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 recreations.




Contents






  • 1 Characters from all series, listed alphabetically


    • 1.1 Key


    • 1.2 A


    • 1.3 B


    • 1.4 C


    • 1.5 D


    • 1.6 E


    • 1.7 F




  • 2 See also


  • 3 References





Characters from all series, listed alphabetically



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Abbreviation Title Date(s) Medium
TOS Star Trek: The Original Series 1966–69 TV
TAS Star Trek: The Animated Series 1973–74 TV
TMP Star Trek: The Motion Picture 1979 film
WOK Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan 1982 film
SFS 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 1987–94 TV
DS9 Star Trek: Deep Space Nine 1993–99 TV
GEN Star Trek Generations 1994 film
VOY Star Trek: Voyager 1995–2001 TV
FCT Star Trek: First Contact 1996 film
INS Star Trek: Insurrection 1998 film
NEM Star Trek: Nemesis 2002 film
ENT Star Trek: Enterprise 2001–05 TV
ST09 Star Trek 2009 film
STID Star Trek Into Darkness 2013 film
STB Star Trek Beyond 2016 film
DSC Star Trek: Discovery 2017– TV
ST Star Trek: Short Treks 2018– 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.



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Character Actor Episodes
Description

Leonard James Akaar


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

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

Albino

Bill Bolender

Blood Oath (DS9)
White skinned, white haired Klingon raider who murdered Kang's firstborn son, Dax

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


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.[1]

Altovar
Victor Rivers

Distant Voices (DS9)
Lethean criminal who was caught stealing bio-mimetic gel from Deep Space Nine in 2371.

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

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.
Brett Anderson

Terry Serpico

The Vulcan Hello (DSC),
Battle at the Binary Stars (DSC)
Admiral in Starfleet.

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 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 April and chief medical officer of the USS Enterprise (NCC-1701) when her husband was captain.

Jonathan Archer

Scott Bakula

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.[2] 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.[3] 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[4] (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)
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 is able to enter the virtual world of Unimatrix Zero as a free individual and meet with others, including Annika Hansen, like himself

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.


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Character Actor Episodes
Description

B-4

Brent Spiner

NEM
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.



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.)

B'Etor

Gwynyth Walsh

Redemption (TNG),
Firstborn (TNG),
Past Prologue (DS9),
GEN

Klingon female; one of the Duras sisters.

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.

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

DS9,
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.

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

Bill

Leon Russom

TUC

Starfleet admiral who serves as C-in-C in 2293, two months after the Klingon moon Praxis explodes. He tasks Kirk with being the Federation's "olive branch" in escorting the Klingon chancellor, Gorkon, to peace negotiations on Earth. He is addressed in dialogue only as "Bill," but he is credited as "Starfleet Chief in Command." (Noncanon: In the movie novelization, he is called "Rear Admiral William Smillie".)

Black

Gregory Itzin

In a Mirror, Darkly (ENT)

Starfleet admiral in the Mirror Universe killed by Commander Jonathan Archer when not given command of the Defiant

Margaret Blackwell
Nancy Vawter

The Pegasus (TNG)

Starfleet vice admiral who ordered the Enterprise-D to rendezvous with the Starship Crazy Horse and pick up Rear Admiral Erik Pressman.

Bob

Harve Bennett

TFF

Starfleet admiral who, in 2287, tasks Kirk with rescuing the Federation, Klingon and Romulan hostages on Nimbus III. He is addressed in dialogue only as "Bob", but he is credited as "Starfleet Chief of Staff". (Noncanon: In the movie novelization, he is called "Admiral Robert Caflisch". However, the Paramount-Pictures-sanctioned reference text The Star Trek Encyclopedia, by Michael Okuda and Denise Okuda, has retconned the character's name to "Admiral Robert Bennett".)

Bochra

John Snyder

The Enemy (TNG)

Romulan centurion and one of two survivors of the crash of the Pi, a small Romulan ship, on the surface of Galorndon Core. Bochra stalks and captures Geordi La Forge, who sarcastically nicknames him "Commodore." However, when the planet's electromagnetic storms wreak havoc with Bochra's metabolism and La Forge's interface with the VISOR, the men put aside their differences and work together to locate and remodulate a neutrino beacon that Wesley Crusher has sent to help locate them. They're soon rescued by the Enterprise-D and Bochra is returned to Commander Tomalak's Warbird. (Continuity Note: Bochra uses the same Romulan salute that Decius first used back in the 1966 TOS episode "Balance of Terror".)

