|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1 |
|
CAPTAIN KATHRYN JANEWAY
Captain Kathryn Janeway was in command of the U.S.S. Voyager when the entity known as the Caretaker hurled the starship into the Delta Quadrant, 70,000 light-years away from home. Janeway's keen leadership instincts and her unswerving adherence to her principles as a Starfleet officer were tested countless times on the journey home, but in the end she succeeded in leading her ship and crew back to the Alpha Quadrant. |
2 |
|
COMMANDER CHAKOTAY
Commander Chakotay was a member of the rebel Starfleet group known as the Maquis when his ship was flung into the Delta Quadrant along with Voyager. Chakotay was instrumental in getting the Maquis and Starfleet personnel to unite as one crew under Captain Janeway. As Voyager's first officer, Chakotay's counsel was important to Janeway, who appreciated his point of view even when it contradicted her own. In time, the two became close friends. |
3 |
|
LT. COMMANDER TUVOK
Lt. Commander Tuvok served aboard Voyager as the starship's chief of security. Long a trusted confidant of Captain Janeway, Tuvok also earned the trust of Voyager's former Maquis contingent, even though he had been an undercover Federation officer in their midst. Tuvok's logical approach to the challenges of the Delta Quadrant proved invaluable during Voyager's long journey home. At the same time, he learned to appreciate his shipmates' more emotional, intuitive qualities. |
4 |
|
LT. TOM PARIS
At first, Voyager helmsman Lt. Tom Paris wasn't keen on returning to the Alpha Quadrant. After all, Captain Janeway had recruited him out of a Federation penal settlement. Soon, however, Paris left his checkered past behind and became a well- liked, highly valued member of the crew, He even built an exploratory craft caled the Delia Flyer. Paris had an independent streak that occasionaly got him into trouble, but Janeway respected the helmsman for his deeply held convictions. |
5 |
|
ENSIGN HARRY KIM
Ensign Harry Kim may have been young and inexperienced at the outset of his tour of duty aboard Voyager, but by the time the starship returned to the Alpha Quadrant, Kim was an integral member of the crew. As Voyager's operations officer, Kim learned to assert himself while dealing with the challenges and dangers of the Delta Quadrant. He was intensely loyal to Captain Janeway and strove never to let her down. |
6 |
|
THE DOCTOR
Circumstances forced Voyager's Emergency Medical Hologram, known to the ship's crew simply as "the Doctor," to take charge of Sickbay and remain active indefinitely as the vessel's sole physician. A mobile holo-emitter gave the Doctor the freedom to leave Sickbay, and Captain Janeway gave him the freedom to control his own existence. The Doctor saved the ship and crew on more than one occasion during Voyager's arduous journey home. |
7 |
|
SEVEN OF NINE
Seven of Nine, born Annika Hansen, was assimilated by the Borg when she was 6 years old. The Borg chose Seven to help Voyager defeat Species 8472, but Captain Janeway cut her link to the Collective and integrated Seven with Voyager's crew. It was a long, difficult process for Seven, who was often at odds with Janeway, but the former Borg drone found her place on the starship and recaptured her humanity along the way. |
8 |
|
LT. B'ELANNA TORRES
Lt. B'Elanna Torres, Voyager's resourceful but quick-tempered chief engineer, was a member of the Maquis before joining Captain Janeway's crew. Half Klingon and half human, Torres struggled to control her mercurial emotions, but she came to accept them eventually as a source of strength. Torres fell in love with Voyager helmsman Tom Paris, and the two were married. She gave birth to the couple's first child just as Voyager returned to Earth. |
9 |
|
NEELIX
Neelix, Voyager's Talaxian morale officer and cook, joined the crew after the Caretaker pulled Voyager into the Delta Quadrant. Neelix served as a guide for the first part of the starship's journey, but then he found other ways to help his new friends make their way home. His holodeck parties, in particular, were legendary. In the end, Neelix bid good-bye to Voyager and remained in the Delta Quadrant with a new family. |
10 |
|
ADMINISTRATOR CHELLICK
Administrator Chellick of the Dinaali Hospital Ship 4-2 gave medicine only to those citizens deemed by his computer to be influential and important. Anyone who didn't measure up was expendable. When the Doctor discovered Chellicks unethical practice, he infected Chellick with a virus and convinced the computer that the Administrator was a low-level citizen In order to save himself. Chellick had to change his procedure and allow all patients equal access to care. |
11 |
|
ADMIRAL PARIS
Admiral Owen Paris, father of Tom Paris, never gave up on finding a way to communicate with Voyager in the Delta Quadrant. Under the admiral's leadership Starfleet's Pathfinder Project succeeded in creating a brief communications link with Voyager. Later, Admiral Paris oversaw Operation Watson, which provided 11 minutes of daily contact with Janeway's crew. The Admiral was among the first to welcome Voyager home as the starship emerged from a Borg conduit. |
12 |
|
ADMIRAL JANEWAY
Admiral Janeway, Captain Kathryn Janeway's father, died on Tau Ceti Prime. When Captain Janeway was injured in a crash landing on a planet, an alien lifeform invaded her cerebral cortex and assumed the admiral's appearance. Pretending to be the spirit of her father, "Admiral Janeway" tried to lure the captain to her own death so that he could feed on her body. Janeway managed to resist him, forcing the alien to depart. |
13 |
|
ALICE
Tom Paris got far more than he bargained for when he convinced Chakotay to acquire a derelict shuttle from an interstellar junkvard. Paris named the vessel Alice and became obsessed with restoring it, unaware that the shuttle possessed a malevolent intelligence. Alice entered Tom's brain and forced him to pilot the shuttle to her home, a particle fountain. Voyager rescued Paris, but Alice - now without an organic pilot - was destroyed in the fountain. |
14 |
|
ALPHA HIROGEN
The Alpha Hirogen whose forces fought the Voyager crew in World War II holodeck simulations was not typical of his species. He worried that his society was in decline. The Hirogen, he believed, were hunting themselves into extinction. Working with Captain Janeway, the Alpha Hirogen released Voyager in exchange for holodeck technology that would allow his people to simulate the hunt while rebuilding their society. He was killed for his actions by the Beta Hirogen. |
15 |
|
ALZEN
Alzen, a Srivani scientist, boarded Voyager surreptitiously to conduct covert medical experiments on the crew. Alzen's goal was to expand the Srivani medical database so that diseases affecting her race could be treated. She thought nothing of the fact that Voyager's crew would sustain deformities and deaths in the process. When Alzen was exposed, Captain Janeway threatened to destroy the ship to stop her. The gambit forced Alzen and her people to flee. |
16 |
|
AMELIA EARHART
Legendary aviator Amelia Earhart was abducted by the Briori in 1937 and brought to a slave labor planet in the Delta Quadrant. Earhart remained in suspended animation for four centuries until she was discovered by the crew of Voyager. Once revived, Earhart had to choose between taking the long journey home with Voyager, or staying with the ancestors of the human slaves, who had long since overthrown their Briori masters. Earhart chose to stay. |
17 |
|
ANNORAX
Annorax, one of the Krenim Imperium's most gifted temporal scientists, commanded a powerful time ship that was capable of erasing entire worlds from history. His space-time experiments and temporal incursions nearly destroyed Voyager, whose interference Annorax would not tolerate. He was focused on creating a new timeline in which his beloved wife would still be alive. Janeway destroyed Annorax's time ship - which, ironically, restored the timeline he so desperately wanted. |
18 |
|
ARRIDOR
The Ferengi doctor Arridor was one of the representatives sent by the Ferengi Alliance to bid for the Barzan wormhole. His underhanded tactics left him stranded in the Delta Quadrant with his Ferengi associate, Kol. Voyager found the pair on the Takarian homeworld, passing themselves off as Great Sages of Takarian mythology and demanding tribute. When Voyager stopped them, Arridor and Kol fled in their shuttle and met an uncertain fate in the Barzan wormhole. |
19 |
|
ARTURIS
Arturis blamed the crew of Voyager - and Captain Janeway in particular - for his species defeat by the Borg. If Voyager had not helped the Borg against Species 8472, Arturis reasoned, the Collective might have been destroyed. Arturis tried to get revenge by tricking Voyager into traveling to his Borg-occupied homeword via a quantum slipstream drive. His plan backfired. Arturis, not the Voyager crew, ended up in Borg space, where he was presumed to be assimilated. |
20 |
|
BOOTHBY
