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The shows that we cover in the evening, i.e. Primetime.

Interview with Michael Peña, Louis Ozawa, Betty Gabriel and Abbie Cornish of “Jack Ryan” on Prime Video by Suzanne 6/16/23
These were two very short interviews for this show. I don’t watch the show regularly, but if you love lots of action and some political intrigue, this is the show for you. I think it does help to know who’s who and what’s going on if you watched the first three seasons, but it’s not impossible to enjoy this fourth season if you haven’t. It’s fairly self-contained. Betty Gabriel is a regular on the show. Abbie Cornish is returning to the show. Michael Peña and Louis Ozawa both play very interesting villains this season.




MORE INFO: Trailer

The fourth and final season of Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan finds the titular character on his most dangerous mission yet: facing an enemy both foreign and domestic. As the new CIA Acting Deputy Director, Jack Ryan is tasked with unearthing internal corruption, and in doing so, uncovers a series of suspicious black ops that could expose the vulnerability of the country. As Jack and the team investigate how deep the corruption runs, he discovers a far-worse reality—the convergence of a drug cartel with a terrorist organization—ultimately revealing a conspiracy much closer to home and testing our hero’s belief in the system he has always fought to protect.
The series stars John Krasinski as Jack Ryan, Wendell Pierce as James Greer, Michael Kelly as Mike November, and Betty Gabriel as CIA Acting Director Elizabeth Wright, with Abbie Cornish returning as Cathy Mueller. Joining the cast this season are Michael Peña as Domingo Chavez and Louis Ozawa as Chao Fah.
Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan is co-produced by Amazon Studios, Paramount Television Studios, and Skydance Television, and executive produced by Allyson Seeger, Andrew Form, John Krasinski, Brad Fuller, Michael Bay, and John Kelly. Additionally, Tom Clancy and Skydance Television’s David Ellison, Dana Goldberg, and Matt Thunell executive produce the fourth season, along with Vaun Wilmott, Mace Neufeld and Carlton Cuse.
Proofread and Edited by Brenda
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Star Trek Movies 2009-2016

Descriptions written by Suzanne
“Star Trek” premiered May 8, 2009. After Spock battles the murderous Nero, Nero escapes into the past and creates an alternate timeline by destroying the ship carrying Kirk’s parents and blowing up Vulcan. The alternative timeline (or “Kelvin”) Kirk and Spock (still cadets), with the help of Christopher Pike, are able to rescue Kirk’s father before the planet blows up. Kirk meets Spock from the original timeline. With his guidance, they’are able to kill Nero and rescue Earth. Kirk, Spock and Pike are promoted.
“Star Trek Into Darkness” premiered May 17, 2013. Starfleet officers bomb London. Kirk is ordered to bomb the officers’ ship when they head to the Klingon homeworld. One of the officers turns out to be Khan Noonien Singh, who’s been commanded by a Starfleet Admiral that wants to start war with the Klingons.
“Star Trek Beyond” premiered July 22, 2016. The crew of the Enterprise is duped into a rescue mission on the planet Altamid; their leader, Krall, takes over the ship to recover a relic that can be turned into a bioweapon. After the Enterprise crashes and the crew is either taken prisoner or goes on the run, Scotty, Kirk, and others are aided by alien Jaylah to rescue the others and defeat Krall.

Prodigy Episodes

SEASON ONE
Episode 101/102 – “Lost & Found” (Thursday, October 28th) Part 1 and Part 2. Exiled on a mining colony outside Federation space, a group of lawless teens discover a derelict Starfleet ship. Dal must gather an unlikely crew for their newfound ship if they are going to escape Tars Lamora, but The Diviner and his daughter Gwyn have other plans. Written By: Kevin & Dan Hageman Directed By: Ben Hibon
Episode 103 – “Starstruck” (Thursday, November 4th) Even with the guidance of their hologram advisor Janeway, the crew of the U.S.S. Protostar is tested when their ship is on a dangerous cosmic collision course. Written By: Chad Quandt Directed By: Alan Wan
Episode 104 – “Dreamcatcher” (Thursday, November 11th) The crew has their first away mission on an undiscovered planet that manifests their deepest desires, only to realize the planet has desires of its own. Written By: Lisa Schultz Boyd Directed By: Steve Ahn, Sung Shin
Episode 105 – “Terror Firma” (Thursday, November 18th) Marooned on a deadly planet, the crew must work together with their captive Gwyn to stay alive…except the planet isn’t the only thing in pursuit. Written By: Julie Benson, Shawna Benson Directed By: Olga Ulanova
Episode 106 – “Kobayashi” (Thursday, January 6th) As Gwyn struggles to find her role aboard the U.S.S. Protostar, Dal tests his leadership skills in the newly discovered holodeck. Written By: Aaron J. Waltke Directed By: Alan Wan
Episode 107 – “First Con-tact” (Thursday, January 13th) When a mentor from Dal’s past persuades him to use their Federation cover for personal gain, they quickly discover Starfleet has protocols for a reason. Written By: Diandra Pendleton-Thompson Directed By: Steve Ahn, Sung Shin
Episode 108 – “Time Amok” (Thursday, January 20th) When the U.S.S. Protostar is fractured in time by an anomaly, Hologram Janeway must synchronize the disjointed crew and save their ship before it destructs. Written By: Nikhil S. Jayaram Directed By: Olga Ulanova, Sung Shin
Episode 109 – “A Moral Star, Part 1” (Thursday, January 27th) The crew forgo their dreams of Starfleet to return to Tars Lamora in a no-win scenario. Written By: S1 Writers Room (Kevin & Dan Hageman, Julie Benson, Shawna Benson, Lisa Schultz Boyd, Nikhil S. Jayaram, Diandra Pendleton-Thompson, Chad Quandt, Aaron J. Waltke) Directed By: Ben Hibon
Episode 110 – “A Moral Star, Part 2” (Thursday, February 3rd) When the plan goes awry, the crew must improvise. Meanwhile, Gwyn discovers a dark truth that will forever jeopardize their quest toward salvation. Written By: S1 Writers Room (Kevin & Dan Hageman, Julie Benson, Shawna Benson, Lisa Schultz Boyd, Nikhil S. Jayaram, Diandra Pendleton-Thompson, Chad Quandt, Aaron J. Waltke) Directed By: Ben Hibon
Episode 111 – “Asylum” (Thursday, October 27th) At the edge of Federation space, the crew applies for asylum at a comm relay outpost, only for their starship to reveal its shocking true purpose. Written By: Kevin & Dan Hageman Directed By: Steve In Chang Ahn & Sung Shin
Episode 112 – “Let Sleeping Borg Lie” (Thursday, November 3rd) When the crew encounters a dormant Borg Cube, Zero risks everything to save their ship. Written By: Diandra Pendleton-Thompson Directed By: Olga Ulanova & Sung Shin
Episode 113 – “All the World’s a Stage” (Thursday, November 10th) The crew answers a distress call to find a colony trapped in Starfleet’s past. Written By: Aaron J. Waltke Directed By: Andrew L. Schmidt
Episode 114 – “Crossroads” (Thursday, November 17th) When the crew attempts to secure transport to the Federation, they unwittingly cross paths with the Vice Admiral who is hunting them. Written By: Lisa Schultz Boyd Directed By: Steve In Chang Ahn & Sung Shin
Episode 115 – “Masquerade” (Thursday, November 24th) Trapped in the Neutral Zone, the crew encounters a rogue geneticist who sheds light on Dal’s past. Written By: Nikhil S. Jayaram Directed By: Sung Shin
Episode 116 – “Preludes” (Thursday, December 1) A Starfleet Admiral digs into the past of the Protostar crew. Meanwhile, the Diviner recalls his life’s mission. Written By: S1 Writers Room (Kevin & Dan Hageman, Julie Benson, Shawna Benson, Lisa Schultz Boyd, Nikhil S. Jayaram, Diandra Pendleton-Thompson, Chad Quandt, Aaron J. Waltke) Directed By: Steve In Chang Ahn & Sung Shin
Episode 117 – “Ghost in the Machine” (Thursday, December 8) When the crew gets trapped in the holodeck by a mysterious malfunction, they aren’t sure what’s programmed or what’s real. Written By: Chad Quandt Directed By: Andrew L. Schmidt
Episode 118 – “Mindwalk” (Thursday, December 15) Desperate to warn Starfleet of their dilemma, a daring experiment goes awry as Dal inadvertently swaps minds with a Starfleet Vice Admiral. Written By: Julie Benson, Shawna Benson Directed By: Sung Shin
Episode 119 – “Supernova, Part 1” (Thursday, December 22) Surrounded by the Federation armada, the crew attempts to stop their ship from destroying all of Starfleet. Written By: Erin McNamara Directed By: Andrew L. Schmidt
Episode 120 – “Supernova, Part 2” (Thursday, December 29) As the Federation hangs in the balance, the crew must make the ultimate sacrifice to save Starfleet’s future. Written By: Kevin & Dan Hageman Directed By: Ben Hibon

Episode Guide Descriptions from Paramount+ Press Site
Lower Decks Episodes

SEASON ONE
“Second Contact” S1 E1 Aug 05, 2020 Series premiere. Ensign Tendi has her first day of work on Starfleet’s U.S.S. Cerritos, where she meets fellow support crew members, Ensigns Mariner, Boimler and Rutherford. Meanwhile, Boimler is tasked with a secret special assignment and Rutherford attempts to keep his dating life intact while a sci-fi disaster strikes the ship.
“Envoys” S1 E2 Aug 12, 2020 After a high profile mission goes awry, Boimler is further plagued with self-doubt when Mariner proves herself to be a more naturally talented sci-fi badass than he. Rutherford quits his job in engineering and explores other departments on the U.S.S. Cerritos.
“Temporal Edict” S1 E3 Aug 19, 2020 A new work protocol eliminating “buffer time” has the Lower Decks crew running ragged as they try to keep up with their tightened schedules. Ensign Mariner and Commander Ransom’s mutual lack of respect comes to a head during an away mission.
“Moist Vessel” S1 E4 Aug 26, 2020 Captain Freeman seeks the ultimate payback after Mariner blatantly disrespects her in front of the crew. A well-meaning Tendi accidentally messes up a Lieutenant’s attempt at spiritual ascension and tries to make it right.
“Cupid’s Errant Arrow” S1 E5 Sep 02, 2020 Mariner is suspicious of Boimler’s new girlfriend. Tendi and Rutherford grow jealous of a bigger starship’s gear.
“Terminal Provocations” S1 E6 Sep 09, 2020 The lovable, but awkward, Ensign Fletcher makes work difficult for Mariner and Boimler. Rutherford introduces Tendi to a holodeck training program he created.
“Much Ado About Boimler” S1 E7 Sep 16, 2020 Mariner tries to impress her best friend from Starfleet Academy who is now a visiting Captain. Boimler is sent to a Starfleet medical ship after a transporter accident puts him “out of phase.”
“Veritas” S1 E8 Sep 23, 2020 Mariner, Boimler, Tendi, and Rutherford are caught off guard when aliens force them to testify about a series of seemingly unrelated events.
“Crisis Point” S1 E9 Sep 30, 2020 Mariner repurposes Boimler’s holodeck program to cast herself as the villain in a Lower Decks style movie.
“No Small Parts” S1 E10 Oct 07, 2020 Season finale. The U.S.S. Cerritos encounters a familiar enemy. Tendi helps a struggling recruit find her footing.
SEASON TWO
“Strange Energies” S2 E1 Aug 11, 2021 Season premiere. Approximately three months after the events of the season one finale, the U.S.S. Cerritos is dispatched on a mission which results in an encounter with “strange energy”.
“Kayshon, His Eyes Open” S2 E2 Aug 18, 2021 Our Lower Deckers have trouble bonding with Ensign Jet Manhaver, who has been assigned Boimler’s bunk and shift duties. Meanwhile, we get a glimpse of Boimler’s life on the U.S.S. Titan, which is more intense than he thought it would be.
“We’ll Always Have Tom Paris” S2 E3 Aug 25, 2021 Assigned a special task by Dr. T Ana, Tendi enlists Mariner for help. On the U.S.S. Cerritos, Rutherford is consumed by a bridge crew mystery.
“Mugato, Gumato” S2 E4 Sep 01, 2021 The U.S.S. Cerritos is dispatched to a planet to investigate an unexplained sighting of a dangerous Mugato.
“An Embarrassment of Dooplers” S2 E5 Sep 08, 2021 Mariner and Boimler try to track down the location of a legendary Starfleet party while the bridge crew deals with an insecure alien diplomat.
“The Spy Humongous” S2 E6 Sep 15, 2021 Anomaly consolidation day on the U.S.S. Cerritos leaves the Lower Deckers with mixed emotions. Captain Freeman attempts to negotiate peace on the Pakled home world.
“Where Pleasant Fountains Lie” S2 E7 Sep 22, 2021 Mariner and Boimler are stranded on an uninhabited planet with a sentient computer. On the Cerritos, Lt. Commander Billups must prove his engineering abilities to an old adversary.
“I, Excretus” S2 E8 Sep 29, 2021 A consultant arrives on the U.S.S. Cerritos to run drills that require the lower deckers and bridge crew to swap duties.
“wej Duj” S2 E9 Oct 06, 2021 Boimler tries to find a bridge buddy while the U.S.S. Cerritos crew has down time during a long warp trip.
“First Contact” S2 E10 Oct 13, 2021 In the season two finale, the U.S.S. Cerritos is tasked to aid an Excelsior-class starship on a first contact mission.
SEASON THREE
“Grounded” S3 E1 Aug 24, 2022 Mariner enlists her friends on a rogue mission to exonerate her mother, as Captain Freeman faces a military tribunal for the destruction of Pakled Planet.
“The Least Dangerous Game” S3 E2 Aug 31, 2022 On a tropical paradise planet, Mariner questions Commander Ransom on how he structures his away team. Boimler makes a bold career decision.
“Mining The Mind’s Mines” S3 E3 Sep 07, 2022 On a remote science outpost, stone orbs are bringing fantasies to life. Tendi starts her first day as a Senior Science Officer Trainee.
“Room For Growth” S3 E4 Sep 14, 2022 Mariner, Boimler and Tendi clash with their arch-rivals: Delta Shift. The Cerritos engineers go on mandatory relaxation leave.
“Reflections” S3 E5 Sep 21, 2022 Mariner and Boimler work the Starfleet recruitment booth at an alien job fair, Rutherford challenges himself.
“Hear All, Trust Nothing” S3 E6 Sep 28, 2022 The Cerritos crew unexpectedly spends a day on Deep Space Nine.
“A Mathematically Perfect Redemption” S3 E7 Oct 05, 2022 A wayward Starfleet ensign struggles to find a path to redemption.
“Crisis Point 2: Paradoxus” S3 E8 Oct 12, 2022 Boimler’s holodeck movie sequel tries to live up to the original.
“Trusted Sources” S3 E9 Oct 19, 2022 A visiting reporter on the Cerritos puts Captain Freeman on edge.
“The Stars at Night” S3 E10 Oct 26, 2022 In the season three finale, The Cerritos crew must prove their worth in a mission race.

