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          Voyager's News Items and Chats Information Archive


          Articles are listed in order from newest to oldest news.

        • Voyager Coming To Home Video Stores

        • Robert J. Doherty Interview

        • J. G. Hertzler Interview

        • A PIECE OF THE ROCK

        • Roxann Dawson on Seven Days

        • Roxann Dawson Jumping Ship

        • Marina Sirtis Set to Guest Star on an Upcoming Episode Of Paramount's 'Star Trek: Voyager'--Dwight Schultz also Guest Stars

        • Viacom and CBS Merge

        • Star Trek: Voyager to Syndication

        • Goodnight and Goodbye from Ronald D. Moore

        • New Husband, New Contract Highlight Her Year

        • Rick Berman's thoughts on future of Star Trek

        • Ron Moore to Leave Voyager?

        • Geppetto (New Movie)

        • New Trek Coming?

        • DeForest Kelley Died

        • Ronald D. Moore joins STAR TREK:VOYAGER

        • Ira Steven Behr

        • Wedding Bells

        • HAGAN, MULGREW MARRIED IN FLORIDA

        • Robert Beltran Chat

        • Congratulations, Scarlett! Won

        • Congratulations, Scarlett! Nominated

        • Mulgrew hopes to exit Voyager

        • People in the News--Kate Mulgrew Engaged

        • THE SERIES' HUNDREDTH EPISODE

        • HOT TIME ON THE VOYAGER SET

        • Voyager's return to Earth

        • Braga says

        • Mulgrew tells Mania Magazine

        • Director Robert Picardo

        • We'll Always Have Paris

        • 'Voyager' Coming To Home Video
          Cinescape is reporting that on the 4th of April, Voyager tapes will be available in video stores throughout the country . . . This is also the date 'Star Wars Episode One: The Phantom Menace' will debut on video.

          Personal note: Saw this announcement just after visiting the Suncoast store in Little Rock, whose manager had told me on February 3 that they would probably have Star Trek Voyager in April!

          Note! Suncoast website states VHS Expected Release Date: April 4, 2000 :
              1. Star Trek Voyager: 1 & 2 / Caretaker
              2. Star Trek Voyager: 3 / Parallax
              3. Star Trek Voyager: 4 / Time-Again
              4. Star Trek Voyager: 6 / Cloud
              5. Star Trek Voyager: Phage

          (Added March 18 from Star Trek Continuum
          )

          03.16.00 Product News: Home Video Wrap-Up

          Star Trek: Voyager fans waiting for VHS editions need wait only a short while longer. April 4 will also see the release of Star Trek: Voyager's first six episodes; "Caretaker Part I and II," "Parallax," "Time and Again," "Phage" and "The Cloud."

          On May 2, more Star Trek: Voyager episodes will be released on VHS; "Emanations," "Ex Post Facto," "Eye of the Needle," "Prime Factors" and "State of Flux."


          Click picture for larger version.

          picture in STAR TREK: THE MAGAZINE

          Robert J. Doherty Interview

          BY: ? IN STAR TREK: THE MAGAZINE

          The youngest member of STAR TREK: VOYAGER's writing staff talks to us about how he made it onto the team, and his work on the show so far.

          Rob Doherty was no stranger to Brannon Braga and the other writers when he joined the staff after the July 4th weekend last year; he had been at Paramount for almost three years, as an intern and then as assistant to writer Kenneth Biller. "I came out here through internship, just out of college," Rob says. "I was an English major. When I was coming closer to graduation, I guess I was planning to go into something like short fiction writing. It didn't really occur to me until quite late to pursue screenwriting.

          Longtime fan

          "I graduated in '96 and I did the same internship as Brannon had done, the academy of TV Arts and Sciences. I had no idea I would be placed at STAR TREK: VOYAGER; I sent an application to the Academy and they just said I would be based on a one-hour drama somewhere, somehow!"

          Rob had been a fan of STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION for several years. "I had watched that pretty religiously during college. VOYAGER I really hadn't seen because I was at school in this tiny little farm town in central New York and we didn't get UPN , so I really hadn't seen VOYAGER before I got home that summer."

          Life as an intern


          Arriving at Paramount, Rob was surprised to find out that an intern's role is treated very seriously. "I thought it was going to be a lot of running errands and stuff," he says, "but the internship is really very rewarding to anybody who does it here. You're included in all the meetings, all of the story breaks, the production meetings, stuff like that; it's really getting a writer's eye view of the production process. It's rare that you're asked to make copies or coffee or anything like that. I was encouraged when I was an intern to speak out and contribute ideas. Everyone's treated with a great deal of respect; there's really no such thing as a bad idea. It was tough for me because I was pretty quiet and soft-spoken it took me a while before I could speak up!

          "I was interned for that summmer of '96. Following my internship, an opening came up with Ken; I worked with him on kind of a trial basis for a little while, then I finally got hired as his assistant." Rob learned a lot during this time, and wrote Season Four's 'Vis a Vis,' where the alien Steth exchanges DNA with Tom Paris--the last in a long line of victims--so as to take on his appearance. "I was thrilled," says Rob. "It was the first script I had ever had produced, and we had Dan Butler from 'Frasier' guest-starring; that was a thrill too."

          The following season, Rob wrote the teleplay for two shows: 'Infinite Regress [by Jimmy Diggs and Robert Doherty],' . . . and 'Bliss [by Bill Prady]. . . .'

          When we spoke, Rob had worked on two teleplays for Season Six, 'Riddles' and 'Tsunkatse'; the former came from a story by STAR TREK science advisor Andre Bormanis. "I just took a pass at the story and got the teleplay," says Rob. "You might know that Roxann Dawson directed it; I thought she did an incredible job.

