List of Star Trek characters (A–F) - Biblioteka.sk

Upozornenie: Prezeranie týchto stránok je určené len pre návštevníkov nad 18 rokov!
Zásady ochrany osobných údajov.
Používaním tohto webu súhlasíte s uchovávaním cookies, ktoré slúžia na poskytovanie služieb, nastavenie reklám a analýzu návštevnosti. OK, súhlasím


Panta Rhei Doprava Zadarmo
...
...


A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | CH | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9

List of Star Trek characters (A–F)
 ...


This article lists characters of Star Trek in their various canonical incarnations. This includes fictional major characters and fictional minor characters created for Star Trek, fictional characters not originally created for Star Trek, and real-life persons appearing in a fictional manner, such as holodeck re-creations.

Characters from all series, listed alphabetically

Key

Abbreviation Title Date(s) Medium
TC "The Cage" (Star Trek: The Original Series) 1966 TV
TOS Star Trek: The Original Series 1966–1969 TV
TAS Star Trek: The Animated Series 1973–1974 TV
TMP Star Trek: The Motion Picture 1979 film
TWOK Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan 1982 film
TSFS Star Trek III: The Search for Spock 1984 film
TVH Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home 1986 film
TFF Star Trek V: The Final Frontier 1989 film
TUC Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country 1991 film
TNG Star Trek: The Next Generation 1987–1994 TV
DS9 Star Trek: Deep Space Nine 1993–1999 TV
GEN Star Trek Generations 1994 film
VOY Star Trek: Voyager 1995–2001 TV
FC Star Trek: First Contact 1996 film
INS Star Trek: Insurrection 1998 film
NEM Star Trek: Nemesis 2002 film
ENT Star Trek: Enterprise 2001–2005 TV
ST09 Star Trek (2009) 2009 film
STID Star Trek Into Darkness 2013 film
STB Star Trek Beyond 2016 film
DSC Star Trek: Discovery 2017–present TV
SHO Star Trek: Short Treks 2018–2020 TV
PIC Star Trek: Picard 2020–2023 TV
LOW Star Trek: Lower Decks 2020–present TV
PRO Star Trek: Prodigy 2021–present TV
SNW Star Trek: Strange New Worlds 2022–present TV

Bajoran characters are listed by family name, which is stated first.

Joined Trills are listed by the name of the symbiont, which replaces the family name.

A

Character Actor Episodes
Description
Leonard James Akaar Ben Gage Friday's Child (TOS)
Son of the late Teer Akaar and his widow Eleen on the planet Capella IV. Born 2267 shortly after his father was killed in a Klingon-induced power struggle, he was named after James T. Kirk and Leonard McCoy, who helped to resolve the local conflict. Leonard James Akaar inherited the title of "teer," or chief, of the Ten Tribes of Capella IV. His mother served as regent until the boy came of age to rule. In the novels, Akaar (who was eventually forced to flee Capella with his mother due to another coup) grows up and joins Starfleet; we first see him serving as chief of security on the USS Excelsior under Captain Hikaru Sulu. Later, in the Star Trek: Deep Space Nine relaunch novels, Akaar is a veteran admiral in the fleet.
Akorem Laan Richard Libertini Accession (DS9)
Bajoran poet best known for The Call of the Prophets. Traveling in a Bajoran lightship, Akorem was the first to find the Celestial Temple (the wormhole to the Gamma Quadrant); when he emerged about 200 years later, Benjamin Sisko gave up his title of Emissary so that Akorem could take it, a decision Sisko regretted when Akorem advocated a return to the D'Jarras (the Bajoran caste system). Sisko and Akorem went to the wormhole together, and the Prophets decided to send Akorem back to his time and reinstate Sisko as their Emissary.
Joshua Albert None (Only discussed, never seen.) The First Duty (TNG) (mentioned)
Starfleet Academy cadet and friend of Wesley Crusher, a fellow team member with Crusher in Nova Squadron under Nicholas Locarno; Albert died during his squadron's rehearsal of a banned flight maneuver intended to impress the Academy's commencement ceremony attendees
ramid Ves Alkur Chip Lucia Man of the People (Star Trek: The Next Generation)
Lumerian ambassador who uses women as "receptacles" for his negative emotions which causes the "receptacles" to die of old age. Deanna Troi almost dies but it is Alkur who receives back the negativity and dies of old age.
Various aliens Bill Blair Tribunal (DS9)