Episode Guide Descriptions from Paramount+ Site
Star Trek: SNW Episodes

Episode 101: “Strange New Worlds” Thursday, May 5
Series premiere. When one of Pike’s officers goes missing while on a secret mission for Starfleet, Pike has to come out of self-imposed exile. He must navigate how to rescue his officer, while struggling with what to do with the vision of the future he’s been given. Teleplay by: Akiva Goldsman Story by: Akiva Goldsman, Alex Kurtzman, and Jenny Lumet Directed by: Akiva Goldsman
Episode 102: “Children of the Comet” Thursday, May 12
While on a survey mission, the U.S.S. Enterprise discovers a comet is going to strike an inhabited planet. They try to re-route the comet, only to find that an ancient alien relic buried on the comet’s icy surface is somehow stopping them. As the away team try to unlock the relic’s secrets, Pike and Number One deal with a group of zealots who want to prevent the U.S.S. Enterprise from interfering. Written by: Henry Alonso Myers & Sarah Tarkoff Directed by: Maja Vrvilo
Episode 103: “Ghosts of Illyria” Thursday, May 19
The U.S.S. Enterprise encounters a contagion that ravages the ship. One by one, the entire crew is incapacitated except for Number One, Una Chin-Riley, who must now confront a secret she’s been hiding as she races to find a cure. Written by: Akela Cooper & Bill Wolkoff Directed by: Leslie Hope
Episode 104: “Memento Mori” Thursday, May 26
While on a routine supply mission to a colony planet, the U.S.S. Enterprise comes under an attack from an unknown malevolent force. Pike brings all his heart and experience to bear in facing the crisis, but the security officer warns him that the enemy cannot be dealt with by conventional Starfleet means. Written by: Davy Perez & Beau DeMayo Directed by: Dan Liu
Episode 105: “Spock Amok” Thursday, June 2
It’s a comedy of manners when Spock has a personal visit in the middle of Spock and Captain Pike’s crucial negotiations with an unusual alien species. Written by: Henry Alonso Myers & Robin Wasserman Directed by: Rachel Leiterman
Episode 106: “Lift Us Where Suffering Cannot Reach” Thursday, June 9
A threat to an idyllic planet reunites Captain Pike with the lost love of his life. To protect her and a scientific holy child from a conspiracy, Pike offers his help and is forced to face unresolved feelings of his past. Written by Robin Wasserman & Bill Wolkoff Directed by: Andi Armaganian
Episode 107: “The Serene Squall” Thursday, June 16
While on a dangerous humanitarian mission, the crew of the U.S.S. Enterprise stumbles into a harrowing game of leverage with the quadrant’s deadliest space pirate. Written by: Beau DeMayo & Sarah Tarkoff Directed by: Sydney Freeland
Episode 108: “The Elysian Kingdom” Thursday, June 23
The U.S.S. Enterprise becomes stuck in a nebula that is home to an alien consciousness that traps the crew in a fairy tale. Written by: Akela Cooper & Onitra Johnson Directed by: Amanda Row
Episode 109: “All Those Who Wander” Thursday, June 30
The U.S.S. Enterprise crew comes face-to-face with their demons – and scary monsters too – when their landing party is stranded on a barren planet with a ravenous enemy. Written by: Davy Perez Directed by: Christopher J. Byrne
Episode 110: “A Quality of Mercy” Thursday, July 7
In the season one finale, just as Captain Pike thinks he’s figured out how to escape his fate, he’s visited by his future self, who shows him the consequences of his actions. Written by: Henry Alonso Myers & Akiva Goldsman Directed by: Chris Fisher
Episode 201: “The Broken Circle” Thursday, June 15
Season premiere. A distress call from Lt. Noonien-Singh compels Spock to disobey orders and take the U.S.S. Enterprise and its crew into disputed space, risking renewed hostilities with the Klingons in a bid to aid their shipmate. Written by Henry Alonso Myers & Akiva Goldsman Directed by Chris Fisher
Episode 202: “Ad Astra per Aspera” Thursday, June 22
Commander Una faces court-martial along with possible imprisonment and dishonorable dismissal from Starfleet, and her defense is in the hands of a lawyer who’s also a childhood friend with whom she had a terrible falling out. Written by Dana Horgan Directed by Valerie Weiss
Episode 203: “Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow” Thursday, June 29
La’An travels back in time to twenty-first-century Earth to prevent an attack which will alter humanity’s future history—and bring her face to face with her own contentious legacy. Written by David Reed Directed by Amanda Row
Episode 204: “Among the Lotus Eaters” – Thursday, July 6
Returning to a planet that dredges up tragic memories, Captain Pike and his landing party find themselves forgetting everything, including their own identities as he confronts a ghost from his past.
Written by Kirsten Beyer & Davy Perez Directed by Eduardo Sanchez
Episode 205: “Charades” – Thursday, July 13
A shuttle accident leads to Spock’s Vulcan DNA being removed by aliens, making him fully human and completely unprepared to face T’Pring’s family during an important ceremonial dinner.
Written by Kathryn Lyn & Henry Alonso Myers Directed by Jordan Canning
Episode 206: “Lost In Translation” – Thursday, July 20
Uhura seems to be the only one who can hear a strange sound. When the noise triggers terrifying hallucinations, she enlists an unlikely assistant to help her track down the source.
Written by Onitra Johnson & David Reed Directed by Dan Liu
Episode 207: “Those Old Scientists” – Saturday, July 22
An accident while investigating a time portal sends Ensign Brad Boimler through time from the twenty-fourth century, and Captain Pike and his crew must get him back where he belongs before he can somehow alter the timeline.
Written by Kathryn Lyn & Bill Wolkoff Directed by Jonathan Frakes
Episode 208: “Under the Cloak of War” – Thursday, July 27
Captain Pike and his crew welcome a Klingon defector aboard the U.S.S. Enterprise, but his presence triggers the revelation of some shocking secrets.
Written by Davy Perez Directed by Jeff Byrd
Episode 209: “Subspace Rhapsody” – Thursday, August 3
An accident with an experimental quantum probability field causes everyone on the U.S.S. Enterprise to break uncontrollably into song, but the real danger is that the field is expanding and beginning to impact other ships—allies and enemies alike.
Written by Dana Horgan & Bill Wolkoff Directed by Dermott Downs
Episode 210: “Hegemony” – Thursday, August 10 (Season Finale)
When the U.S.S. Enterprise investigates an attack on a colony at the edge of Federation space, Captain Pike and his crew face the return of a formidable enemy.
Written by Henry Alonso Myers Directed by Maja Vrvilo

Episode Guide Descriptions from Paramount+ Press Site
Picard Episodes

Episode 101: “Remembrance” (1/23/20)
At the end of the 24th Century, and 14 years after his retirement from Starfleet, Jean-Luc Picard (Sir Patrick Stewart) is living a quiet life on his vineyard, Chateau Picard. When he is sought out by a mysterious young woman, Dahj (Isa Briones), in need of his help, he soon realizes she may have personal connections to his own past. Teleplay by Akiva Goldsman and James Duff Story by Akiva Goldsman & Michael Chabon & Kirsten Beyer & Alex Kurtzman and James Duff. Directed by Hanelle M. Culpepper
Episode 102: “Maps and Legends” (1/30/20)
Picard begins investigating the mystery of Dahj as well as what her very existence means to the Federation. Without Starfleet’s support, Picard is left leaning on others for help, including Dr. Agnes Jurati (Alison Pill) and an estranged former colleague, Raffi Musiker (Michelle Hurd). Meanwhile, hidden enemies are also interested in where Picard’s search for the truth about Dahj will lead. Written by Michael Chabon & Akiva Goldsman Directed by Hanelle M. Culpepper
Episode 103: “The End Is The Beginning” (2/6/20)
Completely unaware of her special nature, Soji continues her work and captures the attention of the Borg cube research project’s executive director. After rehashing past events with a reluctant Raffi, Picard seeks others willing to join his search for Bruce Maddox, including pilot and former Starfleet officer Cristóbal Rios (Santiago Cabrera). Written by Michael Chabon & James Duff Directed by Hanelle M. Culpepper
Episode 104: “Absolute Candor” (2/13/20)
The crew’s journey to Freecloud takes a detour when Picard orders a stop at the planet Vashti, where Picard and Raffi relocated Romulan refugees 14 years earlier. Upon arrival, Picard reunites with Elnor (Evan Evagora), a young Romulan he befriended during the relocation. Meanwhile, Narek continues his attempts to learn more about Soji while Narissa’s impatience with his lack of progress grows. Written by Michael Chabon Directed by Jonathan Frakes
Episode 105: “Stardust City Rag” (2/20/20)
The La Sirena crew begin an unpredictable and lively expedition on Freecloud to search for Bruce Maddox. When they learn Maddox has found himself in a precarious situation, a familiar face offers her assistance. Written by Kirsten Beyer Directed by Jonathan Frakes
Episode 106: “The Impossible Box” (2/27/20)
Picard and the crew track Soji to the Borg cube in Romulan space, resurfacing haunting memories for Picard. Meanwhile, Narek believes he finally found a way to safely exploit Soji for information. Written by Nick Zayas Directed by Maja Vrvilo
Episode 107: “Nepenthe” (3/5/20)
Picard and Soji transport to the planet Nepenthe, home to some old and trusted friends. As the rest of the La Sirena crew attempt to join them, Picard helps Soji make sense of her recently unlocked memories. Meanwhile, Hugh and Elnor are left on the Borg cube and must face an angered Narissa. Written by Samantha Humphrey and Michael Chabon Directed by Doug Aarniokoski
Episode 108: “Broken Pieces” (3/12/20)
When devastating truths behind the Mars attack are revealed, Picard realizes just how far many will go to preserve secrets stretching back generations, all while the La Sirena crew grapples with secrets and revelations of their own. Narissa directs her guards to capture Elnor, setting off an unexpected chain of events on the Borg cube. Written by Michael Chabon Directed by Maja Vrvilo
Episode 109: “Et in Arcadia Ego, Part 1” (3/19/20)
Following an unconventional and dangerous transit, Picard and the crew finally arrive at Soji’s home world, Coppelius. However, with Romulan warbirds on their tail, their arrival brings only greater danger as the crew discovers more than expected about the planet’s inhabitants. Teleplay by Michael Chabon & Ayelet Waldman Story by Michael Chabon & Ayelet Waldman & Akiva Goldsman Directed by Akiva Goldsman
Episode 110: “Et in Arcadia Ego, Part 2” (3/26/20)
A final confrontation on the synthetics’ homeworld, Coppelius, pits Picard and his team against the Romulans, as well as the synths who seek to safeguard their existence at all costs. Teleplay by Michael Chabon Story by Michael Chabon & Akiva Goldsman Directed by Akiva Goldsman
Episode 201: “The Star Gazer” (Thursday, March 3rd)
Season premiere. Starfleet must once again call on legendary Jean-Luc Picard after members of his former crew – Cristóbal Rios, Seven of Nine, Raffi Musiker, and Dr. Agnes Jurati – discover an anomaly in space that threatens the galaxy. Written By: Akiva Goldsman & Terry Matalas Directed By: Doug Aarniokoski
Episode 202: “Penance” (Thursday, March 10th)
Picard finds himself transported to an alternate timeline in the year 2400 where his longtime nemesis, Q, has orchestrated one final “trial.” Picard searches for his trusted crew as he attempts to find the cause of this dystopian future. Teleplay By: Akiva Goldsman, Terry Matalas & Christopher MonfetteStory By: Akiva Goldsman, Terry Matalas & Christopher Monfette Directed By: Doug Aarniokoski
Episode 203: “Assimilation” (Thursday, March 17th)
Picard and the crew travel back to 2024 Los Angeles in search of the “Watcher,” who can help them identify the point at which time diverged. Seven, Raffi and Rios venture out into an unfamiliar world 400 years in their past, while Picard and Jurati attempt to gather information from an unlikely, and dangerous, ally. Written By: Kiley Rossetter & Christopher Monfette Directed By: Lea Thompson
Episode 204: “Watcher” (Thursday, March 24th)
With time running out to save the future, Picard takes matters into his own hands and seeks out an old friend for help. Meanwhile, Rios ends up on the wrong side of the law and Jurati makes a deal with the Borg Queen. Teleplay By: Juliana James & Jane Maggs Story By: Travis Fickett & Juliana James Directed By: Lea Thompson
Episode 205: “Fly Me to the Moon” (Thursday, March 31st)
Picard discovers an important person from his past may be integral to the divergence in the timeline. Q continues his manipulation of the timeline, taking an interest in Dr. Adam Soong. Seven and Raffi attempt a daring rescue of Rios, while Jurati faces the consequences of her deal with the Borg Queen. Written By: Cindy Appel Directed By: Jonathan Frakes
Episode 206: “Two of One” (Thursday, April 7th)
With the help of Tallinn, Picard and the crew infiltrate a gala on the eve of a joint space mission, to protect one of the astronauts they believe to be integral to the restoration of the timeline – Renee Picard. Kore makes a startling discovery about her father’s work. Written By: Cindy Appel & Jane Maggs Directed By: Jonathan Frakes
Episode 207: “Monsters” (Thursday, April 14th)
Tallinn ventures inside Picard’s subconscious mind to help wake him from a coma and face both his darkest secrets and deepest fears. Seven and Raffi go in search of Jurati whom they fear has succumbed to the monster inside. Rios struggles to hide the truth of who he really is from Teresa. Written By: Jane Maggs Directed By: Joe Menendez
Episode 208: “Mercy” (Thursday, April 21st)
With time running out before the launch of the Europa Mission, Picard and Guinan must free themselves from FBI custody. Seven and Raffi come face-to-face with Jurati and the horror of what she’s become. Written By: Cindy Appel & Kirsten Beyer Directed By: Joe Menendez
Episode 209: “Hide and Seek” (Thursday, April 28th)
Picard and his crew fight for their lives as they come under attack from a new incarnation of an old enemy. But to survive, Picard must first face the ghosts of his past. Seven and Raffi have a final showdown with Jurati.
Episode 210: “Farewell” (Thursday, May 5th)
In the season two finale, with just hours until the Europa Launch, Picard and the crew find themselves in a race against time to save the future. Written By: Christopher Monfette & Akiva Goldsman Directed By: Michael Weaver
301 – THE NEXT GENERATION (Thursday, February 16, 2023)
After receiving a cryptic, urgent distress call from Dr. Beverly Crusher, Admiral Jean-Luc Picard enlists help from generations old and new to embark on one final adventure: a daring mission that will change Starfleet, and his old crew forever. Directed by: Doug Aarniokoski Written by: Terry Matalas
302 – DISENGAGE (Thursday, February 23, 2023)
Aided by Seven of Nine and the crew of the U.S.S. Titan, Picard makes a shocking discovery that will alter his life forever – and puts him on a collision course with the most cunning enemy he’s ever encountered. Meanwhile, Raffi races to track a catastrophic weapon – and collides with a familiar ally. Directed by: Doug Aarniokoski Written by: Christopher Monfette & Sean Tretta
303 – SEVENTEEN SECONDS (Thursday, March 2, 2023)
Picard grapples with an explosive, life-altering revelation, while the Titan and her crew try to outmaneuver a relentless Vadic in a lethal game of nautical cat and mouse. Meanwhile, Raffi and Worf uncover a nefarious plot from a vengeful enemy Starfleet has long since forgotten. Directed by: Jonathan Frakes Written by: Jane Maggs & Cindy Appel
304 – NO WIN SCENARIO (Thursday, March 9, 2023)
With time running out, Picard, Riker and crew must confront the sins of their past and heal fresh wounds, while the Titan, dead in the water, drifts helplessly toward certain destruction within a mysterious space anomaly. Directed by: Jonathan Frakes Written by: Terry Matalas & Sean Tretta
305 – IMPOSTERS (Thursday, March 16, 2023)
Caught by Starfleet and facing court martial, paranoia grows as Picard struggles to uncover whether a prodigal crewman from his past has returned as an ally – or an enemy hellbent on destroying them all. Directed by: Dan Liu Written by: Cindy Appel & Chris Derrick
306 – THE BOUNTY (Thursday, March 23, 2023)
Now on the run, Picard and the skeleton crew of the U.S.S. Titan must break into Starfleet’s most top-secret facility to expose a plot that could destroy the Federation. Picard must turn to the only soul in the galaxy who can help – an old friend. Directed by: Dan Liu Written by: Christopher Monfette
307 – DOMINION (Thursday, March 30, 2023)
Crippled, cornered, and out of options, Picard stages a gambit to trap Vadic and reveal her true motive – a gamble that puts the Titan in the crosshairs and forces Picard and Beverly to question every moral code they’ve ever held. Directed by: Deborah Kampmeier Written by: Jane Maggs
308 – SURRENDER (Thursday, April 6, 2023)
Vadic forces Picard to make an impossible choice: deliver what he can never give… or watch his crew perish. Their only salvation lies in the mind of an old friend and old foe. Directed by: Deborah Kampmeier Written by: Matt Okumura
309 – VOX (Thursday, April 13, 2023)
A devastating revelation about Jack alters the course of Picard’s life forever – and uncovers a truth that threatens every soul in the Federation. The final battle begins as Picard and his crew race to save the galaxy from annihilation – but not without a gut-wrenching cost. Directed by: Terry Matalas Written by: Sean Tretta & Kiley Rossetter
310 – THE LAST GENERATION (Thursday, April 20, 2023)
In a desperate last stand, Jean-Luc Picard and generations of crews both old and new fight together to save the galaxy from the greatest threat they’ve ever faced as the saga of Star Trek: The Next Generation comes to a thrilling, epic conclusion. Directed & Written by: Terry Matalas