          Click picture for larger version.

          picture in STAR TREK: THE MAGAZINE

          "'Tsunkatse' was a story by Gannon Kenney. Brannon had plenty of notes on how the sport could be depicted and produced, so again it was a big team effort and all of the staff contributed."

          Second-in-command Chakotay was heavily featured in 'Tsunkatse,' in a role Rob feels worked well. "He was kind of filling in for Janeway for much of the episode, so it was an opportunity to see him in a real command position. He was great; he really pulled it off."


          Click picture for larger version.

          picture in STAR TREK: THE MAGAZINE

          J. G. Hertzler Interview

          BY: ? IN STAR TREK: THE MAGAZINE

          "As Martock, J.G. Hertzler became one of STAR TREK: DEEP SPACE NINE's most popular quest stars. Now that the series is over, he looks back at his career as a Klingon general with great fondness."

          "He has just finished filming an episode of STAR TREK: VOYAGER, 'Tsunkatse,' in which he plays a Hirogen.

          "I was in West Virginia, doing a convention with Robert O'Reilly [Gowron] and Alice Krige [the Borg Queen], when I got the call. They said VOYAGER wants to use you as a hunter, a Hirgen. I didn't know what that was at that time because my world had been DS9, but I said, 'Yeah, I'd love to work on VOYAGER, if I'm there.' So I got home, and the days were great because it was right in the middle of several things."

          In the story, Seven of Nine is pitted against against several aliens, including John's Hirogen, in a wrestling match. "I was on my son's first hunt, and in the middle of that I was just beamed out involuntarily by this organization, the Morcadians. We don't know who they are, but I've been in this arena, in this gladiatorial thing, for 19 years; there's no way out of it, you have to fight, or else you die. Jeffrey Combs [who played Weyoun] plays the organizer of this whole thing. His character is as slimy as they come. Greasy, slimy, and you've gotta love him."

          Looking Forward


          And, since John is almost completely unrecognizable every time he appears in STAR TREK, He's looking forward to the possibility of coming back whenever they need someone who is "Big and noisy, with an incredibly attractive presence and charisma. I love working in latex--I love working in masks. There's a few of us actors that prefer it, and I'm one...."Although it doesn't look particularly likely in the near future, I hope we'll have a chance to do some film work with the Klingons, with Martok and Worf. I look forward to a film appearance," he smiles, "mainly because I'd love to climb into the gear again."


          A PIECE OF THE ROCK

          BY: Steve Hockensmith in Cinescape

          picture in Cinescape

          One of your favorite TV characters just died--or got pregnant or got divorced or showed up again after being gone for two seasons. That fluffy little sitcom you like just ended an episode with a high-drama cliffhanger to be resolved next week. And your favorite hard-hitting news show just launched a searing five-part expose' about in-home lingerie modeling.

          Can you smell what the television networks are cookin'? It's sweeps--the all-important ratings period that determines network advertising rates for weeks to come. That's why the nets like to season sweeps months (such as February) with a pinch of sex, a dollop of upheaval and a heapin' helpin' of stunt casting.

          Even series set on the farthest fringes of the final frontier aren't beyond the reach of sweeps, which explains why the starship Voyager will soon encounter an ambassador from that strange alien organization known as the World Wrestling Federation: In February, WWF star Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson will appear on Star Trek Voyager as--what else?-an interstellar gladiator.

          But Voyager co-executive producer Ken Biller doesn't want anybody to get the wrong idea. Johnson's appearance isn't some UPN-mandated attempt to lure viewers over from the network's popular WWF Smackdown!.

          "The idea didn't come from [the network]," he stresses. "It came from us."

          Picture in Cinescape

          Or, more specifically, from Biller, staff writer Robert Doherty and writer Gannon Kenney, all of whom contributed to the development of the episode, titled "Tsunkatse."

          It grew out of a long discussion I had with [Voyager executive producer] Brannon Braga. I had a very vague desire to do a story that had something to do with sports, so we started talking about science fiction movies with a sport theme, like Rollerball or [Mad Max] Beyond Thunderdome," Biller explains. "I was interested in the way in which sports have become such a big sports heroes and the degree to which sports do or don't become an outlet for people's aggression."

          From those early musings grew a story with vague similarities to "The Gamesters of Triskelion," the campy original series episode in which Kirk, Chekov and Uhura are kidnapped by glowing brains and forced to participate in bizarre--and deadly--contests.

          The crew on shore leave and a number of people, including Chakotay and Torres, become interested in this alien sport called Tsunkatse," Biller says. "They've been going to watch it, like if you went to Japan you might go watch sumo wrestling. Seven of Nine is not interested in this sport or any shore leave at all. She thinks it's kind of a frivolous activity, and so does Tuvok. They go off to explore a nebula, and while they're gone they get captured. They find themselves in this kind og training facility, where they quickly discover that they are about to be forced to participate in this alien sport."

          The Rock shows up (wearing the patented Star Trek "Look, ma, I'm an alien!" beetle brow) as a tsunkatse champion who squares off in the ring against Seven of Nine. But Rock fans hoping that their he-man hero will get a part as juicy as Carl Weathers' Apollo Creed or Mr. T's Clubber Lang might come away disappointed.

          Picture in Cinescape

          "He's probably only on screen for a couple of minutes," Biller admits. "He has three or four lines, then he beats her up."

          Oh, but the way he beats her up--that should have wrestling afficionados cheering.