recurring thereafter

Various aliens and Starfleet officers played by background actor Bill Blair in 45 episodes of DS9, 2 episodes of VOY and 4 of ENT.[1]
Alixus Gail Strickland Paradise (DS9)
Leader of a colony that settled on planet Orellius in 2360, responsible for several deaths because she rejected any form of technologically based medicine.
Almak Off-screen voiceover by an unknown performer Message in a Bottle (VOY)
Romulan subcommander of the IRW T'Met. He leads two other Warbirds to take possession of the USS Prometheus NX-59650, an experimental prototype Federation starship, from its Romulan hijacker, Commander Rekar. However, Almak's fleet opens fire on the Prometheus when he learns that Rekar is no longer in control of it.[2]
Aluura Symba Smith Profit and Lace (DS9)
A Dabo girl who worked at Quark's in 2374.
Kiaphet Amman'sor None The Xindi (ENT)
recurring thereafter
A female aquatic Xindi. She is a member of the Ibix dynasty, and the head aquatic on the Xindi Council.
Ancient Humanoid Salome Jens The Chase (TNG)
A holographic projection of a member of the race from which Humans, Klingons, Romulans, Cardassians and numerous other Alpha Quadrant species descend
Brett Anderson Terry Serpico The Vulcan Hello,
Battle at the Binary Stars (DSC)
Admiral in Starfleet in command of the fleet during the battle at the binary stars against the Klingons. After ostensibly agreeing on a truce the Klingons ram the Admiral's vessel Europa with a cloaked ship forcing him to initiate the self-destruct sequence destroying the Europa along with the Klingon vessel.
Anya Paddi Edwards The Dauphin (TNG)
A shapeshifting allasomorph native to the third moon of Daled IV who served as guardian of the planet's leader, Salia, while she was being transported on the Enterprise-D. To the Enterprise crew, Anya assumed the form of an older human woman; her intrinsic appearance is unknown.
Apollo Michael Forest Who Mourns for Adonais? (TOS)
Extraterrestrial alien believed to be a god by ancient Greeks, who in the 23rd century captures the Enterprise and demands its crew build a society on planet Pollux IV to worship him.
Robert T. April Voice: James Doohan The Counter-Clock Incident (TAS)
First captain of the USS Enterprise (NCC-1701) during its initial five-year mission. April, later a commodore, was succeeded by Christopher Pike. April appears in a single TAS episode, and in the novels Final Frontier and Best Destiny by Diane Carey as the captain of the Enterprise
Sarah April Voice: Nichelle Nichols The Counter-Clock Incident (TAS)
Wife of Starfleet officer Robert T. April and chief medical officer of the USS Enterprise (NCC-1701) when her husband was captain.
Jonathan Archer Scott Bakula Broken Bow recurring thereafter (ENT)
Captain of the USS Enterprise (NX-01).
Ardra Marta DuBois Devil's Due (TNG)
According to the theology of Ventax II, Ardra was a mythic being from the distant past who promised the population a thousand years of prosperity, followed by enslavement upon her return at the end of that epoch. In 2367, a female con artist was unmasked by Enterprise-D personnel after deceiving the Ventaxians into believing she was the deity by using technology to mimic various phenomena believed to herald Ardra's return.
Arex Voice: James Doohan Beyond the Farthest Star (TAS)

recurring thereafter

Lieutenant Arex, voiced by James Doohan, was a recurring character on Star Trek: The Animated Series which ran on NBC from 1973 to 1974.[3] The series' writers and artists were able to create his unique alien look because the series was animated; creating such a character with a live-action actor in make-up would not have been feasible.[4] The character was later used in Star Trek novels and comics.

Arex was a Starfleet officer assigned to the USS Enterprise as navigator. Arex was a member of a tripedal species[5] (given as "Edosians" in Alan Dean Foster's novelizations of the animated episodes, but as "Triexians" in Peter David's New Frontier series) and had three arms and legs. Arex also sometimes took the conn, but he rarely left the ship on landing party missions.