The leader of a Species 8472 training facility took on the role of Boothby, the gruff groundskeeper at Starfleet Academy. Nailing the role perfectly, this Boothby was a cautious, shrewd observer of human nature. These traits made it possible for him to negotiate a cease-fire with Captain Janeway, even though his training facility was designed to help his race infiltrate the Federation. A tenous peace was established, allowing the sharing of information and technology. |
21 |
|
CAPTAIN BRAXTON
Captain Braxton of the timeship Aeon sought to destroy Voyager to prevent the future destruction of Earth, but Voyager was not responsible for that calamity. Braxton wound up in Los Angeles in 1967, living as a vagrant. Later, after returning to duty as captain of the Relativity, Braxton tried to take revenge on Captain Janeway's crew by destroying Voyager with a temporal disruptor. Ultimately, three versions of Braxton were arrested in the 29th century. |
22 |
|
CAPTAIN PROTON
Captain Proton, Spaceman First Class, defender of the universe and scourge of galactic evil, was the fictional protagonist in a holodeck program created by Tom Paris. Proton (played by Paris himself) and his sidekick, Buster Kincaid (played by Harry Kim), took on such foes as Doctor Chaotica, Queen Arachnia, and Satan's Robot. When real-life beings from the fifth dimension battled Chaotica, Captain Proton destroyed Chaotica's death ray, allowing the trans-dimensional aliens to leave in peace. |
23 |
|
CAPTAIN RANSOM
Captain Ransom of the science vessel Equinox violated his Starfleet principles to get his crew home from the Delta Quadrant more quickly. Ransom harvested nucleogenic lifeforms to fuel his vessel, which was under constant attack by the aliens. He even captured Seven of Nine and subjected her to invasive procedures in an attempt to get Voyager's power relay codes. Eventually Ransom's conscience surfaced and he sacrificed himself to save the crews of both ships. |
24 |
|
CAYLEM
Caylem, an elderly Alsaurian man, lived under the rule of the Mokra Order. His wite died in a Mokra prison, and his daughter was killed trying to free her. When Captain Janeway was stranded on the planet, the delusional Caylem believed she was his daughter. Caylem helped Janeway free Voyager's away team from prison, but in the process, he took a phaser shot meant for Janeway. He died believing his wife and daughter were safe. |
25 |
|
CRELL MOSET
Cardassian exobiologist Crell Moset cured the Fostossa virus epidemic on Bajor, saving many lives. However, Moset achieved his success by conducting horrific experiments on living people. Thousands of Bajorans died in his hospital. The Fostossa epidemic itself was created by Moset, who infected Bajorans in order to experiment with treatments. A hologram of Moset helped the Doctor save Lt. Torres's life, but afterward, the Doctor - appalled by Moset's lack of ethics - deleted him. |
26 |
|
DALA
Dala, an alien con artist, met Neelix and Paris while they were on an away mission. Dala then downloaded the database of the Delta Flyer and exploited the information to impersonate Captain Janeway. Using this deception, Dala and her associates (who impersonated other Voyager crewmembers) moved from star system to star system, cheating various races out of goods and supplies. Voyager eventually caught Dala and located her stockpile of stolen property. |
27 |
|
DEJAREN
The HD25 Isomorphic Projection known as Dejaren worked as a cleaner and maintenance unit aboard a Serosian ship. Treated badly by the crew, Dejaren's program destabilized. He became psychotic about cleanliness and killed the Serosians, whose bodies he hid on the lower decks. When Torres and the Doctor answered his distress call, Dejaren very nearly killed them, too. Torres destroyed Dejaren's holomatrix by plunging a live power cable into his chest. |
28 |
|
[DANARA] PEL
[Danara] Pel, a Vidiian hematoloaist, worked tirelessly to find a cure to the phage. She was suffering badly from the disease when Voyager answered her distress call. The Doctor transferred Pels brain patterns into a hologram so she could assist him and the two became close. Ultimately they saved Pel's life, and she left to continue her work. Later, Pel provided the Doctor with a serum that saved the lives of Captain Janeway and Commander Chakotay. |
29 |
|
DERRAN TAL
Not all of the residents of the Varro generational ship wanted to stay aboard. Derran Tal was part of a dissident group who wanted the freedom to leave. Tal developed a synthetic virus that caused the Varro ship to break into its many individual segments. During her encounter with Voyager, Derran became romantically - and chemically - attached to Ensign Kim. When she departed to explore the Galaxy Kim experienced the painful effects of their breakup. |
30 |
|
DOCTOR CHAOTICA
In Tom Paris' Adventures of Captain Proton halonovel, Doctor Chaotica was the self-styled "ruler of the cosmos" and sworn enemy of Earth. He engaged in a war with real photonic lifeforms, who mistook the program for Voyager's true universe. Chaotica was obsessed with Queen Arachnia, whom he promised not to kill until after their wedding night. When Voyager was separated into different timeframes, Chaotica briefly captured Janeway and Chakotay. but they outsmarted him. |
31 |
|
DONIK
Donik, a young Hirogen technician, was the only survivor of a hologram attack at a Hirogen outpost. Acting on his Alpha's orders, Donik had modified the holograms to make them self-aware. Rescued by Voyager, Donik found he was more comfortable with Janeway's crew than his own people. After helping Voyager find the hologram ship and put down the rebellion, Donik remained on the ship to reprogram the holograms and reverse the changes he had made. |
32 |
|
DR. DYSEK
Dr. Dysek, Chief of Medicine on the Dinaali Hospital Ship 4-2, went along with Administrator Chellick's unethical medical system until Voyager's EMH showed him how to resist. Dysek helped the Doctor acquire medication for low-level patients without Chellick's knowledge. Later, when the Doctor injected Chellick with a deadly virus, Dysek refused to treat his boss until all the low-level patients were transferred to the higher level to receive care. Chellick agreed, ending the unfair system. |
33 |
|
EMH MARK II
The EMH Mark II aboard the Starship Prometheus deemed himself superior to Voyager's EMH Mark I, but he lacked the nerve to help the Doctor take back the Prometheus from Romulans. However, once convinced that it was time to be both doctor and commando, the Mark II rose to the occasion. He knocked out the Romulans with a shipwide anesthetic, then helped the Doctor repel an attack by warbirds, allowing Starfleet to retake the ship. |
34 |
|
ENSIGN DAVID GENTRY
David Gentry was the identity assumed by a member of Species 8472 during their re-creation of Starfleet Command on Earth. The aliens were preparing for an infiltration of Starfleet, and Gentry was loyal to that cause. After a run-in with Chakotay and Tuvok, Gentry was taken aboard Voyager. Seeing that he had been captured, Gentry committed suicide rather than reveal his true identity to Voyager's crew. |
35 |
|
ENSIGN HOGAN
Hogan was part of the Maquis crew that integrated with Voyager after both crews were stranded in the Delta Quadrant. Captain Janeway made Hogan an ensign, but he was initially critical of the Starfleet crew. In time, however, Hogan became a loyal shipmate. When the Kazon marooned the crew on Hanon IV, Hogan was killed by a land eel. His remains were found by the Voth scientist Gegen and helped to prove Gegen's Distant Origin Theory. |
36 |
|
ENSIGN LON SUDER
Lon Suder, another of Voyager's former Maquis crewmen, was a Betazoid with an unnaturally violent nature. Tuvok's attempts to help him control his impulses were, for the most part, successful, but Suder tapped into those impulses to fight back against a Kazon takeover of Voyager. In the end, Suder was instrumental in helping the crew retake the ship. He took out eleven Kazon soldiers single-handedly before he was shot and killed. |
37 |
|
ENSIGN VORIK
Ensian Vorik carried out his duties in Engineering with the calm, logical efficiency that was characteristic of his Vulcan heritage. He was not, however, beyond feeling a latent attraction to B'Elanna Torres. Those feelings came violently to the surface when Vorik experienced his first Pon farr. He declared koon-ut-so'lik, the desire to become one's mate, with Torres. Vorik's Pon farr ended when he fought Torres in the ritual kal-it-fee. |
38 |
|
FEMALE Q
The female Q was furious to find Q, her old flame, who tossed her aside for someone five billion ears younger: Captain Janeway. She grew even more angry when Q whisked Janeway off to the Q Continuum, which she believed would cause irreparable harm. Fortunately, Janeway convinced Q to mate with the female Q rather than herself. The pairing produced the first Q newborn in ten millennia and ended the Continuum's civil war. |
39 |
|
FREYA
