Star Trek: Enterprise
From Memory Alpha, the free Star Trek reference.
| This article is written from the Real World point of view |
| Enterprise (2001–2003) Star Trek: Enterprise (2003–2005) | |
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| Abbr.: | ENT |
| Created by: | Rick Berman Brannon Braga |
| Studio: | Paramount Pictures |
| Original network: | UPN |
| Production dates: | 2001–2005 |
| Original run: | 26 September 2001–13 May 2005 |
| Episodes: | 97 (4 seasons), 1 is feature-length (split into two parts for reruns) |
| Timespan: | 2151-2155, 2161 |
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Star Trek: Enterprise is the fifth live-action TV series set in the Star Trek universe. Created by Rick Berman and Brannon Braga, and based upon Gene Roddenberry's classic 1966 Star Trek (and its subsequent spin-offs), Enterprise was a "prequel", set a century before the time of Kirk and Spock. The series followed the voyages of the first starship Enterprise and mankind's first steps into the "final frontier". Initially titled without the Star Trek prefix, Enterprise ran an abbreviated four seasons, debuting in 2001 on the United Paramount Network and eventually falling victim to cancellation in 2005.
- Main Title Theme (seasons 1-2)file info
- Main Title Theme (seasons 3-4)file info
- Where My Heart Will Take Me lyrics (composed by Diane Warren, vocals by Russell Watson)
- Alternate Main Title Themefile info (used in episodes "In a Mirror, Darkly" and "In a Mirror, Darkly, Part II", composed by Dennis McCarthy & Kevin Kiner)
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[edit] Summary
Enterprise was set in the 22nd century, at a time before the Federation and while United Earth was just becoming a player in interstellar politics.
Like its predecessor, Star Trek: Voyager, Enterprise aired on UPN, rather than in first-run syndication like TNG or DS9. Initially, the ratings for Enterprise were as strong as those for Voyager, but the new series steadily lost viewers, and was finally canceled after its fourth season.
Numerous factors contributed to the demise of Enterprise. Due to its setting, the show was perhaps doomed from the start to step on the toes of previous canon and fanon, provoking the ire of the core Star Trek fan base. Enterprise may also have taken a ratings hit because viewers that used then-new Digital Video Recorders were not yet included in official counts.
Enterprise accomplished a number of technical firsts for the Star Trek series, including the first episode aired in high-definition, "Exile", and the first episode produced entirely with digital video equipment, "Storm Front".
[edit] Basic Plot
Launched in the year 2151, the NX class starship Enterprise, (the first of United Earth's advanced warp five vessels) was at first on temporary assignment. Though years of preparation still lay ahead, the ship was unexpectedly put into service when a Klingon national crash landed on Earth, putting the entire planet at stake should he not make it back to his people. Under the command of United Earth Starfleet Captain Jonathan Archer, son of the famed scientist Henry Archer, the crew of Enterprise succeeded in their mission, but found themselves surrounded by deeper mysteries. Warranting the extension of their assignment into a full blown mission of deep space exploration, the crew of the Enterprise set off into the unknown, taking with them a Vulcan science officer (or chaperone) named T'Pol and a Denobulan doctor named Phlox.
Enterprise's first years were rocky; while the ship made contact with such species as the Suliban and the previously mentioned Klingons, such contact was not peaceful. In its first two years alone, the ship's crew found themselves in armed conflict with a range of species from the Tholians to the Coridan to the Borg... and things only got worse. By its third year in space, an alien species known as the Xindi brutally attacked Earth, killing millions.
The NX-01 was dispatched to a remote and previously uncharted area of space known as the Delphic Expanse in order to prevent the Xindi from completing their ultimate goal of destroying humanity. While the ship was successful, after nearly a year in the Expanse, the ship suffered severe damage and many losses.
Upon returning home, Enterprise served a more diplomatic role in the service of United Earth, easing relations between the Vulcans, the Andorians, and the Tellarites, and paving the way toward a Coalition of Planets, an alliance that would eventually lead to the founding of the United Federation of Planets. Though still often tumultuous, Enterprise continued its mission of exploration as well, bringing Humans in contact with even more new worlds and new civilizations.
Though the voyages of Enterprise were relatively brief, the events of its time shaped the next generation of space exploration, and the next. The first to boldly go where no man had gone before...
