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Relaunch Character Creation Process

DarKush

Rear Admiral
Rear Admiral
Some questions for Trek lit writers:

1) What is the creative process you used to create the relaunch characters for DS9, VOY, and TNG? Or were the characters already created when you wrote them?

2) How much freedom do you have to develop the personalities of the new characters? Are you allowed to name them and create backstories?

3) Did you try out other potential characters before 'settling' on the relaunch characters that have appeared so far? How much of that process was a group effort?
 
^ The answer to that question is "it depends." Sorry to be unspecific, but it depends on which characters you're talking about, not to mention the different editorial styles of three different editors (Ordover, Palmieri, Clark).

In the case of Kadohata and Leybenzon, Margaret gave me carte blanche to come up with a new security chief and new second officer. It was all subject to Margaret's approval, of course. I believe it was the same for Jeannie with T'Lana and Nave.

As for the process of how I came up with them, I mostly covered that in the afterword for Q & A. The only thing I'd add is that I found Kadohata in particular to be great fun to write. :D
 
KRAD said:
^ The answer to that question is "it depends."

IIRC, the female Bolian, Commander Tirus Jast, who appears in the first DS9 relaunch novel, "Avatar", was devised by SD Perry (and Marco Palmieri), and then Marco was able to get the character slipped into the WildStorm "N-Vector" comic mini-series and the TNG "Maximum Warp" novel duology before "Avatar" was published. Very clever, building up the character that way!
 
Thank you both for your answers.

KRAD, I just purchased Q & A and am currently reading it. I will definitely read the Afterword when I finish the novel.

So, the editors have the final say-so about the characters? Then what exactly are the editors looking for each of the relaunched series when it comes to new characters? How did they arrive at the idea that Shar or Vaughn (DS9), Kaz (VOY), or T'Lana (TNG)-for example adds to the stories they want told?
 
Writing is a collaborative process. An author could defend a certain character till he or she was blue in the face, but if that character doesn't please the editor, or Paula Block at CBS Consumer Products (and Richard Arnold back when he was at Paramount's ST Office), for some reason, then the character will be tweaked.

And any character can always be killed off, or transferred, or just ignored by the next author of a series, although killing off another author's original character without discussion wouldn't be good etiquette.

Shar was created because it was realized that, after Jadzia's death, DS9 was short a regular science officer. And the Andorians had been a neglected race.

Some examples of past tweaking:

In the original manuscript of "A Flag Full of Stars", Number One of "The Cage" was a special guest watching an anniversary celebration of NASA with Robert April. By the final edited book, Robert April was sitting with an unnamed famous, but seemingly humorless, woman with long salt 'n' pepper hair. I actually guessed it was Number One, but I was still shocked years later when Brad Ferguson told me I was correct!

Lieutenant Thralen, a Theskian with blue skin, antennae and yellow fur-like hair was an Enterprise-D crewman in the novel "TNG: Metamorphosis". His race is said to be "related" to Andorians, but "more gregarious". Jean Lorrah had intended that Thralen actually be an Andorian, but was requested by the then-Star Trek Office at Paramount to make the change, since there were "no Andorians among the Enterprise-D crew". Jean Lorrah was seemingly paying homage to some Andorian speculations from the old zine article, A Summary of the Physiological Roots of Andorian Culture (1976) by Leslie Fish, a friend from her fanfic days (and some of those references remain, such as Thralen's "the Great Mother" deity).

Supposedly Peter David's Ensign Janos, as a talking, sentient Mugato, was originally overruled (ie. he was allowed to be white, furry, with a horn on his head, but not necessarily identified by species name, since canonical TOS never indicated that Mugatos could be sentient) but a few mentions of the term did get through at the editing stage, so when David Mack did a "New Frontier" minipedia entry, Janos got to remain a Mugato, and PAD eventually explained, in "Stone and Anvil", that Janos was a mix of several alien species, including Mugato and Caitian.
 
In <i>Echoes of Coventry</i>, I had to create all the characters I used except for Bart Faulwell and Admiral Batanides. Of the characters I created, the editor approved all except for one, who became the Bajoran linguist.

Of course, writing a SCE story is a little different from a relaunch, but I have the feeling the experience would be pretty similar.
 
Well, this wasn't relaunch (actually it was pre-launch TOS, but I "named" Scotty's mother and sister (and created their physical descriptions, and Scotty's mom's half-Scottish/half-Danish heritage) for my story in SNW VI. No problems. Approved by everyone first time through.

--Ted
 
Richard White said:
In <i>Echoes of Coventry</i>, I had to create all the characters I used except for Bart Faulwell and Admiral Batanides.
Batanides was in more than just Tapestry and Rogue?
 
In the books and comics, I heard that Adm. Uhura was still Chief of Starfleet Intelligence even as late as 2377, she must be over 150 by then. Would Batanides be a suitable candidate to take her place? She'd be about 80 or so by then wouldn't she?
 
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