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'''''Star Trek: Voyager''''' (sometimes abbreviated '''ST:VOY''', '''VGR''', or '''VOY''') is a [[science fiction]] [[television series]] set in the [[Star Trek]] universe. The show was created by [[Rick Berman]], [[Michael Piller]], and [[Jeri Taylor]] and is the fourth incarnation of Star Trek, which began with the 1960s series ''[[Star Trek: The Original Series|Star Trek]]'', created by [[Gene Roddenberry]]. It was produced for seven seasons, from 1995 to 2001, and is the only Star Trek series to feature a female [[Captain (Star Trek)|captain]], [[Kathryn Janeway]], as a lead character.
'''''Star Trek: Voyager''''' (sometimes abbreviated '''ST:VOY''', '''VGR''', or '''VOY''') is a [[science fiction]] [[television series]] set in the [[Star Trek]] universe. The show was created by [[Rick Berman]], [[Michael Piller]], and [[Jeri Taylor]] and is the fourth incarnation of Star Trek, which began with the 1960s series ''[[Star Trek: The Original Series|Star Trek]]'', created by [[Gene Roddenberry]]. It was produced for seven seasons, from 1995 to 2001, and is the only Star Trek series to feature a female [[Captain (Star Trek)|captain]], [[Kathryn Janeway]], as a lead character.


The series follows the adventures of the [[Starfleet]] vessel [[USS Voyager (Star Trek)|USS ''Voyager'']], which becomes stranded 75,000 [[light-year]]s from Earth while pursuing a renegade [[Maquis (Star Trek)|Maquis]] ship. Both ships' crews merge aboard ''Voyager'' to make the estimated 75-year journey home.
The series follows the adventures of the [[Starfleet]] vessel [[USS Voyager (Star Trek)|USS ''Voyager'']], which becomes stranded 75,000 [[light-year]]s from Earth while pursuing a renegade [[Maquis (Star Trek)|Maquis]] ship. Both ships' crews merge aboard ''Voyager'' to make the estimated 75-year journey home. Voyager fans are known to be chronic masterbaters who live in their parents' homes as deadbeats for prolonged periods of time. This serie's fanbase is disproportionately single compared to that of other, better produced and written (a.k.a ALL OTHER) television shows. Those of greek descent are suspected of being homosexual.


==Creation==
==Creation==

Revision as of 19:22, 15 February 2008

Star Trek: Voyager
File:VOYlogo.png
Star Trek: Voyager logo
Created byStar Trek
Gene Roddenberry
Star Trek: Voyager
Rick Berman
Michael Piller
Jeri Taylor
StarringSee cast
Opening themeJerry Goldsmith
Ending themeJerry Goldsmith
Country of origin United States
No. of seasons7
No. of episodes172 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producersBrannon Braga
Jeri Taylor
Camera setupSingle-Camera
Running time45 min. per episode
Original release
NetworkUPN
ReleaseJanuary 16, 1995 –
May 23, 2001

Star Trek: Voyager (sometimes abbreviated ST:VOY, VGR, or VOY) is a science fiction television series set in the Star Trek universe. The show was created by Rick Berman, Michael Piller, and Jeri Taylor and is the fourth incarnation of Star Trek, which began with the 1960s series Star Trek, created by Gene Roddenberry. It was produced for seven seasons, from 1995 to 2001, and is the only Star Trek series to feature a female captain, Kathryn Janeway, as a lead character.

The series follows the adventures of the Starfleet vessel USS Voyager, which becomes stranded 75,000 light-years from Earth while pursuing a renegade Maquis ship. Both ships' crews merge aboard Voyager to make the estimated 75-year journey home. Voyager fans are known to be chronic masterbaters who live in their parents' homes as deadbeats for prolonged periods of time. This serie's fanbase is disproportionately single compared to that of other, better produced and written (a.k.a ALL OTHER) television shows. Those of greek descent are suspected of being homosexual.

Creation

Voyager was created to launch UPN, a television network planned by Paramount. (Paramount considered launching a network on its own in 1977, which would have been anchored by the TV series Star Trek: Phase II.) Planning started in 1993, and seeds for the show's backstory, including the development of the Maquis, were placed in several Star Trek: The Next Generation and Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episodes. Voyager was shot on the same stages The Next Generation had used. The pilot, "Caretaker," was shot in October, 1994. Around that time, Paramount was sold to Viacom - in fact, Voyager was the first Star Trek TV series to premiere after the sale had concluded.