Argyle Biff Yeager Where No One Has Gone Before (TNG)
Datalore (TNG)
A chief engineer aboard the Enterprise-D who supervised the engine modifications made by two specialists, also assembled the android Lore with the help of Dr. Beverly Crusher.
Armus Mart McChesney; Voice: Ron Gans Skin of Evil (TNG)
The Spy Humongous (LOW)
Sentient viscous black liquid (the by-product of a procedure in which a race of "titans" shed all their evil and negative attributes) that killed Tasha Yar.
Dr. Arridor Dan Shor The Price (TNG),
False Profits (VOY)
Member of a Ferengi delegation sent to negotiate for the rights to the Barzan wormhole in 2366 who becomes stranded in the Delta Quadrant until his encounter with the starship Voyager.
Arturis Ray Wise Hope and Fear (VOY)
Alien with exceptional linguistic capability who poses as a friend to Voyager helping them recover a badly garbled transmission from the Alpha Quadrant but uses the opportunity to set up a trap for the entire crew to be assimilated by the Borg
Askwith Rafael Boza The Forge (ENT)
Starfleet corporal at the United Earth Embassy on Vulcan in 2154. After its bombing, Ambassador Soval performed a mind meld with Askwith and learned that Chief Investigator Stel was responsible for bringing the explosive into the embassy.
Jeremy Aster Gabriel Damon The Bonding (TNG)
Human civilian, orphaned when his mother, Marla Aster, an officer aboard the USS Enterprise-D was killed in 2366 on an away mission.
Marla Aster Susan Powell The Bonding (TNG)
Archaeologist aboard the Enterprise-D, and mother of Jeremy Aster. Killed on an away mission in 2366.
Mr. Atoz Ian Wolfe All Our Yesterdays (TOS)
Librarian and keeper of the Atavachron time-portal device on the planet Sarpeidon.
Atul Dennis Madalone Visionary (DS9)
Klingon officer and one of three members of a covert strike force conducting surveillance of the Romulan delegation to Starbase Deep Space 9 in 2371. He is the last of his party to be thrown into the brig.
Axum Mark Deakins Unimatrix Zero (VOY)
Borg drone aboard a vessel in the Beta Quadrant who, while regenerating, due to a recessive gene is able to enter the virtual world of Unimatrix Zero as a free individual and meet with others, including Annika Hansen, like himself. He entertained an intimate relationship with Seven of Nine within Unimatrix Zero until her rescue from the Borg hive by the USS Voyager. Since the Borg Queen is aware of Unimatrix Zero trying to find a way to destroy it for good, Axum contacts Seven of Nine to help them. Axum gets a chance to rekindle their love until Unimatrix Zero is shut down.
Ayala Tarik Ergin Caretaker, Part I (VOY) recurring thereafter
Security officer aboard the USS Voyager and former member of the Maquis
Azetbur Rosanna DeSoto TUC
Daughter of Klingon Chancellor Gorkon, Azetbur ascended to the chancellorship herself when her father was assassinated in 2293. She is essential for the signing of the Khitomer Accords, the first peace treaty between the Federation and the Klingon Empire.

B

Character Actor Episodes
Description
B-4 Brent Spiner NEM, Remembrance and The Bounty (PIC)
B-4 was first seen in the movie Star Trek: Nemesis. He is a Soong-type android (named after Dr. Noonien Soong, their creator). B-4 is one of three androids built by Dr. Soong before Lore and Data.

Praetor Shinzon of Remus was able to obtain the disassembled B-4 and placed some special programming into him, so he could infiltrate the USS Enterprise-E to gain tactical information of the Federation from the ship.

B-4 briefly reappears in Star Trek: Picard where it's revealed that he was ultimately disassembled, but Doctors Altan Soong and Bruce Maddox had used the remnants of Data inside of his positronic network to build a new race of androids. Parts of B-4 were later included by Soong in a new android, alongside Data, Lore and Lal with B-4 briefly speaking through the android. After taking full control of the android, Data said that B-4 was now a part of him.

