Re: If Tasha Yar had not died, what would have happened to her charact
That's true, actually. My mistake. This is what Memory Alpha says: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.
The original idea for "Yesterday's Enterprise" was generated by Trent Christopher Ganino in 15 April 1989, as a spec script submitted through the open submissions policy introduced by Michael Piller in that year. This original version featured the appearance of an Enterprise from the past in the TNG time period, and the resultant dilemma of whether to reveal their fate before sending them back. In this version, however, no alterations were made to the timeline – the central theme was simply the moral dilemma presented. At this point, the captain of the past Enterprise was Richard Garrett, whose last name derived from a pizzeria in Ganino's hometown, San Jose.
At the same time, following a conversation with Denise Crosby at a convention, Eric Stillwell developed a story that would allow Tasha Yar to return to the series after a two-year absence. In Stillwell's pitch, drawing from classic Trek episodes "The City on the Edge of Forever", "The Savage Curtain" and "Mirror, Mirror" – among others – a Vulcan science team would inadvertently cause the death of Surak, the founder of Vulcan philosophy, when a trip through the Guardian of Forever into Vulcan's ancient past goes wrong. As a result, the Vulcan people would never become the logical race that is known in the Trek universe. Instead, a Vulcan race more akin to the Romulan Star Empire would be engaged in war against the other powers of the galaxy, including the remnants of the Federation. As part of this alteration, Tasha Yar would be present amongst the crew of the Enterprise. Ultimately, Ambassador Sarek, who was on board Enterprise-D to greet the returning science team, would sacrifice himself by returning to the past and taking the place of Surak, thus restoring the correct timeline. Stillwell commented, "We thought it would be really cool that someone from the future would replace someone in the past, and I always thought it was funny that their names were so similar anyway." Although not used here, a similar theme would be seen in the DS9 two-part episode, "Past Tense, Part I" and "Past Tense, Part II", where Benjamin Sisko replaced historical figure Gabriel Bell.
When Stillwell pitched this idea to Michael Piller, Piller suggested combining it with Ganino's "Yesterday's Enterprise" story – which had also developed a Tasha Yar element by this point, largely on the suggestion of Piller, who had also wanted to find a way of bringing the character back – with Ganino and Stillwell retaining joint story credit. The Vulcans were replaced by the Klingons, and the Sarek/Surak plotline replaced with the idea that Yar would fill an absence on board Enterprise-C after the death of a female Captain Garrett. The finished storyline treatment was largely as broadcast, with the exception of Guinan's presence in the episode (in the completed pitch, an alien probe provided the crucial information about the timeline alteration). Some other minor plot points were lost between story and teleplay, including a Yar/Data subplot that was dropped for time.
Yeah, it was Crosby herself who invented the character of Sela. So without Crosby leaving, there's no Sela.Now [if Yar had never died] might have prevented the creation of the Sela character later on, though, but that was more to bring back Denise Crosby to TNG than anything else. Otherwise, Sela might have just been a young female Romulan commander with an axe to grind against the Federation for something else...