon Suder, convicted of murder
Seasons 2–3
Brian Markinson
Lieutenant Peter Durst
Season 1
Zoe McLellan
Crewman Tal Celes
Season 6
John de Lancie
Q, Omnipotent deity
Seasons 2–3 and 7
Martin Rayner
Doctor Chaotica
Seasons 5 and 7
Allan G. Royal / Bruce McGill
Captain Braxton, Starfleet captain from the 29th century
Seasons 3 and 5
Warren Munson / Richard Herd
Admiral Owen Paris, father of Tom Paris
Seasons 2 and 5–7
John Rhys-Davies
Leonardo da Vinci
Seasons 3–4
[edit] One-time, cameos or infrequent spots
Marina Sirtis as Deanna Troi
Jonathan Frakes as William Riker
Armin Shimerman as Quark
LeVar Burton as Geordi La Forge
George Takei as Captain Sulu
Ray Walston as Boothby
Dan Shor as Arridor
Ray Wise as Arturis
Derek McGrath as Crewman Chell
Scott Thompson as Ambassador Tomin
Keegan de Lancie as Q Jr., Son of galactic gadfly Q
King Abdullah II of Jordan as an extra in "Investigations"
The Rock as an extraterrestrial gladiator in the episode "Tsunkatse"
Jason Alexander as Kurros in the 20th episode of season 5, "Think
Tank"
Andy Dick as Emergency Medical Hologram, Mark II in the fourteenth episode
of the fourth season, "Message in a Bottle"
Tom Morello of Rage Against the Machine and Audioslave as Crewman Mitchell
in the teaser of "Good Shepherd"
John Gegenhuber as Tierna in "Basics" and as Kelat in "Alliances"
and "Maneuvers"
Kurtwood Smith as Annorax in "Year of Hell"
[edit] Recurring alien races
See also List of Star Trek races
Alien races listed below have been featured or appeared in more than one
episode. This list excludes episodes having plots significantly involving
a non-human series regular or recurring character unless aspects of that
character's alien heritage are profoundly explored or otherwise relevant.
Race
Episodes of appearances
Borg
"Blood Fever", "Unity", "Scorpion, Part 1 &
2", "The Gift", "The Raven", "The Omega
Directive", "Living Witness", "One", "Hope
and Fear", "Drone", "Infinite Regress", "Dark
Frontier, Part 1 & 2", "Survival Instinct", "Collective",
"Child's Play", "Unimatrix Zero, Part 1 & 2",
"Imperfection", "Shattered", "Q2", "Endgame"
Ferengi
"Caretaker", "False Profits", "Inside Man"
The Hierarchy
"Tinker, Tenor, Doctor, Spy", "The Void", "Renaissance
Man"
Hirogen
"Message in a Bottle", "Hunters", "Prey",
"The Killing Game, Part 1 & 2", "Tsunkatse", "Flesh
and Blood, Part 1 & 2"
Kazon
"Caretaker", "State of Flux", "Initiations",
"Maneuvers", "Alliances", "Investigations",
"Basics, part 1 & 2",
Klingon
"Day of Honor", "Barge of the Dead", "Prophecy"
Krenim
"Before and After", "Year of Hell, Part 1 & 2"
Malon
"Night", "Extreme Risk", "Think Tank", "Juggernaut"
Nacene
"Caretaker", "Cold Fire"
Ocampa
"Caretaker", "Cold Fire", "Fury"
Q
"Death Wish", "The Q and the Grey", "Q2"
Species 8472
"Scorpion" (Parts 1 & 2), "Prey", "In the
Flesh"
Talaxian
"Basics" (Parts 1 & 2), "Fair Trade", "Homestead"
Vidiian
"Phage", "Faces", "Lifesigns", "Deadlock",
"Resolutions", "Fury"
[edit] Book relaunch
Image:Star Trek Voyager books.jpg
Voyager pocket books
In the wake of a successful series of original novels collectively known
as the Deep Space Nine relaunch, featuring stories placed after the end
of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, a similar relaunch was planned with regards
to Voyager, with novels based upon events occurring following the end
of the series. In the relaunch, several characters are reassigned to other
posts, some new characters are introduced (such as Kaz, the new Trill
ship's doctor), Kathryn Janeway is promoted to Admiral (as she is also
seen in the film Star Trek: Nemesis), and Chakotay is promoted to Captain
of Voyager. Most of the other characters are promoted two steps in rank
(for example, Ensign Harry Kim is promoted directly to full lieutenant,
and Tom Paris is promoted from Lieutenant junior grade to Lieutenant Commander)
to make up for time spent in the Delta Quadrant where they could not normally
receive promotions.
So far, only a few Voyager Relaunch novels have been published, beginning
with Homecoming and The Farther Shore in 2003. More novels are planned,
both in the Relaunch and also other novels set during the original 7-season
run of the show.