Badar N'D'D Marc Alaimo Lonely Among Us (TNG)
Antican delegate to the summit with the Selay on Parliament. (Note: Character name comes from the script.)
Bahrat Carlos Carrasco Fair Trade (VOY)
Heavy-handed manager of the Nekrit Supply Depot located near the border of the Nekrit Expanse. Bahrat insisted on a 20 percent commission on trades taking place at his station.
Lt. Baji Juliet Cesario Skin of Evil (TNG) recurring thereafter
Female operations / science division officer, who served aboard the Enterprise-D from 2364 to 2365. She was working on the bridge during the rescue mission for Counselor Troi on Vagra II (Skin of Evil), was on duty on the aft section of the bridge when the Enterprise-D took Thadiun Okona aboard and had to handle the differences between Straleb and Atlec (The Outrageous Okona), was working in sickbay when Dr. Pulaski treated Geordi La Forge and told him about a surgery to bring back his eyesight (Loud as a Whisper) and was treating several patients in the sickbay following several system malfunctions caused by an Iconian probe (Contagion). (The actress received no credit for her appearances. According to the IMDb, Wikipedia, and Cesario herself this character was named Lt. Baji.)[6][7]
Lyndsay Ballard Kim Rhodes Ashes to Ashes (VOY)
Voyager crewmember who died on an away mission in the Delta Quadrant and then was reanimated by the Kobali.
Balok Clint Howard The Corbomite Maneuver (TOS)
Diminutive alien commander of the First Federation starship Feserius who captures the Enterprise and tests its crew through the use of an intimidating puppet (voiced by Ted Cassidy)
Arctus Baran Richard Lynch Gambit (TNG)
Captain of a mercenary ship raiding archeological sites for specific artifacts to re-form an ancient Vulcan weapon
Barash Dana Tjowander Future Imperfect (TNG)
A solitary child from an undetermined species who, desperate for a companion, used an illusory world to entrap William Riker in his specially modified cave on Alpha Onias III. Riker eventually saw through the young alien's illusions and brought Barash back to the Enterprise-D with him.
Reginald Barclay Dwight Schultz Hollow Pursuits (TNG)
recurring thereafter,
FCT,

Projections (VOY)
recurring thereafter

Although he may appear to be nervous and lacking in confidence, Reginald "Reg" Barclay is a highly talented Starfleet systems diagnostic engineer. Stationed aboard the Enterprise-D from 2366, Barclay had a tendency to spend more time inside the holodeck than in real social situations. He also suffered from severe transporter phobia in 2369, although he seems to have overcome this psychological barrier. He also spent time at Jupiter Station as Dr. Lewis Zimmerman's assistant on his EMH project.

While stationed aboard the USS Enterprise-E in 2373, and through a strange turn of events involving the Borg, Barclay was able to meet one of his idols, Zefram Cochrane. By 2376, Barclay's main focus was developing a means of communicating with the missing USS Voyager still stranded in the Delta Quadrant.

