The third season of Star Trek: Voyager debuted on 4 September 1996, with twenty-six episodes that ran through 21 May 1997.
Episodes[]
Title | Episode | Production number | Stardate | US release date |
---|---|---|---|---|
"Basics, Part II" | 3x01 | 40840-146 | 50032.7 | 1996-09-04 |
"Flashback" | 3x02 | 40840-145 | 50126.4 | 1996-09-11 |
"The Chute" | 3x03 | 40840-147 | 50156.2 | 1996-09-18 |
"The Swarm" | 3x04 | 40840-149 | 50252.3 | 1996-09-25 |
"False Profits" | 3x05 | 40840-144 | 50074.3 | 1996-10-02 |
"Remember" | 3x06 | 40840-148 | 50203.1 | 1996-10-09 |
"Sacred Ground" | 3x07 | 40840-143 | 50063.2 | 1996-10-30 |
"Future's End" | 3x08 | 40840-150 | 50312.5 | 1996-11-06 |
"Future's End, Part II" | 3x09 | 40840-151 | 50312.5 | 1996-11-13 |
"Warlord" | 3x10 | 40840-152 | 50348.1 | 1996-11-20 |
"The Q and the Grey" | 3x11 | 40840-153 | 50384.2 | 1996-11-27 |
"Macrocosm" | 3x12 | 40840-154 | 50425.1 | 1996-12-11 |
"Fair Trade" | 3x13 | 40840-156 | Unknown | 1997-01-08 |
"Alter Ego" | 3x14 | 40840-155 | 50460.3 | 1997-01-15 |
"Coda" | 3x15 | 40840-158 | 50518.6 | 1997-01-29 |
"Blood Fever" | 3x16 | 40840-157 | 50537.2 | 1997-02-05 |
"Unity" | 3x17 | 40840-159 | 50614.2 | 1997-02-12 |
"Darkling" | 3x18 | 40840-161 | 50693.2 | 1997-02-19 |
"Rise" | 3x19 | 40840-160 | Unknown | 1997-02-26 |
"Favorite Son" | 3x20 | 40840-162 | 50732.4 | 1997-03-19 |
"Before and After" | 3x21 | 40840-163 | Unknown | 1997-04-09 |
"Real Life" | 3x22 | 40840-164 | 50836.2 | 1997-04-23 |
"Distant Origin" | 3x23 | 40840-165 | Unknown | 1997-04-30 |
"Displaced" | 3x24 | 40840-166 | 50912.4 | 1997-05-07 |
"Worst Case Scenario" | 3x25 | 40840-167 | 50953.4 | 1997-05-14 |
"Scorpion" | 3x26 | 40840-168 | 50984.3 | 1997-05-21 |
Summary[]
Season three begins with the departure of the Kazon. The Doctor gains freedom from sickbay in "Future's End", by way of an autonomous mobile emitter. The same episode also has Harry Kim taking command of Voyager for the first time when the four ranking bridge officers beam to 1996 Earth.
Voyager enters the Nekrit Expanse in "Fair Trade". This area of space marks the farthest extent of Neelix' knowledge and the end of his usefulness as Voyager's guide to the Delta Quadrant.
Three episodes later, "Blood Fever" features a brief introduction of the Borg to the series, the inclusion of which would have serious and far-reaching ramifications for the franchise from this point onwards. "Blood Fever" also introduced the very real possibility of a romantic interest between Tom Paris and B'Elanna Torres, a relationship of singular importance not only to the development of the two characters involved, but also to the other crucial evolutionary step taken by the series in season three – the crew of Voyager as family. It is towards the end of "Fair Trade" that Janeway, while disciplining Neelix, first mentions this notion of familial allegiance.
"I'm prepared to leave the ship, captain."
"Oh no, it's not that easy. You can't just run away from your responsibilities because you made a mistake. You're part of a family now, and you have obligations."