Freya, shieldmaiden and daughter of King Hrothgar in the Beowulf holodeck program, helped the Doctor on his mission to find three missing crewmen. Freya was frightened of Grendel and thought the Doctor was very courageous for going after the energy lifeform. She became romantically attached to the Doctor, and she died while trving to protect him from Unferth, another character in the holoprogram. |
40 |
|
GEDRIN
Voyager awakened Gedrin and the rest of the Vaadwaur from stasis after an 892-year sleep. The Vaadwaur were a warrior race bent on conquest and would have seized Voyager for their own purposes, but Gedrin opposed the effort. He came to sympathize with the Voyager crew and went so far as to take his people's ships off-line when they attacked Voyager. Unfortunately, Gedrin's efforts on behalf of his new Federation friends cost him his life. |
41 |
|
HENRY JANEWAY
Henry Janeway resisted change. As the owner of a bookstore in Portage Creek, Indiana, in the year 2000, Henry never traveled far. His refusal to sell his shop held up construction of the futuristic Millennium Gate project. Then Henry met Shannon O'Donnell, and the two fell in love. Shannon convinced Henry to let the Gate project begin. Their descendants included Kathryn Janeway, captain of the Starship Voyager. |
42 |
|
HENRY STARLING
In 1967, Henry Starling discovered the crashed 29th century timeship Aeon and exploited its technology to lead the computer age of Earth's 20th century. Thirty years later, Starling tried to travel to the future aboard the Aeon. If he'd been successful, he would have caused a temporal explosion resulting in the destruction of Earth's solar system. Voyager stopped Starling by firing a photon torpedo at the timeship. destroying it. |
43 |
|
HIROGEN TSUNKATSE FIGHTER
The Hirogen hunter who fought Seven of Nine in the Tsunkatse matches had been forced to fight for 19 years. He trained Seven for her death match, turning her into a fearsome fighter - but not telling her that he was to be her opponent. The Hirogen was tired, and he wanted Seven to be the instrument of his death. Fortunately, Voyager beamed them both aboard before their match could be completed. They parted as friends. |
44 |
|
ICHEB
The Voyager crew rescued Icheb, a Brunali boy who had been assimilated by the Borg. Once the Doctor removed his implants, Icheb began his new life aboard Voyager. He devoted himself to astrophysics and designed a gravimetric sensor array that Voyager used to detect wormholes. When Seven's cortical node malfunctioned, Icheb risked his own life to save hers. He returned to the Alpha Quadrant with Voyager and entered Starfleet Academy. |
45 |
|
IDEN
Iden was the leader of the holograms created by Hirogen engineer Donik to serve as prey. Bajoran in appearance, Iden improved his abilities with each hunt. He killed his Alpha and liberated the other holograms, who massacred many Hirogen hunters. Iden soon developed a messiah complex and expected the other holograms to form a new religion around him. The Doctor was forced to shoot Iden, and his program destabilized. |
46 |
|
JAL CULLUH
As first Maje of the Kazon-Nistrim sect, Jal Culluh tried repeatedly to obtain advanced technology from the Starship Voyager. Culluh was highly ambitious and dreamed of uniting the Kazon under his leadership. Assisted by Voyager defector Seska, who bore his child. Culluh managed to capture the Starfleet vessel for a brief period. When the crew retook the ship, Culluh fled with his child to an uncertain fate. |
47 |
|
JARYN
Lieutenant Jaryn and her people, the Lokirrim, were at war with the photonic servants who had rebelled against them. Voyager's Doctor, secretly downloaded into Seven of Nine's cortical implant, developed an attraction to Jaryn. She, however, was in love with Ranek, her ship's captain. Jaryn got to meet the Doctor in his own form when he saved Ranek's life. Jaryn reconsidered her opinion of holograms and thanked the Doctor for his efforts. |
48 |
|
KADAN
Kadan, a Quarren doctor, used drugs to control the kidnapped workers comprising his planet's labor force. Kadan altered the workers' memories to keep them from questioning their presence at the industrial work complex. He subjected almost the entire Voyager crew to his treatments, but Chakotay convinced a local police officer to help him expose Kadan's plot. When it became known that Kadan was accepting bribes and working with corrupt Quarren officials, he was arrested. |
49 |
|
KARDEN
Karden was trying to earn warrior status among his Kazon-Ogla sect when the youth fired on Chakotay's shuttle. Chakotay destroyed his ship but beamed Karden aboard before the explosion. When the Kazon leader Razik imprisoned them both, Chakotay again refused to kill Karden, even though he would have been freed for doing so. The pair escaped, and a grateful Karden killed Razik instead of Chakotay, earning his warrior name. |
50 |
|
KASHYK
The Devore considered telepaths a danger to their Imperium. Inspector Kashyk conducted regular searches of Voyager as the Starfleet ship passed through Devore space. Kashyk pretended to seek asylum aboard Voyager and tried to earn Captain Janeway's trust, but he was really plotting to uncover the telepaths she was hiding. Janeway saw through Kashyk's carefully plotted gambit and foiled his efforts, saving the telepaths and forcing her would-be suitor to let Voyager go. |
51 |
|
KEJAL
Kejal was among the specially designed holograms created by Hirogen engineer Donik to serve as prey in the Hirogen hunting simulations. Initially supportive of Iden, the hologram who led a rebellion against the Hirogen, Kejal later sided with Voyager when Iden proved to be dangerous. She agreed to help Donik adjust the programming of the other holograms to undo the damage Donik had unwittingly caused. |
52 |
|
KELIS
The poet and playwright Kelis befriended B'Elanna Torres and tended to her wounds when she crashed on his planet. Kelis also provided Torres with dilithium for her shuttle in exchange for stories about Voyager's adventures. He used the stories to write a play that he hoped would ease tensions between rival warlords and avert a war. Torres helped Kelis rehearse and even took part in the play's ending, which proved to be a resounding success. |
53 |
|
KELLIN
As a Ramuran tracer, Kellin's job was to bring back those who tried to leave their homeworld. After meeting Chakotay and falling in love, Kellin herself tried to defect. She sought asylum aboard Voyager, but the pheromones produced by her species prevented Chakotay from remembering her. In time, their relationship bloomed again, but another tracer found Kellin and erased her memories. Unable to see herself as the person Chakotay described. Kellin returned to Ramura. |
54 |
|
KES
Kes joined the crew of Voyager following the ship's encounter with the Caretaker. She served as a field medic and took charge of the airponics bay. As an Ocampan, Kes had a lifespan of only nine years. She and Neelix were close romantically, but in time she departed Voyager to explore her increasingly powerful mental abilities. Leaving the corporeal world behind, Kes pushed Voyager almost ten thousand light-years closer to Earth as a parting gift. |
55 |
|
KOL
Kol traveled to the Takarian homeworld with his fellow Ferengi, Arridor. There, they passed themselves off as mythological Great Sages and demanded tribute from the unsuspecting Takarians. Voyager eventually found Kol and his partner and drove them off the planet, but they tried to return to Takar in their shuttle. Before they could land, however, Kol and Arridor were pulled into the unstable Barzan wormhole. |
56 |
|
KOLOPAK
Kolopak, Chakotay's father, was dedicated to the traditional ways of his Native American ancestors. When Chakotay believed he had a child with Seska, Kolopak (in a vision quest) helped Chakotay accept the child. Kolopak believed that home was wherever you happened to be. Unfortunately, his home was threatened by the Federation's agreement with Cardassia, so he joined the Maquis. Kolopak was killed in action, prompting Chakotay to leave Starfleet and take his father's place. |
57 |
|
KOVIN
The Entharan arms dealer Kovin was only interested in selling Captain Janeway an isokinetic cannon, but Seven of Nine accused him of secretly extracting her nanoprobes. The ensuing investigation proved that Seven misinterpreted her encounter with Kovin who was innocent. By this time however, Kovin had fled in his vessel. When Voyager gave chase, Kovin fired at the starship. His weapons destabilized and his ship exoloded, killing him. |
58 |
|
KURROS
Kurros, spokesperson and tactician for a small group of alien scholars known as the Think Tank, offered to help Voyager solve the problem of relentless Hazari attacks. In return, Kurros wanted Seven of Nine. Captain Janeway refused, of course, and eventually she learned that Kurros was in league with the Hazari. Janeway and her crew outsmarted Kurros by leaving the Think Tank's ship to tangle with the Hazari while Voyager went to warp. |
59 |
|
LEONARDO DA VINCI