          "We hired [veteran movie actor/stunt man] James Lew to do the fights for us. He's really an extraordinary fight coordinator," Biller says. "Tsunkatse is a weird blend of martial arts. It's not WWF wrestling. It's a very interesting, alien, futuristic, hybrid form of fighting. And there's a high-tech element to it, as well. There are sensors and targets and different things. You won't see people smashing each other over the head with chairs or tag-teaming or whatever it is they do in wrestling. [But] the very discerning viewer might notice a hint or two of The Rock's signature moves. He's got one called 'The Rock Bottom' and he does a version of that in the fight."

          Though Capt. James T. Kirk wasn't some kind of namby-pamby Mr. Sensitive--one suspects he wouldn't mind clobbering people over the head with chairs, provided said clobberees were Klingons or Romulans--the Star Trek/wrestling cross-over does seem a bit inconsistent with Gene Roddenberry's highminded ideals. After all, Trek's heroes have always espoused the virtues of multiculturalism, understanding and reason, while the stars of wrestling have traditionally espoused the virtues of...well, clobbering people over the head with chairs. Biller acknowledges the seeming incongruity, but dances around the implications.

          "I'm sure there are plenty of people who think that wrestling is barbaric," he says. "We try not to take a position on any of [those kinds of] issues. We try to raise interesting questions and do something that's thought provoking. [Perhaps 'Tsunkatse' will] make people ask themselves why they watch this stuff and what is interesting to them about it. I think that's always our goal."


          From TV Guide

          Roxann Dawson

          Seven Days: The Devil and the Deep Blue Sea

          See on January 5, 2000 The disappearance of a top-ranking admiral leads to a stormy reunion between Parker and a former flame (Roxann Dawson) when her vessel tangles with the Chinese off the coast of Taiwan.

          Adm. Newman: James Antonio. Lasalle: Kevin Patrick Walls. Olga: Justina Vail. Ballard: Sam Whipple. Ramsey: Nick Searcy.

          Cast: Jonathan LaPaglia, Don Franklin, Justina Vail, Norman Lloyd, Nick Searcy, Sam Whipple, Alan Scarfe


          From TV Zone Magazine

          Roxann Dawson Jumping Ship

          "Star Trek: Voyager’s chief engineer comes down to Earth for an adventure on the high seas"

          In her role as ex-Maquis rebel and half-human, half-Klingon Lieutenant B’Elanna Torres on Star Trek: Voyager, Roxann Dawson has spent the past five years following Captain Kathryn Janeway’s orders while learning how to conduct herself as a Starfleet officer.

          A New Task

          Back in October, the actress had the chance to sit in the captain’s chair when guest-starring as United States Navy officer Commander Keagle on UPN’s popular Time travel series Seven Days. According to her, cruising the waters off the coast of Vancouver, British Columbia was a bumpy but welcome respite from warping through the Delta Quadrant.

          “I’m used to working on a soundstage where everything is calm – there is no weather in Space – and suddenly I was out on a naval vessel in the middle of a storm,” says Dawson. “So that took some getting used to, but I still enjoyed myself. It was nice not having to wear the Klingon make-up that I do on Voyager. That allowed me a great deal of creative freedom that I haven’t felt in a while as an actress.

          “Besides the make-up, Keagle is quite unlike B’Elanna in that she comes from a different background and has her own life and set of goals. Yes, she’s a military officer and the only female on an all-male ship, so I suppose some of the job-related challenges she faces might be similar to those B’Elanna experiences on Voyager. However, I still feel that there are more differences than similarities between them and that’s part of what made Keagle so refreshing to play.”

          In the second-season Seven Days episode Saving the Admiral, Frank Parker (Jonathan LaPaglia) is reunited with his old flame Commander Keagle during a Back-Step mission in which he must undo the misguided handiwork of a psychotic Joint Chief of Staff who is aboard her ship. “The story is written in such a way that the relationship between Keagle and Parker is hinted at but not actually spelt out in any great detail,” notes Dawson.

          “All we really know", continues Dawson, "is that they haven’t seen each other in quite a long time, so that leaves a lot open to the imagination. I think when you’re faced with playing someone like this you have to invent a whole backstory for them and an entire relationship that they had with this other person. You then use this as the subtext to guide you in the scenes between both characters.

          “I couldn’t have asked for a better actor to play opposite than Jonathan LaPaglia,” she adds. “He’s very passionate about his work and is willing to take risks in his acting. Jonathan’s totally committed to making Seven Days as good as it possibly can be and is open to other peoples’ ideas and suggestions. This certainly helped foster a productive and creative working environment.”

          Believe it or not, being cast as Keagle came as a complete surprise to Dawson. “The Seven Days production people actually contacted the production team on Voyager without me knowing it,” says the actress. “They cleared my days and enabled me to do the project before ever approaching me about it. They sent me the script and I really liked the role. Once they worked everything out they offered me the job. That doesn’t happen very often in this business, so I was quite flattered.”

          After finishing work on Seven Days, the actress was back at her post in engineering as B’Elanna Torres on Voyager. She and her fellow castmembers had returned to Paramount Studios in June to begin filming the show’s sixth season. One of the first episodes they shot, Barge of the Dead, features Dawson’s feisty Klingon alter ego. In it B’Elanna convinces Captain Janeway (Kate Mulgrew) to allow her to enter a coma-like state so that she can help her mother Miral (Karen Austin), whose soul is trapped in Klingon purgatory.

          “That is probably the most exhausting Voyager episode I’ve ever done just because B’Elanna is so present in it. Everything is through her perspective, and there is no B-storyline to switch to, so that made it very tiring. "Also, working from morning until night under all the make-up made for long days and very short turnarounds, which meant I barely made it home and back to work in time. Some nights it was easier for me to sleep in my trailer on the Paramount lot...”

          Steven Eramo

          Roxann is appearing in the episode entitled 'Saving the Admiral', scheduled to air on Wednesday the 12th of January, 2000.


