Beltran was the best actor IMO on Voyager. Frakes was so-so (Sir Patrick hands down was the best actor, with Spiner and Dorn as other good ones) and Blalock so-so also.
I don't know what Beltran's other work is like, but in VOY he was totally wooden, even on rare occasions when he got something to do (I remember a scene in
Equinox when he seemed indifferent during a charged confrontation with Janeway). Maybe he wasn't trying anymore after a while, but I really cannot understand why people praise him, at least based on his work on VOY.
Last year Beltran got VERY good reviews for his performances in two theatre plays in San Francisco and LA.
As I said, he could very well be great outside VOY, but on VOY, I was very unimpressed. Maybe it was the poor writing and his dissatisfaction with the role that lead to it, but I really can't say he was good in the role when he wasn't.
Beltran was the best actor IMO on Voyager. Frakes was so-so (Sir Patrick hands down was the best actor, with Spiner and Dorn as other good ones) and Blalock so-so also.
I don't know what Beltran's other work is like, but in VOY he was totally wooden, even on rare occasions when he got something to do (I remember a scene in
Equinox when he seemed indifferent during a charged confrontation with Janeway). Maybe he wasn't trying anymore after a while, but I really cannot understand why people praise him, at least based on his work on VOY.
Last year Beltran got VERY good reviews for his performances in two theatre plays in San Francisco and LA.
And for his acting in Voyager- look here
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000296/awards
That doesn't really say anything about how his acting in VOY compares to the rest of the cast, does it. It's not like anyone else from the show was eligible for the same category. I'm not even sure how many Hispanic actors played crossover roles on TV those years, so I don't even know if he had to beat any serious competition to be one of the 5 or 6 nominees.
I always thought Robert Picardo was the best actor on Voyager, but i can't remember an episode when Beltran had much to work with. I heard Dorn got arogant and there was far too much of his charachter in ds9. In my opinion the other actors outshone him.
I think as Worf is a very stoical and reserved character, it doesn't show much range for Dorn. but I think in TNG, Worf was written in more comic situations, whilst in DS9 the character wasn't as such. TNG Worf was better written than DS9 Worf, IMO. I guess they had Quark as comic relief, when in TNG Worf was the comic relief character (and Data to some degree).
I don't think I would agree with that. Worf had a lot of comic moments on DS9, mostly with Jadzia. (There's also a very memorable moment in season 4 (I think) when Worf is asked what Klingons dream about and answers in his deadpan way "Things that would send cold chills down your spine, and wake you in the middle of the night. No, it is better you do not know" and Kira says "I never know when he's joking".) He was never the main comic relief on TNG, that was usually Data. Worf's storylines on TNG were at least as dark if not darker than on DS9: refusing to give blood transfusion to save the racist Romulan in
The Enemy; the entire story arc with the Klingon politics and the Duras family, including losing K'Ehleyr and avenging her death (he also lost Jadzia on DS9, but there was no revenge story); disrupting if not destroying the harmonious Romulan/Klingon society in
Birthright pt 2.
I don't think that Worf was very different on TNG and DS9. The main difference was that, on TNG, he stood out as the edgier character with an alien perspective compared to the rest of the main cast who were all well-adjusted Federation Humans (or half-Humans who didn't really act that differently from the others) and an android whose greatest desire was to be more human. (At least before Ro was added to the cast, but her appearances were not regular.) However, DS9 already had edgier and more ambiguous characters and a lot of alien non-Starfleet characters with different ethics and perspectives in the main cast and prominent recurring characters - and next to Kira, Odo, Quark, Garak, Dukat, Winn, the Cardassians, the Bajorans, the Ferengi, and last but not least, more typical Klingons (Martok), Worf suddenly seemed relatively dull.
I know that a lot of people think that the Worf/Jadzia pairing was not good for Jadzia because her stories were all about Klingons rather than exploring her Trillness, but it was in any case great for Worf, since he didn't really fit that well with the rest of the cast, and their relationship gave him an opportunity for comedy in addition to some occasional drama. If not for that relationships, he would feel out of place on the station. TNG's only major misstep with Worf was pairing him up with Troi. With Worf/Jadzia, he was given a more convincing pairing, somewhat similar to Worf/K'Ehleyr - with a strong woman who was a match for him and challenged him with her more open-minded views and sometimes irreverent attitudes - but more light-hearted and with quite a few comic moments.