Episode Guide Descriptions from Paramount+ Press Site
Star Trek: The Next Generation Episode Guide
Star Trek Disco Episodes

Episode 101: “The Vulcan Hello” (9/24/17)
Series premiere. While patrolling Federation space, the U.S.S. Shenzhou encounters an object of unknown origin, putting First Officer Michael Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green) to her greatest test yet. Starring Sonequa Martin-Green, Michelle Yeoh and Doug Jones.
Episode 102: “Battle at the Binary Stars” (9/24/17)
Face to face with Klingon vessels, the U.S.S. Shenzhou prepares for the possibility of war if negotiations fail. Amidst the turmoil, Burnham looks back to her Vulcan upbringing for guidance. Starring Sonequa Martin-Green, Michelle Yeoh and Doug Jones.
Episode 103: “Context Is For Kings” (10/1/17)
Burnham finds herself aboard the U.S.S. Discovery where she quickly realizes things are not as they seem, including the mysterious Captain Gabriel Lorca (Jason Isaacs). Starring Sonequa Martin-Green and Jason Isaacs.
Episode 104: “The Butcher’s Knife Cares Not for the Lamb’s Cry” (10/8/17)
With tensions and stakes high as Starfleet continues in their efforts to end the war with Klingons, Burnham begins to settle in to her new position aboard the U.S.S. Discovery. Starring Sonequa Martin-Green, Jason Isaacs, Doug Jones, Anthony Rapp and Mary Wiseman.
Episode 105: “Choose Your Pain” (10/15/17)
While on a mission, Lorca unexpectedly finds himself in the company of prisoner of war, Starfleet Lieutenant Ash Tyler (Shazad Latif) and notorious intergalactic criminal, Harry Mudd (Rainn Wilson). Burnham voices her concerns about the repercussions of the spore drive jumps on “Ripper”. Starring Sonequa Martin-Green, Jason Isaacs, Doug Jones, Anthony Rapp, Mary Wiseman and Shazad Latif. Guest starring Rainn Wilson.
Episode 106: “Lethe” (10/22/17)
The U.S.S. Discovery crew is intrigued by new addition, Lt. Ash Tyler. Sarek seeks Burnham’s help, rekindling memories from her past. Admiral Cornwell questions Lorca’s tactics. Starring Sonequa Martin-Green, Jason Isaacs, Doug Jones, Anthony Rapp, Mary Wiseman and Shazad Latif.
Episode 107: “Magic to Make the Sanest Man Go Mad” (10/29/17)
As the U.S.S. Discovery crew attempts to let loose at a party, an unwelcome visitor comes aboard bringing about a problematic and twisted sequence of events. Starring Sonequa Martin-Green, Jason Isaacs, Doug Jones, Anthony Rapp, Mary Wiseman and Shazad Latif.
Episode 108: “Si Vis Pacem, Para Bellum” (11/5/17)
The U.S.S. Discovery is tasked with a high-priority mission to planet Pahvo and learn the science behind the Klingon’s cloaking technology. Starring Sonequa Martin-Green, Jason Isaacs, Doug Jones, Anthony Rapp, Mary Wiseman and Shazad Latif.
Episode 109: “Into The Forest I Go” (11/12/17)
Bypassing Starfleet’s orders, Lorca uses the U.S.S. Discovery crew’s ultimate asset, the ship itself, in an effort to end the war with the Klingons once and for all in the Chapter 1 Fall Finale. Starring Sonequa Martin-Green, Jason Isaacs, Doug Jones, Anthony Rapp, Mary Wiseman and Shazad Latif.
Episode 110: “Despite Yourself” (1/8/18)
While in unfamiliar territory, the U.S.S. Discovery crew is forced to get creative in their next efforts to survive opposing and unprecedented forces and return home.
Episode 111: “The Wolf Inside” (1/14/18)
As the crew continues their guise, Burnham undergoes a merciless mission in hopes of helping the U.S.S. Discovery return home. Tilly works on restoring Stamets’ neurofunction.
Episode 112: “Vaulting Ambition” (1/21/18)
Burnham heads to the ISS Charon with a special “gift” for the Emperor. With the help of an unexpected source, Stamets gains clarity while trapped inside the mycelial network. Saru asks for L’Rell’s help.
Episode 113: “What’s Past Is Prologue” (1/28/18)
Lorca plans to move forward with a coup against the Emperor, propelling Burnham to make a quick decision to save not only herself, but the U.S.S. Discovery.
Episode 114: “The War Without, the War Within” (2/4/18)
Back on the U.S.S. Discovery, Burnham and the crew are faced with the harsh reality of the war during their absence. In order to move forward, Starfleet must use unconventional tactics and sources to take their next action against the Klingons.
Episode 115: “Will You Take My Hand?” (2/11/18)
Season one finale. With Georgiou at the helm of the plan to end the Klingon war once and for all, the U.S.S. Discovery crew struggles to fathom and tolerate her hostile tactics. Memories of past hardships are rekindled within Burnham.
Episode 201: “Brother” (1/17/19)
Season premiere. After answering a distress signal from the U.S.S. Enterprise, the U.S.S. Discovery welcomes aboard Captain Christopher Pike (Anson Mount) and begins a new mission to investigate the meaning behind seven mysterious red signals. Michael Burnham grapples with her past growing up on Vulcan with her foster parents and brother Spock.
Episode 202: “New Eden” (1/24/19)
A new signal appears, prompting Stamets’ emotional return to the mycelial network and leading Burnham, Pike and Owosekun to a pre-warp planet, where they face a complex ethical dilemma. Tilly’s over-eagerness lands her in trouble but when the planet – and Discovery’s landing party – are threatened, her curiosity may be the one thing that can save them.
Episode 203: “Point of Light”(1/31/19)
A surprise visitor to the U.S.S. Discovery brings shocking news about Spock and dredges up past regrets for Burnham. Following the asteroid incident, Tilly struggles to keep a grip on her reality. L’Rell’s authority on Qo’noS is threatened.
Episode 204: “An Obol For Charon” (2/7/19)
A mysterious sphere threatens the U.S.S. Discovery even as May, in her original form, implements a plan that puts Tilly’s life in danger. Saru and Burnham’s bond grows when Saru is forced to acknowledge a deeply unsettling Kelpien truth. Pike receives new intel on Spock from a loyal friend.
Episode 205: “Saints of Imperfection” (2/14/19)
Burnham and the crew navigate a dangerous alien landscape in a race against time to save Tilly’s life, but Stamets is not at all prepared for what they find in the process. Section 31 is assigned to help track down Spock, much to Pike’s dismay.
Episode 206: “The Sound of Thunder” (2/21/19)
When a new signal appears over Saru’s home planet, Burnham, Saru and the crew embark on a perilous mission that puts Saru in danger and raises questions about the Red Angel’s intentions. Hugh struggles to come to terms with his new reality.
Episode 207: “Light and Shadows” (2/28/19)
Burnham goes to Vulcan in search of Spock, where she unearths surprising family secrets. In researching what is left of the Red Angel’s signal over Kaminar, Pike and Tyler end up in battle with time itself. Georgiou has a few tricks up her sleeve for Leland and Section 31.
Episode 208: “If Memory Serves” (3/7/19)
Spock and Burnham head to Talos IV, where the process of healing Spock forces the siblings to confront their troubled past. Stamets desperately tries to reconnect with an increasingly disconnected Hugh, while Tyler struggles to shed the crew’s suspicions of him due to his past as Voq.
Episode 209: “Project Daedalus”(3/14/19)
When the Discovery crew infiltrates Section 31’s headquarters, suspicions arise that the crew may have a traitor in their midst. Burnham tries to help Spock but her efforts don’t go as planned.
Episode 210 “The Red Angel” (3/21/19)
Burnham is stunned when she learns her ties to Section 31 run deeper than she ever fathomed. Armed with the identity of the Red Angel, the U.S.S. Discovery goes to work on its most critical mission to date.
Episode 211: “Perpetual Infinity” (3/28/19)
Burnham receives the reunion she’s been longing for, but it doesn’t go quite as she imagined. Georgiou and Tyler sense a disturbing change in Leland.
Episode 212: “Through the Valley of Shadows” (4/4/19)
A fourth signal leads the U.S.S. Discovery to an insular world, where Pike is forced to make a life-changing choice. Burnham and Spock investigate a Section 31 ship gone rogue, leading to a discovery with catastrophic consequences.
Episode 213: “Such Sweet Sorrow” (4/11/19)
When the U.S.S. Discovery’s crucial mission does not go according to plan, Burnham realizes what must ultimately be done. The crew prepares for the battle of a lifetime as Leland’s Control ships get closer.
Episode 214: “Such Sweet Sorrow, Part 2” (4/18/19)
Season two finale. The U.S.S. Discovery battles against Control in a fight not only for their lives but for the future, with a little help from some unexpected friends. Spock and Burnham discern vital new connections between the red signals while Burnham faces one of life’s harshest truths: the right decisions are often the hardest to make.
Episode 301: “That Hope is You, Part 1” (on Thursday, October 15th)
Arriving 930 years in the future, Burnham navigates a galaxy she no longer recognizes while searching for the rest of the U.S.S. Discovery crew. Written by: Michelle Paradise & Jenny Lumet & Alex Kurtzman Directed by: Olatunde Osunsanmi
Episode 302: “Far From Home” (on Thursday, October 22nd)
After the U.S.S. Discovery crash-lands on a strange planet, the crew finds themselves racing against time to repair their ship. Meanwhile, Saru and Tilly embark on a perilous first-contact mission in hopes of finding Burnham. Written by: Michelle Paradise & Jenny Lumet & Alex Kurtzman Directed by: Olatunde Osunsanmi
Episode 303: “People of Earth” (on Thursday, October 29th)
Finally reunited, Burnham and the U.S.S. Discovery crew journey to Earth, eager to learn what happened to the Federation in their absence. Written by: Bo Yeon Kim & Erika Lippoldt Directed by: Jonathan Frakes
Episode 304: “Forget Me Not” (on Thursday, November 5th)
Burnham and Adira visit the Trill homeworld in hopes of unlocking the secrets trapped within Adira’s mind. Back on the U.S.S. Discovery, Saru’s efforts to help the crew reconnect with one another take a surprising turn. Written by: Alan McElroy & Chris Silvestri & Anthony Maranville Directed by: Hanelle M. Culpepper
Episode 305: “Die Trying” (on Thursday, November 12th)
After reuniting with what remains of Starfleet and the Federation, the U.S.S. Discovery and its crew must prove that a 930 year old crew and starship are exactly what this new future needs. Teleplay by: Sean Cochran Story by: James Duff & Sean Cochran Directed by: Maja Vrvilo
Episode 306: “Scavengers” (on Thursday, November 19th)
After receiving a message from Book, Burnham and Georgiou embark on a rogue mission to find him, leaving Saru to pick up the pieces with Admiral Vance. Meanwhile, Stamets forms an unexpected bond with Adira. Written by: Anne Cofell Saunders Directed by: Doug Aarniokoski
Episode 307: “Unification III” (on Thursday, November 26th)
While grappling with the fallout of her recent actions, and what her future might hold, Burnham agrees to represent the Federation in an intense debate about the release of politically sensitive – but highly valuable – Burn data. Written by: Kirsten Beyer Directed by: Jon Dudkowski
Episode 308: “The Sanctuary” (on December 3rd)
Burnham and the U.S.S. Discovery crew travel to Book’s home planet to help rescue it from Osyraa, the formidable leader of the Emerald Chain. Meanwhile, Stamets and Adira continue their search for valuable information on the origin of the Burn. Written by: Kenneth Lin & Brandon Schultz Directed by: Jonathan Frakes
Episode 309: “Terra Firma, Part 1” (on Thursday, December 10th)
The U.S.S. Discovery crew journey to a mysterious planet in hopes of finding a cure for Georgiou’s deteriorating condition. Stamets and Adira make a stunning breakthrough with the newly acquired Burn data. Teleplay by: Alan McElroy Story by: Bo Yeon Kim & Erika Lippoldt & Alan McElroy Directed by: Omar Madha
Episode 401: “Kobayashi Maru” (Thursday, November 18th)
After months spent reconnecting the Federation with distant worlds, Captain Michael Burnham and the crew of the U.S.S. Discovery are sent to assist a damaged space station – a seemingly routine mission that reveals the existence of a terrifying new threat. Written by: Michelle Paradise & Jenny Lumet & Alex Kurtzman Directed by: Olatunde Osunsanmi
Episode 402: “Anomaly” (Thursday, November 25th)
Saru returns to help the U.S.S. Discovery uncover the mystery of an unusually destructive new force. As Burnham leads the crew, she must also find a way to help Book cope with an unimaginable loss. Written by: Anne Cofell Saunders & Glenise Mullins Directed by: Olatunde Osunsanmi
Episode 403: “Choose to Live” (Thursday, December 2nd)
Burnham and Tilly hunt the killer of a Starfleet officer as Stamets and the science team race against the clock to prevent the anomaly from killing anyone else. Written by: Terri Hughes Burton Directed by: Christopher J. Byrne
Episode 404: “All Is Possible” (Thursday, December 9th)
Tilly and Adira lead a team of Starfleet Academy cadets on a training mission that takes a dangerous turn. Meanwhile, Burnham is pulled into tense negotiations on Ni’Var. Written by: Alan McElroy & Eric J. Robbins Directed by: John Ottman
Episode 405: “The Examples” (Thursday, December 16th)
Burnham and Book race to evacuate a group of stranded colonists in the anomaly’s path as one of the Federation’s brightest scientists comes aboard the U.S.S. Discovery to do high-stakes research with Saru and Stamets. Written by Kyle Jarrow Directed by Lee Rose
Episode 406: “Stormy Weather” (Thursday, December 23rd)
Seeking answers, the U.S.S. Discovery ventures into a subspace rift created by the Dark Matter Anomaly. Meanwhile, Book faces a strange visitor from his past. Written by: Anne Cofell Saunders & Brandon Schultz Directed by: Jonathan Frakes
Episode 407: “…But to Connect” (Thursday, December 30th)
Tensions rise as representatives from across the galaxy gather to confront the threat of the Dark Matter Anomaly. Zora’s new sentience raises difficult questions. Written by: Terri Hughes Burton & Carlos Cisco Directed by: Lee Rose
Episode 408: “All In” (Thursday, February 10th)
Following a hunch, Captain Burnham tracks Book to an old haunt from their courier days and gets drawn into a high-stakes competition for a powerful weapon. Written by: Sean Cochran Directed by: Christopher J. Byrne & Jen McGowan
Episode 409: “Rubicon” (Thursday, February 17th)
Captain Burnham and the U.S.S. Discovery race to stop Book and Ruon Tarka from launching a rogue plan that could inadvertently endanger the galaxy. Written by: Alan McElroy Directed by: Andi Armaganian
Episode 410: “The Galactic Barrier” (Thursday, February 24th)
Captain Burnham and her crew must go where few have gone before: beyond the Galactic Barrier. Meanwhile, Book learns the truth of what drives Ruon Tarka. Written by: Anne Cofell Saunders Directed by: Deborah Kampmeier
Episode 411: “Rosetta” (Thursday, March 3rd)
While Captain Burnham leads an away mission to a planet that was once home to the aliens responsible for the DMA, Book and Tarka secretly infiltrate the U.S.S. Discovery. Written by: Terri Hughes Burton Directed by: Jeff Byrd
Episode 412: “Species Ten-C” (Thursday, March 10th)
As the DMA approaches Earth and Ni’Var, Captain Burnham and the crew of the U.S.S. Discovery attempt to make First Contact with the powerful species responsible before it’s too late. Written by: Kyle Jarrow Directed by: Olatunde Osunsanmi
Episode 413: “Coming Home” (Thursday, March 17th)
In the season four finale, the DMA approaches Earth and Ni’Var. With evacuations underway, Burnham and the team aboard the U.S.S. Discovery must find a way to communicate and connect with a species far different from their own before time runs out. Written by: Michelle Paradise Directed by: Olatunde Osunsanmi

Episode Guide Descriptions from Paramount+ Press Site
Voyager Episodes

First Season – Second Season – Third Season – Fourth Season – Fifth Season – Sixth Season – Seventh Season
Back to top

Episode Titles from Epguides.com
Enterprise Episodes

Set in the 22nd century, a hundred years before James T. Kirk helmed the famous starship of the same name, ENTERPRISE takes place in an era when interstellar travel is still in its infancy. Captain Jonathan Archer (Scott Bakula) has assembled a crew of brave explorers to chart the galaxy on a revolutionary spacecraft: Enterprise NX-01. As the first human beings to venture into deep space, these pioneers will experience the wonder and mystery of the final frontier as they seek out new life and new civilizations. (from the press release for the series)
First Season – Second Season – Third Season – Fourth Season
Season 2 begins with Captain Archer and Daniels stranded in the 31st Century. We soon learn about the first ever contact between Vulcans and Humans. Later, the Enterprise finds itself in a cloaked minefield, radiation threatens everyone on board, the Enterprise gets held captive and much more.
Season 3 sees more drama on the Enterprise which includes: Captain Archer, Reed and Sato turned into aliens, Hoshi Sato being contacted by a 400-year-old telepathic alien, Archer and T’Pol travel back in time to stop three Xindi reptilians, the Enterpise taken over again, this time by religious zealots and much more.
In the final series, we begin with the Enterprise appearing to travel back in time to World War 2. Later, the Enterpise searches for a suspected bomber who took out Earth’s embassy on Vulcan so T’Pol and Captain Archer head off in search of the Syrranites.