[edit] Main Cast
- Scott Bakula (as Jonathan Archer)
- John Billingsley (as Phlox)
- Jolene Blalock (as T'Pol)
- Dominic Keating (as Malcolm Reed)
- Anthony Montgomery (as Travis Mayweather)
- Linda Park (as Hoshi Sato)
- Connor Trinneer (as Charles Tucker III)
Star Trek: Enterprise was the only Star Trek series to complete its run without a change in cast, neither the premature departure of a cast member, nor the addition of new characters at midpoint (though rumors suggest the addition of Jeffrey Combs as Shran was planned for the scrapped fifth season).
[edit] Production Crew
- Rick Berman - Co-Creator, Executive Producer, Writer
- Brannon Braga - Co-Creator, Executive Producer, Writer
- Chris Black - Co-Executive Producer, Writer
- Manny Coto - Co-Executive Producer, Writer
- John Shiban - Co-Executive Producer, Writer
- David A. Goodman - Supervising Producer, Writer
- Ken LaZebnik - Supervising Producer, Writer
- Mike Sussman - Producer, Writer
- Alan Brennert - Producer, Writer
- André Bormanis - Executive Story Editor, Science Consultant, Writer
- Alan Kobayashi - Graphic Designer
- Dawn Velazquez - Producer
- Gene Roddenberry - Creator of Star Trek
[edit] Episode List
[edit] Season 1
ENT Season 1, 25 episodes
[edit] Season 2
ENT Season 2, 26 episodes
[edit] Season 3
ENT Season 3, 24 episodes
| Title | Episode | Prodno. | Date | Original Airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Xindi | 3x01 | 053 | Unknown | 2003-09-10 |
| Anomaly | 3x02 | 054 | Unknown | 2003-09-17 |
| Extinction | 3x03 | 055 | Unknown | 2003-09-24 |
| Rajiin | 3x04 | 056 | Unknown | 2003-10-01 |
| Impulse | 3x05 | 057 | Unknown | 2003-10-08 |
| Exile | 3x06 | 058 | Unknown | 2003-10-15 |
| The Shipment | 3x07 | 059 | Unknown | 2003-10-29 |
| Twilight | 3x08 | 060 | Unknown | 2003-11-05 |
| North Star | 3x09 | 061 | Unknown | 2003-11-12 |
| Similitude | 3x10 | 062 | Unknown | 2003-11-19 |
| Carpenter Street | 3x11 | 063 | Unknown | 2003-11-26 |
| Chosen Realm | 3x12 | 064 | Unknown | 2004-01-14 |
| Proving Ground | 3x13 | 065 | 2153-12-06 | 2004-01-21 |
| Stratagem | 3x14 | 066 | 2153-12-12 | 2004-02-04 |
| Harbinger | 3x15 | 067 | 2153-12-27 | 2004-02-11 |
| Doctor's Orders | 3x16 | 068 | Unknown | 2004-02-18 |
| Hatchery | 3x17 | 069 | 2154-01-08 | 2004-02-25 |
| Azati Prime | 3x18 | 070 | 2154-01 | 2004-03-03 |
| Damage | 3x19 | 071 | Unknown | 2004-04-24 |
| The Forgotten | 3x20 | 072 | Unknown | 2004-04-28 |
| E² | 3x21 | 073 | Unknown | 2004-05-05 |
| The Council | 3x22 | 074 | 2154-02-12 | 2004-05-12 |
| Countdown | 3x23 | 075 | 2154-02-13 | 2004-05-19 |
| Zero Hour | 3x24 | 076 | 2154-02-14 | 2004-05-26 |
[edit] Season 4
ENT Season 4, 22 episodes
| Title | Episode | Prodno. | Date | Original Airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Storm Front | 4x01 | 077 | Unknown | 2004-10-08 |
| Storm Front, Part II | 4x02 | 078 | Unknown | 2004-10-15 |
| Home | 4x03 | 079 | Unknown | 2004-10-22 |
| Borderland | 4x04 | 080 | 2154-05-17 | 2004-10-29 |
| Cold Station 12 | 4x05 | 081 | Unknown | 2004-11-05 |
| The Augments | 4x06 | 082 | 2154-05-27 | 2004-11-12 |
| The Forge | 4x07 | 083 | Unknown | 2004-11-19 |
| Awakening | 4x08 | 084 | Unknown | 2004-11-26 |
| Kir'Shara | 4x09 | 085 | Unknown | 2004-12-03 |
| Daedalus | 4x10 | 086 | Unknown | 2005-01-14 |
| Observer Effect | 4x11 | 087 | Unknown | 2005-01-21 |
| Babel One | 4x12 | 088 | 2154-11-12 | 2005-01-28 |
| United | 4x13 | 089 | 2154-11-15 | 2005-02-04 |
| The Aenar | 4x14 | 090 | Unknown | 2005-02-11 |
| Affliction | 4x15 | 091 | 2154-11-27 | 2005-02-18 |
| Divergence | 4x16 | 092 | 2154-12 | 2005-02-25 |
| Bound | 4x17 | 093 | 2154-12-27 | 2005-04-15 |
| In a Mirror, Darkly | 4x18 | 094 | 2155-01-13 | 2005-04-22 |
| In a Mirror, Darkly, Part II | 4x19 | 095 | 2155-01-18 | 2005-04-29 |
| Demons | 4x20 | 096 | 2155-01-19 | 2005-05-06 |
| Terra Prime | 4x21 | 097 | Unknown | 2005-05-13 |