Captain Janeway enjoyed spending time with famous Italian scientist and artist Leonardo da Vinci on the holodeck. Leonardo advised Janeway and helped her through stressful situations. When pirates stole the maestro's program, Janeway tracked them down, only to be captured herself. Leonardo came to her defense and knocked out their captor. The two friends used Leonardo's glider to make a thrilling escape. |
60 |
|
LEOSA
Leosa, a dabo girl, became Reginald Barclay's girlfriend on false pretenses. Leosa told Barclay she was a teacher, but in reality she was learning all she could from him about his work on the Pathfinder Proiect. She then sold the information to a Ferengi named Nunk. When Leosa was brought in for questioning about her role in the crime, she identified Nunk's ship and admitted she was supposed to get ten percent of the profits. |
61 |
|
LEUCON ICHEB
Icheb's father, Leucon Icheb, harbored an ugly secret that he and his wife, Yifay, kept from their son until Voyager reunited them on the Brunali homeworld. Leucon and Yifay had altered Icheb's genetics and sent him to the Borg, hoping to infect the Collective with the pathogen Icheb carried. Once reunited with their son, Leucon and Yifay tried to send Icheb to the Borg once more, but the crew of Voyager intervened in time. |
62 |
|
LYNDSAY BALLARD
Ensign Lyndsay Ballard was killed by the Hirogen while on a mission with Harry Kim. After the Kobali found her body and reanimated her,
Ballard tried to resume her life aboard Voyager. She soon found this was impossible, however, because her mind and body were no longer human. She did not belong on Voyager anymore. When the Kobali attacked the starship and demanded that Ballard return to them, she agreed to go. |
63 |
|
LYRIS
Lyris, leader of the nearly all-female planet Taresia, orchestrated the capture and DNA modification of Ensign Harry Kim. Lyris wanted Kim to believe he was actually a long-lost Taresian so that he would remain on her world and "join" with a Taresian female. Unfortunately for Kim, the reproductive process so essential to the Taresian race would result in his death. The Voyager crew rescued Kim from Lyris and her cohorts in the nick of time. |
64 |
|
MA'BOR JETREL
Haakonian scientist Ma'Bor Jetrel created the metreon cascade, a weapon his people used to end their conflict with the Talaxians on Rinax. The cascade killed hundreds of thousands and introduced a fatal blood disease. Jetrel spent the rest of his life attempting to undo the damage his weapon had caused. He thought Voyager's transporters might be able to bring back those who had died but the experiment failed. Before Jetrel's death, Neelix forgave him. |
65 |
|
MABUS
Governor Mabus of the Trabe, enemies of the Kazon, proposed an alliance with Captain Janeway. Pretending to want peace, Mabus agreed to arrange a meeting with all the Kazon leaders to discuss safe passage for Voyager. Mabus then betrayed Janeway by sending a Trabe ship to attack the conference in hopes of wiping out all the Kazon leaders at once. Voyager drove the Trabe ship off and refused to deal with Mabus any longer. |
66 |
|
MALIA
Malia, a Taresian, welcomed Harry Kim to her planet and participated in the plot to make Kim believe he was actually Taresian himself. Malia became the bride of Taymon, another male who had been brought to the planet by the nearly all-female Taresians. Unfortunately for Taymon, the Taresian reproductive process involved the deadly extraction of DNA from the male. Taymon died when Malia procured his DNA during their honeymoon. |
67 |
|
MARAYNA
Marayna worked alone on a hidden space station. She tapped into Voyager's holodeck and interacted with the crew as a holoprogram. When Marayna developed a romantic interest in Tuvok. she tried to prevent Voyager from leaving the area. The crew located the real Marayna and Tuvok beamed to her location to reason with her. At first she demanded that Tuvok stay with her, but eventually she relented and let him depart with Voyager. |
68 |
|
MICHAEL JONAS
Unlike Ensign Hogan, former Maquis fighter Michael Jonas never developed feelings of loyalty to Captain Janeway or Voyager's Starfleet crew. Believing his best hope for safety in the Delta Quadrant lay with the Kazon, Jonas became a spy for Seska, who had defected to the Kazon-Nistrim. Eventually his treachery was discovered. Neelix interrupted his attempt to sabotage Voyager, and Jonas fell into a plasma stream, incinerating him instantly. |
69 |
|
MIRAL
When B'Elanna Torres lapsed into a coma following an encounter with an ion storm, she saw her mother, Miral. Together, mother and daughter traveled on the Barge of the Dead to Gre'thor. Miral expected to pay for B'Elanna's sins, but instead, B'Elanna gave her life to send Miral to Sto-Vo-Kor. Miral appeared to her daughter once more, to tell Torres that she could be saved if she lived with honor. |
70 |
|
NAOMI WILDMAN
Naomi Wildman was the first child born aboard Voyager. Her father, Greskrendtregk, was Ktarian, while her mother, Ensign Samantha Wildman, was human. Naomi befriended many of Voyager's adult crewmembers, especially Neelix and Seven of Nine, with whom she formed close bonds. She aspired to work on the bridge as Captain Janeway's assistant and, some day, to succeed Janeway as Voyager's captain. Naomi returned safely to the Alpha Quadrant with the rest of the crew. |
71 |
|
NIMIRA
Chief Examiner Nimira was proud of the way her telepathic race, the Mari, had nearly eliminated violent crime. When B'Elanna Torres appeared to set off a pattern of violent behavior among her people, Nimira was prepared to subiect Torres to a dangerous procedure in order to remove her violent thoughts. Tuvok managed to prove that Torres was not responsible, however, Nimira arrested the true culprit, a Mari named Guill, and released Torres. |
72 |
|
NOSS
Tuvok and Paris met Noss when their shuttle crashed on an uncharted planet. A 14-year survivor of her own crash, Noss helped the two Voyager crewmen survive on the hostile planet by teaching them to hunt and providing them shelter. She developed romantic feelings for Tuvok, and she was hurt when he rebuffed her. Eventually they were rescued by Voyager, and Tuvok mind-melded with Noss to help her understand him better. |
73 |
|
ONE
A transporter mishap involving the Doctor's mobile emitter and Seven of Nine's nanoprobes created One, a Borg drone with 29th century technology. After he inadvertently alerted a Borg sphere to Voyagers location, One chose to help the crew resist the sphere's attack. Ultimately, he beamed to the sphere and destroyed it, but he sustained serious injuries. Knowing the Borg would hunt Voyager as long as he remained alive, One allowed himself to die. |
74 |
|
PENK
Penk produced the popular blood sport Tsunkatse for the Norcadians and transmitted the matches via hologram to arenas throughout the sector. After capturing Tuvok and Seven of Nine, Penk forced Seven to fight a Hirogen in a "red match" - a fight to the death - in exchange for medical care for Tuvok. Voyager engaged Penk's ship in battle and rescued Seven, Tuvok and the Hirogen, despite Penk's superior firepower. |
75 |
|
PHLOX
Phlox a member of the Hierarchy, was on a reconnaissance mission when he encountered Voyager. He interfaced with the Doctor, whose daydreams appeared real to Phlox. Consequently, the Hierarchy made plans to attack Voyager. When Phlox realized his error he was afraid to tell his superiors that he'd made a mistake. He did, however, warn Voyager of the impending strike, which allowed the Doctor to stop the attack and help Phlox with his superiors. |
76 |
|
PROFESSOR GEGEN
Professor Gegen was determined to prove that the Voth originated on a distant planet and migrated to the Delta Quadrant. The genetic makeup of Voyager's crew was similar to his own and seemed to prove his Distant Origin Theory. With Chakotay's help, Gegen presented his evidence to the Voth Ministry of Elders, but they charged the professor with heresy. When they threatened to imprison Voyager's crew and destroy the ship, Gegen retracted his theory. |
77 |
|
Q
Voyager had three encounters with the meddlesome Q. He pursued another of his species, Quinn, to Voyager when Quinn sought asylum aboard the ship. Later, Q schemed to mate with Captain Janeway and embroiled her in the Q civil war. After producing a son with his old girlfriend, Q found he couldn't control the boy and tried to leave him with Janeway. Instead, the Q Continuum made Q retain eternal custody of his son. |
78 |
|
QUEEN ARACHNIA
Captain Janeway never expected to play the role of Arachnia, Queen of the Spider People, in Tom Paris' holodeck program The Adventures of Captain Proton. When photonic lifeforms mistook the program for reality, however, Janeway had to step in as Arachnia, deactivate Chaotica's lightning shield, and help Captain Proton convince the aliens to leave. On another occasion, Arachnia wooed Chaotica to distract him and gain access to circuitry in the holodeck. |
79 |
|
QUINN