Boday

None

A Gallamite ship captain frequently mentioned, but never seen, that Jadzia Dax was quite fond of, that Kira Nerys was repulsed by, and that Worf was somewhat jealous of.

Bok
Frank Corsentino
Lee Arenberg

The Battle (TNG)
Bloodlines (TNG)

Ferengi DaiMon who tried to wreak vengeance on Picard for the Battle of Maxia.

Boothby

Ray Walston

Final Mission (TNG),
The First Duty (TNG),
The Game (TNG),
In the Flesh (VOY),
The Fight (VOY)

Groundskeeper of Starfleet Academy and Starfleet Headquarters. In addition to tending grounds, Boothby offered advice and otherwise acted as a mentor to several characters–including Jean-Luc Picard, Kathryn Janeway, and Chakotay–when they were attending Starfleet Academy. Boothby several times gave Janeway a rose. Picard, in whose opinion Boothby "is one of the wisest men he has ever known", calls upon his knowledge of the Nova Squadron cadets while investigating the death of Joshua Albert in "The First Duty." Species 8472 recreates Boothby on a planet designed to mimic Starfleet HQ. 8472-Boothby mimics his signature gesture of offering a rose.

Bo'rak

Bob Minor

Visionary (DS9)

Klingon officer and one of three members of a covert strike force conducting surveillance of the Romulan delegation to Starbase Deep Space Nine in 2371. Bo'rak was the drunken Klingon in this episode's teaser.

Philip Boyce

John Hoyt

The Cage (TOS),
The Menagerie (TOS)
Chief medical officer aboard the USS Enterprise in 2254, under the command of Captain Christopher Pike.

Leah Brahms

Susan Gibney

Booby Trap (TNG)
Galaxy's Child (TNG)
Human female; engineer who developed the warp drive of Galaxy-class starships.

During a crisis on board the Enterprise-D, chief engineer Geordi La Forge created a holodeck representation of Brahms, and later used her mission logs to create a personality for the representation. A year later, La Forge met the real Brahms, who found out about the holodeck program La Forge had created, and turned hostile. Later, after working with La Forge, she realized her arrogance and became friends with La Forge.
In the alternate future timeline of "All Good Things...", La Forge is married to someone named "Leah", who may be Brahms (though this is not confirmed).[5]



Branch

David Gautreaux

TMP

Starfleet commander of the Epsilon 9 space station, which observes the Klingons' battle with V'ger and then the cloud's direct heading for Earth. When Branch communicates some real-time tactical information to the Enterprise, V'ger reacts negatively to Epsilon 9's sensor scans and destroys the station.

Brand

Jacqueline Brookes

The First Duty (TNG)

Starfleet rear admiral and superintendent of Starfleet Academy in 2368. She presided over the inquiry into the death of Cadet Joshua Albert.

Braxton
Allan G. Royal
Bruce McGill

Future's End (VOY)
Relativity (VOY)
A native of the 29th century, he is the pilot of the Federation timeship Aeon in one timeline, and captain of the Federation timeship USS Relativity in another.

Brunt

Jeffrey Combs

Family Business (DS9)
recurring thereafter
Ferengi liquidator, working for the Ferengi Commerce Authority. For a brief period, acting Grand Nagus. He's the one who discovers Ishka's illegal profit earning activity, and afterwards he does everything to turn Quark's life into a living hell. At one occasion he revokes Quark's business licence for some time. Later though he helps Quark rescue Ishka from the Dominion's captivity.

Bu'kaH
Michelle C. Bonilla

Sleeping Dogs (ENT)
Klingon female; engineer on the IKS Somraw in 2151.

Michael Burnham

Sonequa Martin-Green

DSC
Human Starfleet mutineer, given temporary war-time field assignment as a science specialist on the USS Discovery. Lead character in Star Trek: Discovery.

Eric Burton

Rickey D'Shon Collins

Liaisons (TNG) Masks (TNG)
A student in Ms. Narsu's art class.[6][7][8][9]


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Character Actor Episodes
Description

Cartwright

Brock Peters

TVH, TUC

Starfleet admiral who presides at Starfleet Command in 2286, when the "whale probe/traveler" attacks Earth. In 2293, he conspires with Klingon general Chang and Romulan ambassador Nanclus to derail Federation-Klingon negotiations.