          From Yahoo

          Marina Sirtis Set to Guest Star on an Upcoming Episode Of Paramount's 'Star Trek: Voyager'--Dwight Schultz also Guest Stars

          Wednesday September 15, 3:17 pm Eastern Time
          Company Press Release
          SOURCE: Paramount Television Group
          HOLLYWOOD, Calif., Sept. 15 /PRNewswire/ -- Marina Sirtis who starred for seven seasons on ``Star Trek: The Next Generation'' is set to guest star in Paramount Network Television's multiple Emmy Award-winning series, ``STAR TREK: VOYAGER'' for UPN. Dwight Schultz, who guest starred in several episodes of ``Star Trek: The Next Generation'' will also appear in this episode. Sirtis and Schultz will reprise their roles as Counselor Troi and Lieutenant Barclay, respectively, in the episode entitled ``Pathfinder,'' which begins filming this week. The episode is tentatively scheduled to air on Wednesday, December 1 at 9:00 PM on UPN.

          ``Pathfinder,'' which takes place on Earth, revolves around Barclay's obsession with contacting Voyager. During his project to contact Voyager, Barclay becomes consumed with his holographic recreations of the Voyager crew. Barclay seeks advice from his old friend from the Starship Enterprise, Counselor Troi who helps him deal with his growing problem.

          Sirtis who is best known for her portrayal of Deanna Troi has also portrayed the same character in Paramount's blockbuster feature films, ``Star Trek: Generation,'' ``Star Trek: First Contact'' and most recently in, ``Star Trek: Insurrection.'' Her additional, feature film credits include ``The Wicked Lady'' with Faye Dunaway, ``Death Wish III opposite Charles Bronson, ''Blind Date`` with Bruce Willis and ''The Thief of Baghdad.``

          Schultz's feature film credits include ``Star Trek: First Contact '' as Lieutenant Barclay, as well as ``Fat Man and Little Boy'' with Paul Newman, ``The Long Walk Home'' and ``The Temp'' with Tim Hutton and Laura Flynn Boyle, Schultz's television credits include starring in the popular television series ``The A-Team.''

          At the helm of the Starship Voyager is Kate Mulgrew as Captain Kathryn Janeway. The series also stars Robert Duncan McNeill as Ensign Tom Paris, Robert Beltran as First Officer Chakotay, Tim Russ as Tactical Officer Tuvok, Garrett Wang as Ensign Harry Kim, Roxann Dawson as Chief Engineer B'Elanna Torres, Ethan Phillips as Neelix, Robert Picardo as the Doctor and Jeri Ryan as Seven of Nine.

          Rick Berman and Brannon Braga are executive producers of ``STAR TREK: VOYAGER.'' ``STAR TREK: VOYAGER'' based on ``Star Trek'' created by Gene Roddenberry, was created by Rick Berman, Michael Piller, and Jeri Taylor. ``STAR TREK: VOYAGER'' is produced by Paramount Network Television for UPN. The Paramount Television Group is part of the entertainment operations of Viacom Inc.


          From Vidiot's Voyager Page

          Viacom and CBS Merge

          What does this mean for UPN? Well, FCC rules do not allow a company to have more than one network. Depending on when the paperwork is signed, UPN should be allowed to complete the season.

          From Backstage Pass
          First, the deal with CBS may take as much as a year to get ironed out, so it's pretty certain that Star Trek: Voyager and 7 Days will get a full season's run. After that, look for Voyager to leave the air with a new Trek series to begin on CBS around the middle of the 2000 - 2001 season. It will be the first Trek series on a major (Big 3) network since 1969. Another thought that has been mentioned around the studio has been a big sweeps mini series for Trek's 35th anniversary in 2001.

          For complete details on this developing story, visit Backstage Pass.


          Great News from Vidiot's Voyager Page
          Paramount is Releasing Star Trek: Voyager to Syndication. The past episodes will be available this fall. They will be seen five days a week! UPN has been advertising scenes with Seven of Nine so there will be at least four seasons of Voyager--but probably five.

          Star Trek: Voyager will be launching into syndication on September 13th. The new Star Trek: Voyager season takes off on September 22nd!

        • If you are looking for a schedule of Star Trek: Voyager in syndication, the UPN Affiliates each have their own schedule. Dallas/Fort Worth is showing five episodes (Monday--Friday) at 9 P.M. Little Rock has episodes on Saturday and Sunday at 9 P. M. New Orleans only shows one episode on Sunday at 9 P.M. Then there are others who are not showing any syndicated episodes.

        • Subject: Goodnight and Goodbye
          Date: Thu, 08 July 1999 07:56 PM EDT
          From: RonDMoore
          Message-id: <19990708195622.06618.00008199@ng-fg1.aol.com>

          Well, folks it's true. I've left Voyager and Star Trek.

          I know there's a lot of speculation out there as to the how's and why's of my departure, but I'd really rather not get into the details of what happened. (Dirty laundry and all that.) What I will say is that I realized that it was time for me to move on and that I left more out of sorrow than in anger. I have no bitter feelings over what happened and I wish everyone associated with Trek and with Voyager only the best.

          I'd also like to clear up some odd rumors that have been clogging the net: I did not leave because of the supposedly negative reaction to my sole Voyager script, "Survival Instinct." In fact, the teleplay was well-received by everyone and went through a fairly modest rewrite. The same goes for "Barge of the Dead," to which I contributed only a co-story and was actually written by Bryan Fuller. I wanted to specifically put both of these rumors to rest because I think leaving a show over "bad script notes" would be incredibly unprofessional. I've been around the block a few times and I've had more than my share of nasty notes and even had entire drafts thrown out. It's not something that would make me head for the exits even if it had occured (which it did not).