| These Are the Voyages... | 4x22 | 098 | 47457.1 | 2005-05-13 |
[edit] The Would-Be Season 5
A fifth season of Star Trek: Enterprise was never produced, since the show was officially canceled on 2 February 2005. The producers, however, had already devised numerous plans for future seasons, which could have started airing by September 2005. Most information is based on comments by producer Manny Coto.
- A Kzinti episode had been suggested as a prequel to TAS: "The Slaver Weapon", which progressed as far as a "rough rendering" of a Kzinti starship, commissioned by writer Jimmy Diggs. The story was titled "Kilkenny Cats."
- An episode had been discussed where the Enterprise crew encountered a previous alias of Flint.
- It has also been stated that the starship Enterprise would have received new crewmembers, including Shran, the recurring Andorian character.
- Plans existed for an episode showing the construction of the first starbase, most likely in the Berengaria system. First hints to that episode were already given in "Bound".
- Enterprise was due to revisit (actually previsit) the cloud city Stratos on Ardana showing the formation of the two castes seen in TOS: "The Cloud Minders".
- Guinan (Whoopi Goldberg) might have been seen as well: a two-hour drama centering around Hoshi Sato was written for Season Five (Writer's Guild-East Registration R18220-00), in which Guinan would be under an assumed name, "Claranna" (relating to Q's line to her in TNG: "Q Who", "Oh, is that the name you're using now?"), acting personal assistant of the head of the United Earth Space Probe Agency. Also to have been revealed: more of Guinan's background, what she was doing there since the time of Mark Twain (TNG: "Time's Arrow"), links to TOS and TNG, the first appearance of Skon, grandfather of Spock (T'Lar's line near the end of Star Trek III: The Search for Spock) in a filmed episode, and why Vulcan delayed helping Earth with warp drive. The story was titled "The Treatment."
- Further planned topics included the Enterprise finally visiting Phlox's homeworld, Denobula. Furthermore, a revisit to the Mirror Universe, which had already been shown in "In a Mirror, Darkly", and possibly featuring Hoshi Sato being empress of the Terran Empire had also been discussed. A return of Section 31, which had its last appearance in "Terra Prime", was planned as well.
- Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens pitched a story with Alice Krige as a Starfleet medical technician who makes contact with the Borg from Season 2 ("Regeneration") and becomes the Borg Queen. [1]
- Writer/producer Mike Sussman hoped to have T'Pol finally meet her father, and reveal to the audience that he was in fact a Romulan agent who had posed as a Vulcan officer prior to faking his own death. The suggestion that T'Pol was half-Romulan would have shed light on her affinity for humans as well as her interest in experimenting with emotions.
[edit] Related topics
- ENT performers
- ENT recurring characters
- ENT recurring character appearances
- ENT directors
- Composers
- Paramount Stage 8
- Paramount Stage 9
- Paramount Stage 18
[edit] Background
Perhaps the most controversial of all the Star Trek spin-offs, and certainly the most polarizing, Enterprise was created in the hopes of revitalizing the Star Trek franchise - ratings for the previous series, Star Trek: Voyager, having waned near the end. Intended to be more modern, with characters far from Gene Roddenberry's 24th century Utopian Humanity, Enterprise was situated in one of the least explored eras in the Star Trek universe and a time only 150 years from present day.
The producers - under the guidance of Roddenberry's successor, Rick Berman - sought to set the series apart from those that had come before, creating nearly every set, prop and costume anew and tending toward a more encompassing, "you-are-there" style of storytelling.