Cassie

Penny Johnson

Far Beyond the Stars (DS9)
A waitress, in a 1950s era diner, who was Benny Russell's girlfriend in a vision experienced by Benjamin Sisko

Richard Castillo

Christopher McDonald

Yesterday's Enterprise (TNG)
A Starfleet lieutenant, helmsman aboard the Enterprise-C until it traveled 22 years into the future when he became the effective XO after all other bridge officers were killed, then was endorsed for command by Jean-Luc Picard subsequent to death of Captain Rachel Garrett. Also, a love interest of an alternate time line's Tasha Yar.

Ch'Pok

Ron Canada

Rules of Engagement (DS9)
Klingon advocate who argued at an extradition hearing on Deep Space Nine to have Worf sent to Qo'noS for trial after he apparently destroyed a Klingon civilian ship, killing all 441 of its passengers.

Chakotay

Robert Beltran

VOY

Starfleet commander and a former Maquis member, best known as the first officer of the starship USS Voyager in the TV series Star Trek: Voyager. (Throughout the series, the special rank insignia designed for former Maquis members indicates that Chakotay is a lieutenant commander, although he is only ever referred to as "commander.")

Chaotica
Martin Rayner

Bride of Chaotica! (VOY),
Night (VOY),
Shattered (VOY)

Metafiction holodeck character created by Tom Paris.

Chandra
Reginald Lal Singh

Court Martial (TOS)
Starfleet captain who served on Captain Kirk's court-martial board.

Chef


ENT
Chef aboard Jonathan Archer's Enterprise

Chekote

Bruce Gray

The Circle (DS9),
Gambit, Part I (TNG)
A Starfleet admiral conferred with (separately) by both Commander Sisko and Commander Riker.

Christine Chapel

Majel Barrett

The Naked Time (TOS) recurring thereafter, Beyond the Farthest Star (TAS) recurring thereafter, TMP, TVH
Nurse aboard the USS Enterprise (NCC-1701), later a Doctor and Commander.

Charlene

Wendy Schaal

Real Life (VOY)
Hologram; the Doctor's wife in his holographic family program.

Pavel Chekov

Walter Koenig
Anton Yelchin

TOS, TMP, WOK, SFS, TVH, TFF, TUC, GEN, ST09, STID, STB
Starfleet officer who served aboard the USS Enterprise (NCC-1701), USS Enterprise (NCC-1701-A) and USS Reliant.

John Christopher

Roger Perry

Tomorrow Is Yesterday (TOS)
1960-era U.S. Air Force captain who is brought aboard the Enterprise as his fighter jet is un-intentionally crushed by a tractor beam

Clancy
Anne Elizabeth Ramsay

The Emissary (TNG)
Female Starfleet ensign and flight controller aboard the Enterprise-D in 2365.

L. Q. "Sonny" Clemonds

Leon Rippy

The Neutral Zone (TNG)
Human male; 20th century civilian cryogenically frozen and discovered by the USS Enterprise-D.

Zefram Cochrane

Glenn Corbett
James Cromwell

Metamorphosis (TOS),
FCT,
Broken Bow (ENT)
Human male; Earth's inventor of warp drive and the first human to make first contact with Vulcans.

J.M. Colt

Laurel Goodwin

The Cage (TOS)

Yeoman aboard Captain Christopher Pike's Enterprise
Katrina Cornwell

Jayne Brook

DSC
Psychiatrist, recurring character in Star Trek: Discovery.

Kimara Cretak
Megan Cole
Adrienne Barbeau

Image in the Sand (DS9),
Shadows and Symbols (DS9),
Inter Arma Enim Silent Leges (DS9)
Being a Romulan Senator, she was a representative of the Romulan empire for a short time aboard Deep Space Nine. She was set up by Section 31 to be accused of treason against the empire and imprisoned.

Beverly Crusher

Gates McFadden

TNG, GEN, FCT, INS, NEM
Chief Medical Officer aboard the USS Enterprise (NCC-1701-D) and USS Enterprise (NCC-1701-E)

Jack Crusher
Doug Wert

Family (TNG),
Violations (TNG),
Journey's End (TNG)
Deceased Starfleet officer, husband of Beverly Crusher and father of Wesley Crusher. He served aboard the USS Stargazer under Captain Picard, his friend, but died sometime during its mission. In "Family", when Dr. Crusher retrieved some of his things from storage, the label on the travel case lists him as "lieutenant commander", although the rank insignia on his old uniform indicates otherwise (lieutenant junior grade). Jack Crusher recorded a video message to his son Wesley during his infancy, to be viewed when he was older. Jack intended this to begin a series of pre-recorded video messages to Wesley, but because of his death, he only ever got to make one message.

