Her most difficult time with Wesley occurred in “The First Duty,” when Wesley narrowly escaped death in a training exercise off Saturn, in which another cadet did die. Her son admitted to participating in a coverup of the accident. While Wesley Crusher did the right thing at the end, he was humiliated in front of all of his Starfleet Academy peers and was forced to repeat his final year at the Academy.
GATES MCFADDEN
Dr. Crusher is the first regular role in a television series for actress Gates McFadden. Her character is presented with more background than most of the others, as she is the mother of Wesley Crusher, and the widow of the man who died while saving Picard’s life on an earlier mission.
Gates trained to be a dancer when quite young, while growing up in Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio. “I had extraordinary teachers: one was primarily a ballerina and the other had been in a circus. I grew up thinking most ballerinas knew how to ride the unicycle, tap dance, and do handsprings. Consequently, I was an oddball to other dancers.”
Her interest in acting was sparked by community theater and a touring Shakespeare company. “When I was ten, my brother and I attended back-to-back Shakespeare for eight days in a musty, nearly empty theater. There were twelve actors who played all the parts. I couldn’t get over it—the same people in costumes every day, but playing new characters. It was like visiting somewhere but never wanting to leave.”
She earned her Bachelor of Arts in Theater from Brandeis University while continuing to study acting, dance, and mime. Just prior to graduation she met Jack LeCoq and credits the experience with changing her life.
“I attended his first workshop in the United States. His theatrical vision and the breadth of its scope were astonishing. I left for Paris as soon as possible to continue to study acting with LeCoq at his school. We worked constantly in juxtapositions. One explored immobility in order to better understand movement. One explored silence in order to better understand sound and language. It was theatrical research involving many mediums. Just living in a foreign country where you have to speak and think in another language cracks your head open. It was both terrifying and freeing. Suddenly I was taking more risks in my acting.”
A WOMAN OF MANY TALENTS
McFadden lives in New York City, where she has been involved in film and theater both as an actress and director-choreographer. Her acting credits include leads in the New York productions of Michael Brady’s To Gillian on Her 37th Birthday, Mary Gallagher’s How to Say Goodbye, Caryl Churchill’s Cloud 9, and, in California, in the La Jolla Playhouse production of The Matchmaker with Linda Hunt.
Gates was the director of choreography and puppet movement for the late Jim Henson’s Labyrinth and assisted Gavin Miller in the staging of the fantasy sequences for Dreamchild. “Those films were my baptism by fire into the world of special effects and computerized props,” Gates reveals.
Following the first season of Next Generation, Gates was inexplicably dropped from the cast and just as inexplicably returned in the third season, after her role as ship’s doctor had been played for one season by Diana Muldaur. During her absence from the series, among other work Gates had a small role in The Hunt for Red October as the wife of the main character. She did not repeat this role in Patriot Games, the second film to feature the Jack Ryan character, as a younger actress was chosen for the part in the 1992 sequel.
Deanna Troi is the ship’s counselor. This position didn’t exist during the time of the first starship Enterprise seventy-five years before. In the twenty-fourth century it has been realized that the success of a starship’s mission depends as much on efficiently functioning human relationships as it does on the vessel staying in one piece and having fully functional warp drive.
Counselor Troi is fully trained in human and alien psychology. When a starship encounters alien life forms, the counselor is crucial to the captain and Number One.
While twentieth-century psychiatry and psychology are considered to be more arts than empirical science, in the twenty-fourth century, solid evidence and medical research have radically changed things. Psychiatry has become a field of applied science in which hard evidence has replaced guesswork, supposition, and mere practiced insight. Command ranks aboard starships both respect and actively make use of the skills of the counselor in much the same way that they solicit advice from the medical officers, chief engineer, and other shipboard specialists. With the commissioning of the Galaxy-class starships, with the added complexities of families and the presence of children, the Counselor is in even more demand.
A Starfleet graduate, Deanna is half human and half Betazoid. Her father was a Starfleet officer who lived on Betazed with one of that world’s humanoid females. Her mother Lwaxana is an aristocratic eccentric who provides Deanna with acute embarrassment whenever she appears onboard the Enterprise. She is insistent on pursuing Captain Picard (she thinks he has great legs), or whatever other male she sets her eyes on.
While Lwaxana and all other full Betazoids are fully telepathic, Deanna has telepathic abilities limited to the emotional range; she can “read” feelings and sensations, but not coherent thoughts. Another extreme example of Betazoid ability is the hypersensitive Tam Elbrun, who vanished with the space-faring being dubbed “Tin Man” by the Federation. While most Betazoids develop their full telepathic abilities during adolescence, Elbrun was born with them fully functional, which led him to seek the solitude of space. He was, in fact, Deanna’s patient at one time, but she was not able to do much for him.
OFTEN AWAY
Due to her particular training and inherent abilities, Counselor Troi is often selected as an Away Team member, as she can provide important insights into the motives and feelings of the beings they must deal with.
(Some beings, notably the Ferengi, are impervious even to full telepaths. While some races may be able to intentionally block their minds, the Ferengi probably are resistant due to peculiarities of their brain structure.)
Generally, when dealing with alien life, Deanna can sense something of the moods or attitudes that a being harbors toward Federation representatives. In the case of the Traveler (“Where No One Has Gone Before”) she could detect nothing from him, as if he wasn’t even there. With humans she is able to sense more when it is a person she has some sort of rapport or relationship with.
For instance, Troi was acquainted with William Riker before either was posted to the Enterprise. Neither knew the other had been assigned to this starship until they first encountered one another on board. While Troi did no feel she could become deeply involved with Riker again, she did find their affair meaningful and pleasant. It has not progressed any further, as each feels honor bound to maintain a disciplined and professional status while aboard ship.
MARINA SIRTIS
A British actress, Marina Sirtis worked in various roles in England for years before she decided to give the colonies a try. She landed the continuing role of Deanna Troi after being in America only six months. “It’s taken me years to become an overnight success,” she quips. “I had a six-month visa, which was quickly running out. In fact, I got the call telling me I had the part only hours before I was to leave for the airport to return home.”
Marina enjoys the irony of being a British actress playing an alien on American television But viewers won’t notice a British accent coming out of an alien being, as she’s devised a combination of accents for the character to use. Sirtis states, “In the twenty-fourth century, geographical or national barriers are not so evident. The Earth as a planet is your country, your nationality. I didn’t want anyone to be able to pin down my accent to any particular country, and being good at accents, the producers trusted me to come up with something