According to recent comments made by Executive Producer Brannon Braga in discussions with fans at TrekMovie.com, Berman's original idea for the series was to have the entire first season set on Earth as humanity's first ever warp starship was constructed. This was soon decided to be too far removed from the style of the franchise as a whole, and so the premise was redrafted.
The series was the first to incorporate lyrics into its opening theme song (unused lyrics did exist for the original series' fanfare); it also did not include the words Star Trek in its title until the third season episode "Extinction".
Despite these departures, Enterprise producers also borrowed heavily from the classic series, using the triad of characters, Archer, T'Pol and Trip in much the same way as Kirk, Spock and Bones.
It was their intention to bring Star Trek back to its fundamental concepts of exploration and "cowboy diplomacy", with Scott Bakula as Captain Archer, a far more Kirk-like commander than previous Star Trek headliners.
While not pushing too far into miniskirts and frequent interspecies mating, Enterprise was nevertheless touted as being far sexier than any of the other Trek spin-offs, embodied by Subcommander T'Pol - whose bare backside was featured in the episode "Harbinger", though edited out in some markets.
Premiering on 26 September 2001 with a strong opening, the two-hour pilot "Broken Bow" garnered a 9.9 overnight rating and a 15% share. Ratings, however, declined over the next few seasons, dipping to an average 2.5 million viewers an episode.
As early as the second season, rumors of the show's imminent cancellation pushed the producers to find new directions to take the series. Beginning with the series' third season, Enterprise adopted a darker tone and a more violent arc, in some ways mirroring the post 9/11 sentiment.
While many critics were impressed with the new pull of the series, ratings remained low, and the show was cancelled at the end of its fourth season. Despite the protests and a hoped-for fan-funded fifth season, production of Enterprise ceased at the conclusion of the 2005 television season.
Enterprise's opening title sequence is notable, featuring the Enterprise OV-101 shuttle, named in real life in honor of Star Trek, an interesting paradox. Also used in the sequence: a clip of Zefram Cochrane's ship, the Phoenix, from Star Trek: First Contact, and the real-life animated footage of the Mars rover.
Enterprise was nominated for five individual Saturn Awards, it won an ASCAP Award in 2002 for "Top TV Series", nominated for seventeen Emmy Awards, winning four, and two episodes were nominated for Hugo Awards.
[edit] Video Games
As of this writing, only two official video games from the Enterprise-era have been released. They are: Star Trek: Encounters, and Star Trek: Legacy. However, these two games are not true Enterprise games. The two games cover all five Star Trek shows, not simply Enterprise. However, Enterprise mods have been used in other Trek games. Fans have made mods designed to include both the Enterprise and the Mirror Universe NX-01 in Star Trek: Armada II, as well as other games.
[edit] Elite Force
One of the mods made for the popular Star Trek: Voyager: Elite Force game is the NX-01 Mod. The mod is set during an episode of Enterprise, and uses voice clips from the show for its cut scenes. In the mod, the player assumes the role of Malcolm Reed, and must stop a force of Klingons from sabotaging Enterprise's warp core. Unfortunately, this mod has since been abandoned and remains unfinished.
[edit] Temporal Cold War
A mod that is active is the Halflife 2 engine mod, Star Trek: Enterprise - Temporal Cold War.
[edit] Syndication
With four seasons, Enterprise reached syndication less than a year after its cancellation, in some markets airing multiple times a week. However, with the 40th anniversary of Star Trek, Enterprise was replaced in syndication by "remastered" versions of classic TOS episodes on 16 September 2006. Nevertheless, the Sci-Fi Channel and HDNet are airing the series.
The first 3 seasons are also available on the Xbox Live Marketplace (currently US only), a premium service offered with the Xbox 360. Each episode costs about 2 to 3 US dollars, and are available in both standard and high-definition widescreen. Two part episodes are broken up into two separate episodes and must be purchased separately.
[edit] Media
[edit] External links
- Star Trek: Enterprise at Wikipedia
- Star Trek: Enterprise at Memory Beta, the wiki for licensed Star Trek works
- Star Trek: Enterprise at the Internet Movie Database
| Star Trek television series |
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| Star Trek: The Original Series • Star Trek: The Animated Series • Star Trek: The Next Generation • Star Trek: Deep Space Nine • Star Trek: Voyager • Star Trek: Enterprise |