Wesley Crusher

Wil Wheaton

TNG, NEM

Enterprise-D civilian (crew family member), then Starfleet Academy cadet

Crystalline Entity

None

Datalore (TNG),
Silicon Avatar (TNG)
Life form that destroyed colonies on Omicron Theta and other planets. Conspired with Lore in attempt to destroy life on the Enterprise-D. Destroyed by the mother of one of its victims.

Jal Culluh

Anthony De Longis

Basics Part II (VOY),
State of Flux (VOY)
First Maje, or leader, of the Kazon-Nistrim, one of the various warring sects of the Kazon race who inhabit the farthest region of the Delta Quadrant on the other side of the Milky Way Galaxy.


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Character Actor Episodes
Description

Jenna D'Sora

Michele Scarabelli

In Theory (TNG)

Starfleet lieutenant (j.g.) and Enterprise-D security officer who fell in love with Data.

Dara

Michelle Forbes

Half a Life (TNG)
Daughter of Kaelon II's Dr. Timicin

Damar

Casey Biggs

Return to Grace (DS9) recurring thereafter

Cardassian military officer first serving under Gul Dukat then puppet head of the Cardassian Union within the Dominion and finally rebel leader for Cardassian freedom from the Dominion.

Dammar

Kenneth Tigar

Displaced (VOY)
Chief operative of the Nyrians; translocated the Voyager crew and took command of the ship.

Damron

Jeffrey Dean Morgan

Carpenter Street (ENT)

Xindi Reptilian scientist.

Caithlin Dar

Cynthia Gouw

TFF

Romulan Ambassador to the Planet of Galactic Peace.

Darhe'el

Harris Yulin

Duet (DS9)

Cardassian Gul and leader of the Gallitep labor camp on Bajor during the Cardassian Occupation. He was dubbed the "Butcher of Gallitep" because of all the atrocities committed there under his command. Never directly appears, only impersonated by filing clerk Aamin Marritza in his hope to be sentenced to death by a Bajoran court and executed.

Arne Darvin

Charlie Brill

The Trouble with Tribbles (TOS),
Trials and Tribble-ations (DS9)
In "The Trouble with Tribbles", Darvin is a Klingon who poses as a Federation official to sabotage Federation attempts to colonize Sherman's Planet. A tribble, sensitive to Klingons, hints at his true identity, which is confirmed by Dr. Leonard McCoy. Darvin is arrested.

According to dialog in "Trials and Tribble-ations", Klingon intelligence subsequently turned its back on Darvin, who spent the next 100 years posing as a human merchant going by the name "Barry Waddle".


Brill reprised the role for "Trials and Tribble-ations", in which Darvin gains passage from Cardassia to Bajor aboard the USS Defiant. Darvin uses the Bajoran Orb of Time to send the ship back to the time and place depicted in "The Trouble with Tribbles". Intent on exacting revenge on James T. Kirk, he plants a bomb in a tribble; the Defiant's crew prevents Kirk's murder and captures Darvin.



Data

Brent Spiner

TNG,
GEN, FCT, INS, NEM
Android – second officer of the Enterprise-D.

Dathon

Paul Winfield

Darmok (TNG)
Tamarian captain, the first of his race to successfully establish communications between his species and the Federation.

Dougherty

Anthony Zerbe

INS
A Starfleet admiral working with the Son'a with designs on the Briar Patch

Carmen Davila

Susan Diol

Silicon Avatar (TNG)
Senior member of the Malona IV project, died when the Crystalline Entity attacked the colony.

Dax (symbiont)

None

Invasive Procedures (DS9)

Trill symbiont, over 300 years old in the 24th century and carried by the 8th (later 9th) host. Only appears through the hosts who carry it (and briefly through SFX).

Audrid Dax

Armin Shimerman

Facets (DS9)
Joined Trill; fourth host of Dax symbiont. (Never appears directly.)