Voyager was the first aired UPN program at 8:00 p.m. on January 16, 1995. Voyager was also the first Star Trek TV show to use Computer Generated Imagery (CGI) exclusively, and eliminate the use of models for exterior space shots. Other television shows such as seaQuest, Space Above and Beyond, and Babylon 5 had exclusively-used CGI (to avoid the huge expense of models), but the Star Trek television department continued using models, because they felt models provided better realism. That changed when Star Trek Voyager became Paramount's first television property to go fully CGI in mid-season 3.[1] (Amblin Imaging won an Emmy for the opening title visuals, but the weekly episode exteriors were still captured using in-house-built miniatures of the Voyager, shuttlecraft, and other ships, the same method used for The Next Generation.)

Early CGI experiments during season 2 were less-than-satisfactory and appeared fake, until Paramount obtained an exclusive contract with Foundation Imaging, which had done the effects for Babylon 5's first three seasons, and provided some effects previously to both Star Trek series, such as the Solar Sailing vessel on Deep Space Nine. The season 3 episode "The Swarm" began using Foundation's effects exclusively. (Star Trek Deep Space Nine started using Foundation Imaging exclusively in 1997 (season 6), after Voyager had successfully proven that CGI could look as realistic as models. Foundation Imaging also worked on the first season of Enterprise.)

Plot overview

File:VoyagerStarship.jpg
The USS Voyager

In the pilot episode, "Caretaker," Voyager is on a mission to locate a missing ship piloted by Maquis fighters. Janeway brings Tom Paris, a former Starfleet member, out of prison to help find the ship. Maneuvering through the dangerous Badlands, an ancient alien known as the Caretaker transports Voyager to the Delta Quadrant, on the other side of the galaxy, where the Maquis ship was also sent. In the process, several members of Voyager's crew are killed, including the first officer, helmsman, chief engineer, and all medical personnel.

Voyager and the Maquis ship are attacked by Kazon raiders intent on capturing the Caretaker's Array, which was used to transport the ships. The Maquis ship collides with a Kazon ship, destroying both, after the Maquis crew transports to Voyager. Believing the Kazon will use the Array to harm the Ocampa, Janeway decides to destroy it rather than use it to return home.

The Starfleet and Maquis crews integrate and work together as they begin the 75,000-light-year journey home, predicted to take 75 years. Chakotay, leader of the Maquis group, becomes first officer. B'Elanna Torres, a half-human/half-Klingon Maquis becomes chief engineer. Tuvok is revealed to be a Starfleet spy on the Maquis ship and resumes his duties as chief security officer. Paris becomes the helmsman, and the Emergency Medical Hologram, designed for only short-term use, becomes the chief medical officer. In the Delta Quadrant, the crew gains the Talaxian Neelix as a local guide and chef, along with his Ocampan girlfriend, Kes. Both Paris and Kes become qualified assistants to the Doctor, expanding the ship's medical capabillity. The crew expands to include Seven of Nine, a Borg drone liberated from the collective, in the show's fourth season.

The Delta Quadrant is mostly unexplored by the Federation. On the way home, the crew contends with hostile species that include organ-harvesting Vidiians, belligerent Kazon, nomadic Hirogen hunters, the Borg and Species 8472 from fluidic space. They also encounter hazardous natural phenomena.

Episodes

Cast

Actor Character Species Rank Position
Kate Mulgrew Kathryn Janeway Human Captain Commanding Officer
Robert Beltran Chakotay Human Lieutenant Commander (provisional) First Officer
Tim Russ Tuvok Vulcan Lieutenant
Promoted to Lieutenant Commander
Second Officer
Chief of Security
Roxann Dawson B’Elanna Torres Half-Klingon Half-Human Lieutenant Junior Grade (provisional) Chief Engineer
Robert Duncan McNeill Tom Paris Human Civilian Adviser
Instated to Lieutenant Junior Grade
Demoted to Ensign[2]
Promoted to Lieutenant Junior Grade
Chief Helmsman, Medic
Garrett Wang Harry Kim Human Ensign Chief Operations Officer
Robert Picardo The Doctor (Emergency Medical Hologram) Photonic (holographic) human no rank Chief Medical Officer
Ethan Phillips Neelix Talaxian no rank Chef, Ambassador and self appointed Morale Officer; later, Federation Ambassador in the Delta Quadrant
Jennifer Lien Kes Ocampan no rank Aeroponics caretaker, Medical aide/student
Jeri Ryan Seven of Nine (Annika Hansen) Borg (originally human) no rank Engineer, Astrometrics Operator

Originally, French Canadian film actress Geneviève Bujold was cast for the role of Captain Nicole Janeway. One version of events is that she quit on the second day of filming, citing exhaustion and incompatibility with rigorous television filming schedules. Another version, expressed by Rick Berman, Executive Producer, on the first season Voyager DVD, is that "There was enough going on in that first day or two that, that we realized that, for everybody's sake, that it was best to go in another direction". Kate Mulgrew was chosen to replace Bujold as captain after a second round of auditions. The captain's character was subsequently renamed Kathryn Janeway who incidentally has the same name as a character in James Ellroy's crime novel, L.A. Confidential.