Episode Descriptions from TV Guide
DS9 Episodes

First Season | Second Season | Third Season | Fourth Season | Fifth Season | Sixth Season | Seventh Season

Star Trek: Next Gen Episodes

First Season – Second Season – Third Season – Fourth Season – Fifth Season – Sixth Season – Seventh Season – Movies
From Jeff: Movies featuring the TNG cast
“Star Trek: Generations” Picard and his crew fight against a crazy scientist name Soran who is trying to get the Nexus by destroying stars. Picard, trapped in the Nexus with Soran, gets the presumed-dead Captain Kirk to help him go back in time and stop Soran.
“Star Trek: First Contact” While defending Earth from the Borg, the Enterprise goes back in time to keep them from interfering with the first time the Vulcans landed (to make first contact), in order to change history and take over the Earth when its more vulnerable.
“Star Trek: Insurrection” While helping to rescue Data, who malfunctioned while observing inhabitants of a peaceful planet, Picard uncovers a plot from some top Federation officers (and some neighboring aliens) to force them off the planet and mine it for its fountain of youth qualities (thus destroying the planet).
“Star Trek: Nemesis” Riker and Troi are married, and an earlier version of Data, B-4, is discovered. Dying Romulan rebel Shinzon, a young clone of Picard, tries to kidnap Picard and use his blood to save his life as well as destroy life on Earth.


Interview with Idris Elba, Archie Panjabi and Max Beesley in “Hijack” on Apple TV+ by Suzanne 6/26/23
This was an early-morning press conference in London that I watched on Zoom. The host took questions from us ahead of time, as well as from the audience. This is a great show that you won’t want to miss, particularly if you love high-stakes drama and action. It was great to watch their chat.
[CHATTER]
[MUSIC STARTS]
Kate Quilton (Moderator): Thank you so much for joining us today. I’ve got to say, I think Hijack might actually be my new favourite show. I don’t know about you guys, but I guess there might be a few fans out there that binged it like I did – oh, yes! We’ve got a round of applause already, isn’t it brilliant? Ok, well, let’s get our glittering cast and creatives out. First up, Idris Elba [AUDIENCE APPLAUSE]; Idris plays Sam Nelson, and he’s executive producer; this is George Kay, writer and executive producer; here we have Archie Panjabi, who plays Zahar Gahfoor; Max Beesley, who plays Daniel O’Farrel; and then we have Jim Field Smith, director and executive producer [ALL APPLAUSE]. Wow. Thank you so much. I mean, I literally think this stage is bowing under the weight of the talented accolades, really. I mean, you guys are a stella team, isn’t it, you are a force, absolute force. So, firstly, I just want to you, you play Sam Nelson, when did you first know, you were going to play Sam?
Idris Elba: Hi everyone, how you doing? Nice to see you all, thanks for coming.
Kate Quilton (Moderator): What happened? How did the script land on you? Was it a conversation with George?
Idris Elba: It was some… made in an alignment of timings. And I think, you know, the idea came… George had the idea and was rearing that, at the same junction I was looking at, you know, Apple and I had a deal that were trying to figure out what we were going to do together, and this came as just an idea from George and then became, you know, the story beats and then the scripts. So… But I knew really much very early when I sat with George and talked about what were trying to achieve and what, you know, the story and the perspective of this story. For me, as a producer and a talent, I was sort of interesting in doing something that, you know, hit the mark in television. I love television, I love making television, I have done for years. I play in the film space as well and I think the- the sort of merger between film and what is film and what is television has gotten smaller, that sort of line. And- and working with George was just like… it was a joy. I was a fan of his work and wanted to make that happen.
Kate Quilton (Moderator): Brilliant. Brilliant. I mean, Sam certainly stayed with me. I’ve got to say, like, you know, even that opening shot, it’s almost… the way you’re talking about the crossover between TV and film, it is filmic. I’ve never seen a travelator look so sexy in my life [ALL LAUGH]. Do you know what I mean? And the lens flare and the sun. And I love that motif that we see throughout, which is kind of, you know, you being backlit looking angelic and heroic, which actually brings me, really, I guess to the cinematography, and Jim, at the end.
Jim Field Smith: I thought you were going to say it brings you to Max Beesley.
[ALL LAUGH]
Kate Quilton (Moderator): From angel to another [LAUGHS]. But it is, it is exquisite, I mean, how it’s shot; can you tell us a little bit about how you settled on shooting style and the look and feel of it?
Jim Field Smith: Well obviously, we spent most of our time trying to make Idris look presentable, which is tough…
Kate Quilton (Moderator): Tough gig [LAUGHS].
Jim Field Smith: The biggest thing for us, I suppose, was we’ve got a show that’s set almost exclusively inside of an airplane. And there’s two problems with that, one is to make it engaging dramatically and not make it feel dull and flat, and the other thing is to make it feel like you are actually in an airplane that’s moving through the sky. So, it was sort of definitely very, very challenging, but we had a very talented team that figured out how to solve both of those issues. And I sort of heaped problem on top of problem by saying, you know, we didn’t really want to break this place apart, we wanted to move around the plane and never break through the skin of it, and we didn’t… I didn’t want the thing you sometimes see on screen where everything gets scaled up, we actually… the plane you see in the show is a millimetre for millimetre replication of a- of an airliner. So, we sort of made it as hard for ourselves as we possibly could and hope that translates onto screen into something that feels really convincing, but at the same time, yeah, try to make it look as engaging and sort of pull you into the drama as much as possible.
Kate Quilton (Moderator): Mhm. I mean, that must have been challenging. I mean, how many people were on that plane? I mean, obviously we have the two hundred passengers, plus crew…
Jim Field Smith: Well, as many as you see… As many as you see, plus some of them behind the camera, yeah. So, that was sort of everybody boarding a long-haul flight every single day for a hundred twenty days.
Kate Quilton (Moderator): [GASPS]
Idris Elba: In the middle of summer with no AC.
Jim Field Smith: In the middle of summer, yeah.
Kate Quilton (Moderator): How was that for you? I mean, you must be…
Idris Elba: It was great I…
Kate Quilton (Moderator): 6’ 3” ish?
Idris Elba: Yeah [LAUGHS].
Jim Field Smith: He’s been wearing shorts ever since.
Idris Elba: 6’ 3”, but luckily the first-class cabin had the extra legroom.
Kate Quilton (Moderator): Oh, ok. I guess you spent maybe half your time there and half at the back…
Idris Elba: Yeah, some of it in the back, yeah. But actually, you know, I think the- the fact that we didn’t break the
plane apart and make… you know, this is a real plane, just in a studio, and the- the- the confinement of that just really applied to the drama. Even for the crew, you know, figuring out how we’re going to do this top shot without being able to take the roof off was about trying to figure out how to do that. And, you know, it all sort of led into the claustrophobia of it, so the crew, the actors, you know, everyone was sort of tight, and we’re… it was almost like watching a documentary being made while being in the documentary, you know.
Jim Field Smith: It meant we could keep going more, you know, it meant that we could stay in the moment and let the scene play out more, which, you know, when you’re dealing with a hijacking it’s about people reacting and trying to figure out live, you know, how to get through the next second, how to get through the next minutes. And so, we were able to bring some of that into the actual making of it, you know, we used a lot of unbroken shots, we moved often with Sam’s character… with Idris’ character, Sam, we’re moving with him through the plane. So, we did a lot of that for real, you know. And there was a lot of like, you know, literally people having to hand the camera to each other and stuff like that. But, again, that was, as Idris says, that was all about wanting to feel engaged in the drama of it and not feel like it was artifice or that it was… we were sort of sitting aback and watching it from afar, I wanted it to feel like you’re in that hijack.
Kate Quilton (Moderator): Yeah, which you certainly do. I mean, you feel it, it’s a ride, you know what I mean? George, I want to ask you – George is the writer of the project – how did it come about? I mean, where did the… what was the genesis of the idea?
George Kay: I was on a train, actually – I was on the Eurostar, I was doing a lot of work in France – and we were in the Eurostar tunnel and the train stops quite abruptly. And even though I knew everything was alright, it flashed through my mind, what if there’s something going on, on this train? What if it’s happening up the carriages? And I looked around me at the people, the kind of businessman eating his lunch, and the squabbling family, and I thought like, how would we cope as a group of people if this was a serious incident? Would the tough looking guy really be tough, would the kind of the weedy guy really rise up and actually cover himself in glory and manage to stand up to people. Who are these people really when you look past them as- as- as… you get past your prejudice of those people and how they look. And it kind of put me in mind of blitz spirit and like when the chips are down, how does the British or an international community cope when suddenly thrust into kind of extremes. Then the thought of a plane was much more of a visual, you know, we could really open it up…
Kate Quilton (Moderator): High stakes.
George Kay: High stakes. Also, like a moving society, you know, we’ve got a class system on a plane, you’ve got all sorts of people. But as all the characters experience, whether they’re on the ground or in the plane, that hijacking is a great leveller for all these people and so they really get tested, no matter what their rank, no matter what their class seat they’re sitting on a plane, so it felt like a good setting to take it to a plane.
Idris Elba: So, you’re saying that I’m the weedy guy [ALL LAUGH]. So, that’s what’s really going on here, I didn’t see that.
George Kay: You’re the business guy eating his lunch. On a serious point, what was great was that when Idris came on board to play Sam, we all have our understanding of Idris as an actor and his like… and it’s great to give a role that, I think, that’s kind of a… he doesn’t have those skills of a Royal Marine or an SAS soldier or stuff, he’s really… as a character…
Kate Quilton (Moderator): But he does in a real life…
George Kay: But he looks like he might. He looks like he might, right, yeah [LAUGHS]. So, it’s quite fun to play with what the hijackers thought… think of Sam Nelson, and what Sam Nelson thinks they think of Sam Nelson. Those are fun layers to exploit.
Kate Quilton (Moderator): Yeah. Now, Archie and Max, together, you’re part of the ground force, what’s happening on the ground?
Max Beesley: After you, Archie.
Archie Panjabi: So, yeah, so I am the… Gosh, I was so interested in hearing how it all came about, I completely lost my words [ALL LAUGH]. Zahar’s character first learns about the hijacking and gets together all the authorities and starts a big investigation. We were in a room that… not as narrow as the aircraft, but it was still… it was probably about three times the size of the stage, and the room just got bigger and bigger as it became more tense. Those were stressful scenes though, we all had to stay in one position, we couldn’t move because of the number people in the room, we were watching the monitor with like a dart, which was the aircraft, and really like intense scenes.
Kate Quilton (Moderator): Who had it worse?
Archie Panjabi: Sorry?
Kate Quilton (Moderator): Nobody knows who had it worse [LAUGHS].
Archie Panjabi: Yeah, well, I think we did because he was in business class with his feet… first class?
Kate Quilton (Moderator): First.
Archie Panjabi: He was in first. We were kind of packed like sardines too. But we did have, you know, I was telling Idris earlier, we did have a good laugh on the show. It was intense, right, Jim? We had a lot of fun on the show.
Kate Quilton (Moderator): So, when the script first landed with you, did you know immediately, yes, I want to play Zahar?
Archie Panjabi: Well, when I first read it, I think I was sent three and I couldn’t put it down. And then, by the end of the third one, I wanted to know if my character had [LAUGHS] successfully saved the passengers, so I phoned up my agent and said, “I need to read four to seven”, and she said [LAUGHS] so selfish of me. But she said, “do you not want to do it?”, I said “no, I’d love to do it. I just need to know what happens to the passengers” And that’s when I thought this is a brilliant script, it’s really thrilling, it’s going to have audiences at the edge of their seat, so. And Idris was in it, of course, and Max and Jim and [LAUGHS].
Kate Quilton (Moderator): I’ve just been handed a message, which, shall I read this out? Thank you. Ok, thanks, Ernie. Please remind press here in the screening room that while photos are ok, please do not video tape the press conference, thanks, Ernie. Running in a rule! Thank you. So, no videos but photos are great. So, sorry. Sorry to interrupt! [LAUGHS]. Brilliant, so, Max, I think you have maybe one of the best entrances possible, you know, just that killer reveal at the beginning of the episode where you literally just roll into frame and it’s… it’s a couple of seconds but we learn so much. In terms of storytelling, it is brilliant. I mean, for you, when you first read the script, did you think, ok, I’m in, this is brilliant?
Max Beesley: Well, I… Interestingly enough, Idris is very kind enough to suggest me for the role to the producers, which was lovely, and then- and then when I got the scripts, the first thing I always look at is who’s written it, because I write myself and I love… I like good writing. And I saw it was George, and then Jim as a director, and I’d seen Criminal, and what I loved about that show was it was compelling. It was in such small, confined spaces yet there was so much going on within the stillness, if that makes sense, and I thought it was really clever television that they’d both created. And so, immediately, I was like great, let’s go. And also, I wanted to work with Idris. I didn’t realise that he’d be thirty thousand feet up in the air and I’d be running around the ground trying to find out what was going on, you know, but…
Kate Quilton (Moderator): Did you ever see each other?
Max Beesley: No, not even in the six months shooting [LAUGHS].
Idris Elba: No, not once.
Max Beesley: So… But, of course, after reading it, the first couple of episodes – I think I read three – and the character became more and more involved. And there are so many wonderful nuances for me to play as well as a professional policeman, but also from a personal point of view, being involved in Sam’s ex-wife, played by Christine Adams. And we get very subtle reminders of that, you know, on the picture frame, there’s pictures of Sam with the family and he’s obviously handsome and he’s, you know, he’s got a vibe about him. And so, I think that policemen, while they’re so tenacious and professional and very good at their jobs, their personal lives are very discombobulated, if you like. So, there was something interesting there for me to get hold of. And then, of course, my… Archie’s character is another ex-lover of this rogue… were we lovers? I think we were. George?
George Kay: Yeah.
Kate Quilton (Moderator): I mean, I’m itching to know the backstory because the relationship between you two, I mean, that dynamic just leaps off the screen, doesn’t it. I mean, something- something really bad went down [LAUGHS].
Max Beesley: We had… something went down, I’m not quite sure what it was, Kate, but…
Archie Panjabi: Oh, I am.
[ALL LAUGH]
Max Beesley: Oh, ok [LAUGHS]. But it’s excellent because we very delicately and subtly worked through Christine’s messages from… from Idris’ character, Sam, and then my relationship, past relationship with Archie, who is in counterterrorism, we can then start formulating something we don’t really think is going on, but as the dominos fall then we realise we’re into a very serious situation. Quite quickly in the show as well, which is good because it grabs you quite quickly. And it’s high octane… high octane stuff. It’s really, you know, a great drama… a thriller and a great drama. I’m really proud to be a part of it, you know.
Jim Field Smith: We actually, you just reminded me you guys talking about being on the ground, is that part of the necessity of where we shot was that everyone was sort of separated, but it was also slightly by design as well. And the people on the plane never met really any of the people on the ground but used to call each other the ‘ground people’ and the ‘plane people’ [ALL LAUGH]. And they would always try and sneak in and look at what we were doing in other sets, and we’re like get off, get out of here. Because, of course, part of the, you know, without being too highfalutin about it, part of the fun of it is about information and about who knows what. And, you know, the genius of Sam’s character is he’s trying to get information to the ground without being caught doing that by the hijackers, meanwhile, because of the methods that he’s using, which are maybe a little bit unconventional, the characters on the ground are having to decipher this and figure out is it hijacked or is it not. And so, we sort of deliberately wanted to keep everyone separate and keep everyone guessing the whole time. And, yeah, again, hopefully that comes across on the screen.
Idris Elba: [LAUGHS] I remember actually, you know, because we’re shooting at a studio with several stages, and because I couldn’t sort of go and see what the other stages were doing every now and then, I’d always stay near the back, and then one time I realised I was walking right through basically a whole shot. And I think Archie was in there, I think, and everyone was huddled in this tiny room, and they were just, you know, I think they were just running lines, right, and I just walk past. And I was like “hey!” [ALL LAUGH] and they all looked at me like, what are you thinking? You’re meant to be… and I was in full costume, blood on my face, they were like, he looks happy! What the fuck are we doing!
[ALL LAUGH].
Jim Field Smith: He’s fine, hijack’s over, guys.
Idris Elba: I thought everyone would be like, hey, what’s up, Idris! They were like, what are you doing here? Just get out, man, you’re killing our vibe.
Kate Quilton (Moderator): Brilliant. Well, those are a few questions from me, but the people we are really interested to hear questions from today is everyone out here and also everyone online who has joined us virtually. So, I’ll start by taking a question from the floor in the room here, if anyone has got a question, just pop your hand up and we’ll get a mic to you before you ask it.
Press: This question is for Max, you mentioned that you didn’t have the opportunity to meet with Idris for about six months while shooting, but your character is pretty much solving, trying to solve the pieces of the puzzle to this, you know, mystery with what’s going on with, you know, this hijacking, so did that help you in your role not having to be able to interact with Idris in those six months, or did that hinder you?
Max Beesley: I… It was helpful. I mean, just from a professional point of view, I wanted to do the dance with Idris on set because he’s a terrific actor, but I think it helped a little bit. And also, obviously, he’s a very handsome man, so like I say, when you do… there are very subtle shots of me and Christine in the bedroom, there are family pictures of her with Idris’ character with the boys, and there’s just a couple of moments that Jim shot there where you just… it’s the male thing of, you know, just like, what am I working with? And these… this guy is a professional but so is Sam, he’s a very successful professional guy. And so, I don’t know, I mean, yeah, it probably did help, maybe, yeah, I’m not too sure, just try to be real on the day with the scene and that’s it.
Kate Quilton (Moderator): Thank you. Oh yeah, let’s take it. Thank you.
Press: Thank you. Question for Idris, obviously this is an action thriller, so talk us through, please, if it’s ok, the sort of fight sequences or action sequences, and sort of how did it effect you? Did you get battered and bruised, or were there any injuries or anything like that?
Idris Elba: So, I guess, you know, one of the things that I guess was by design was that, you know, we didn’t take this plane apart and made it easier for us to shoot, we designed all the action sequences with what we’ve got, ok. And, you know, you know, Sam does a lot of sneaking around the plane, you know. Me sneaking on a plane is like, bro, what you doing? [ALL LAUGH]. We can see you, you know, so it meant that I had to even get lower, or we had to figure out another way. And that was actually really, again, adds to the sort of drama and reality of this thing. The fight sequences were certainly hard to shoot. They were choreographed within the space, if we hurt ourselves, we just took a breather and carried on, because not to say that we didn’t care but it’s just we didn’t try and change the choreography not to hurt ourselves because, in this instance, the fight sequence- sequences were based on what would we do rather than this is a fight sequence, you know. And one of the memorable ones for me is the one with Neil’s character, and this gun and this tiny kitchen space – I’m a big man, so I could just… but it just wasn’t easy to move around and fight this guy, especially if my character is not a fighter, he’s fighting out of desperation and he’s frightened of getting shot. Not only is he frightened of getting shot, but he doesn’t want the plane to go down because of a bullet. So, there’s all this stuff that was part of the design of the action and I think really gives… puts the audience in that… we’ve all been on a plane, we’ve all sat in a chair and looked over and seen that person from this perspective, we’ve all looked down the aisle and looked behind us, and that’s what Jim and the team really designed well and implemented into the action sequences, you know.
Kate Quilton (Moderator): Thank you. I’m going to take a question now from the journalists that have joined us virtually. So, this is a question to Archie and Max, and this is from Barbara Monker, who is at DPA in Germany, you’re part of the team on the ground and the personal backstory, how did you experience the tension building on the plane while figuring out a solution on the ground?
Archie Panjabi: Well, I guess we’re, you know, the great thing about filming this is that we did it chronologically and so the tension just builds. And having to, you know, work with the ministers, the JTAC, the county-terrorism, there’s all these different things going on that [LAUGHS]… I guess the pressure just builds so much that the tension in that room just escalates to a point where it becomes unbearable. In terms of us…
Max Beesley: Yes, carry on.