Quinn, a philosopher among the Q Continuum, got into trouble for his unorthodox views. Faced with the unbearable boredom of immortality, Quinn wanted to commit suicide. He pleaded with Captain Janeway for asylum, and in his subsequent hearing, Quinn won his case. After Q made him mortal, Quinn voluntarily ended his life with a dose of Nogatch hemlock. His death was an inspiration to other Q and led to significant changes in the Continuum. |
80 |
|
RAIN ROBINSON
Twentieth-century Earth scientist Rain Robinson searched for extraterrestrials on a grant from entrepreneur Henry Starling. When Robinson reported discovering Voyager, which had traveled back in time, Starling sent a hit man to kil her. Tuvok and Paris saved Robinson, and she teamed up with them to stop Starling from traveling into the future. Along the way, Robinson developed an attraction to Paris. The two shared a kiss before bidding each other goodbye. |
81 |
|
REGINALD BARCLAY
Reginald Barclay's dogged determination while working on Starfleet's Pathfinder Project proved critical in establishing two-way communications with the crew of Voyager. Barclay even helped the Doctor save the life of the EMH creator, Dr. Lewis Zimmerman. Later, Barclay worked with Counselor Deanna Troi to save Voyager from a Ferengi plot. When Voyager emerged from a transwarp conduit near Earth, Barclay was one of the first to welcome Captain Janeway's crew home. |
82 |
|
RILEY FRAZIER
Riley Frazier was one of several former drones who formed a Borg Cooperative on an M-Class planet. Chakotay was injured by warring factions while answering Frazier's distress call, so she linked with him to heal his wounds. Frazier wanted to activate a Borg neuroelectric field generator to re-establish order among all the former drones. She forced Chakotay to carry out her plan, and peace was restored. Frazier then ended her link with Chakotay. |
83 |
|
SAMANTHA WILDMAN
Samantha Wildman, a xenobioloaist aboard the Starship Voyager, discovered she was pregnant after the Caretaker cast Voyager into the Delta Quadrant. Ensign Wildman had to raise the child, whom she named Naomi, without her husband, but her shipmates helped fill the void. Wildman was seriously iniured during an away mission aboard the Delta Flyer with Tuvok and Paris. Fortunately, Voyager transported them aboard in time to save their lives. |
84 |
|
SESKA
Seska joined the Voyager crew along with the other Maquis fighters who had served aboard Chakotay's raider. She was not, however, a true Maquis. She wasn't even Bajoran, despite her appearance. Seska was a Cardassian whose assignment - the infiltration of the Maquis - became moot when she was stranded in the Delta Quadrant. Eventually Seska defected to the Kazon and briefly commandeered Voyager with Maje Culluh. She was killed when Janeway's crew retook the ship. |
85 |
|
SKLAR
Sklar was a Nezu exogeologist whose planet was being bombarded by artificial asteroids. Another race, the Etanian Order, was trying to drive the Nezu from their planet. Sklar turned out to be an Etanian collaborator, and he poisoned the Nezu astrophysicist who suspected him. Sklar also tangled with Tuvok and Neelix while they rode up from the planet's surface on an orbital tether. During the struggle. Sklar fell out of the space elevator to his death. |
86 |
|
SPECIES 8472
The xenophobic species known to the Borg as Species 8472 originated in fluidic space. They were immune to the Borg's assimilation techniques. Captain Janeway believed Species 8472 was a threat to all life in the Galaxy. so she formed a brief alliance with the Borg that forced Species 8472 to retreat to fluidic space. As a result, Species 8472 made plans to infiltrate Starfleet. Ultimately, however, they agreed to a truce with Janeway's crew. |
87 |
|
STETH
The entity who came aboard Voyager as Steth was actually a DNA-stealing lifeform who switched appearances with his victims. He switched first with Paris and tried to assume Tom's life, but his erratic behavior gave him away. Steth then switched DNA with Janeway, but that disguise did not last either. The crew managed to force Steth to return the DNA of his victims, after which the real Steth took charge of the imposter and departed. |
88 |
|
SULAN
Sulan, chief surgeon of the Vidiian Sodality, believed that Klingon DNA was resistant to the phage. He captured Torres, Paris and Peter Durst, then split Torres into two individuals - one human, the other Klingon - and infected the Klingon Torres with the phage. As the experiment wore on, Sulan made things worse by killing Durst and grafting the man's face over his own in a horrifing attempt to look more appealing to Torres. |
89 |
|
SUSPIRIA
Suspiria, the Nacene entity who once accompanied the Caretaker, took several hundred Ocampa to a new location and established her own array. When the Caretaker died Suspiria believed that the Voyager crew was responsible. Bent on revenge, she attacked several crewmembers and threatened to destroy the ship. Fortunately, Kes managed to incapacitate Suspiria by attacking her Ocampan liaison, Tanis. Surprised by Janeway's subsequent show of mercy, Suspiria left Voyager in peace. |
90 |
|
TAL CELES
Tal Celes, grade three sensor analyst in Voyager's [astrometrics] department, was one of three crewmembers who failed to perform their duties at acceptable levels. Hoping to inspire them, Captain Janeway took the group [on] a mission in the Delta Flyer. Celes was nervous and insecure at first but when the Flyer was damaged by dark matter lifeforms, she refused to abandon her captain. Celes' bravery and loyalty proved she was worthy of the uniform. |
91 |
|
TANIS
Tanis was elected by his Ocampan ancestors to live with the Caretaker's mate, Suspiria. Unlike the Ocampa who remained with the Caretaker, Tanis lacked compassion. Suspiria wanted to punish Voyager for the Caretaker's death, so she sent Tanis to deliver the starship to her. Tanis disparaged the crew and urged Kes to leave with him. When Neelix tried to intervene, Tanis attacked him. Kes responded in kind, hurting Tanis and ultimately ending the threat. |
92 |
|
THE BORG QUEEN
The Borg Queen was assimilated in her youth and went on to become the central controlling entity within the Collective. She allowed Seven of Nine to be liberated by Captain Janeway, with the intention of re-assimilating Seven later and using. Seven's experiences aboard Voyager to make the Borg stronger. Seven rejected her, however, and in time, Janeway managed to infect the Queen with a fatal neurolytic pathogen. The Queen's death destroyed the immense Borg Unicomplex. |
93 |
|
THE CARETAKER
The Caretaker saw to the welfare of the Ocampa after his race, the Nacene, accidentally destroyed the Ocampan ecosystem. He didn't see that he was preventing the Ocampa from learning to take care of themselves. When the Caretaker realized he was dying, he abducted dozens of starships from across the Galaxy in hopes of finding a compatible mate. The process stranded Voyager in the Delta Quadrant. The Caretaker died before he could send Voyager home. |
94 |
|
THE CLOWN
The Clown terrorized five members of a Kohl settlement while they lay in linked stasis. He was a manifestation of their worst fears, created by their own fear of death. Kim tried to help the Kohl, but the Clown tormented him, too. The Doctor's attempts to negotiate with the Clown were unsuccessful. Finally, Captain Janeway managed to trick the malevolent entity while shutting down the system, which terminated the Clown as well. |
95 |
|
TIERAN
Tieran, the former Ilari autarch, was a ruthless despot who had to be overthrown. He survived by transferring his mind to other host bodies for two hundred years. After transferring himself to Kes, Tieran staged a coup and retook control of the Ilari Kes' mental powers made Tieran a formidable dictator. Kes fought him, though, and her Voyager crewmates rescued her. When Tieran transferred to another host, Kes used a synaptic stimulator to destroy him. |
96 |
|
TUVIX
Tuvix was created when a transporter malfunction merged Tuvok and Neelix into one being. Possessing the memories and abilities of both men, Tuvix settled into life aboard Voyager. He was an able tactical officer and made plenty of friends. When the Doctor figured out how to separate him into his two oriainal components, Tuvix announced that he didn't want to die. His pleas were overruled, but Tuvix forgave the crew. |
97 |
|
VALERIE ARCHER
A member of Species 8472 assumed the identity of Valerie Archer during a training mission that simulated Starfleet Headquarters. In her human guise, Archer developed an appreciation for Vulcan philosophy and Klingon martinis. It was Archer who discovered that the Voyager crew was aware of the simulation. She alerted her superiors, but she was the first of her kind to be won over by Captain Janeway's appeal for peace. Before parting, Archer kissed Chakotay goodbye. |
98 |
|
ZET
Zet, a member of the Hierarchy, kidnapped Captain Janeway and forced the Doctor to steal Voyager's warp core. The Doctor brought him the core, but Zet reneged on the deal he'd made. He imprisoned the Doctor with Janeway and then tried to use the Doctor to steal information from the Hierarchy Central Command. Zet ended up trading weapons fire with Tuvok and Paris, then nearly destroyed the warp core. The crew stopped him in time. |