As there were three different actors on the set with the same first name (Robert), to avoid confusion the cast grew to refer to them as such: "Robbie" McNeill, "Bob" Picardo, and "Robert" Beltran.

Connections with other Star Trek incarnations

Characters and races

As with all other Star Trek series, the original Star Trek's Klingons and Romulans appear in Star Trek: Voyager.[3] Majel Barrett again voices the ship's computer.[3]

Voyager saw appearances by several characters and races who initially appear in The Next Generation: Q, William Riker, Geordi La Forge, Deanna Troi, and Reginald Barclay. The Borg, Cardassians, Bajorans, Romulans, Betazoids, Vulcans, Klingons, Ferengi, and a Jem'Hadar hologram also make appearances, as does the Maquis terrorist group.[3]

The Borg Queen, the antagonist from Star Trek: First Contact, makes several appearances in Voyager. Susanna Thompson usually played the role in the series; Alice Krige, who played the character in First Contact, reprised the role for the series finale.

Quark from Deep Space Nine appears in Voyager's pilot.

Kate Mulgrew appears as Kathryn Janeway, promoted to admiral, in Star Trek Nemesis.

Actor crossovers

The following Voyager main cast members have appeared in other Star Trek productions.

  • Robert Duncan McNeill (Paris) in Star Trek: The Next Generation episode "The First Duty" as Starfleet cadet Nicolas Locarno. (The character of Tom Paris was based on Locarno, but he was felt to be 'beyond redemption' for his actions during 'The First Duty').
  • Tim Russ (Tuvok) appeared in Star Trek: The Next Generation episode "Starship Mine", two Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episodes and the film Star Trek: Generations, as various characters.
  • Robert Picardo (the Doctor) in Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episode "Doctor Bashir, I Presume" as Dr. Lewis Zimmerman and an EMH Mark I, and Star Trek: First Contact as the Enterprise-E's EMH.
  • Ethan Phillips (Neelix) in Star Trek: The Next Generation episode "Ménage à Troi" as the Ferengi Farek, Star Trek: Enterprise episode "Acquisition" as the Ferengi pirate Ulis, and in Star Trek: First Contact as an unnamed Maitre d' on the holodeck.
  • Robert Duncan McNeill and Roxann Dawson (Paris & Torres) have also directed episodes of Star Trek: Enterprise.

The following actors from other Star Trek productions have done guest spots in Voyager as other characters.

  • Jonathan Frakes (William Riker of The Next Generation) appears as Riker in the episode "Death Wish".
  • Aron Eisenberg (Nog of Deep Space Nine) appeared in "Initiations" as a Kazon adolescent named Kar.
  • Jeffrey Combs (Weyoun and Brunt of Deep Space Nine and Shran of Enterprise) appeared in "Tsunkatse" as Norcadian Penk.
  • J.G. Hertzler (Martok of Deep Space Nine) appeared in "Tsunkatse" as an unnamed Hirogen.
  • LeVar Burton (Geordi LaForge of The Next Generation) appears as Captain Geordi LaForge in "Timeless".
  • Dwight Schultz (Reginald Barclay of The Next Generation) appears in "Pathfinder", "Inside Man", "Life Line" "Endgame" and "Projections".
  • Marina Sirtis (Deanna Troi of The Next Generation) appears in "Pathfinder", "Life Line", and "Inside Man".
  • Jonathan Frakes, LeVar Burton (Riker & LaForge of The Next Generation), and Andrew Robinson (Garak of Deep Space Nine) have also directed episodes of Star Trek: Voyager.

Book relaunch

In the wake of Pocket Books' successful Deep Space Nine relaunch novel series, which features stories placed after the end of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, a similar relaunch was planned for Voyager. The novels take place after the series' conclusion. In the relaunch, several characters are reassigned while others are promoted but stay aboard Voyager; these changes include Janeway's promotion to admiral and Chakotay becoming captain of Voyager. The series also introduces several new characters.

The series began with Homecoming and The Farther Shore in 2003, a direct sequel to the show's final, "Endgame". These were followed in 2004 by Spirit Walk: Old Wounds and Spirit Walk: Enemy of My Enemy. Other novels -- some set during the relaunch period, others during the show's TV run -- have been published.

References

  1. ^ http://www.thelogbook.com/jcc/q3-04/voyager3/
  2. ^ "Thirty Days". StarTrek.com. Retrieved 2007-12-23.
  3. ^ a b c Okuda, Mike and Denise Okuda, with Debbie Mirek (1999). The Star Trek Encyclopedia. Pocket Books. ISBN 0-671-53609-5.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

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