Archie Panjabi: I remember when we first met, we were like, well, what’s our chemistry? What’s our backstory? What’s our history? And I think we both had two different stories, didn’t we, we both decided each of us had chucked each other, and then you pointed to the script, didn’t you…
Kate Quilton (Moderator): I said you were the dominant… you’re the dominant, you broke my heart, maybe. I mean, I think it’s only George that can settle this.
George Kay: Yeah, sorry, Max…
Kate Quilton (Moderator): George, what’s the backstory?
Max Beesley: Was I an animal? I don’t know anything.
George Kay: I think Zahar is strong and managed to kind of see that maybe Daniel is not the right partner and they broke up. But they did have a relationship, for sure, yeah.
Archie Panjabi: And maybe Sam Nelson was more appropriate, you think? [ALL LAUGH]
Max Beesley: In answer to that lady’s question [LAUGHS]…
Kate Quilton (Moderator): That’s a whole new series.
Idris Elba: Yeah, a whole new one.
George Kay: A love triangle.
Max Beesley: No, no, in answer to the question, when we were working on the ground, obviously as we get more information, the stakes are high, everything’s heightened, everything’s heightened, everything’s heightened. And then, we’re out on the road and then the counter-terrorism units are involved, response units are involved, then it really does… you just play the script and that’s all you need to do. And it grows quite beautifully, you know, throughout the seven hours of the show, I think, so…
Archie Panjabi: There’s a really nice moment though, isn’t there, there’s a really nice moment when I’m driving the car and you ask me all these questions about your ex, and I have a complete… I have a go at you, and at the end she just says, “it’s ok, I get it”. I think from then onwards we just work together.
Max Beesley: We’re very good at our jobs, which is important, and ultimately, we do kind of really help the situation, I think, you know.
Kate Quilton (Moderator): I think you’re all quite exceptional at your jobs. Talking about the tension building…
Max Beesley: Sorry, I meant as the characters. I wasn’t being an egomaniac. We are both very good counter-terrorist policemen, ok [ALL LAUGH].
Kate Quilton (Moderator): Oh, funny. There’s a question here, and this is to Jim and George, it’s from the States, it’s from Cherry the Geek TV – Joe at Cherry the Geek TV. Now, he was wondering if you could talk about the real time element in the show. In the past, this type of story was told as a two-hour movie, with this format, you’re telling the story of the seven-hour flight over the course of seven hours, and it works really well. Talk about the development of the stories and the challenges, and maybe unexpected surprises of doing this story in real time.
George Kay: You want to go first?
Jim Field Smith: Yeah. Well, I was going to answer the second bit, do you want to answer the first bit?
George Kay: Yeah, ok, yeah. In terms of the- the real time of seven hours and maintaining tension, what I realised when writing was that in the hijacking situation, it’s not immediately life or death, it’s not like you’re just about to be pushed off the edge of a cliff or something. For Sam’s character… For Idris’ character, Sam, he has to contend with a situation that is about to be, constantly is about to be life or death. So, there’s time and tension is suspended because until you know what those hijackers want, where they’re taking the plane, what they intend to do, these are all unknowable things at the start of our story, and so we have a kind of… we’ve got a tension inbuilt. And there’s no point breaking that, from a writing perspective, there’s no point breaking that tension, you want to unfold the mystery really carefully and slowly because you should have people’s breath held in their chests at that point, and you’ve got seven hours to play with, that’s all they know. And I think at the end of the first or second episode, it becomes clear that they’re going to go to London, I don’t know what we can say in terms of the story, but the seven hours is the size of the football pitch under which Sam Nelson can plot his strategy around and get to his goal. So, the tension is going to be there throughout because you’re edging all more incrementally towards a more intense situation the whole time.
Kate Quilton (Moderator): And at which point did you decide, right, we’re going to do this real time?
Jim Field Smith: I was looking at the- the flight distances and the length of a TV series, and they’re very similar, and actually then the thought they cropped up, well, hang on, why don’t we just play it, why don’t we just run it for real, because we’ve all been on what would feel like interminable plane journeys, that it would not feel interminable or it would be suddenly a short, intense and magnified experience if you were under a hijacking so it just felt right that the length of the show seems to be the length of a flight.
Jim Field Smith: What you don’t want to be is on a flight that gets captained by the network halfway through [ALL LAUGH].
Kate Quilton (Moderator): Was that reason at the beginning, you thought… [LAUGHS]
Jim Field Smith: They can’t- they can’t cancel it. Yeah, one of the… One of the bits of research we were doing early on, I was listening to this testimony from a hijack survivor, and she said this thing that really, really stuck with me the whole way through the show, which was that she had been in a hijack situation and she said, “during a hijack, time ceases to exist and all you’re left with is decisions”. And that… I sort of had that in my head the whole time because it is real time, it’s potentially more real time for the people on the ground as it is for the people on the plane. As George has said, for the people, you’re sort of suspended, I mean, you’re literally suspended but you’re sort of in suspension and you’re just trying to figure out how to sort of live through to the next moment. For the people on the ground, they’re scrambling for answers, they’re trying to figure out what’s going on, and of course, this plane is heading essentially towards them. In terms of the second part of the question, there were… the sort of… some of the challenges of making it sort of perversely became, I think, some of the benefits of the show. So, the problem with making a real time drama is that you are wedded to every single decision that you make in production throughout. Normally, if it’s like, oh, we hate this jacket, oh, don’t worry, we’ll get rid of it in the next scene or, you know, we’re going to jump to this or we can cut around this or we can go there, we can’t do that in our show. So, we had to live with all of the decisions that we made, and that’s the reality of what would happen in that situation and so we weren’t able to do the convenient thing of jumping ahead in time or sort of swerving around something, we had to just take everything head on. So, you know, we made decisions about characters in episode one that we then had to, you know, essentially live with. And I think, hopefully, that’s to the benefit of the show. You know, the downsides are that you can’t avoid anything. If you’ve got a real time storyline, you’ve got scripts that are written to a real time storyline, you can’t skip things.
Kate Quilton (Moderator): And there’s very little fixing in the edit.
Jim Field Smith: There’s very little, you know, but the good thing was, to bring it back to the original point, the material on the plane we found could actually expand, because actually once you’re in those scenes on a plane, we, hopefully successfully, went for it, like I really wanted to feel the tension of moments that in any other situation would be completely inconsequential, feeling like the most important thing ever, like, you know, Sam’s character waiting for someone to move slightly so they’re not in his eyeline anymore and they can go this way. You know, I wanted those moments to feel like they lasted forever almost, you know, and- and conversely, wanted the stuff on the ground to feel like relentless, so.
George Kay: Also, we… we didn’t want to do any flashbacks or give the audience any irony or any knowledge that Sam and the characters on board didn’t have, everything has to be earned for people on the ground and for the people on the plane. TV is full of shows that are mixing timelines and flashing back and giving audience better knowledge than some of the characters in the show, so it felt fresh to try something just linear, everyone learning at the same time.
Idris Elba: Just quickly, as an actor though, it felt like I was flying to Mars [ALL LAUGH]. I was just like, am I still on this flight? Six months later I’m still on the flight, or three seasons of the show, are we still here? What’s going on?
Kate Quilton (Moderator): In the same outfit [LAUGHS]. Like, how many…
Idris Elba: Ironically, the same shirt I’m wearing now. I’m joking.
Kate Quilton (Moderator): Did you have… Was it kind of like Jeff Goldblum in The Fly, did you have like literally twelve hanging up in your dressing room?
Idris Elba: Yeah, and they were all very different stages. Oh, this one over here with all this blood on, I know where that is, I’ll wear that again, ah man
[ALL LAUGH].
Kate Quilton (Moderator): Brilliant. Alright, we’ll take another question from the floor. Excellent.
Press: Not a very intellectual question, but I wondered, before making the show were any of you afraid of flying and if that had changed since making it?
Archie Panjabi: Well, I didn’t fly on the show, but in terms of watching it, no, no not at all. I think maybe for the first five minutes and then after that it didn’t really affect me so much. But I have done a few dramas on a plane before so maybe I’m, you know, used to flying, I don’t feel the fear so much.
Idris Elba: I, no, for me, more informed about flight and airplanes now, which is weird, you know what I’m saying, I’ll sit on a plane, and I’ll be like, oh, the A3 80 [ALL LAUGHS], oh, different trim, interesting. I don’t know this shit. But it’s actually not, you know, I love flying, I love travelling, and I’ve always, always said hello to staff on planes, off planes, just by way of people wanting to say and wave and what not, so yeah, it just felt interesting to be on a plane again after making this show.
Kate Quilton (Moderator): Can I ask a question…
Max Beesley: Before you do, can I just say, sorry, because I flew in six hours ago on a BA flight and every single stewardess was like “are you doing something with Idris? He’s so lovely. We’ve had him on British Airways so many times, he’s such a nice guy”. Like, six minutes in, and I’m like, can we get back to me for a second? But yeah, that was nice to hear. But I did use to have a fear of flying. I used to love it and then I had a couple of terrible, terrible turbulent flights, and then it was Paul McKenna actually that helped me years ago and now I love it. But I do remember after 9/11, because I live in Los Angeles, I always eyeball the passengers when I get on, and I just think, right…
Idris Elba: That’s helpful.
Max Beesley: Yeah [LAUGHS]. Right. Yeah, I’m like… No, I’m not… I just clock them quite quietly and I just go, mm, ok, because I’ve got two little girls and so I’m… if anything’s going to happen, I’m going… Well, after watching this show, you don’t know, who knows…
Kate Quilton (Moderator): Who knows? But, as you already said, you are an excellent policeman, what would you be looking for on that flight?
Max Beesley: Just little tell-tale signs. You know stewardess, when you board a plane and stewards, they’re also reading you as a passenger as someone who can help them in an event, who’s fit? Who’s looking good? Who’s drunk? Who doesn’t drink on the plane? You know, so, yeah, I’m into flying, I really like it a lot.
[ALL LAUGH].
Kate Quilton (Moderator): If you ever happen to be on a flight with Max, he might be…
Max Beesley: You’ll be alright, you’ll be alright.
Kate Quilton (Moderator): Don’t be alarmed! Right, we’ve got loads of hands in the audience so let’s go wherever we can get a microphone, yeah! Great. Excellent.
Press: Idris, serious question here, this sees you do a more multi-dimensional role, but in terms of being an actor and getting a variety of roles, is it a blessing or a curse to be a good-looking man?
[ALL LAUGH]
Idris Elba: I’m getting a lot of love today, thank you very much.
Press: Max, you can answer that as well, if you like.
Idris Elba: Wow. Look, I’m sure it’s all subjective. I’m not sure I’m good-looking to everyone, but there is something interesting you said earlier, George was talking about, you know, the weedy man versus the strong man and, you know, my size and shape and, you know, all my life sort, oh, you’re a big lad, you know, and I’ve taken on roles that sort of feed into that a little bit. And in this particular time, I was really interested in playing against that. Even though Sam is what he is, he isn’t always the sort of hero in that sense, you know. He’s using… it’s more cerebral, he’s quite vulnerable in the sense that he’s got lots going on internal in terms of his family, and I really was interested in that, you know. So, it played against type, if you like, and I… Yeah, you know, some camera angles are not sexy man, especially on a plane, let me tell you. When Jim’s got the camera right up my nozzle, I’m like, are you sure that’s the angle bro? [ALL LAUGH] Can I just shift to the light? He’s like, no, no, no, this is perfect.
Kate Quilton (Moderator): And let’s take another question from our journalists virtually, this is from Nando Rona at Deadline in Germany, this is it to Idris, Archie and Max, how do you think you might personally react in a situation like the series because of the show? So, since you’ve made it, how might you react on a plane that [LAUGHS] has been hijacked?
Idris Elba: Well, look, you know, I would shut up and mind my own business.
Kate Quilton (Moderator): Really?
Idris Elba: No. But I wouldn’t be Sam, for sure, I just wouldn’t have thought out that clearly, but if I had an opportunity to speak to a hijacker and I got eye contact and I thought for a second that person would listen to me, I would go for that and be like, dude, this is very stupid. Or, dude, can you get me a drink please? Just quickly get me drink [ALL LAUGH]. I don’t think I would be the hero guy that’s trying to, you know, outsmart the hijackers, I doubt that very much, but I certainly would want to help the staff and say, look, I’ll, you know, if you need a volunteer to help you do something, I’m in, a hundred percent.
Kate Quilton (Moderator): And you’ve got a bit of intel now. I mean, you’ve learned a lot making this series.
Idris Elba: I know. I know how to fly now, I know how to fly a plane, so yeah.
Kate Quilton (Moderator): What about you, Archie?
Archie Panjabi: I don’t know what I would do. I guess it would depend on the hijackers, what they were like. I’d like to think I’d be able to communicate with them and talk with them, use some of Zahar’s skills, but I don’t know, that’s a really interesting question. It would depend on the people.
Kate Quilton (Moderator): Max?
Max Beesley: Again, I’m no idea…
Kate Quilton (Moderator): Employ McKenna? I mean, would you rely on a few of those hypnotherapy tips, I don’t know.
Max Beesley: No, I’m… Because I remember years ago, I got robbed in Ladbroke Grove at gunpoint and I remember thinking if that ever happens, I’ll go to work and take care of business, and I completely froze. I was in a chair with a gun at the back of my head. And even if I had a weapon I would have said, “brother, I’ve got a gun here, man”, I was terrified. So, I don’t know. I have a friend in America, Spencer Stone, who was a… in the military, and he was on the Amsterdam to Paris, he was one of the soldiers that took that chap down. I’ve spoken to him at length about it and I think you’re just wired in a different way, so I’ve got no idea. I’ve got no idea what, you know.
Kate Quilton (Moderator): And George, I mean, it feels unfair to leave you out but…
George Kay: I would…. I would run and hide in the toilet [ALL LAUGH]. I would not step up at all, I think.
Kate Quilton (Moderator): Jim?
Jim Field Smith: Me and George and a friend of ours used to play a game that if the three of us were on a boat that was sort of marooned at sea, which of us would turn on each other first to kill them and eat them? So, I think [LAUGHS] every man for themselves.
Kate Quilton (Moderator): Are you… Ok, you’re eater, not eaten.
Jim Field Smith: I’d definitely rather be eating than be eaten [ALL LAUGH]. If that’s what you’re asking me.
George Kay: I get eaten in the game.
Kate Quilton (Moderator): Oh, you get eaten.
Idris Elba: What’s the name of this game?
[ALL LAUGH]
Kate Quilton (Moderator): I think we got one… We’ve got time for just one more question from the floor. Great, we’ve got a mic there.
Kate Quilton (Moderator): Last question, do you think you could watch Hijack on a flight?
Idris Elba: [LAUGHS]
George Kay: Do you think they’re going to put it on when- when…?
Kate Quilton (Moderator): [LAUGHS] I don’t know, you might want to fight for it, George, I don’t know, like have that chat…
Jim Field Smith: You can watch it on a seven-hour flight. That would be a very specific requirement you need to be able to watch it.
George Kay: It would be annoying to watch it on a four-hour flight.
Idris Elba: It would have to be a nine-hour flight because you’ve got two hours delay, then they don’t let the thing work.
Kate Quilton (Moderator): I mean, it’s intense. I watched one episode on a train and that was enough for me, to be honest, the blood pressure definitely raised for sure. Thank you so much, everyone. Thank you so much for this really exceptional piece of work. It is, yeah, an exhilarating ride. I will, just to bounce things out, compliment you all on your looks and say you are all beautiful, exceptionally handsome…
Jim Field Smith: And very good at our jobs.
Kate Quilton (Moderator): But it is a very beautiful panel. So, thank you so much, thank you for joining us today, thank you for coming, thank you everyone online.
[APPLAUSE]
[CHATTER]
[MUSIC BEGINS]
MORE INFO: Trailer