Curzon Dax
Frank Owen Smith
René Auberjonois

Emissary (DS9),
Facets (DS9)
Trill male; seventh host of Dax symbiont (before Jadzia).

Emony Dax

Chase Masterson

Facets (DS9)
Joined Trill female; third host of Dax symbiont. (Never appears directly.)

Ezri Dax

Nicole de Boer

DS9 (season 7)
Joined Trill female; ninth host of Dax symbiont; Starfleet officer, and counselor aboard DS9. Formerly Ezri Tigan.

Jadzia Dax

Terry Farrell

DS9 (seasons 1–6)
Joined Trill female; eighth host of Dax symbiont; Starfleet officer, and science officer aboard DS9 from 2371 to 2374.

Joran Dax

Jeff Magnus McBride
Leigh J. McCloskey
Avery Brooks

Equilibrium (DS9),
Facets (DS9),
Field of Fire (DS9)
Joined Trill male; sixth host of Dax symbiont. Formerly Joran Belar.

Lela Dax

Nana Visitor

Facets (DS9)
Joined Trill female; first host of Dax symbiont. (Never appears directly.)

Tobin Dax

Colm Meaney

Facets (DS9)
Joined Trill male; second host of Dax symbiont. (Never appears directly.)

Torias Dax

Alexander Siddig

Facets (DS9)
Joined Trill male; fifth host of Dax symbiont. (Never appears directly.)

Yedrin Dax

Gary Frank

Children of Time (DS9)
Trill; descendant of Jadzia Dax and host of the Dax symbiont in an alternate timeline.

Richard Daystrom

William Marshall

The Ultimate Computer (TOS)
Human male; creator of M5 multitronic computer system. Also created the Enterprise' main computer.

Decius

Lawrence Montaigne

Balance of Terror (TOS)
A proud young Romulan officer who served aboard the Praetor's flagship Bird-of-Prey in 2266. He dispatched a coded message to the Praetor while the ship was under cloak, thereby breaking the "rule of silence." For this infraction, he was reduced two steps in rank. Later, he was ordered to place a nuclear warhead with a proximity fuse among the debris that was to be jettisoned from the ship. This maneuver succeeded in severely damaging the Enterprise. Decius was viewed by the ship's elder Centurion as having powerful friends who may not appreciate his being demoted, and which could mean danger for the ship's Commander.

Willard Decker

Stephen Collins

TMP
Captain of the USS Enterprise before joining with V'ger, son of Commodore Matt Decker.[10] Decker's basic character outline was originally developed as part of Star Trek: Phase II before that project became The Motion Picture.[11] Some of this character's elements are similar to those of William Riker, the second in command of the USS Enterprise-D in Star Trek: The Next Generation.[11]

Matt Decker

William Windom

Doomsday Machine (TOS)
Starfleet commodore and commanding officer of the starship USS Constellation until its crew were killed by an extraterrestrial-created "planet eater" Ultimate Weapon. Decker tried to kill the planet 'eater' by going on a suicide mission with one of the shuttles belonging to the USS Enterprise. He failed, but analysis of his attempt provided inspiration for the final solution used to defeat the machine.[12]

Degra

Randy Oglesby

The Xindi (ENT)
recurring thereafter
Primate representative on the Xindi Council; scientist who supervised construction of the Xindi superweapon.

DeSalle
Michael Barrier

The Squire of Gothos (TOS),
This Side of Paradise (TOS),
Catspaw (TOS)
Starfleet lieutenant of French descent. DeSalle served as the Enterprise's navigator ("The Squire of Gothos"), botanist ("This Side of Paradise") and assistant chief engineer ("Catspaw"). In "The Squire of Gothos", DeSalle is part of the landing party that encounters Trelane. In "This Side of Paradise", DeSalle discovers that the colonists on Omicron Ceti III are the only life forms to survive exposure to the planet's Berthold rays. He also performs a quantitative analysis of the crops being grown by the colonists. In "Catspaw", DeSalle commands the Enterprise while Captain Kirk, Commander Spock and Lieutenant Commander Scott are being held prisoner on the surface of Pyris VII. He directs the crew's effort to pierce an alien force field to rescue the landing party. (Conjecture: The Star Trek Concordance, by Bjo Trimble, lists his first name as "Vincent".)

