Star Trek: The Next Generation: Difference between revisions
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[[Image:WomenOfTNG.jpg|thumb|200px|right|The female characters of Season 1, ST:TNG]] | [[Image:WomenOfTNG.jpg|thumb|200px|right|The female characters of Season 1, ST:TNG. [[Tasha Yar]] (left), [[Deanna Troi]] (right), and [[Beverly Crusher]] (bottom)]] | ||
AKA ST:TNG. TV series that aired originally from 1987 to 1994. | AKA ST:TNG. TV series that aired originally from 1987 to 1994. | ||
Notable female characters: | |||
*[[Ro Laren]] | |||
*[[Beverly Crusher]] | |||
*[[Deanna Troi]] | |||
*[[Tasha Yar]] | |||
[[Gene Roddenberry]] had promised that ST:TNG would have gay characters. Beverly Crusher's orderly, Ensign Freeman, was supposed to be gay, in a first-season script that was never produced. Roddenberry had promised in 1991 to introduce minor gay characters during the fourth season (1991-92), but Roddenberry died, and the production company and network reneged on the promise. The show did have two episodes that touched on sexual orientation, "[[The Outcast (ST:TNG episode)|The Outcast]]" (a gender-neutral species represses heterosexuality and gender-identity) and "[[The Host (ST:TNG episode)|The Host]]" (using a Trill host-symbiont gender-switch to confront Dr. Crusher with the possibility of same-sex love). | |||
[[Category:TV series]] | [[Category:TV series]] | ||
[[Category:Star Trek]] | [[Category:Star Trek]] | ||
[[category:Series first published in 1987]] | |||
Latest revision as of 07:59, 29 October 2011

AKA ST:TNG. TV series that aired originally from 1987 to 1994.
Notable female characters:
Gene Roddenberry had promised that ST:TNG would have gay characters. Beverly Crusher's orderly, Ensign Freeman, was supposed to be gay, in a first-season script that was never produced. Roddenberry had promised in 1991 to introduce minor gay characters during the fourth season (1991-92), but Roddenberry died, and the production company and network reneged on the promise. The show did have two episodes that touched on sexual orientation, "The Outcast" (a gender-neutral species represses heterosexuality and gender-identity) and "The Host" (using a Trill host-symbiont gender-switch to confront Dr. Crusher with the possibility of same-sex love).