ABOUT “HIJACK”:
Told in real time, “Hijack” is a tense thriller that follows the journey of a hijacked plane as it makes its way to London over a seven hour flight, and authorities on the ground scramble for answers. Idris Elba will star as ‘Sam Nelson,’ an accomplished negotiator in the business world who needs to step up and use all his guile to try and save the lives of the passengers — but, his high-risk strategy could be his undoing. Archie Panjabi will play the role of ‘Zahra Gahfoor,’ a counter terrorism officer who is on the ground when the plane is hijacked and becomes part of the investigation. The series also stars Christine Adams, Max Beesley, Eve Myles, Neil Maskell, Jasper Britton, Harry Michell, Aimee Kelly, Mohamed Elsandel and Ben Miles.
“Hijack” has been produced by 60Forty Films, the production company set up by Emmy Award winning Executive Producers Jamie Laurenson and Hakan Kousetta (‘Slow Horses’, ‘The Essex Serpent’) under its exclusive content deal with Apple TV+, alongside Kay and FIeld-Smith’s own production company Idiotlamp Productions, and also marks the first series to debut from Elba’s first-look deal with Apple TV+ and his Green Door Pictures. In addition to writing and directing, Kay and Field Smith each serve as executive producers alongside Elba, Jamie Laurenson, Hakan Kousetta and Kris Thykier.
Proofread and Edited by Brenda
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TAS Episodes

by Jeff
| Episode Title | Airdate | stardate | production number |
| Beyond the Farthest Star | 9/8/1973 | 22004 | 1 – 1 |
| Yesteryear | 9/15/1973 | 22003 | 1 – 2 |
| One of Our Planets is Missing | 9/22/1973 | 22007 | 1 – 3 |
| The Lorelei Signal | 9/29/1973 | 22006 | 1 – 4 |
| More Tribbles, More Troubles | 10/6/1973 | 22001 | 1 – 5 |
| The Survivor | 10/13/1973 | 22005 | 1 – 6 |
| The Infinite Vulcan | 10/20/1973 | 22002 | 1 – 7 |
| The Magicks of Megas-Tu | 10/27/1973 | 22009 | 1 – 8 |
| Once Upon a Planet | 11/3/1973 | 22014 | 1 – 9 |
| Mudd’s Passion | 11/10/1973 | 22008 | 1 – 10 |
| The Terratin Incident | 11/17/1973 | 22015 | 1 – 11 |
| The Time Trap | 11/24/1973 | 22010 | 1 – 12 |
| The Ambergris Element | 12/1/1973 | 22013 | 1 – 13 |
| The Slaver Weapon | 12/15/1973 | 22011 | 1 – 14 |
| The Eye of the Beholder | 1/5/1974 | 22016 | 1 – 15 |
| The Jihad | 1/12/1974 | 22012 | 1 – 16 |
| The Pirates of Orion | 9/7/1974 | 22020 | 2 – 1 |
| Bem | 9/14/1974 | 22018 | 2 – 2 |
| The Practical Joker | 9/21/1974 | 22017 | 2 – 3 |
| Albatross | 9/28/1974 | 22019 | 2 – 4 |
| How Sharper Than a Serpent’s Tooth? | 10/5/1974 | 22022 | 2 – 5 |
| The Counter-Clock Incident | 10/12/1974 | 22023 | 2 – 6 |

Star Trek TOS Episode Guide

First Season | Second Season | Third Season
contributed by Lou Israel; proofread and edited by Suzanne
80 – Futurama : Where No Fan Has Gone Before
In a spoof of Star Trek’s “The Menagerie”, Fry meets up with the real life cast of Star Trek The Original Series (Minus McCoy and Scotty). In this Episode, however , Scotty was replaced by “Welshie”. There are several TOS References mentioned in this show. This Episode aired during the 4th year of Futurama. It could be considered an Original Series Cast Reunion Episode.
TOS Movies ( by Suzanne)
“Star Trek: The Motion Picture” (1979) Admiral Kirk returns to take command of the retrofitted Enterprise to stop the threat of a destructive cloud heading towards Earth.
“Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan” (1982) Khan Noonien Singh captures the starship Reliant and uses it to go after Kirk for revenge; once again assuming command of the Enterprise, Kirk must stop Khan from stealing the Genesis device.
“Star Trek III: The Search for Spock” (1984) Kirk learns that Spock put his katra into McCoy before he died, so he retrieves Spock’s body from the Genesis planet. The klingons attack, to get the Genesis device.
“Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home” (1986) The Enterprise crew must journey back in time to save the humpback whales in order to stop a giant probe from destroying the Earth in their own time.
“Star Trek V: The Final Frontier” (1989) Spock’s brother, Sybok, hijacks the new Enterprise-A to find God at the edge of the universe, while the Klingons follow them to seek revenge on Kirk.
“Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country” (1991) The Enterprise carries the Klingon Chancellor to an important peace summit; when he’s assassinated, Kirk and McCoy are blamed and sentenced to a Klingon prison planet. Spock tries to figure out who’s behind all of it and rescue them.

Star Trek Episodes Lists and Guides

Star Trek Episode Guides and Lists
Star Trek: The Animated Series
Star Trek: The Next Generation

Star Trek Character Profiles

Star Trek Character Biographies
MORE COMING SOON!
Star Trek: The Next Generation
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
Star Trek: Voyager
Star Trek: Enterprise
Star Trek: Discovery
Star Trek: Picard
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds
Star Trek: The Animated Series
Star Trek: Lower Decks
Star Trek: Prodigy
Star Trek Kelvin movies

Back to the Main Star Trek Page
Star Trek Character Profiles

Star Trek Character Biographies by Suzanne
Original Star Trek

Captain James T. Kirk (portrayed by William Shatner) is the ultimate hero. Modeled in part after the literary character Horatio Hornblower, he also embodies the lawmen of 60’s TV who went with their guts as well as their heads and hearts. Kirk is very intelligent and was the top of class as well as being the youngest officer to make captain in Starfleet. He’s shrewd and has outwitted many strange space aliens, some of whom were foes and some of whom became friends. Although Kirk generally follows regulations, he will sometimes divert from or even ignore them, when his crew is at risk, or when he feels that the greater good is more important (such as saving people on a planet). Kirk’s crew is very loyal to him, and he to them. Kirk is the model of the 23rd century man who believes in humanity and peace, not brute force (for the most part). Kirk boxes to keep in shape, so he’s able to easily defend himself.
Kirk had a son, David, a scientist who resented Kirk at first. David was a pacifist and seemed to be the opposite of Kirk in most ways. He and Kirk grew to admire each other, but then he died when the Klingons stole the Genesis device and threatened Saavik and Spock. Kirk blamed the Klingons for David’s death. He had a hard time letting go of his hatred for them.
Captain Kirk has an eye for beautiful women, but his ship, the Enterprise, is the lady he always chooses to return to. He had a long career as both Captain and Admiral. Kirk dies when he and Captain Picard fight against an evil being named Soran who tries to destroy a planetary system in order to get back to a an extra-dimensional area called The Nexus (in the movie “Star Trek: Generations”).

Mr. Spock (portrayed by Leonard Nimoy) is half-human and half-Vulcan. Vulcans suppress their emotions and use logic and science in their lives. Spock is the first Vulcan to serve in Starfleet. He’s the First Officer and Science officer of the Enterprise. Although he has learned not to show his emotions, it’s clear that Spock values his friendships, including those of his captain, James T. Kirk, and Dr. “Bones” McCoy and Nurse Chapel. Spock gave his life to save the ship when it was about to explode due to the Genesis device. He went into the anti-matter core to adjust it manually, dying of radiation poisoning (In “Star Trek: Wrath of Khan”). He subsequently was resurrected by the same Genesis device and rescued by the crew of the Enterprise (in “Star Trek 3: Search for Spock”).
Later in his life, Spock worked to reunite the Vulcans and Romulans in peace, with help from Jean-Luc Picard (In “Star Trek: The Next Generation”). He also tried to help the Romulans when their planet was threatened. He ended up accidentally creating an alternative timeline because of a vengeful Romulan, Nero (in the 2009 reboot movie “Star Trek”). Spock meets the younger version of himself and Kirk in the other reality, and they defeat Nero. However, Nero had destroyed Vulcan, so Spock remained in the alternate universe to help rebuild New Vulcan. He also aided the younger Spock and Kirk with some advice in their fight with Khan (in the 2013 film “Star Trek: Into Darkness”).

Dr. Leonard McCoy (portrayed by DeForest Kelley) is the Chief Medical Officer of the starship Enterprise. He calls himself “an old country doctor” because he’s from Atlanta and studied at the University of Mississippi. He was divorced at a young age and had many failed romances, perhaps because of high moral standards. He’s good friends with Captain Kirk. Where Mr. Spock is very logical, Dr. McCoy is a bit emotional (even though he’s a man of science himself). He believes strongly that sometimes the body can heal itself. He is very folksy, and he doesn’t trust all of the modern technology, even though he uses it to save lives. He and Mr. Spock were often at odds during tense situations, and McCoy often would call Spock a freak or some other insulting term, but they came to admire and respect each other. Indeed, they became friends.
Dr. McCoy became Chief of Starfleet Medical later on in life, also becoming an admiral. He lived a long life and appeared at age 137 on the Starship Enterprise once again (in “Star Trek: The Next Generation”) to inspect the medical bay of the new Enterprise-D; he was escorted by Lt. Commander Data.

Montgomery “Scotty” Scott (portrayed by James Doohan) is the Engineering Officer on the Enterprise. He’s Scottish and very proud of his heritage. He’s even prouder of the ship and its engines, which he treats as if they’re his babies. He’s able to perform miracles and get the ship and its crew out of many jams. He likes to drink Scotch Whiskey or other alcoholic drinks. Scotty gets along fine with his shipmates, and he’s very loyal to them (especially Captain Kirk).
Scotty served on 11 ships in his long career. He was about to retire when his shuttlecraft was hit by a Dyson Sphere. He put himself in the pattern buffer to survive, and he was there for 75 years until revived by the crew of the Enterprise D (in “Star Trek: The Next Generation”). Scotty didn’t adjust well to life in the 25th century because his knowledge was too outdated. After helping to save the Enterprise D, he was given a small starship (called a runabout) and went off to explore space in his remaining days.

Nurse Christine Chapel (portrayed by Majel Barrett) is the nurse that assists Dr. McCoy on the Enterprise. She originally had a career in bio-research, but she abandoned it to go into space when her fiancé went missing. Once they found him, and he died, she decided to stay on the ship. She’s a capable medical officer who does a lot to help the crew. Eventually, she became a doctor (in the movie “Star Trek: The Motion Picture”).
In the series, Nurse Chapel has a crush on Mr. Spock, who can’t return her feelings because he’s a Vulcan. She kept trying to get close to him, despite that.