          All I can tell you is that I felt that I had to leave and that it wasn't an easy decision to make. Let's leave it at that.

          So my personal Trek has come to an end. It's been a helluva ride, let me tell you. I sold my first professional script to Star Trek 10 years ago next week and it's been an amazing experience ever since. I've often posted how much this show has meant to me over the years, so I won't bore you with another nostalgic paean to all things Trek. Let me just express to you that my overwhelming feeling as I leave is one of gratitude. Gratitude for the opportunity to be a part of something that was an integral part of my childhood; for the chance to contribute to a bit of Americana; for the professional rewards that come with being part of an enormously successful series; for the education in learning my craft; for the many, many friendships that I've formed.

          And gratitude to you -- the fans. You've been loyal and passionate throughout the years and I'm continually amazed by your thoughtfulness and generosity. Not fifteen minutes ago, a very special package arrived on my doorstep. Inside was a beautifully made scrapbook of thank yous and momentos from the regular users of this board. To say that I was touched would be an understatement. The fact that it arrived at this moment, after all that's happened means a great deal to me and I will treasure it always.

          One last anecdote:

          My last day was Thursday, July 1 and I spent most of it walking around the lot, saying good-bye to various members of the cast and crew, some of whom I'd worked with for a decade. It was a melancholy sort of task and I was eager to be done with it and get outta there. So when Bryan pulled me aside and said that my birthday gift had come in, my first reaction was to put him off for another day, but then I relented and he walked into my office with it hidden behind his back.

          It was a bat'leth. A genuine, metal, leather-handled, sharp as all hell, bat'leth. Made by our prop department, which is as close as you can get to getting one from Kronos itself. I was touched and I laughed, but it wasn't until I was on my way home that I realized what Bryan had really given me: an ending to my own Star Trek story. You see, ten years ago I walked onto the Paramount lot for the first time with a script under my arm and last week I walked off with a bat'leth. I left carrying my sword. There's a certain poetry to that and it went a long way toward making me feel as if I'd left with my head high and my "honor" intact. Thank you, Bryan.

          So that's it -- now I'm just another fan. Which is what I was at the beginning, and what I'll probably be until I shuffle off to StoVoKor (which better friggin' exist after all the time I spent talking about it.)

          Take care, and I wish you all well in your personal Treks.

          Ronald D. Moore

          To find this on AOL enter as keywords "Star Trek Club" then click on the following as they appear on different screens
          The Message Boards
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          Ron D. Moore Discussion Board


        • (Added July 10, 1999)
        • Another Universe's interview with Kate Mulgrew

          "New Husband, New Contract Highlight Her Year"

          "After a bicoastal courtship, Mulgrew and Hagan were married April 19th in a small ceremony in Sanibel, Florida (there are details in the July 5 People Magazine, in which the Hagan-Mulgrew nuptials share space with the latest royal wedding)."

          "While the actress expressed hope that the addition of former Deep Space Nine producer Ron Moore to the staff would encourage storylines which would connect Voyager to the Alpha Quadrant, Moore's departure last week may have limited such possibilities."

          "My great wishes for this season...I really want a featured episode with Roxann [Dawson, who plays B'Elanna Torres] and one with Bob [Picardo, who plays the Doctor], where they are integral to what's happening not only on the ship, but with me," she revealed. "I have a very close personal relationship with both of them, those two, and I feel that Roxann has suffered a bit in the past year."

          "In this year that we stand alone, I want it to be really great," added Mulgrew, referring to the as-yet-unnamed new Star Trek series that executive producer Rick Berman told USA Today is already in the works. With Deep Space Nine off the air and no new Next Generation films planned, "It's like being a member of a large family and suddenly everyone goes away to college and you have the house to yourself. I don't know what they're going to do next, but my guess is that they'll bring it on during our seventh season. That gives us this year to be wild."


        • (Added July 4, 1999) In Star Trek Communicator
          • Star Trek Update

            Rick Berman's thoughts on ST:DS9
            and the future of Star Trek

          "Where are you in the process of making another Next Generation feature film?

          All I can say is that we do not have a film planned for the fall of 2000, which would be a two-year hiatus like the last two were. As to whether there will be a film the year after that and what it will be about and who it will feature is all in discussion right now. The next film has not been planned significantly enough to say that it definitely will or will not be a Next Generation movie. I can't imagine that it will take more than a couple of years to get another film in production. I don't think the fans have to worry about not getting another Star Trek movie and I think they're going to get another Star Trek series in the next couple of years. We are in development on it now. The new series is going to be substantially different from what we've seen. My instincts tell me that the new series will come before the next film."


          Ron Moore to Leave Voyager?

          (June 28, 1999) After only a short time, writer and co-executive producer Ron Moore is believed to be leaving the Voyager staff. There has been no official confirmation of this and only speculation as to why he may be leaving.


          From The Official Scarlett Pomers Homepage.

            Geppetto- In June, Scarlett worked on a musical for Disney called Geppetto, starring Drew Carey. Also starring in the film is Brent Spiner, TNG's Data and Rene Auberjonois, DS9's Odo. Spiner plays Stromboli, the villain. Scarlett's scene/song features Auberjonois as the creator of a group of perfect children. Geppetto will be on ABC's Wonderful World of Disney in May, 2000. Photos from the set coming soon.


          New Trek Coming?

