If Tasha Yar had not died, what would have happened to her character? How would she have developed?
instead of worf, eventual she would have been assigned to ds9, begun an affair with, and married jadzia dax.
their sex would have also resulted in visits to the infirmary.
Actually, Patrick Stewart was thinking about leaving, so Piller wrote the episode so that it could result in Picard's death if contract negotiations didn't work out and Stewart left the show.Heck, I really think that probably almost happened with Picard and Riker, too, during the Best of Both Worlds cliffhanger - that they weren't finding enough for Picard and Riker to each do as separate characters, so they were writing out Picard (who was probably played by the more expensive actor). And I was eager for them to do so at the time, but I'm glad they didn't, because an episode or two after BoBWp2 they really began to build Picard's character into someone that I ultimately liked.
These all seem like surprisingly good suggestions (even the Geordi one) except for the bolded one. I seem to remember Michael Dorn saying several times that if Denise Crosby hadn't left the show, they would have killed off Worf.She would have hooked up with Geordi (yeah, the unlikely one).
She'd become a big sister to Wesley in season two during Beverly's absence.
As Worf's sister-in-arms, she would have served as his cha'Dich in "Sins of the Father" and presented the truth about the Duras family to Picard.
She would keep reminding Data that one time didn't happen.
She would have been promoted to lieutenant commander by season three or four and would be seen taking charge of more away team missions.
Thing is... I kinda wish they had gotten rid of either Picard or Riker after "Best of Both Worlds". I know it's tempting to shout "Blasphemy!" at this -- and there are Picard stories and Riker stories after "Best of Both Worlds" which I love and don't want to get rid of -- but I stand by it.bullethead said:Actually, Patrick Stewart was thinking about leaving, so Piller wrote the episode so that it could result in Picard's death if contract negotiations didn't work out and Stewart left the show.
I don't think Roddenberry originally wanted a Klingon in TNG, but once he decided it would be a good way of showing how things had changed since TNG, he went with it, but didn't think of Worf as much more than a "token" character, IMO. I also believe that Roddenberry always wanted a female security chief to show that a woman could do a job normally associated with a man in most action-adventure shows at the time.heavylids said:I think it was a little silly to have Tasha be head of security and also tactical officer when there is a Klingon in the crew. Any Klingon would probably be naturally better in both those areas. Worf was the logical choice.
IIRC, didn't Roddenerry originally intend Worf to only be a sort of a supporting character and was really a last-minute addition to the main cast? I think that Worf benefited from Yar being killed off, because otherwise he would have been only slightly more than a reoccuring character like O'Brien.ColeMercury said:These all seem like surprisingly good suggestions (even the Geordi one) except for the Geordi one. I seem to remember Michael Dorn saying several times that if Denise Crosby hadn't left the show, they would have killed off Worf.C.E. Evans said:She would have hooked up with Geordi (yeah, the unlikely one).
She'd become a big sister to Wesley in season two during Beverly's absence.
As Worf's sister-in-arms, she would have served as his cha'Dich in "Sins of the Father" and presented the truth about the Duras family to Picard.
She would keep reminding Data that one time didn't happen.
She would have been promoted to lieutenant commander by season three or four and would be seen taking charge of more away team missions.
Maybe this time she was onboard helping with repairs, or a tactical briefing, or just saying goodbye to Castillo, when the ship was pulled back through the anomaly.^but the YE Tasha got on the E-C because she learned she died a meaningless death. If Tasha was still alive in the third season, she woulda have stayed behind.
heavylids said:I think it was a little silly to have Tasha be head of security and also tactical officer when there is a Klingon in the crew. Any Klingon would probably be naturally better in both those areas. Worf was the logical choice.
Sure it would--it just would have been a slightly different story because it was more about the Enterprise-C going back to fulfil its destiny than about Tasha Yar anyway.I'm fairly sure that if Tasha hadn't been killed off, "Yesterday's Enterprise" would never have been written in the first place.
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