And I gotta say something here. mirandafave, it would be hard to cast DeMara Deen? Really? I don't think so. I think all you gotta do is pull Hayden Panitierre outta "Heroes", blonde her back up, give her some purple contacts and a TNG uniform and throw her on stage and tell her to look "sereeeeene". Add some angelic harp music every time she crosses the threshold and you're golden.
Do you know who it would really be hard to cast from CeJay's stories? Michael Owen. Do you know why? Because the author has never bothered to really describe the man. Ever. In fact, the only reason I can picture him at all in my head is because Ceej let TLR borrow him once and TLR actually described him. TLR, not the guy who created him! I had no clue what to think of him until then! And Captain Owen should be the one with the clearest image, cause he's the freakin' star of the series! But the problem here is clear. The most insight CeJay has given us into Owen is that he doesn't like "Ride of the Valkyries" and he's good friends with DeMara Deen.
Owen is not the only character that suffers from this problem. You know So'Dan Leva's a half-romulan. You know Lif Culsten's the typical eager Lieutenant, but you really know that DEMARA DEEN'S BEAUTIFUL AND SHE'S SERENE AND PEOPLE FEEL LIKE PUPPIES AND FLUFFY CLOUDS WHENEVER THEY'RE NEAR HER AND HER PEOPLE ARE SO MYTHICAL AND MAGICAL AND MYSTERIOUS THAT OTHER RACES WITHIN TEN LIGHT YEARS OF HER HOME PLANET SING DAHOO DORAY DAHOO DORAY WHENEVER THEY VENTURE OUT INTO THE VASTNESS OF SPACE!
And you have no idea how utterly frustrating that makes it to read his stories!
First off I don't find reading his stories frustrating. As for not describing Owens I hadn't ever really noticed that but perhaps by leaving it a blank slate it allows for versitility it helps a reader to perhaps put themselves into the Captain's boots for purposes of reading the story - a kind of every man perspective.
My point about Demara was not which blonde female could you get to play her but in part what you complain about in regard her character that she appears ethereal and mysterious and how you could convey that onscreen. I think CeJay has said often enough that he actually steers away from casting his characters allowing himself and so other readers to imagine the person for themselves. Physical characteristics left out? Perhaps. But how they interplay with one another is usually very well detailed and crafted. He doesn't tend to skip on such details.
Yes I know you have a gripe about Demara and that's your opinion and so valid but is it so hard to believe that if there are an infinite number of species in the Star Trek universe that one cannot turn out to a mysterious elven angel like species - we have species more or less cats - the Voth were reptiles that originated on Earth and flew away, Cardassians are tortoises without their shells! It is sci-fi so anything should be possible when an author uses their imagination.
Personally reading Demara i do know what you mean - she seems so magical and that perhaps made her a harder fit in a sci-fi world. But the main thing to me she represents is the utopian hopeful optimism of gene Roddenberry's vision for Star Trek. It is as if she is a personification of that ideal and therefore a tool in which to explore certain concepts or moral dilemmas. Maybe I read too much into that but it is my take on her.
One point regard characters like Demara to put across is how they would make any fan fiction hard to produce onscreen - many of us use characters who are usually so painstakingly beautiful or otherwise alien to be portrayed by budgetery constraints but then the idea was to just think not actually consider which most practically could be made for television. Your own series in that case would be the best option becuase it uses so many canon characters/cast. Reimagined terrific storytelling or not.