          From Starland Online Magazine

          (Added June 14, 1999) Rick Berman has been making hints there is a new show up his sleeve. The big question isn't whether there will be a new series, but rather what kind of SF show? Many of the people working on the recently cancelled DS9 series have been asked to make themselves available for the new show this fall. Actual details are hard to come by, but it should be noted that Berman has not announced if the series will be made for the struggling UPN or for the more lucrative syndication market. The new series could be available for TV as early as September 2000. His comments to the LA Times have revealed that the show will definitely be a Star Trek spin-off, but he seems to be, wisely, keeping the changing details under wraps.


          (Added June 11 from Star Trek Continuum) DeForest Kelley, the beloved "Doctor 'Bones' McCoy" on the original Star Trek series, died today at 12:15 p.m. (PT) in Woodland Hills, California. He was 79.

          Kelley had been hospitalized at the Motion Picture and Television Fund Hospital for several months with a lingering illness. Kelley was born in Atlanta, Georgia on January 20th, 1920. He is survived by his wife of 55 years, Carolyn.

          DeForest Kelley Remembered

          From Starland Online Magazine

          Our beloved Doctor died Friday at the Motion Picture and Television Fund Hospital in Woodland Hills, California. His wife of 55 years, Carolyn was at his side. Leonard Jackson Kelley was always a good friend and classy individual.

          KathE and Karolyn (my wife and sister-in-law) had the great privilege of running DeForest's fan club for a time and felt proud to know the Kelley's personally. I occasionally talked with him and his wife over dinner and spent some time at the two conventions that we produced where he was a guest. De and his wife shared much joy in the letters they would receive from McCoy's fans. De waxed proud over the accomplishments of those that wrote to mention McCoy as an inspiration in their lives. De and Carolyn took the time to correspond with those people and turned them into fans of DeForest and Carolyn Kelley.

          Carolyn is currently being treated for illness at the Hospital and could probably use your encouragement during this difficult time. Address your correspondence to: Carolyn Kelley c/o Motion Picture and Television Country Home and Hospital 23388 Mulholland Drive Woodland Hills, CA 91364.


          Ronald D. Moore joins STAR TREK:VOYAGER

          (Added May 31, 1999-- Star Trek: The Magazine) Veteran STAR TREK writer Ronald D. Moore is soon to join STAR TREK: VOYAGER as co-executive producer. Ron has a long history of involvement with STAR TREK. He joined the writing staff of STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION in its third season and worked on that show until it finished. He then transferred to STAR TREK: DEEP SPACE NINE, where he became a co-executive producer. During this time, he also co-wrote the feature films STAR TREK GENERATIONS and STAR TREK: FIRST CONTACT with VOYAGER's current executive producer, Brannon Braga.

          Ron has never written for VOYAGER and will begin contributing stories with the start of Season Six. Filming for the new season starts when the cast and crew return to Paramount studios on June 8.


        • (Added May 22, 1999) Star Trek Continuum

          Ira Steven Behr
          "Executive Producer" on Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
          May 18, 1999

          Cmdr. Spock asks:
          Are any of the talented writers from DS9 going to jump over to Voyager next season? How about you?

          Ira Steven Behr:
          Ron Moore is on Voyager even as we speak but he is the only one who felt like making that leap into that Delta Quadrant.

          Mogh asks:
          Will Chancellor Martok be seen in the last episode?

          Ira Steven Behr:
          Yes, J.G. Hertzler is one of those actors like Jeff Coombs who we like to use every week. And maybe this is a good time to just take a moment and salute all the DS9 stock of supporting players. So let's hear it for Marc Alaimo, Andrew Robinson, Louise Fletcher, Salome Jens, Casey Biggs, Barry Jenner, Max Grodenchik, Chase Masterson, Aron Eisenberg, Jimmy Darren, Rosalind Chao, Penny Johnson, Wallace Shawn, Cecily Adams... I cannot tell you how much these people mean to me and to the writer-producers of DS9. All of them were just so enthused and happy to be working on the show all of them contributed so much to the series they helped make my 7 years here such a pleasure and I really, really do want to work with them in the future. I think we had as fine a supporting cast as could be found on TV.


        • (Added May 11, 1999) In Star Trek Communicator under an announcement of wedding bells was this announcement.

        • (Added April 25, 1999 from Totally Kate: The Kate Mulgrew Page)
        • CLEVELAND PLAIN DEALER

          April 22, 1999

          HAGAN, MULGREW MARRIED IN FLORIDA

          Former Cuyahoga County Commissioner Tim Hagan and actress Kate Mulgrew, Starfleet Capt. Kathryn Janeway on "Star Trek: Voyager," have quietly married. The ceremony, which reportedly included only the couple and a close friend of Mulgrew's, took place Monday [April 19] in Florida.

          Hagan, who will give the afternoon commencement address at Cleveland State University May 9, and receive an honorary doctorate from the university during the ceremony, did not run for re-election for commissioner last year, a post he had held since 1983. The father of two daughters is now serving as a consultant to CSU's Maxine Goodman Levin College of Urban Affairs, in charge of developing the college's new Civic Forum speakers' program. Hagan is also a consultant to the nonprofit Mandel Foundation.

          Mulgrew, the mother of two sons, is expected to return for at least one more season as Capt. Janeway. However, don't confuse TV with real life. It was only acting when, on a recent "Star Trek: Voyager" episode, Mulgrew's character gave a big romantic smooch to a passenger aboard the USS Voyager.


          Parts from the Robert Beltran Chat at Star Trek Continuum
          March 4, 1999

        • Linda asks:
          Do you think the show is going in the right direction?

        • Robert Beltran:
          When I find out what that direction is, I will tell you. Let me expand on that... I don't see the obvious advantage of going back to the Alpha Quadrant. We're still going to be dealing with aliens, just with different noses.

        • Red Dwarf asks:
          Is it just a rumor, or will you really be BOXING in an upcoming Voyager episode? And...do you still blow the most lines of any actor on the show?