99 |
|
U.S.S. VOYAGER
The U.S.S. Voyager NCC-74656 was a home away from home for the crew after they were stranded in the Delta Quadrant. The Intrepid class starship featured bio-neural circuitry, variable geometry warp nacelles and an Emergency Medical Hologram. Voyager saw the crew through difficult encounters with the Kazon, the Hirogen, the Borg and Species 8472, not to mention the Krenim timeship and various temporal anomalies. Voyager returned to Earth seven years later with most of her crew intact. |
1 |
|
Captain Kathryn Janeway |
2 |
|
Commander Chakotay |
3 |
|
Lt. Commander Tuvok |
4 |
|
Lt. Tom Paris |
5 |
|
Ensign Harry Kim |
6 |
|
The Doctor |
7 |
|
Seven of Nine |
8 |
|
Lt. B'Elanna Torres |
9 |
|
Neelix |
10 |
|
Administrator Chellick |
11 |
|
Admiral Owen Paris |
12 |
|
Admiral Janeway |
13 |
|
Alice |
14 |
|
Alpha Hirogen |
15 |
|
Alzen |
16 |
|
Amelia Earhart |
17 |
|
Annorax |
18 |
|
Arridor |
19 |
|
Arturis |
20 |
|
Boothby |
21 |
|
Captain Braxton |
22 |
|
Captain Proton |
23 |
|
Captain Ransom |
24 |
|
Caylem |
25 |
|
Crell Moset |
26 |
|
Dala |
27 |
|
Dejaren |
28 |
|
[Danara] Pel |
29 |
|
Derran Tal |
30 |
|
Doctor Chaotica |
31 |
|
Donik |
32 |
|
Dr. Dysek |
33 |
|
EMH Mark II |
34 |
|
Ensign David Gentry |
35 |
|
Ensign Hogan |
36 |
|
Ensign Lon Suder |
37 |
|
Ensign Vorik |
38 |
|
Female Q |
39 |
|
Freya |
40 |
|
Gedrin |
41 |
|
Henry Janeway |
42 |
|
Henry Starling |
43 |
|
Hirogen Tsunkatse Fighter |
44 |
|
Icheb |
45 |
|
Iden |
46 |
|
Jal Culluh |
47 |
|
Jaryn |
48 |
|
Kadan |
49 |
|
Karden |
50 |
|
Kashyk |
51 |
|
Kejal |
52 |
|
Kelis |
53 |
|
Kellin |
54 |
|
Kes |
55 |
|
Kol |
56 |
|
Kolopak |
57 |
|
Kovin |
58 |
|
Kurros |
59 |
|
Leonardo da Vinci |
60 |
|
Leosa |
61 |
|
Leucon Icheb |
62 |
|
Lyndsay Ballard |
63 |
|
Lyris |
64 |
|
Ma'Bor Jetrel |
65 |
|
Mabus |
66 |
|
Malia |
67 |
|
Marayna |
68 |
|
Michael Jonas |
69 |
|
Miral |
70 |
|
Naomi Wildman |
71 |
|
Nimira |
72 |
|
Noss |
73 |
|
One |
74 |
|
Penk |
75 |
|
Phlox |
76 |
|
Professor Gegen |
77 |
|
Q |
78 |
|
Queen Arachnia |
79 |
|
Quinn |
80 |
|
Rain Robinson |
81 |
|
Reginald Barclay |
82 |
|
Riley Frazier |
83 |
|
Samantha Wildman |
84 |
|
Seska |
85 |
|
Sklar |
86 |
|
Species 8472 |
87 |
|
Steth |
88 |
|
Sulan |
89 |
|
Suspiria |
90 |
|
Tal Celes |
91 |
|
Tanis |
92 |
|
The Borg Queen |
93 |
|
The Caretaker |
94 |
|
The Clown |
95 |
|
Tieran |
96 |
|
Tuvix |
97 |
|
Valerie Archer |
98 |
|
Zet |
99 |
|
U.S.S. Voyager |
A1 |
|
Front: Akritirian, Alsaurian, Banean
Back: B'omar, Borg, Bothan |
A2 |
|
Front: Caatati, Cardassian, Class J Nebula Life Form
Back: Devore, Drayan, Dream |
A3 |
|
Front: Enaran, Ferengi, Haakonian
Back: Hanon(ian), Hazari, Hierarchy |
A4 |
|
Front: Hirogen, Ilarian, Inheritor
Back: Kazon, Klingon, Kobali |
A5 |
|
Front: Komar, Kradin, Krenim
Back: Ktarian, Kyrian, Malon |
A6 |
|
Front: Mari, Mikhal Traveler, Mokra
Back: Monean, Nacene, Nausicaan |
A7 |
|
Front: Nechani, Nezu, Numiri
Back: Nyrian, Ocampan, Photonic Alien |
A8 |
|
Front: Q, Qomar, Rakosan
Back: Repto-Humanoid, Romulan, Sakari |
A9 |
|
Front: Sikarian, Species 116, Species 8472
Back: Steth, Tak Tak, Talaxian |
A10 |
|
Front: Taresian, The Swarm, Think Tank
Back: Trabe, Turei, Vaadwaur |
A11 |
|
Front: Varro, Vhnori, Vidiian
Back: Void Alien, Vori, Voth |
|
R1 |
|
CAPTAIN JANEWAY
and CHAKOTAY
Despite Chakotay's Maquis background, he and Captain Janeway became close friends aboard Voyager. In fact, Janeway could not imagine a day without Chakotay. The two had their share of disagreements, as Chakotay was not afraid to question the CaPtain's command decisions on occasion, but mutual respect and admiration kept their bond strong. The romantic tension between Janeway and Chakotay was not something they chose to explore, however |
R2 |
|
SEVEN OF NINE and CHAKOTAY
The relationship between Seven of Nine and Chakotay got off to a rocky start. Chakotay doubted that Seven could leave the Collective behind and learn to fit in with Voyager's crew. In time, Seven's rough edges softened, and she explored a romantic relationship with Chakotay, first on the holodeck, then for real. Shortly before Voyager's return to the Alpha Quadrant, Seven and Chakotay enjoyed a private dinner in Chakotay's quarters - and a passionate kiss. |
R3 |
|
TOM PARIS and
B'ELANNA TORRES
Tom Paris and B'Elanna Torres both had troubled pasts in the Alpha Quadrant. Aboard Voyager they were drawn to one another, although their romance took time to develop. Torres resisted Paris at first, noting his reputation as a ladies' man. He persisted, and eventually their relationship took off. It was sometimes volatile, as B'Elanna was notoriously short-tempered and Tom could be restless, but they worked through their issues got married, and had a child, Miral. |
R4 |
|
NEELIX and KES
Neelix was the first non-Ocampan that Kes met, and their relationship when they joined Voyager's crew was a romantic one. Myriad challenges took their toll, the first being Neelix's jealousy over Kes' burgeoning friendship with Tom Paris, and another being the pair's conflict concerning children when Kes prematurely entered her elogium phase. Ultimately, Kes and Neelix broke up, but they remained close friends until Kes departed Voyager. |
R5 |
|
CAPTAIN JANEWAY and MICHAEL SULLIVAN
EPISODE. "FAIR HAVEN"
Captain Janeway found herself attracted to Michael Sullivan, a character in Tom Paris' Fair Haven holodeck program. Sullivan was a simple, married bartender until Janeway altered the character, making him single and giving him an education. During subsequent visits to the holodeck, Janeway began a romantic affair with Sullivan. The last alteration the captain made to her holographic paramour's program was to prevent herself from making any more changes. |
R6 |
|
SEVEN OF NINE and AXUM
EPISODE: "UNIMATRIX ZERO"
Seven of Nine met Axum in Unimatrix Zero, a virtual reality inhabited by some Borg drones during their regeneration cycles. Seven, as Annika Hansen, carried on a six-year romance with Axum in the unimatrix. Later, while serving aboard Voyager, Seven helped Axum and the other drones of Unimatrix Zero retain their memories while conscious, so they could mount a resistance against the Collective. Unfortunately, the unimatrix was destroyed, separating Seven and Axum once more. |
R7 |
|
CHAKOTAY and VALERIE ARCHER
EPISODE: "IN THE FLESH"
Species 8472's Starfleet simulation brought Commander Chakotay and Valerie Archer together. Chakotay was undercover as Jason Hayek, the human disguise of a Species 8472 alien. Archer really was Species 8472, but outwardly she appeared to be an attractive, intelligent human female. She and Chakotay got along well, even after his cover was blown. Their kiss revealed his true identity to Archer, but that didn't stop her from kissing Chakotay again. They parted as friends. |
R8 |
|
SEVEN OF NINE and HARRY KIM
EPISODE: "REVULSION"
Harry Kim found himself attracted to Seven of Nine shortly after she joined the crew of Voyager. Kim's interest in the former Borg drone was painfully obvious to the rest of his shipmates, even to Seven, who expressed a willingness to explore her sexuality with him. She addressed the matter in frank terms, asking if Kim desired to "copulate" and telling him to take his clothes off. Kim, embarrassed by Seven's directness, dropped the matter completely. |
R9 |
|
SEVEN OF NINE and WILLIAM CHAPMAN
EPISODE: "SOMEONE TO WATCH OVER ME"
When Seven of Nine sought to learn the art of dating, she chose Lt. William Chapman as a potential match based on his efficient work performance and compatible interests. Chapman was renowned for being nervous around women, but he did his best with Seven, securing the best table and ordering champagne and lobster. Unfortunately, Seven accidentally tore a ligament in Chapman's shoulder while dancing, and the date ended prematurely. |
R10 |
|
SEVEN OF NINE and THE DOCTOR
The Doctor helped Seven of Nine develop social skills and explore romantic relationships. Along the way, he fell in love with her. He even fantasized about painting Seven in the nude. The two learned a great deal about each other during a unique incident when the Doctor was transferred into Seven's body. Later, the Doctor admitted his true feelings for Seven. She did not reciprocate those feelings, but she did consider him a close friend. |
R11 |
|
SEVEN OF NINE and THE BORG QUEEN
EPISODE: "DARK FRONTIER"
The Borg Queen considered Seven of Nine her favorite drone because Seven was Unique. The Queen threatened to destroy Voyager if Seven did not rejoin the Collective, where Seven's newfound individuality would enhance the Borg's perfection. Seven refused to cooperate with the Queen, however. Not even the appearance of her father, now a drone, could make Seven betray Captain Janeway. Seven's crewmates rescued her, and the Borg Queen was denied her prize. |
RP12 |
|
TUVOK and NEELIX