- - Neelix and Janeway
It is also around this midpoint in the season that other, more subtle changes were being made to the overall look and feel of the franchise. Stage lighting underwent significant changes, most notably in "Macrocosm" where for the first time, darkened or blacked out set pieces were used to add tension to scenes. Prior to this, Voyager's decks and corridors were always largely flood-lit except in times of emergency.
While attending a Sacramento, USA, Convention in 2003 (uploaded onto YouTube), Kate Mulgrew commented that by early season three, she felt as if she had successfully married the actress to the character, to the extent that the writers were able to "back-off."
"And when they finally allowed Mulgrew to inhabit Janeway, she took off. I'd say that was about the end of the second/beginning of the third season. Every nuance that I could give to her, all those subtle endowments that were mine, that Mulgrew brought to Janeway. That's when you fall in love. I couldn't do it without her, and she couldn't do it without me." : – Kate Mulgrew
It would therefore appear that the writers, producers, and performers had begun to find a direction and with it came a developing continuity. The Borg, introduced in "Blood Fever", popped up again in "Unity", and throughout the remainder of the series. John de Lancie returned as Q in "The Q and the Grey", providing continuity back to the suicide of Quinn in the second season episode "Death Wish". Also, the events of "Distant Origin" linked not only "Fair Trade", but also the season two finale "Basics, Part I". Writers also used events to tease the audience with what was to come in season four, namely "Before and After" and the "Year of Hell".
Possibly most significant is the season three finale "Scorpion", which sees Voyager entering a war-torn Borg space. As Voyager came of age, audience figures leaped through the roof, and within half a season the show's writing and cinematography was largely unrecognizable from its previous seasons. Certainly, once Voyager entered the Nekrit Expanse in "Fair Trade", and later traversed Borg space in "Scorpion", the franchise was never the same.
Background information[]
- This season was broadcast concurrently with Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Season 5, and Star Trek: First Contact was released during its run.
- Four episodes that aired as part of this season were produced during the second season. These episodes were (in production order) "Sacred Ground", "False Profits", "Flashback", and "Basics, Part II". Each of the four episodes that were moved from the second season to this one refer, in their opening credits, to actress Roxann Dawson as "Roxann Biggs-Dawson", whereas the opening titles sequences in the rest of this season's installments refer to her without the "Biggs" part of her name; this change signifies the fact that, between the second and third seasons, Dawson was divorced from Casey Biggs.
- Apparently, one story that Voyager's team of writer-producers planned to include in the season was discarded. During the hiatus between the second and third seasons, actor Robert Picardo said of the writers, "They […] have a comic story in mind in which some alien computer hacker hijacks the holographic Doctor's program and actually steals him off the ship! He's held hostage with a zany alien family, which should be fun." (Star Trek Monthly issue 20) Although this plot – in its entirety – was not included in the season, elements from the story do appear, such as The Doctor being kidnapped by a hacker ("Future's End" and "Future's End, Part II") and interacting with an unusual family ("Real Life"), so it is another possibility (besides outright abandonment) that the aforementioned story line was an early version of an episode that was produced.
- Characters which "crossover" from other incarnations of Star Trek: Hikaru Sulu, Janice Rand, Kang, Dimitri Valtane, and Lojur in "Flashback" from Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country, and Arridor and Kol in "False Profits" from the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode "The Price".
- Because of being stranded in the Delta Quadrant, the old DS9-style uniforms worn by the Voyager crew are still used rather than replacing them with the new uniforms which were seen in the Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Season 5 episode "Rapture" and in Star Trek: First Contact.