Stefan DeSeve

Barry Lynch

Face of the Enemy (TNG)
Former Starfleet ensign who defected to Romulus. He returns to the Federation after becoming disillusioned with the Romulans. He also relays a message from Ambassador Spock that the Enterprise-D must rendezvous with a Corvallen freighter, which is supposed to be carrying Romulan vice proconsul M'ret and his two top aides, who are defecting to the Federation.

Dickerson
Arell Blanton

The Savage Curtain (TOS)
Security guard; led honor guard detachment to greet the Excalbian projection of President Lincoln.

Dikironium Cloud Creature

None

Obsession (TOS)
Sentient gaseous cloud creature that feeds off iron-based hemoglobin; once decimated the crew of the starship Farragut then years later is encountered by the Enterprise

Klim Dokachin

Graham Jarvis

Unification (TNG)
Zakdorn; quartermaster and administrator of the Federation Surplus Depot Z15.

Guruk Dolim

Scott MacDonald

The Xindi (ENT)
recurring thereafter
Reptilian regimental commander and representative on the Xindi Council. He hijacked the Xindi superweapon.

Jose Dominguez

None

The Man Trap (TOS)

Starfleet officer and "space commander" of the starship base on Corinth IV. He requests information regarding the Enterprise's delay at Planet M-113; he says the starship has "supplies he urgently needs".

Donatra

Dina Meyer

NEM

Romulan commander of the IRW Valdore. She attempts to ingratiate herself to Praetor Shinzon by flirting with him, but he prefers that she demonstrate her allegiance by watching Commander Suran, whose impatience and lack of respect have given Shinzon pause. Donatra fears that a war with the Federation will mark Romulan children for generations to come. She eventually rejects Shinzon and fights with the Enterprise-E against the Reman Warbird Scimitar. Although the Valdore is severely damaged in battle, Donatra is able to offer aid to the ram-damaged Enterprise after the Scimitar is destroyed.

Sarina Douglas

Faith Salie

Statistical Probabilities (DS9)
Chrysalis (DS9)
Human female whose genetic engineering went wrong and caused her to be cataleptic for several years. Later cured by Dr. Julian Bashir and briefly got romantically involved with him.

Drea
Lezlie Dalton

By Any Other Name (TOS)
Female Kelvan who pilots the Enterprise through the Galactic Barrier on its way to the Andromeda Galaxy.

Duchamps

Michael Dorn

Our Man Bashir (DS9)
An assistant to Dr. Hippocrates Noah in Julian Bashir's secret agent program. Due to a transporter malfunction, Duchamp appeared as Worf.

Skrain Dukat

Marc Alaimo

Emissary (DS9) recurring thereafter

Cardassian Gul. Prefect of Bajor during the Cardassian Occupation; Commander of Terok Nor. Father of Tora Ziyal. Briefly a guerilla fighter against the Klingon Empire, afterwards head of the Cardassian Union under The Dominion until Ziyal's death. Later he acts as the "anti-emissary" of the pagh-wraiths.

Duras, son of Ja'rod

Patrick Massett

Sins of the Father (TNG),
Reunion (TNG)
Klingon male. The House of Duras was a notably aggressive and dishonest dynasty of the Klingon Empire. His father was a traitor who betrayed the Khitomer colony to the Romulans. When Ja'rod's treason was discovered post-mortem, High Council-member Duras had the blame placed on Worf's father, Mogh. His House Included his two sisters, Lursa and B'Etor, and his illegitimate son, Toral.

Duras, son of Toral

Daniel Riordan

Judgment (ENT),
Bounty (ENT),
The Expanse (ENT)
Klingon male, sent to apprehend Jonathan Archer and destroy the Enterprise.


E





























































































Character Actor Episodes
Description

Amelia Earhart

Sharon Lawrence

The 37s (VOY)
Human female; abducted from Earth in 1937; found cryogenically frozen in the Delta Quadrant by the Voyager crew.

Julius Eaton

Alexander Siddig

Far Beyond the Stars (DS9)
A writer for a 1950s era science fiction magazine in a vision experienced by Benjamin Sisko

Kay Eaton

Nana Visitor

Far Beyond the Stars (DS9)
A writer (who used the pseudonym "K.C. Hunter") for a 1950s era science fiction magazine in a vision experienced by Benjamin Sisko

Michael Eddington

Kenneth Marshall

The Search (DS9)
recurring thereafter

Starfleet lieutenant commander and chief of Starfleet security on Starbase Deep Space 9, beginning in late 2370. He later defected to join the Maquis.

