The cast of Deep Space Nine proved they could play a wide range of emotions and points of view. Instead, because the other characters don’t immediately notice the changes, their slide into paranoia and cruelty is gradual. This didn’t mean these bizzaro versions were straight-up evil, or chewing the scenery like Mirror Universe duplicates. From Avery Brooks playing Commander Sisko with an unhinged intensity, to Nana Visitor turning Major Kira into a ruthless mutineer, to Colm Meaney suggesting that Chief O’Brien might be a secret bigot, the actors played their regular characters convincingly, but through a cracked lens. It feels like every character suddenly acts like they’re on a pirate ship or from the Mirror Universe.īecause only René Auberjonois is acting like his usual character, we got to see just how good the DS9 cast really was. All the main characters turn into sneaky conspirators, trying to slyly figure out who’s on the side of Major Kira, and who will side with Commander Sisko. The first episode, “Emissary,” established tensions between the Bajorians who own the station and the Federation crew that help run it, and 18 episodes later, it looked like that uneasy alliance would boil over into a full-on battle. Halfway through the episode, the audience still has no idea why the entire crew is acting bonkers, and most of the action plays out like a simmering mutiny. What “Dramatis Personae” did was way weider. And in the TNG episode “Power Play,” Troi, O’Brien, and Data were possessed by ancient alien souls, but that was made clear early, and the rest of the crew was unaffected. Star Trek floated something similar in the TOS episode “Return to Tomorrow,” but in that episode, the crew knew what they were doing and purposefully took the risk. O’Brien and Kira plotting in “Dramatis Personae.” CBS/Paramount But instead of picking up a nasty disease or a DNA-altering weapon, our heroes get roles and moods. After a Klingon ship explodes near the station, a sole Klingon survivor beams and accidentally spreads the telepathic virus. The premise involves the station’s crew having their personalities overridden by ancient telepathic imprints from a long-dead species called the Saltah'na. “Dramatis Personae” is not considered one of the great DS9 episodes, and many fans may not remember its significance. Star Trek has a long history of throwing its characters into personality-altering romps, starting in 1966 with the TOS episode “The Naked Time,” and again with the TNG episode in 1987 “The Naked Now.” Having the entire crew lose their minds is such a common trope that Lower Decks parodied it in the 2021 “I, Excretus.” But 30 years ago, Deep Space Nine took its turn into strange, bold territory. In science fiction television, you can learn how much your audience loves your characters by getting them to act out of character.
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