Credits[]
Starring[]
Also starring[]
- Robert Beltran as Commander Chakotay
- Roxann Dawson as Lieutenant B'Elanna Torres
- Jennifer Lien as Kes
- Robert Duncan McNeill as Lieutenant Tom Paris
- Ethan Phillips as Neelix
- Robert Picardo as The Doctor
- Tim Russ as Lieutenant Tuvok
- Garrett Wang as Ensign Harry Kim
Guest and co-stars[]
Crew[]
- Executive Producerss
- Supervising Producers
- Producers
- Co-Producers
Line Producer: Brad Yacobian
Creative Consultant: Michael Piller
Theme By: Jerry Goldsmith
Associate Producer: Dawn Velazquez
Story Editor: Lisa Klink
- Music By
- Dennis McCarthy Basics, Part II (episode), False Profits (episode), The Swarm (episode), The Q and the Grey (episode), Macrocosm (episode), Coda (episode), Favorite Son (episode), Real Life (episode), Worst Case Scenario (episode)
- Jay Chattaway Sacred Ground (episode), The Chute (episode), Future's End (episode), Future's End, Part II (episode), Blood Fever (episode), Rise (episode), Before and After (episode), Displaced (episode), Scorpion (episode)
- David Bell Flashback (episode), Remember (episode), Warlord (episode), Fair Trade (episode), Unity (episode), Distant Origin (episode)
- Paul Baillargeon Darkling (episode), Alter Ego (episode)
Director of Photography: Marvin V. Rush, A.S.C.
Production Designer: Richard D. James
- Editor
Unit Production Manager: Brad Yacobian
- First Assistant Director
Second Assistant Director: Arlene Fukai
- Casting By
- Junie Lowry-Johnson, C.S.A.
- Ron Surma
Original Casting By: Nan Dutton, C.S.A.
Casting Executive: Helen Mossler, C.S.A.
Costume Designer: Robert Blackman
Set Decorator: Leslie Frankenheimer
Visual Effects Producer: Dan Curry
- Visual Effects Supervisor
Scenic Art Supervisor / Technical Consultant: Michael Okuda
Senior Illustrator / Technical Consultant: Rick Sternbach
Make-Up Designed and Supervised By: Michael Westmore
Assistant Art Director: Louise Dorton
- Assistant Editor
- Visual Effects Coordinator
Visual Effects Assistant Editor: Elizabeth Castro
Visual Effects Associate: Cheryl Gluckstern
Script Supervisor: Cosmo Genovese
Special Effects: Dick Brownfield
Property Master: Alan Sims
Construction Coordinator: Al Smutko
Scenic Artist: Wendy Drapanas
Junior Illustrator: Jim Magdaleno
Video Coordinator: Denise Okuda
Hair Designer: Josee Normand
- Make-Up Artists
- Hair Stylists
Wardrobe Supervisor: Carol Kunz
Sound Mixer: Alan Bernard, C.A.S.
Camera Operator: Doug Knapp, S.O.C.
Chief Lighting Technician: Bill Peets
First Company Grip: Randy Burgess
- Key Costumers
Music Editor: Gerry Sackman
Supervising Sound Editor: Bill Wistrom
Supervising Sound Effects Editor: Jim Wolvington
- Sound Editors
Visual Effects Assistant Editor: Elizabeth Castro
Production Coordinator: Diane Overdiek
Post Production Coordinator: April Rossi
Production Associate: David Rossi
Pre-Production Coordinator: Lolita Fatjo
- Assistants to Producers
- Robert J. Doherty
- Christopher Culhane
Stunt Coordinator: Dennis Madalone
Science Consultant: Andre Bormanis
- Main Title Design By
Post Production Sound: Modern Sound
Filmed with PANAVISION® Cameras and Lenses
Motion Control Photography Image G
Digital Optical Effects: Digital Magic
Special Video Composting: CIS, Hollywood
Editing Facilities: Unitel Video
Computer Generated Effects: Foundation Imaging
Uncredited[]
- Emmerson Denney – Voice/Dialogue Coach for Albie Selznick ("Macrocosm")
- Nancy J. Hvasta Leonardi – Makeup Artist ("Displaced", "Worst Case Scenario", "Scorpion")
- Jo Ann Phillips – Hair Stylist ("Fair Trade")
Media releases[]
External links[]
- Star Trek: Voyager season 3 at Memory Beta, the wiki for licensed Star Trek works
- Star Trek Voyager Season 3 episode reviews at Ex Astris Scientia
Previous season: VOY Season 2 |
Seasons of Star Trek: Voyager |
Next season: VOY Season 4 |