        • Robert Beltran:
          I will be boxing in an upcoming episode... Yes, I am still the one who blows the most lines.

        • Peter Northwood asks:
          In 5 single words, how would you describe Chakotay AND yourself ( I mean 5 for each!!)?

        • Robert Beltran:
          Chakotay...
          Limp...
          Weasely...
          Cowardly...
          Homosexual...
          Charming...

        • For me...
          Facetious...
          Indifferent...
          Immoral...
          Cold...
          But loveable...
          :)
          :)

        • Actually, Chakotay and I have very little in common - in the unimportant areas. In the important areas such as loyalty, friendship, duty, etc... we are very similar. But he's the only gay one.

        • Mike Plane asks:
          Hi Robert, will there be any further romance between Chakotay and Janeway?

        • Robert Beltran:
          It's surprising to me that Captain Janeway touches me more now that we obviously do not have a romantic relationship, but I don't believe anything romantic will ever happen.
          This year.

        • hirogen asks:
          Is it true that in the episode "waking moments" there was to be a steamy love scene with Janeway and Chakotay but Kate Mulgrew objected?

        • Robert Beltran:
          Wherever you got your information, it's wrong. That never happened. Don't believe every damn thing you read!

        • Queen Arachnia asks:
          How do you feel about the fans' clamor to see Janeway and Chakotay romantically involved?

        • Robert Beltran:
          I think the fans made that obvious to the writers and to the producers and they ran with it for awhile, but then they decided that it probably would not be a good idea for us to have a romantic relationship. So relax... enjoy the Virginia Madsens and the Kate Vernons that come along and I certainly will. And we should all be happy.

        • missy asks:
          Any truth to the rumor on the internet that you are planning to leave the show?

        • Robert Beltran:
          I'd like to know how people know this about me when I don't even know it. I have no plans to leave the show, but then of course, they can fire me any damn time they want to.

        • Captain Maley asks:
          Are you happy with Chakotay's development as a character? What would you personally like to see?

        • Robert Beltran:
          In general, yes I'm very happy with Chakotay's development. Unfortunately, in a tv show, things develop slowly. So I have to constantly remind myself to be patient. All of us do. But the writers have come up with some fun and challenging episodes for me. As far as what I would like to see... I honestly prefer the writers to come up with storylines. That's what they're paid to do. I'm paid to just learn the lines. And say them when I can. So far, things have been working well that way.

        • Richard Freitag asks:
          Are we going to see Chakotay's own Holodeck program?

        • Robert Beltran:
          Yes. But I can't tell you what it is yet.

        • BBanzai asks:
          The character Chakotay is very professional and controlled, while, from previous chat transcripts, Mr. Beltran appears to be freewheeling and seat-of-the-pants (good things, in my opinion). Do you enjoy playing opposite your own inclinations? I would. :

        • Robert Beltran:
          Yes. Thank you for being able to distinguish the actor from his character. Some people still don't get it. And yes, I do enjoy playing characters that are removed from my own personality. It's more of a challenge.

        • Rdakin- Big Fan- From Canada asks:
          Think back, a few years ago. When you found out you would be serving under a female captain, what was your reaction? I'm not calling you a sexist pig, I'm just curious.

        • Robert Beltran:
          I was looking forward to working with the female captain, who was at the time, Genevieve Bujold. That's why I made the decision to audition for the role. Besides the fact that I thought it was a good role. So you mustn't assume men are sexist pigs, but thank you for your curiousity.

        • Robert Beltran:
          I want to thank everybody for logging in. I hope my sense of humor doesn't offend anybody... I do take my job seriously, but not too seriously. I hope everyone understands that. And I can honestly say I had a good time, and appreciate the questions and the interest. I hope to see you all someday at a convention on on the street somewhere, or another chat.


        • Congratulations, Scarlett!
          The results are in. On March 6, Scarlett was honored at the Young Artist Awards ceremony by being presented with this year's award for Best Performance in a Drama Series: Supporting Young Actress for her role as Naomi on Star Trek: Voyager! This is a big honor for Scarlett, and she was thrilled to receive it. According to
          The Official Scarlett Pomers Homepage

          (Added 2-6-99)

          Congratulations Scarlett!

          "Congratulations are in order! Scarlett has been nominated for this year's Young Artist Award for Best Supporting Actress in a Drama series for her role as Naomi on Star Trek: Voyager! The awards are held annually and give young actors and actresses the recognition due to them for their talent and hard work, which often gets overlooked. (In other words, it is the child actor's equivalent of a Golden Globe!) Scarlett has been honored twice before by the Young Artist Awards for her work in The Baby-sitter's Club and Touched by an Angel. Other actors and actresses who have been honored by the Young Artist Awards in the past include Drew Barrymore, Leonardo DiCaprio, Christina Applegate, Rick Shroder, and more. It is a great honor for Scarlett to be nominated. The 20th annual Young Artist Awards ceremony will be held on March 6 1999, so we will all have our fingers crossed for her. Good luck, Scarlett and congratulations on your nomination!"


          Hollywood Wire Daily News--

          Mulgrew hopes to exit "Voyager"

          As every Star Trek fan knows, there's always trouble among the stars. But they may really not know the half the story.

          First Jeri Ryan, the beautiful Borg who was added to the cast of Star Trek: Voyager last season, began talking about how "difficult" work on the show had become. And now, Kate Mulgrew, the star, has indicated she has asked to be let out of her contract.

          At the semi-annual TV critics tour in Pasadena, Mulgrew, who stars as Captain Kathryn Janeway on the series, said over the weekend that she wants to spend more time with her children and with her husband-to-be, Tim Hagan, a Cleveland politician. She complained about the 80-hour work weeks, about the Hollywood lifestyle and culture and made known her desire to return to theater work in New York.