Professor Honey Bare Terry Farrell Our Man Bashir (DS9)
Although a holographic character in Julian Bashir's secret agent holosuite program, Professor Bare took on the look of Jadzia Dax during a malfunction. Bare was reputedly Earth's top seismologist in 1964, the year the program was set.
Bareil Antos Philip Anglim In the Hands of the Prophets (DS9)
recurring thereafter
Bajoran Vedek who was nominated as possible successor to Kai Opaka, but lost the position to Kai Winn instead. Love interest of Kira Nerys (until his death).
Barstow Richard Derr The Alternative Factor (TOS)
Starfleet commodore at Starfleet Command who contacts the Enterprise an hour after the disruption/distortion effects emanated from the dead planet the starship is orbiting. Barstow wants to know whether they are natural phenomena or mechanically generated, and, if the latter, by whom and for what purpose. He charges Kirk with finding out the specifics, but cannot assign reserve starships to help the Enterprise because he is evacuating all Starfleet units and personnel within 100 parsecs of her position.
Regina Bartholomew Stephanie Beacham Ship in a Bottle (TNG)
Holographic love interest of the holographic Professor Moriarty in Data's Sherlock Holmes program
Amsha Bashir Fadwa El Guindi Doctor Bashir, I Presume? (DS9)
Human female; wife of Richard Bashir, and mother of Julian Bashir.
Julian Bashir Alexander Siddig Emissary (DS9)
recurring thereafter,
Birthright (TNG)
Human male; Chief Medical Officer of Deep Space Nine.
Richard Bashir Brian George Doctor Bashir, I Presume? (DS9)
Human male; husband of Amsha Bashir, and father of Julian Bashir. In 2348, he took his then 6-year-old son to a planet outside the Federation to have him genetically enhanced. When the fact came out in the open about three decades later, Richard accepted a plea bargain of a 2-year prison sentence to save Julian's career.
Marta Batanides J. C. Brandy Tapestry (TNG)
Human female; Jean-Luc Picard's Academy classmate. In an alternate timeline created by Q, she and Picard had a romantic relationship.
Morgan Bateson Kelsey Grammer Cause and Effect (TNG)
Commanding officer of the 23rd century Federation starship USS Bozeman, which became trapped in a temporal causality loop near the Typhon Expanse in 2278. Bateson and his crew emerged in 2368, unaware they had passed through 90 years of time, until Captain Picard of the USS Enterprise-D set them straight.
Gabriel Bell John Lendale Bennett
Avery Brooks
Past Tense (DS9)
Human male (April 24, 1987 – September 3, 2024); during a 2024 revolt in San Francisco where federal employees were held hostage, Bell made sure the hostages were not harmed. In the Deep Space Nine episode "Past Tense", he is killed earlier and a time-travelling Benjamin Sisko steps in to fulfill Bell's role in the pivotal historical moment. In a guidebook to Earth that Jake gave to Nog, Gabriel Bell is described as "the father of Earth's post-modern reformism," and shown with a picture of Sisko.
Belle Lindsey Haun Real Life (VOY)
Holographic female; the Doctor's daughter in his holographic family program, killed after B'Elanna changes the Doctor's program.
Benaren Michael L. Maguire Before and After (VOY)
Ocampan male; father of Kes, husband of Martis.
Ensign Bennett Tim McCormack Encounter at Farpoint (TNG)
recurring thereafter
Ensign Bennett was a Starfleet helmsman aboard the USS Enterprise-D from 2364 to 2370. He was a background character, appearing in a total of 54 episodes, but the actor was never credited.
Benzan Kieran Mulroney The Outrageous Okona (TNG)
Son of Secretary Kushell from the planet Straleb, entrusting Thadiun Okona with delivering the family's heirloom, the Jewel of Thesia, as a wedding gift to his future wife Yanar of the planet Atlec in 2365.
Beta XII-A entity None Day of the Dove (TOS)
Non-corporeal alien entity deriving sustenance from violent emotions such as hate and fear in others; attempts to pit Klingons and Enterprise personnel against each other in endless combat
B'Etor Gwynyth Walsh Redemption (TNG), Firstborn (TNG), Past Prologue (DS9), GEN
Klingon female; one of the Duras sisters.

Time magazine rated B'Etor with her sister Lursa, as the 2nd best villains of the Star Trek franchise in 2016.[8]

Bill Leon Russom Zdroj:https://en.wikipedia.org?pojem=List_of_Star_Trek_characters_(A–F)
Text je dostupný za podmienok Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License 3.0 Unported; prípadne za ďalších podmienok. Podrobnejšie informácie nájdete na stránke Podmienky použitia.






Text je dostupný za podmienok Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License 3.0 Unported; prípadne za ďalších podmienok.
Podrobnejšie informácie nájdete na stránke Podmienky použitia.

Your browser doesn’t support the object tag.

www.astronomia.sk | www.biologia.sk | www.botanika.sk | www.dejiny.sk | www.economy.sk | www.elektrotechnika.sk | www.estetika.sk | www.farmakologia.sk | www.filozofia.sk | Fyzika | www.futurologia.sk | www.genetika.sk | www.chemia.sk | www.lingvistika.sk | www.politologia.sk | www.psychologia.sk | www.sexuologia.sk | www.sociologia.sk | www.veda.sk I www.zoologia.sk