Tuvok and Neelix were polar opposites - one stoic, disciplined and logical; and the other cheerful, bubbly and emotional. Neelix liked Tuvok from the start, but Tuvok did not appreciate Neelix's frivolous ways, nor his wild culinary concoctions. Yet, somehow, the pair developed a deep fondness and respect for one another, especially after their experience aboard the Nezu orbital tether forced them to address their differences and to work together. |
R13 |
|
TOM PARIS and ALICE
EPISODE: "ALICE"
Tom Paris fell hard for Alice, the physical embodiment of an alien shuttle he restored. His attachment to Alice was amplified by a neurogenic interface that the entity used to exert her influence over him. Eventually Paris realized that Alice was only using him. She forced him to pilot the shuttle to her home, a deadly particle fountain. Fortunately for Tom, the Voyager crew rescued him from Alice in the nick of time. |
R14 |
|
CHAKOTAY and RILEY FRAZIER
EPISODE: "UNITY"
Chakotay met Riley Frazier, a former Borg drone, when he was injured by a rival faction on Frazier's planet. She and her friends linked their minds with his to heal his neural damage. The experience established a bond between Chakotay and Frazier. Unfortunately, Frazier established the link a second time to use Chakotay against his will for her own motives. Chakotay worried that Frazier had lost her sense of morality. |
R15 |
|
REGINALD BARCLAY and DEANNA TROI
EPISODE: "PATHFINDER"
Deanna Troi was not just a counselor to Reginald Barclay, she was also his friend. Troi knew full well that Barclay was prone to holo-addiction, so she listened with grave concern as Barclay told her about his extensive use of the holodeck for the Pathfinder Project. Barclay's methods got him into trouble with Commander Harkins, whose assessment mirrored Troi's: Barclay was obsessed with Voyager. Ultimately, Barclay was vindicated, and he thanked Troi for her help. |
R16 |
|
CAPTAIN JANEWAY and LEONARDO dA VINCI
The holographic representation of Leonardo da Vinci was an important figure in Captain Janeway's life aboard Voyager. She kept a copy of Leonardo's self-portrait in her ready room and often visited the maestro during times of stress. Leonardo called the captain "Catarina" and felt a deep affection for her. When pirates stole the Leonardo program, Janeway came to his rescue. Da Vinci returned the favor by spiriting Janeway to safety aboard his glider. |
R17 |
|
THE DOCTOR and [DANARA] PEL
EPISODE: "RESOLUTIONS"
The Doctor and [Danara Pel], a Vidiian hematologist suffering from the phage, fell in love while they worked together on a treatment for her ravaged body. [Danara's] mind had been transferred into a holographic body to facilitate the collaboration. She appreciated the Doctor's compassion and sense of humor, and she took to calling him "Shmullus" after her favorite uncle. The treatment worked and [Danara] danced with the Doctor in her real body before departing. |
R18 |
|
TOM PARIS and
VOYAGER RAINROBINSON
EPISODE: "FUTURE'S END"
Tom Paris met Rain Robinson during Voyager's mission to Earth's past to stop Henry Starling from launching the timeship Aeon. After Paris helped save Robinson, a SETI scientist, from Starling's hit man, Robinson joined forces with the Voyager crew. She took a special liking to Paris, who loved vintage science fiction films as much as she did. Tom and Rain worked well together during the mission, and they shared a kiss before
Voyager departed. |
R19 |
|
THE DOCTOR and CHARLENE
EPISODE: "REAL LIFE"
In an effort to experience family life, the Doctor created a wife for himself on the holodeck. Charlene was the perfect mother to their two children and a subservient wife to the Doctor. Then Torres made the program more real. Charlene no longer sickeningly sweet, became an independent, strong-willed woman who often disagreed with the Doctor's demands. He learned to appreciate Charlene, and through her, all the complexities of married life. |
R20 |
|
SEVEN OF NINE and NAOMI WILDMAN
Naomi Wildman was initially nervous around Seven of Nine and tried to avoid the former Borg drone. However, as time went by, they became very good friends. Seven even played kadis-kot with Naomi, and the child sometimes stayed with Seven when her mother and Neelix were otherwise engaged. During an incident when Seven took on the personality of a young girl, she and Naomi spent an hour playing games. They thought of each other as family. |
R21 |
|
THE DOCTOR and FREYA
EPISODE: "HEROES AND DEMONS"
Freya, a holographic character in Harry Kim's Beowulf program, met "Schweitzer" (the Doctor) when he entered the program to find three missing shipmates. Freya thought the Doctor was very brave to pursue Grendel, the photonic lifeform that converted the crewmen into energy. She grew romantically attached to the Doctor and invited him into her bed, an offer he declined. Ultimately, Freya gave her life protecting the Doctor. She bid him farewell with a final kiss. |
R22 |
|
SEVEN OF NINE and ONE
EPISODE: "DRONE
Seven of Nine was like a mother to One, the Borg drone created by a transporter mishap involving Seven's nanoprobes and the Doctor's mobile emitter. Seven took charge of One and warned him about what would happen if he joined the Collective. When One sacrificed himself to save Voyager, Seven was devastated. She pleaded with One to let the Doctor help him, but One refused. He assured her that she would adapt to his absence. |
R23 |
|
HARRY KIM and DERRAN TAL
EPISODE: "THE DISEASE"
The attraction between Harry Kim and Derran Tal was part emotional, part chemical. Tal, a Varro, exposed Kim to a biochemical process called olan'vora every time they made love. Their bond grew stronger the longer they were together. The affair violated protocol, so Captain Janeway ordered Kim to end it. When Tal succeeded in separating the Varro ship into its individual segments, she said goodbye to Kim. He found the breakup quite painful. |
R24 |
|
CAPTAIN JANEWAY and JAFFEN
EPISODE: "WORKFORCE"
Captain Janeway met Norvalian engineer Jaffen after she was kidnapped and brainwashed to believe she was a laborer on Quarra. Jaffen and Janeway began seeing each other romantically, and three months later she moved in with him. When Chakotay came to rescue the captain, revealing her true identity, Jaffen - who was initially jealous of Voyager's first officer - protected Janeway while she contacted the ship. Jaffen gave Janeway an engineering trinket to remember him by. |
RP1 |
|
CAPTAIN JANEWAY
and CHAKOTAY |
RP2 |
|
SEVEN OF NINE and CHAKOTAY |
RP3 |
|
TOM PARIS and
B'ELANNA TORRES |
RP4 |
|
NEELIX and KES
|
RP5 |
|
CAPTAIN JANEWAY and MICHAEL SULLIVAN
EPISODE. "FAIR HAVEN" |
RP6 |
|
SEVEN OF NINE and AXUM
EPISODE: "UNIMATRIX ZERO" |
RP7 |
|
CHAKOTAY and VALERIE ARCHER
EPISODE: "IN THE FLESH" |
RP8 |
|
SEVEN OF NINE and HARRY KIM
EPISODE: "REVULSION" |
RP9 |
|
SEVEN OF NINE and WILLIAM CHAPMAN
EPISODE: "SOMEONE TO WATCH OVER ME" |
RP10 |
|
SEVEN OF NINE and THE DOCTOR |
RP11 |
|
SEVEN OF NINE and THE BORG QUEEN
EPISODE: "DARK FRONTIER"
|
RP12 |
|
TUVOK and NEELIX |
RP13 |
|
TOM PARIS and ALICE
EPISODE: "ALICE" |
RP14 |
|
CHAKOTAY and RILEY FRAZIER
EPISODE: "UNITY" |
RP15 |
|
REGINALD BARCLAY and DEANNA TROI
EPISODE: "PATHFINDER" |
RP16 |
|
CAPTAIN JANEWAY and LEONARDO dA VINCI |
RP17 |
|
THE DOCTOR and [DANARA] PEL
EPISODE: "RESOLUTIONS" |
RP18 |
|
TOM PARIS and
VOYAGER RAINROBINSON
EPISODE: "FUTURE'S END" |
R19 |
|
THE DOCTOR and CHARLENE
EPISODE: "REAL LIFE" |
R20 |
|
SEVEN OF NINE and NAOMI WILDMAN |
R21 |
|
THE DOCTOR and FREYA
EPISODE: "HEROES AND DEMONS" |
R22 |
|
SEVEN OF NINE and ONE
EPISODE: "DRONE |
R23 |
|
HARRY KIM and DERRAN TAL
EPISODE: "THE DISEASE" |
R24 |
|
CAPTAIN JANEWAY and JAFFEN
EPISODE: "WORKFORCE" |
BB1 |
|
Captain Kathryn Janeway |
BB2 |
|
Commander Chakotay |
BB3 |
|
Lt. Commander Tuvok |
BB4 |
|
Lt. Tom Paris |
BB5 |
|
Ensign Harry Kim |
BB6 |
|
The Doctor |
BB7 |
|
Seven of Nine |
BB8 |
|
Lt. B'Elanna Torres |
BB9 |
|
Neelix |
BG1 |
|
Captain Kathryn Janeway |
BG2 |
|
Commander Chakotay |
BG3 |
|
Lt. Commander Tuvok |
BG4 |
|
Lt. Tom Paris |
BG5 |
|
Ensign Harry Kim |
BG6 |
|
The Doctor |
BG7 |
|
Seven of Nine |
BG8 |
|
Lt. B'Elanna Torres |
BG9 |
|
Neelix |
BGP10 |
|
Seven of Nine
Alternate image found in Archive Boxes only
|
|
- |
|
Irma "Aimo" Ahmed
|
- |
|
Kristin Allen
|
- |
|
Jeffrey Benitez
|
- |
|
Dan Borgonos
|
- |
|
León Braojos
|
- |
|
Jomar Bulda
|
- |
|
Daniel Campos
|
- |
|
François Chartier
|
- |
|
Roy Cover
|
- |
|
John Czop
|
- |
|
David Day
|
- |
|
Connie Faye
|
- |
|
Bien Flores
|
- |
|
Javier Gonzalez
|
- |
|
Daniel Gorman
|
- |
|
Chris Hoffman
|
- |
|
Laura Inglis
|
- |
|
John Jackman
|
- |
|
Debbie Jackson
|
- |
|
Michael James
|
- |
|
Achileas Kokkinakis
|
- |
|
Lee Lightfoot
|
- |
|
Jeff Mallinson
|
- |
|
Chris Meeks
|
- |
|
Rich Molinelli
|
- |
|
Sean Moore
|
- |
|
Tanner Padlo
|
- |
|
Mary Jane Pajaron
|
- |
|
Gener Pedrina
|
- |
|
Sean Pence
|
- |
|
Brent Ragland
|
- |
|
Scott Rorie
|
- |
|
Danny Silva
|
- |
|
Judit Tondora
|
- |
|
Helga Wojik
|
- |
|
Back of Sketch Card |
- |
|
Jason Alexander
as Kurros
in "Think Tank"
© 2014 |
- |
|
Lee Arenberg
as Pelk
in "Juggernaut"
© 2013 |
- |
|
Ed Begley, jr.