          Sunday's New York Daily News said that Mulgrew's comments touched off a scramble by Paramount TV execs "to contain a possible contract breach." The studio quickly issued a statement in which Mulgrew was quoted as saying, "I cannot imagine not participating in the entire run, whatever that may be."

          Mon 1/11[added January 13, 1999]


          People in the News

          7.28 p.m. ET (029 GMT) November 25, 1998

          CLEVELAND (AP) — Kate Mulgrew, captain of television's Starship Voyager, will soon be boldly going down the wedding aisle.

          The actress became engaged to Tim Hagan, a Cuyahoga County commissioner, over the weekend in California, The Plain Dealer reported Wednesday.

          The wedding will take place "as soon as she gets back from Delta Quadrant,'' joked Hagan, referring to the "Star Trek: Voyager'' story line.

          Actually, the couple plan to marry during the show's hiatus next spring.

          Mulgrew, 43, and Hagan, 52, met five years ago at the U.S. embassy in Ireland where Hagan's friend, Jean Kennedy Smith, was ambassador. Mulgrew's mother fixed them up because she thought Hagan would be just right for her daughter. Both were previously married; Mulgrew has two sons.


          dreamwatch's Voyager celebrates century

          THE CAST AND CREW OF STAR TREK: VOYAGER RECENTLY CELEBRATED THE SERIES' HUNDREDTH EPISODE, NOW TITLED TIMELESS.

          Click for larger picture. Addressing the gathering on stage eight at Paramount Studios, Executive Producer Rick Berman said, “as tempting as it is to use the old joke, 'We am going to keep doing it until we get it right,' it would be unfair... I really believe that we have been getting it right.”

          Expressing his hopes for the future of STAR Trek on TV, DS9 producer Ron Moore states that, “the TREK franchise needs a breather before going on to the next series. Personally, I'd like to see Voyager get back to the Alpha Quadrant and then, in a year or two, launch a new series set in the future with a slew of new alliances, ships and weapons. From the look of things it appears I'm going to get my wish...”


          (Season 5) HOT TIME ON THE VOYAGER SET

          Star Trek: Voyager started off its new season (Wednesdays, 9 pm/ET, UPN) with a bang. Literally. "Light fixtures on the bridge set overheated and exploded recently, causing a small fire," says a source on the Paramount lot.

          Despite alarmist Internet chatter that the expensive set was a dead loss, "crew members put the fire out very quickly," the source says. Kate Mulgrew and company worked past the incident without so much as a dent in their Starfleet regulation hairstyles.

          "No one was hurt," series star Roxann Biggs Dawson told TVGEN visitors during a recent online chat, "but the bridge is getting new carpeting." -- TVGEN (Added October 18,1998)


        • (Season 5) Voyager's return to Earth: "If and when Voyager gets home is going to be a surprise. Whether it's in the fifth season or the sixth season or the seventh season is something that obviously Brannon Braga and I have discussed and we have discussed with the studio. There is no definitive answer to that. But, I must say, if there were a definitive answer to that, I don't think I would tell you. So we'll leave it at that." (According to Cinescape Online)


        • (September 9, 1998 Season 5) In Star Trek Communicator Braga says:
          "We will see Species 8472 again."
          "We're building a brand new shuttlecraft that is a Maquis/Borg amalgam."
          "You'll finally see a sonic shower and an orbital skydiving sequence."

        • (August 14, 1998 Season 5) Kate Mulgrew expressed in Another Universe Mania Magazine "I understand that UPN was very anxious to establish this character [Seven], to get the ratings up and so on and so forth. Mission accomplished, and now we have to go back to what makes Voyager really compelling, which are the nine characters telling the story," she said flatly. "We've shot six episodes this season, and it's everybody but Seven - and but me, too, everybody's going to get their due. I cautioned them, and I think they know that balance must be restored - it's just very important that we tell the story of this group of people and it in no ways becomes exclusive to one or two, because then it really loses its heart."


          Season 5

          Bob: "I very much enjoyed the episode I directed. And my understanding is that I may direct one of the final ten episodes of the season because our executive producer Rick Berman has assured me that I am on the schedule. But I think only the first 10 or 12 directors have been announced, so it will be in the second half of the season. Since our executive producer is busy doing post-production for the movie and working on Deep Space Nine and Voyager, we tend not to pester him. He's told me that I'm on the schedule so I'm going to take his word for it unless I don't show up in a few weeks-- then I will resort to pestering him."


          (Season 5)In the article "We'll Always Have Paris" by Michelle Erica Green, "McNeill did have to sacrifice some down time this year to working out to lose the 25 pounds he says he gained during his wife's pregnancy. "I actually got up to 217 pounds, which is a lot for me. This year I went back to a Star Trek outfit from two years ago when I was a lot thinner, so I was very happy about that. I hate working out, sometimes that shows, but the roles I play, a lot of times they want guys who are really buff. This hiatus I discovered spinning, it's basically a bicycle class where you go in like an aerobics studio where they have the old-fashioned stationary bikes with the big heavy flywheel, and they put music on really loud and talk you through as if you're going on a road race. You end up sprinting and racing and climbing hills. For the first time in my life, I want to go."

          "The former heartthrob of All My Children has a substantial resume of theater credits, but is trying to move into directing. His first efforts, the Voyager episodes "Sacred Ground" and "Unity," were extremely well-received; "Unity," which featured a colony of ex-Borg, was one of the highest-rated episodes of the third season. He will be directing a Voyager episode late this season. (Another Universe Mania Magazine.)


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