Ee'Char

Craig Wasson

Hard Time (DS9)
Male; Miles O'Brien's simulated cellmate during his time-compressed simulation of incarceration. Afterwards he returns as a hallucination to haunt O'Brien (who killed him).

Albert Einstein

Jim Norton

The Nth Degree (TNG),
Descent, Part I (TNG)
Holographic reproduction for a game of poker with Data.

Ekoria

Ellen Wheeler

The Quickening (DS9)
Teplan female; afflicted by the blight, the first one to believe that Julian Bashir could find a cure to her condition. She died from the blight, but her baby was born perfectly healthy.

Elaan

France Nuyen

Elaan of Troyius (TOS)
Dohlman of Elas. Her planet's Council of Nobles offered her in marriage to the ruler of Troyius, a neighboring planet in the Tellun Star System, to prevent the escalation of hostilities between the two worlds. En route to Troyius on the Enterprise, Elaan stabs Ambassador Petri of Troyius for being in her quarters without permission. Later, when Elaan sheds tears (which act as a "super love potion") because she feels that nobody likes her, Kirk wipes them away and immediately becomes biochemically attracted to her. However, he's able to shake off the effects while in combat with the Klingons. In accordance with his duty, Kirk delivers Elaan to Troyius to be married, although neither is happy at the prospect.

Tam Elbrun

Harry Groener

Tin Man (TNG)

Betazoid male; had unusually great telepathic ability skilled at making contact with non-humanoid sentient life forms.

Endar

Sherman Howard

Suddenly Human (TNG)

Talarian captain of the Q'Maire whose biological son was killed by humans. In accordance with Talarian customs, he claimed the human boy Jeremiah Rossa as his own son, renaming him Jono. Years later, when Captain Jean-Luc Picard intended to return Jono to his human family, Endar was ready to go to war to retrieve his adopted son.

Enright

Voice: James Doohan

The Ultimate Computer (TOS)

Starfleet commodore on the Watchtower-class space station that serves as headquarters for the M-5 multitronic unit war games.

Eris

Molly Hagan

The Jem'Hadar (DS9)
A female Vorta pretending to be a fellow prisoner when Benjamin Sisko and Quark are taken captive by the Jem'Hadar.

Esoqq

Reiner Schöne

Allegiance (TNG)
A native of the planet Chalnoth, among those held captive (including Captain Picard) in an alien prison/laboratory

Gul Evek

Richard Poe

Journey's End (TNG),
Preemptive Strike (TNG),
Playing God (DS9),
The Maquis (DS9),
Tribunal (DS9)
Caretaker (VOY)

Cardassian gul and commander of the Vetar. A confrontational opponent, appearing in three Star Trek series.


F



































































































Character Actor Episodes
Description

Kivas Fajo

Saul Rubinek

The Most Toys (TNG)
Zibalian male; kidnapped Data for his collection of priceless artifacts.

Falcon
Mark Yerkes
Colm Meaney

Our Man Bashir (DS9)
Hologram; assassin in Julian Bashir's secret agent holo-program. Due to a transporter malfunction, Falcon's physical parameters were temporarily modeled on O'Brien.

Dr. Farek

Ethan Phillips

Ménage à Troi (TNG)

Ferengi male; crewmember of the Krayton, tried using a mind probe on Lwaxana Troi to learn the secret of Betazed telepathy.

John Farrell
Jim Goodwin

The Enemy Within (TOS), Mudd's Women (TOS), Miri (TOS)
Human Male; he served as navigator in TOS: "The Enemy Within" and "Mudd's Women" and as the relief communications officer in TOS: "Miri".

Karen Farris

Courtney Peldon

Valiant (DS9)
Human female; Red Squad cadet appointed First Officer of the USS Valiant after the death of Captain Ramirez.

Felton
Sheila Franklin

A Matter of Time, New Ground, Hero Worship, The Masterpiece Society, Imaginary Friend (all TNG)
Human female ensign who served as the conn officer on the Enterprise-D (numerous season 5 episodes, on-screen credit for five talking episodes)

Female Changeling

Salome Jens

The Search (DS9) recurring thereafter
Nameless (“What use would I have for a name?”, DS9 episode Behind the Lines) Changeling and Founder who helps lead the Dominion's invasion of the Alpha Quadrant while teaching the Shapeshifters' ways to Odo in an attempt to lure him back to The Great Link.