Lt. Hikaru Sulu (portrayed by George Takei) is the ship’s helmsman. He has a background in physics and was the ship’s staff physicist when it started. Then he became the helmsman. Sulu has many hobbies, including botany, fencing, gymnastics and ancient weaponry. He later, in the movies, became Lt. Commander, Commander and then Captain. He commanded his own ship, the U.S.S. Excelsior.
In the movie “Star Trek: Generations,” we learn that he has a daughter, Demora Sulu. Sulu is also seen in a flashback by Lt. Tuvok, who served under Captain Sulu, in an episode of “Star Trek: Voyager.” We learn nothing else about Sulu’s personal or romantic life.
Lt. Nyota Uhura (portrayed by Nichelle Nichols) is the Chief Communications Officer on the ship. She can also fill in at the helm, navigation or science stations when needed. She speaks many languages, but she mostly interacts with the technology on the ship. She is religious (Christian) and also loves to sing for the crew when off-duty (sometimes with Spock playing the Vulcan lyre). Like most of the ship’s crew, she’s very loyal to the ship, its crew and to Captain Kirk. She comes from the United States of Africa.
When challenged, especially by obnoxious aliens, she stands up for herself as a strong woman. One alien robot, NOMAD, erased her memory, so she had to relearn her whole life (with the help from the ship’s computers). It didn’t take her long, thankfully. She has a good working relationship with the other crew, but no mention is ever made of any romantic relationships. When some of the crew went to the mirror universe, she flirted with the mirror Sulu in order to distract him. Nothing else is known about Uhura’s personal or romantic life. Later, Uhura was promoted to Lt. Commander and then Captain.
Ensign Pavel Chekov (portrayed by Walter Koenig) is a junior officer compared to the rest of the bridge crew. He’s younger and more naïve. Chekov is later promoted to Lieutenant, and then to Lt. Commander. He’s the ship’s navigator. Later, he became the ship’s tactical officer and security chief. Hailing from Russia, he enjoys making jokes about how everything is a Russian invention. However, his youthful arrogance hides the fact that he was an honors graduate of the Space Academy and is almost as good with science as Mr. Spock.
Like Captain Kirk, Chekov always admires beautiful women and frequently flirts with them. Chekov became the Executive Officer aboard the Reliant (in “Star Trek 2: The Wrath of Khan”) and showed up later on the Enterprise-B as a guest on its first voyage (in “Star Trek: Generations”). His son, Anton, became President of Earth, but nothing else is known about Chekov’s life outside of the ship.
Janice Rand (portrayed by Grace Lee Whitney) is Captain Kirk’s Yeoman, which is similar to a personal assistant. Captain Kirk showed his sexist side when he was uncomfortable having a woman in that position (probably because she was so beautiful, and he had a hard time ignoring that). There is always a lot of sexual tension between the two. Yeoman Rand seemed quiet and shy at first, but she is clearly a capable officer who frequently goes on away missions with a tricorder, and she’s able to stand up for herself when necessary.
Later, Rand became the Transporter Chief on the ship (in the movie “Star Trek: The Motion Picture”) and then a Communications Officer on the U.S.S. Excelsior (in the film “Star Trek: The Undiscovered Country”).
Lt. Arex (voiced by James Doohan) serves as one of the ship’s navigation officers (in “Star Trek: The Animated Series”). He’ss an Edosian, and that species has 6 limbs. He is adept at using the science station and has commanded the Enterprise a few times when the captain was away. Arex has a very high, whiny voice.
Arex is known as one of the best navigators in Starfleet and was Ensign Chekov’s instructor at the academy. Arex got his start as a technician on merchant vessels but became an officer through a field promotion. He never went to Starfleet Academy. He has had many commendations and citations for bravery and valor, but he is quiet and unassuming.
Lt. M’ress (voiced by Majel Barrett) is the ship’s Operations Division Officer and frequently fills in for Uhura as Communications Officer and sometimes as Science Officer. Her species is Caitian; she has a tail and a cat-like appearance. Also, she purrs when she speaks. She is close friends with Lt. Uhura and Nurse Chapel, and she also hangs out with Lt. Arex. She has interests in anthropology, archaeology, poetry-writing and performing in plays.

Information from watching the series, as well as from Wikipedia and Memory Alpha.
Star Trek movies Birthdays Cast List

Star Trek Kelvin movies Cast Birthdays
Remember your favorite “Star Trek” actor on their birthday or wish them a happy birthday on social media!
Note: We get this information from IMDB and Google, so please let us know if you see anything that’s inaccurate…
Fraser Aitcheson 3/30/73
Eric Bana 8/9/68
Anita Brown 6/6/91
Sofia Boutella 4/3/82
John Cho 6/16/72
Noel Clarke 6/6/75
Clifton Collins Jr. 6/16/70
Nazneen Contractor 8/26/82
Ben Cross 12/16/47
Benedict Cumberbatch 7/19/76
Jonathan Dixon 8/10/88
Idris Elba 9/6/72
Tony Elias 11/19/82
Alice Eve 2/6/82
Amanda Foreman 7/15/66
Joseph Gatt 12/3/71
Bruce Greenwood 8/12/56
Chris Hemsworth 8/11/83
Aisha Hinds 11/13/75
Doug Jung 1/21/?
Kim Kold 8/25/65
Jennifer Morrison 4/12/79
Rachel Nichols 10/18/73
Leonard Nimoy 3/26/23
Simon Pegg 2/14/70
Chris Pine 8/26/80
Danny Pudi 3/10/79
Zachary Quinto 6/2/77
Jeremy Raymond 10/30/82
Melissa Roxburgh 12/10/92
Deep Roy 12/10/92
Winona Ryder 10/29/71
Zoe Saldana 6/19/78
Faran Tahir 2/16/63
Joe Taslim 6/23/81
Karl Urban 6/7/72
Anton Yelchin 3/11/89
Peter Weller 6/24/47
Lydia Wilson 11/30/84
NOTE: This list only covers the movies from 2009-2016

Most of this Info from Internet Movie Database
Star Trek: Prodigy Birthday Cast List

STP Birthdays Cast List
Remember your favorite “Star Trek” actor on their birthday or wish them a happy birthday on social media!
Note: We get this information from IMDB and Google, so please let us know if you see anything that’s inaccurate…
Rylee Alazraqui 5/17/11
Jason Alexander 9/23/59
Dee Bradley Baker 8/31/62
Eric Bauza 12/7/79
Robert Beltran 11/19/53
Laila Berzins 10/4/83
Kimberly Brooks 7/29/81
Billy Campbell 7/7/59
Brook Chalmers 4/6/75
Ronny Cox 7/23/38
Daveed Diggs 1/24/82
Zehra Fazal 8/28/84
Bonnie Gordon 3/27/86
Brett Gray 8/7/96
Grey Griffin 8/24/73
Amy Hill 5/9/53
Angus Imrie 8/2/94
Jameela Jamil 2/25/86
Tommie Earl Jenkins 11/13/65
Erin Macdonald ?
Jason Mantzoukas 12/18/72
Gates McFadden 3/2/49
Kate Mulgrew 4/29/55
John Noble 8/20/48
Ella Purnell 9/17/96
Rania Sharkawy ?
Jimmi Simpson 11/21/75
Samantha Smith 11/4/69
Fred Tatasciore 6/15/67
Ben Thomas ?
Melissa Villaseñor 10/9/87
Debra Wilson 4/26/62

Most of this Info from Internet Movie Database
STLD Cast Birthdays

Star Trek: Lower Decks Cast Birthday List
Remember your favorite “Star Trek” actor on their birthday or wish them a happy birthday on social media!
Note: We get this information from IMDB and Google, so please let us know if you see anything that’s inaccurate…
Carlos Alazraqui 7/20/62
Eric Bauza 12/7/79
Neil Casey 7/28/81
Gary Cole 9/20/56
Jeffrey Combs 9/9/54
Eugene Cordero 7/18/86
James Cromwell 1/27/40
John de Lancie 3/20/48
Robin Atkin Downes 9/6/76
Merrin Dungey 8/6/71
Jonathan Frakes 8/19/52
Rich Fulcher 11/18/68
Susan Gibney 9/11/61
Marcus Henderson 9/13/87
J.G. Hertzler 3/18/50
Marc Evan Jackson 8/21/70
Echo Kellum 8/29/82
Tom Kenny 7/13/62
Richard Kind 11/22/56
Georgia King 11/18/86
Alice Krige 6/28/54
Phil LaMarr 1/24/67
Lauren Lapkus 9/6/85
Dawnn Lewis 8/13/61
Vanessa Marshall 10/19/69
Jack McBrayer 5/27/73
Jessica McKenna 4/18/87
Robert Duncan McNeill 11/9/64
Kenneth Mitchell 11/25/74
Bobby Moynihan 1/31/77
Tawny Newsome 2/24/83
Nolan North 10/31/70
Jerry O’Connell 2/17/74
Toks Olagundoye 9/16/75
Haley Joel Osment 4/10/88
Randall Park 3/23/74
Missi Pyle 11/16/72
Jack Quaid 4/24/92
Kevin Michael Richardson 10/25/64
Ryan Ridley 5/12/47
Ben Rodgers 5/31/?
Gabrielle Ruiz 12/12/84
Paul Scheer 1/31/76
Armin Shimerman 11/5/49
Harry Shum Jr. 4/28/82
Marina Sirtis 3/29/55
Kurtwood Smith 7/3/43
George Takei 4/20/37
Carl Tart 1/5/89
Fred Tatasciore 6/15/67
Paul F. Tompkins 9/12/68
Gillian Vigman 1/28/72
Nana Visitor 7/26/57
Kari Wahlgren 7/13/77
Noël Wells 12/23/86
Alice Wetterlund 5/16/81

Most of this Info from Internet Movie Database

Interview with Jamie Bamber of “Cannes Confidential” on Acorn by Suzanne 6/23/23
It was wonderful to speak with Jamie on Zoom today. As I told him, I’ve been a huge fan of his ever since “Battlestar: Galactica,” which he starred in (20 years ago this December!). It was an outstanding series and one of the most successful TV reboots. He’s done great work since in many other shows, including “Law and Order UK” and “NCIS.” He has a great role in this new series as Harry King, a conman of sorts, who is incredibly charming (and also very annoying, especially to Camille, the police officer that he becomes involved with). He’s also haunted by his past. The characters are complex and interesting, but it’s also a lighthearted and fun series, which lots of action. I hope you can watch it! It’s only 6 episodes, but they fly by. The show also has beautiful scenery and music.
Suzanne: It’s great to see you. I enjoyed the screeners of the show. I loved it.
Jamie: Oh, bless you. Thanks for watching. I really appreciate that.
Suzanne: Yeah, it reminds me of [the 80’s TV show] Remington Steele a lot. I was a huge fan of that.
Jamie: Yeah, so that’s definitely what we’re going for. We’re going for, you know, a police procedural that the whole family can enjoy, that should be fun, with characters that hopefully you’ll wish you were alongside them as they discuss the case and as they argue with each other, and as they get up to all sorts of scrapes that you want to be with them, sort of Lethal Weapon style.
Suzanne: Right, right. Well, maybe you’ll be the next James Bond.
Jamie: I’m waiting for the call.
Suzanne: Oh, well, I’ve been a big fan of yours since Battlestar Galactica. Can you believe that this December is 20 years since it started?
Jamie: Strangely, I can believe it, because I know it’s true. But yeah, does it feel like 20 years ago? I don’t know what 20 years feels like, but I guess that’s what it feels like. Yeah, it’s a long time. And yeah, it’s weird. I was just with some of my cast mates at a convention in Phoenix. And, you know, we’re so close that we’ve never really been apart. We see each other regularly all the time. So, we’ve never really left the show behind. So, it is odd that was 20 years ago, but we love the milestones, because other people then remember us, and we get to be part of the conversation again, as we were back in the day.
Suzanne: Oh, that’s great. That’s great. So, how did your involvement in this project come about?
Jamie: Well, it was the first script I read after the first lockdown. And I know that, because, as soon as I was allowed to, I went to visit my mom, as people all over the world did with parents that they had lost touch with – not lost touch, but hadn’t seen. So, she lives in the south of France, and I happened to be there when another friend of mine from Marseille called me and said, “Look, I’ve just seen your name on a shortlist for a show called Cannes Confidential. Would you like to read the script?” It’s a friend of mine producing; I said, “Of course.” So, I read the script. I immediately fell in love with the nod to The Persuaders, that whole Cary Grant, Roger Moore, in the south of France kind of vibe. And I thought, “Well, if I can shoot a show, where I used to live, basically just down the road from where I used to live, I will do it.” And then, I read the dialogue, and I really liked it. I really enjoyed the tone, which is light and humorous, and the energy which comes from dialogue, rather than from, you know, any kind of sort of big angst or anything like that. So, yeah, I was in. The project been changed an awful lot. I can’t lie; I had some issues with some of the changes, but all the way through, the producers were great with me. They allowed me to sort of retain the essence of the character that I fell in love with, and they gave me some leeway with dialogue and stuff like that to maintain the sort of infuriatingly unflappable charm that Harry has on the surface, and yet also the sort of brooding tragedy that lies sort of somewhere beneath. And that was the attraction for me to play, a complicated man who seems effortlessly uncomplicated.
Suzanne: It’s only six episodes, but they packed so much into it with the characters. The episode to episode mysteries and the backstories and the action. It didn’t seem like six episodes when I watched it. It seemed like a whole season. That’s a good thing.
Jamie: Well, I appreciate that, and I’m glad. I’m glad. Well, I hope you enjoyed it. But, we’d love to make more than six episodes. Let’s see.
Suzanne: Yeah, that’d be great. And I love the music too. I mean, the whole thing was kind of cinematic, but I felt that the music was very much so like those old movies that you’re talking about, but not in a bad way.
Jamie: Yeah, no, I mean, that’s all done deliberately. I mean, the photographer Philippe Lozano is a true artist. He was very, very exacting. He had a style in mind, and it absolutely had to be filmic. And, you know, we were very much aware that is the element of the show. You have to want to be in Cannes. You have to fall in love with the city. That’s the other character. It’s the fourth character in the show. It’s the primary character in the show. And you’re right, the music is a sort of throwback to sort of, you know, those shows, The Persuaders. They’ve got simple little memes and little melodies for each character in each situation. Harry’s definitely got a theme that whenever he’s around, there’s this little trilling theme that sort of effortlessly jauntily flows its way through. Yeah, I agree with you. I’m very happy with those two elements as well.
Suzanne: There’s one with a sort of, not haunted house, but [involving a séance] – and it was very Hitchcockian, and I thought the music turned very Hitchcockian.
Jamie: Yeah, and you know there are references to Hitchcock films all the way through, and movies all the way through. One of Harry’s pseudonyms is Archie Leach, which is Cary Grant’s real name. And there’s a poster for To Catch a Thief in the hotel episode. So, yeah, those are all the influences, and we make no bones about it, that those are the shows we want to sort of evoke from the past. And we want to sort of celebrate that, because when you go to the south of France, when you go to that part of the world, you are stepping in the footsteps of the people that put it on the map over very many years, because, you know, they’re all just little fishing villages that have been transformed into these glamour spots by festivals and movie stars and famous films and TV shows.
Suzanne: And have you ever played a character anything like this before? I’m trying to think if you have.
Jamie: No, I don’t think anything quite like this. That’s really what drew me. I love watching old Cary Grant films. I love the effortlessness. He does nothing, and yet he seems to have everything. Roger Moore, I’m a massive admirer of Roger Moore, David Niven. Who else? Pierce Brosnan. You know, these are the people that we’ve exported over the years, and just the chance to play a character that’s even a little bit like that was a great opportunity. I’ve had characters in the past that have had elements of it, but they’re always in a much darker world. I mean, my character in Strike Back had elements of it, but that was a military action show where he was also a killer. You didn’t really get to dwell on that. So, yeah, it was fun just to play someone who seems to be effortless and light hearted, and yet, beneath, you know, there’s more to it than that.
Suzanne: Was it difficult to walk this fine line you have there between charming and obnoxious?
Jamie: Well, I think so. I’m not sure that I always did, but, yeah. And yeah, he is infuriating to her. So, the charm has to work on some level for the audience, but it also has to be deeply, deeply irritating to her, because she’s not someone who operates through charm. She operates through interrogation, arrest, investigation. She’s very direct, and Harry’s deflective. He deflects everything that comes anywhere near him. And yeah, you do see him actually, as the series progresses, as, you know, you see elements where he’s dealing with relationships that pre-exists the world he’s now in, and you see that his past implies a very different character than he’s now inhabiting. So, there’s a bit of an actor to him.
Suzanne: Yes, and there’s a lot of action in the show. The women do, I would say, probably most of it, but you do a lot of it, too. Did you do any of your own stunts?
Jamie: Well, I did all my own stunts, because I don’t think I did very many stunts. I think you’re being very generous to say that I was involved at all. I think, you know, maybe I stuck out a foot at one point to apprehend being a criminal, but no, Harry’s superpower are his words and conversation and understanding how to gain people’s confidence and how to push buttons. That’s his thing. The girls, the female police officers in the show, are very much the action heroes.
Suzanne: You didn’t do a lot of fighting. You did some running. You rode a motorcycle.
Jamie: I ride a motorcycle, but then also I have my motorcycle taken over and ridden far more aggressively than I would ride. So yeah, no, I enjoyed all that though. I’ve done a lot of action in my time, and it was nice to watch other people enjoy their action. I think Harry can probably handle himself, but that’s not the world he’s choosing to operate in at this particular point. He’s very – he’s got several different personas. This one is not a man of action; it’s a man of charm and taste. And he’s a [unintelligible], and he likes beautiful things. And he dresses well, and he’s not into running around and sweating too much.
Suzanne: Well, thank you. I really appreciate your talking to me this morning. What time is it? Where you are?
Jamie: It’s just about a quarter past three in the afternoon. Lovely time of the day. What about where you are?
Suzanne: It’s a little after 9am.
Jamie: Oh, morning coffee time.
Suzanne: Yes, definitely. All right. Thank you. Good luck with it.
Jamie: Thank you. I appreciate that.
MORE INFO:

CANNES CONFIDENTIAL, THE INTERNATIONAL ROMANTIC CRIME DRAMA SHOT ON LOCATION, PREMIERES JUNE 26 ON ACORN TV
Starring Lucie Lucas, Jamie Bamber and Tamara Marthe, the Six-Part Series Recently Made its World Premiere at CANNESERIES Festival
Get a jump start on summer and head to the south of France by checking out the full season of Acorn TV’s all-new international romantic crime drama, Cannes Confidential, available now on Screeners.com.
Starring French TV-drama actor Lucie Lucas (Clem, Porto and Gloria), Jamie Bamber (Strike Back, Marcella, Battlestar Galactica), and singer/actor Tamara Marthe (Profilage), the six-part series will premiere on Monday, June 26 with two episodes on Acorn TV, AMC Networks’ acclaimed streamer devoted to British and international television. Two new episodes will premiere weekly every Monday through July 10. Cannes Confidential made its world premiere at the 6th annual CANNESERIES festival in Cannes, France, where the series was shot.
Created by Chris Murray (Midsomer Murders, Agatha Raisin), Cannes Confidential is a high-concept detective series centered on the bicker-banter relationship between no-nonsense detective Camille Delmasse (Lucas) and charming international conman Harry King (Bamber). Thrown together solving crimes on the French Riviera, Camille and Harry’s relationship lies at the heart of the show against a luxurious Cannes backdrop. Camille and Harry’s chemistry is complicated by Camille’s colleague and wing-woman, Léa Robert (Marthe), and a deal they make to free Camille’s ex-Chief of Police father from corruption charges.
The series is executive produced by Patrick Nebout (Midnight Sun, Agent Hamilton), Henrik Jansson-Schweizer (Thicker Than Water, Midnight Sun), Catherine Mackin and Bea Tammer of Acorn Media Enterprises (Acorn TV’s commissioning, co-producing, and development division), International Drama Development & Artistic Acquisitions Department of TF1, Lotta Dolk of Viaplay, and produced by Daniel J. Cottin at Isolani Pictures. Camille Delamarre (The Transporters, Assassin Club, Netflix’s Into The Night) directed all six episodes.
Acorn TV holds the exclusive distribution rights to the series in North America, New Zealand, Australia, and United Kingdom. Viaplay holds exclusive distribution rights in the Nordic region. Acorn Media Enterprises and Acorn Media International hold worldwide rights in all other territories.
EPISODE DESCRIPTIONS
Episode 1 – “Death of a Jester” – Premieres Monday, June 26 on Acorn TV
Cannes detective Camille Delmasse (Lucie Lucas) is trying to solve the murder of a young street artist known as the Jester. During the investigation with her trusted sidekick Lea Robert (Tamara Marthe), Camille keeps running into the charming, but equally shady art collector Harry King (Jamie Bamber). It appears the dead artist had many enemies. Meanwhile, Camille’s father, the respected former Chief of police Philippe Delmasse is about to be cleared from corruption charges. But there are secrets being unraveled: Harry isn’t really an art collector, and regarding Philippe, Camille’s world is about to be turned upside down. Does Harry know who is behind the framing of her father Philippe? Camille intends to find out.
Episode 2 – “Creatures of Habit” – Premieres Monday, June 26 on Acorn TV
The wife of Casino owner Maxine Beauregard is poisoned to death in front of his friends and assistant. Camille (Lucie Lucas) and Lea (Tamara Marthe) are called to the scene, and all suspicions point toward the blacklisted gambler Roxie Roland. The problem is, there is no proof. After their mutual deal, Camille teams up with Harry (Jamie Bamber), trying to solve the murder. As a conman, there is no one better suited than to take down another con woman. But as the evidence and the suspects pile up, it takes a high-stakes poker game to unravel the truth. With Camille’s father in prison, Harry keeps his end of the bargain and gives Camille the name of the man threatening her father. He is already in Cannes.
Episode 3 – “A Clear Conscience” – Premieres Monday, July 3 on Acorn TV
A monk is found murdered below the fort Royal on the St Marguerite Island outside Cannes. The infamous island that housed the Man with the iron mask. Who killed the monk and why? Camille (Lucie Lucas) and Harry (Jamie Bamber) cross paths once again, making Lea (Tamara Marthe) jealous. Harry’s old friend Father Placid was a mentor to the dead monk, and Camille and Lea have to track down the victim’s troubled past in order to find the answers. Harry is one step ahead but gets in over his head, having to rely on Camille’s help to stay alive. Meanwhile her father’s nemesis Julien Boire makes it even more personal by approaching Camille’s sister Margaux. His warning to Camille is clear — stop digging or else.
Episode 4 – “The Deadlier Species” – Premieres Monday, July 3 on Acorn TV
Boire tries to run Camille (Lucie Lucas) off the road, but she manages to visit her father Philippe in prison. Camille and Lea (Tamara Marthe) are ordered to babysit arms-dealer and billionaire Leo Duval at The Majestic. Duval has been facing death threats, and it is rumored that the legendary assassin Nightshade is hired to kill him. Problem is that the Nightshade hasn’t been seen for fifteen years. Harry (Jamie Bamber) acts as the guide and encyclopedia trying to stop the assassin, something that brings Camille and Harry closer. When the dead body of a former MI6 operative shows up, Camille realizes the Nightshade is still alive. The riddle gets even more complex as the night closes in. There are stronger motives than money.
Episode 5 – “Southern Gothic” – Premieres Monday, July 10 on Acorn TV
Pascal, the son of the famous conductor Francois Fontaine, is found hanged after a seance. The Fontaine family are supposedly cursed, due to the tragic fate of the victim’s mother Babette who died in a mental asylum. Everybody but Camille that is, she doesn’t believe in ghosts. Camille (Lucie Lucas), Lea (Tamara Marthe), and Harry (Jamie Bamber) join forces to catch the killer, and have to go through shady mediums, news archives and scorned lovers to find the truth. A true southern gothic story, where nothing is what it seems. During all this, Camille and Harry try to lure Boire into a trap, something that will have dire consequences. Especially for Lea. In the end, Camille also realizes why Harry is in Cannes.
Episode 6 – “Love and Let Die” – Premieres Monday, July 10 on Acorn TV
During the Cannes film festival, Camille (Lucie Lucas) and Lea (Tamara Marthe) are assigned a murder case of famous actress Celeste Badeau’s assistant Zina. Was the movie star the intended target? The prime suspect is the notorious paparazzi Miko Zajac blackmailing Celeste, but why? During the investigation Lea meets Zina’s girlfriend and Lea’s former lover Eloise, and Camille sees that it affects her. Meanwhile Harry’s (Jamie Bamber) daughter Emily has been threatened by Boire, and he decides to stop the thug once and for all. Harry breaks into Boire’s office and finds alarming evidence that will shock Camille. Her father Philippe is about to be released, and Harry has to walk a fine line trying to protect Camille from ending up in the line of fire.
About Acorn TV
AMC Networks’ Acorn TV is North America’s largest streaming service specializing in premium British and international television. Acorn TV adds exclusive programming every week to a deep library of revered mysteries, dramas, and comedies – all commercial-free. Acorn TV’s recent slate is comprised of critically acclaimed commissioned and original series including popular New Zealand detective series My Life Is Murder (Lucy Lawless), acclaimed Irish crime thriller Bloodlands (James Nesbitt, co-executive produced by Jed Mercurio), British crime drama Whitstable Pearl (Kerry Godliman), Emmy®-nominated Queens of Mystery, Kiwi romantic comedy Under the Vines and British detective drama Dalgliesh (Bertie Carvel), to name a few. Current and upcoming Acorn TV Original Series include UK detective drama Harry Wild (Jane Seymour), Signora Volpe (Emilia Fox), The Chelsea Detective (Adrian Scarborough), Darby and Joan (Bryan Brown, Greta Scacchi) and many more. The above add to a growing catalog of popular bingeable dramas including Agatha Raisin (Ashley Jensen), A Place to Call Home, Jack Irish (Guy Pearce), Doc Martin (Martin Clunes), Deadwater Fell (David Tennant, Cush Jumbo), all 22 seasons of fan-favorite Midsomer Murders, highly-rated drama The Nest, and groundbreaking period drama A Suitable Boy, among others.
“glorious streaming service… an essential must-have” – The Hollywood Reporter
“Netflix for the Anglophile” – NPR
Acorn TV is available for $6.99/month or $69.99/year. Facebook: OfficialAcornTV – Twitter: @AcornTV – Instagram: @Acorn_tv
Proofread and Edited by Brenda
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Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Cast Birthdays

ST:SNW Cast Birthdays List
Remember your favorite “Star Trek” actor on their birthday or wish them a happy birthday on social media!
Note: We get this information from IMDB and Google, so please let us know if you see anything that’s inaccurate…
Shawn Ahmed 1/14/86
Sage Arrindell ?
Jess Bush 3/26/92
Christina Chong 9/18/83
André Dae Kim 12/2/96
Rong Fu 8/12/91
Celia Rose Gooding 2/22/00
Adrian Holmes 3/31/74
Bruce Horak 8/5/74
Jennifer Hui 9/12/81
Dan Jeannotte 9/22/81
Carol Kane 6/18/52
Alex Kapp 12/5/69
Anson Mount 2/25/73
Melissa Navia 8/24/84
Babs Olusanmokun 9/18/84
Ethan Peck 3/2/86
Cameron Roberts 9/7/78
Rebecca Romijn 11/6/72
Gia Sandhu 9/15/91
Melanie Scrofano 12/20/81
Paul Wesley 7/23/82

Most of this Info from Internet Movie Database
Star Trek: Picard Cast Birthdays List

Picard Cast Birthdays
Remember your favorite “Star Trek” actor on their birthday or wish them a happy birthday on social media!
Note: We get this information from IMDB and Google, so please let us know if you see anything that’s inaccurate…
Kirk Acevedo 11/27/71
Ito Aghayere 6/6/92
Kay Bess 3/14/?
Orla Brady 3/28/61
Isa Briones 1/17/99
LeVar Burton 2/16/57
Mica Burton 7/8/94
Santiago Cabrera 5/5/78
James Callis 6/4/71
Oscar Camacho 11/8/88
Stephanie Czajkowski 11/3/73
Daniel Davis 11/26/45
John de Lancie 3/20/48
Thomas Dekker 12/28/87
Jonathan Del Arco 3/7/66
Elizabeth Dennehy 10/1/60
Michael Dorn 12/9/52
Amy Earhart 10/3/80
Evan Evagora 8/10/66
Michelle Forbes 1/8/67
Jonathan Frakes 8/19/52
Whoopi Goldberg 11/13/55
Menik Gooneratne 7/5/79
Steve Gutierrez 4/13/09
Michelle Hurd 12/21/66
Casey King 3/25/91
Walter Koenig 9/14/36
Alice Krige 6/28/54
Grace Lee 10/4/82
Joseph Lee 12/29/87
Chad Lindberg 11/1/76
Peyton List 8/8/86
Jin Maley 12/4/86
Angel Manuel 1/28/83
Gates McFadden 3/2/49
Jamie McShane 7/18/64
Penelope Mitchell 7/24/91
Sumalee Montano 8/3/72
Nolan North 10/31/70
Patton Oswalt 1/27/69
David Paymer 8/30/54
Alison Pill 11/27/85
Amanda Plummer 3/23/57
Sol Rodriguez 4/17/90
Tim Russ 6/22/56
Jeri Ryan 2/22/68
Jane Edwina Seymour 10/5/?
Ashlei Sharpe Chestnut 8/9/92
Tiffany Shepis 9/11/79
Marina Sirtis 3/29/60
Ed Speleers 4/7/88
Brent Spiner 2/2/49
Aaron Stanford 12/27/76
Todd Stashwick 10/16/68
Sir Patrick Stewart 7/13/40
Lea Thompson 5/31/61
Tamlyn Tomita 1/27/66
Harry Treadaway 9/10/84
Dylan Von Halle 9/9/11
Annie Wersching 3/28/77*
Wil Wheaton 7/29/72
Madeline Wise 3/1/88
Rebecca Wisocky 11/12/71
*passed away
See the original Star Trek: The Next Generation Cast Birthdays

Most of this Info from Internet Movie Database
Star Trek: Discovery Cast Birthdays List

STDisco Cast Birthdays
Remember your favorite “Star Trek” actor on their birthday or wish them a happy birthday on social media!
Note: We get this information from IMDB and Google, so please let us know if you see anything that’s inaccurate…
David Ajala 5/21/86
Ian Alexander 4/20/01
Rachael Ancheril 12/8/71
Arista Arhin 2/8/05
Avaah Blackwell 2/28/90
Jayne Brook 9/16/60
Hannah Cheesman 10/6/84
Mary Chieffo 11/7/92
David Cronenberg 3/15/43
Wilson Cruz 12/27/73
Orville Cummings 1/28/95
Raven Dauda 7/21/73
Blu del Barrio 9/15/97
Nicole Dickinson 6/28/81
Shawn Doyle 9/19/68
Robinne Fanfair 3/7/?
Oded Fehr 11/23/70
James Frain 3/14/68
Julianne Grossman 2/23/69
Eve Harlow 6/20/89
Chelah Horsdal 6/19/73
Jason Isaacs 6/6/63
Doug Jones 5/24/60
Mia Kirshner 1/25/75
Patrick Kwok-Choon 11/19/88
Shazad Latif 7/8/88
Sonequa Martin-Green 3/21/85
Kenneth Mitchell 11/25/74
Sara Mitich 11/26/90
Anson Mount 2/25/73
Tig Notaro 3/24/71
Oyin Oladejo 9/23/85
Ethan Peck 3/2/86
Anthony Rapp 10/26/71
Callum Keith Rennie 9/14/60
Tara Rosling 11/16/70
Ronnie Rowe 12/16/80
Rekha Sharma 1/1/70
Phumzile Sitole 11/18/89
Sonja Sohn 5/9/64
Fabio Tassone 9/11/80
David Benjamin Tomlinson 8/14/?
Elias Toufexis 10/27/75
Tasia Valenza 4/5/67
Alan Van Sprang 6/19/71
Annabelle Wallis 9/5/84
Mary Wiseman 7/30/85
Michelle Yeoh 8/6/62

Most of this Info from Internet Movie Database