as Henry Starling
in "Future's End" & "Future's End, Part II"
© 2012 |
- |
|
Robert Beltran
as Chakotay
© 2011 |
- |
|
J Paul Boehmer
as One
in "Drone"
© 2015 |
- |
|
Len Cariou
as Admiral Edward Janeway
in "Coda"
© 2014 |
- |
|
David Clennon
as Crell Moset
in "Nothing Human"
© 2015 |
- |
|
Bertila Damas
as Marika Wilkarah
in "Survival Instinct"
© 2015 |
- |
|
Roxann Dawson
as B'Elanna Torres
© 2011 |
- |
|
Brad Dourif
as Crewman Lon Suder
in "Meld" & "Basics, Part I & II"
© 2015 |
- |
|
Jonathan Frakes
as Commander William T. Riker
in "Death Wish"
© 2015 |
- |
|
Gary Graham
as Tanis
in "Cold Fire"
© 2015 |
- |
|
Joel Grey
as Caylem
in "Resistance"
© 2014 |
- |
|
Jerry Hardin
as Neria
in "Emanations"
© 2013 |
- |
|
James Horan
as Tosin
in "Fair Trade"
© 2013 |
- |
|
Michael Horton
as Kovin
in "Retrospect"
© 2015 |
- |
|
Lisa Kaminir
as Lillias
in "Rise"
© 2015 |
- |
|
Robert Knepper
as Gaul
in "Dargon's Teeth"
© 2014 |
- |
|
Jennifer Lien
as Kes
© 2011 |
- |
|
Scott MacDonald
as Ensign Rolllins
in "Caretaker"
© 2013 |
- |
|
Jad Mager
as Ensign Tabor
in "Nothing Human" & "Repression"
© 2015 |
- |
|
Mary Elizabeth McGlynn
as Daelen
in "Vis à Vis"
© 2015 |
- |
|
Fintan McKeown
as Michael Sullivan
in "Fair Haven" & "Spirit Folk"
© 2014 |
- |
|
Zöe McLellan
as Tal Celes
in "Good Shepherd" & "The Haunting of Deck Twelve"
© 2015 |
- |
|
Robert Duncan McNeill
as Tom Paris
© 2011 |
- |
|
Kate Mulgrew
as Captain Janeway
© 2011 |
- |
|
Sandra Nelson
as Marayna
in "Alter Ego"
© 2015 |
- |
|
Lori Petty
as Noss
in "Gravity"
© 2014 |
- |
|
Ethan Phlllips
as Neelix
© 2011 |
- |
|
Robert Picardo
as The Doctor
© 2011 |
- |
|
Kim Rhodes
as Lyndsay Ballard
in "Ashes to Ashes"
© 2015 |
- |
|
Kim Rhodes
as Jhet'leya
in "Ashes to Ashes"
© 2015 |
- |
|
John Rhys-Davies
as Leonardo da Vinci
in "Scorpion" & "Concerning Flight"
© 2012 |
- |
|
Tim Russ
as Tuvok
© 2011 |
- |
|
Jeri Ryan
as Seven of Nine
© 2011 |
- |
|
Cari Shayne
as Eliann
in "Favorie Son"
© 2013 |
- |
|
Armin Shimerman
as Quark
in "Caretaker"
© 2013 |
- |
|
Dan Shor
as Arridor
in "False Profts"
© 2015 |
- |
|
Marina Sirtis
as Counselor Deanna Troi
in "Pathfinder", "Life Line" & "Inside Man"
© 2015 |
- |
|
Garrett Wang
as Harry Kim
© 2011 |
- |
|
Tim DeZarn
as Warden Yediq
in "Repentance"
© 2013 |
- |
|
Gerrit Graham
as Quinn
in "Death Wish"
© 2015 |
- |
|
Scott Lawrence
as Garon
in "The Void"
© 2013 |
- |
|
Brian Markinson
as Lt. Peter Durst
in "Cathexis" & "Faces"
© 2013 |
- |
|
Brian Markinson
as Sulan
in "Faces"
© 2013 |
- |
|
Sharisse Baker-Bernard
as Leosa
in "Inside Man"
© 2015 |
- |
|
Jonathan Breck
as Dying Borg Drone
in "Survival Instinct"
© 2013 |
- |
|
Wren T. Brown
as Kohlar
in "Prophecy"
© 2012 |
- |
|
Kelly Connell
as Sklar
in "Rise"
© 2014 |
- |
|
Mimi Craven
as Jisa
in "Dragon's Teeth"
© 2015 |
- |
|
Michael Cumpsty
as Lord Burleigh
in "Cathexis" & "Persistence of Vision"
© 2014 |
- |
|
Judy Geeson
as Sandrine
in "The Cloud" & "Twisted"
© 2013 |
- |
|
Maury Ginsberg
as Maury Ginsberg
in "Death Wish"
© 2015 |
- |
|
Lori Hallier
as Riley Frazier
in "Unity"
© 2015 |
- |
|
Lindsey Haun
as Beatrice Burleigh
in "Learning Curve" & "Persistence of Vision"
© 2014 |
- |
|
Stan Ivar
as Mark Johnson
in "Caretaker" & "Persistence of Vision"
© 2014 |
- |
|
Cindy Katz
as Kejal
in "Flesh and Blood"
© 2015 |
- |
|
Patrick Kerr
as Bothan Infiltrator
in "Persistence of Vision"
© 2015 |
- |
|
Amy Lindsay
as Lana
in "Endgame"
© 2015 |
- |
|
Athena Massey
as Jessen
in "Remember"
© 2015 |
- |
|
Deborah May
as Lyris
in "Favorite Son"
© 2013 |
- |
|
Bradley Pierce
as Jason Janeway
in "11:59"
© 2014 |
- |
|
Claire Rankin
as Alice
in "Alice"
© 2015 |
- |
|
Lyndsay Ridgeway
as Suspiria
in "Cold Fire"
© 2014 |
- |
|
Carolyn Seymour
as Mrs. Templeton
in ""Cathexis" & "Persistence of Vision"
© 2015 |
- |
|
Wayne Thomas Yorke
as Zet
in "Rennaisance Man"
© 2015 |
- |
|
Robert Pine
as Liria
in "The Chute"
© 2012 |
- |
|
Irene Tsu
as Mary Kim
in "Favorite Son" & "Author, Author"
© 2013 |
- |
|
McKenzie Westmore
as Ensign Jenkins
in "Warhead"
© 2012 |
- |
|
Jason Alexander
as Kurros
in "Think Tank"
© 2014
Alternate image (Star Trek Aliens version) found in Archive Boxes only |
|
CT1 |
|
Heroes Montage |
CT2 |
|
Villains Montage |
|
|
|
- |
|
6 Case Incentive
Jeri Ryan "Silver Series" Autograph Card
as Seven of Nine
© 2015 |
- |
|
9 Case Incentive
Kate Mulgrew/Jeri Ryan Dual Autograph Card
as Janeway and Seven of Nine
© 2015 |
|
BB10 |
|
Seven of Nine |
|
- |
|
Binder with 1 nine-pocket page and P3 Promo |
- |
|
Contains: 68 of 69 pack inserted autograph cards, 6-case and 9-case incentives, 2 case toppers, 24 card relationships set, 11 card Aliens set, 9 card black gallery set, exclusive BG10 black gallery METAL card, exclusive Jason Alexander alternate image autograph card, 1 random sketch card, 15 random PARALLEL base cards.
Does NOT include: Jason Alexander pack inserted autograph, relationships or gallery parallel cards, promos, 84 of 99 PARALLEL base cards. |
P1 |
|
General Distribution
Borg Queen and Seven of Nine |
P2 |
|
Non Sport Update Magazine
Kurros and Seven of Nine
|
P3 |
|
Philly Non Sport Show
Captain Janeway and Quinn
|
P4 |
|
Binder Exclusive
Doctor Chaotica and Queen Arachnia
|
|
- |
|
Sell sheet (digital download) |
|