Kyril Finn

Richard Cox

The High Ground (TNG)
Terrorist leader on planet Rutia IV who kidnaps Dr. Beverly Crusher to treat his people who are suffering from side-effects of the dimensional-shift transporter they use

Marla E. Finn
Nora Leonhardt

Eye of the Beholder (TNG)

Starfleet ensign assigned to Utopia Planetia shipyards. Was killed by ex-lover Lieutenant Walter Pierce.

Finnegan
Bruce Mars

Shore Leave (TOS)

Starfleet Academy cadet, upperclassman, prankster and merciless tormentor to a young fellow cadet named James T. Kirk

Fitzgerald

Richard Derr

The Mark of Gideon (TOS)

Starfleet admiral who refuses to give Spock permission to violate the planet Gideon's sovereignty and beam down to locate the missing and allegedly kidnapped Captain Kirk, since Spock cannot prove to him that Kirk's life is in danger.[13]

Fitzpatrick

Ed Reimers

The Trouble with Tribbles (TOS)
Starfleet admiral who ordered Kirk to cooperate fully with Nilz Baris regarding security protection for the quadrotriticale on Deep Space Station K-7.

Flint

James Daly

Requiem for Methuselah (TOS)
Human male; a 6000-year-old immortal, encountered on the planet Holberg 917G. Flint lived as many influential persons in Earth history.

Vic Fontaine

James Darren

His Way (DS9)
recurring thereafter

Hologram; a holodeck entertainer, used as counselor by various crewmembers of Deep Space Nine.

Fujisaki

None

Inter Arma Enim Silent Leges (DS9)

Starfleet vice admiral and deputy chief of Starfleet Intelligence until 2374, when he died. Section 31 believed that Koval, the Romulan chairman of the Tal Shiar, was involved in his death, but there was no proof. (Never appears, only talked about.)


See also




  • List of Star Trek characters G–M • N–S • T–Z


  • List of recurring Star Trek: Deep Space Nine characters • Enterprise • The Next Generation • The Original Series • Voyager

  • List of Star Trek episodes



References





  1. ^ Discrepancy Note: The voice-over actor clearly identifies the character as "Almak", but the closed-captioning reads "Almar" and The Star Trek Encyclopedia lists him as "Almar".


  2. ^ Joanna Peart, The Journal (July 22, 2004). "Beam me back Scotty". p. 46.


  3. ^ St. Joseph News-Press, Spotlight (Feb. 2, 1974). "New Role on Show". p. 12.


  4. ^ Alison L. Smith, Chicago Sun-Times (November 30, 1986 ). "The Vulcan mind probe". p. 6.


  5. ^ "Star Trek Profile: Geordi La Forge". StarTrek.com. Retrieved October 5, 2014..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output .citation q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-ws-icon a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4c/Wikisource-logo.svg/12px-Wikisource-logo.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-maint{display:none;color:#33aa33;margin-left:0.3em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  6. ^ "STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION "Masks"". Star Trek Minutiae: Exploring the Details of Science Fiction. Retrieved 11 February 2018. But Mrs. Narsu said we should try to make our sculptures as realistic as possible.


  7. ^ "Masks". missionlogpodcast.com. November 9, 2017. Retrieved March 28, 2018.


  8. ^ "Star Trek: The Next Generation Rewatch: "Masks"". tor.com. March 1, 2013. Retrieved March 28, 2018.


  9. ^ "The Next Generation Transcripts - Masks". www.chakoteya.net. Retrieved March 28, 2018.


  10. ^ "Willard Decker". startrek.com. Retrieved July 1, 2010.


  11. ^ ab Okuda, Mike and Denise Okuda, with Debbie Mirek (1999). The Star Trek Encyclopedia. Pocket Books. ISBN 0-671-53609-5.CS1 maint: Multiple names: authors list (link)


  12. ^ The Star Trek Encyclopedia


  13. ^ Casting Note: Richard Derr also played Commodore Barstow in "The Alternative Factor". In the interest of continuity, some Star Trek fans have suggested that, since Admiral "Fitzgerald" was never named in dialogue, it can be disregarded and "Barstow" retconned in its place. However, Derr is identified as "Fitzgerald" in the ending credits (and the script), so canon demands that "Fitzgerald" stand as a different role for the same actor, as with other actors in the Trek universe.











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