In November 2004, Pocket Books published Spirit Walk Book One, closely
followed a month later by Spirit Walk Book Two. The stories are based
on the Star Trek Voyager episode "Tattoo"; however, they are
set in the Alpha Quadrant, and depict Captain Chakotay being sent on assignment
to transport a set of colonists back to the planet of Loran II.
In 2006 Pocket books published three books of "String Theory"
series, called Cohesion, Fusion and Evolution. As the "Historian's
Note" in the book says: "The story unfolds between the fourth
and fifth seasons" and takes place in and near the Monorhan system.
[edit] Trivia
Kate Mulgrew (Captain Kathryn Janeway), Robert Beltran (Chakotay), Tim
Russ (Tuvok), and Robert Duncan McNeill (Tom Paris) are the only actors
to appear in every episode of the series.
Roxann Dawson, Robert Duncan McNeill, Robert Picardo, Tim Russ, TNG stars
LeVar Burton and Jonathan Frakes, and recurring DS9 player Andrew Robinson
all have had a hand at directing episodes of the series. Dawson, McNeill,
and Burton have also directed episodes of Enterprise. McNeill has since
directed in several TV shows including Dawson's Creek, The O.C., Las Vegas,
One Tree Hill, Dead Like Me, Summerland, Supernatural, and Desperate Housewives.
Several famous guest stars have included Sharon Lawrence, Saro Mardikian,
Ed Begley, Jr., Andy Dick, Jason Alexander, Michael McKean, Sarah Silverman,
John Rhys-Davies, Virginia Madsen, The Rock, Tom Morello, McKenzie Westmore
of Passions, TNG stars Jonathan Frakes, Marina Sirtis, LeVar Burton, John
de Lancie, and Dwight Schultz, DS9 star Armin Shimerman, and George Takei
and Grace Lee Whitney from the original series of the late 1960s.
Robert Duncan McNeill appeared in the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode
"The First Duty" as Nick Locarno, a Starfleet cadet expelled
for covering up a classmate's death in a banned aerobatic stunt. Locarno
was originally planned to return as part of the Voyager cast, but a similar
character was created instead - officially because Locarno was felt to
be beyond redemption. Unofficially, McNeill was cast as Tom Paris rather
than Locarno to avoid paying royalties to the writers of "The First
Duty" every time Locarno was in an episode.[citation needed]
Ethan Phillips appeared as a Ferengi in a Star Trek: Enterprise episode,
as a different Ferengi in Ménage à Troi (TNG episode) and
as a maitre d' in the film Star Trek: First Contact.
Tim Russ played the character Devor in the Star Trek: The Next Generation
episode "Starship Mine", and also played Tuvok in a mirror universe
on the Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episode "Through The Looking Glass".
Also, he appeared as a human on the bridge of the Enterprise-B in the
film Star Trek: Generations and as a Klingon named T'kar in the Star Trek:
Deep Space Nine episode "Invasive Procedures". This makes him
the actor to have stood beside the most captains in Star Trek history.
In addition, he auditioned for the role of Geordi La Forge on Star Trek:
The Next Generation, but did not receive it. Russ is the first African
American to play a Vulcan, and thus Tuvok is the first black Vulcan seen
in the Star Trek universe. [2]
During the first season, Tuvok has rank insignia of Lt. Commander before
he is promoted to that rank during the beginning of the fourth season's
"Revulsion".
King Abdullah II of Jordan, a well-known Star Trek fan, appeared as an
extra in the episode "Investigations". Abdullah's role was not
given any speaking lines because he is not a member of the Screen Actors
Guild.
The Doctor utters several lines that recall Doctor McCoy's famous "I'm
a Doctor, not a ..." quips. In "Phage", he says, "I'm
a doctor, not a decorator." In "Gravity", he says, "I'm
a doctor, not a battery," and in "Bliss", he says, "I'm
a doctor, not a dragon slayer." Perhaps most famously, in Star Trek:
First Contact, when asked to halt the approach of the Borg in sickbay,
he says, "I'm a doctor, not a doorstop." This would possibly
emanate from the Doctor's programming, which, as the doctor mentions several
times, includes procedures and personality from Dr. Leonard McCoy, among
others. (By the same token, Tom Paris also follows this pattern with the
line, "I'm a pilot, not a doctor.")
Genevieve Bujold as Nicole Janeway
Kate Mulgrew (Captain Kathryn Janeway) was cast in the series after the
original star, Quebecoise film actress Geneviève Bujold, quit on
the second day of filming citing exhaustion and incompatibility with rigorous
television filming schedules.
This was the first program ever to air on the UPN network. The "network"
was a loose association of locally owned and operated stations that officially
became UPN when the first episode began to air at 8:00 p.m. on January
16, 1995.
[edit] See also
List of Star Trek: Voyager episodes
[edit] External links
Star Trek: Voyager at StarTrek.com
Star Trek: Voyager at the Internet Movie Database
Star Trek: Voyager at TV.com
Star Trek: Voyager article at Memory Alpha, a Star Trek wiki.
Star Trek: Voyager at TrekCore.com - Includes archive of over 50,000 DVD
Screencaps from the show
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