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5* ActingForTwo:
6** All of the main cast (with the exception of Cirroc Lofton) and their MirrorUniverse counterparts.
7** Bashir gets [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bCmQg6VkQ4A reckd]] by ''Voyager''[='s=] Creator/RobertPicardo (as Dr. Lewis Zimmerman ''and'' the Emergency Medical hologram) in "[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS05E16DrBashirIPresume Dr. Bashir, I Presume]]". The "archaic" EMH is confronted by the even more presumptuous Holo-Bashir, triggering a four-way catfight between the holograms and their templates.
8** Creator/JeffreyCombs, playing clones of the same character, gets to play a good and evil (ie. normal) version of Weyoun arguing over a commlink; he also played the Ferengi character Brunt. Combs always wanted to appear as both Weyoun and Brunt in a single scene, but never got the chance. He did, at least, get to play both characters in ''the same episode'', Season Seven's "[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS07E24TheDogsOfWar The Dogs of War]]". At one point, a scene change cleverly cuts directly from Brunt to Weyoun.
9** "[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS06E13FarBeyondTheStars Far Beyond the Stars]]", "[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS07E02ShadowsAndSymbols Shadows and Symbols]]", and (to a lesser extent) "[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS07E15BaddaBingBaddaBang Badda-Bing, Badda-Bang]]" and "[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS07E25E26WhatYouLeaveBehind What You Leave Behind]]" showcased the cast ''sans fards''. One interesting example is the episode "Far Beyond The Stars". The entire regular cast show up as humans in Sisko's vision of the 1950s on Earth. Cast members who usually appear in heavy alien makeup here appear almost unrecognizable without their prosthetic, leading to a weird "you look familiar..." deja vu feeling (which reflects Sisko's state of mind) until you match up the actors with the characters they usually play. Combs appears out of makeup twice: once as a corrupt detective in the Bennyverse, and again in "[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS07E25E26WhatYouLeaveBehind What You Leave Behind]]" as one of the {{creator cameo}}s in Vic's lounge.
10* ActingInTheDark: Creator/AlexanderSiddig didn't know that his character was actually a Changeling impersonator for several episodes until the one where it was revealed. The reveal that Bashir was an augment in "Doctor Bashir, I Presume?" was dealt with similarly (in that case, because the writers had not actually planned it out too far ahead of time), and much of Siddig's frustration with the storyline was because he was not able to "prepare" his performance in earlier episodes to fit it.
11* ActorInspiredHeroism: The series finale twist ("[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS07E25E26WhatYouLeaveBehind What You Leave Behind]]") of Sisko [[spoiler:dying in the Fire Caves and becoming a Prophet]], Creator/AveryBrooks was firm: ''Hell'' no. Given the fact that he was [[UnfortunateImplications an African-American man ditching his wife and newborn child]], Brooks was uneasy about the message they would be sending. The writers suddenly saw his point, and the ending was rewritten to make Sisko's departure more ambiguous.
12* ActorLeavesCharacterDies: Jadzia Dax was killed off after contract re-negotiations with Terry Farrell fell through, largely due to her wanting to be paid the same amount as the men on the main cast and if they wouldn't, to allow her to drop down to guest star instead of main cast. She was refused, and so Terry left the show in Season 6 to join the cast of ''{{Series/Becker}}''.
13* ActorSharedBackground:
14** Like his character, Creator/AndrewRobinson is claustrophobic. He had trouble wearing the prosthetic early on. Garak also spoke of posing as a gardener while conducting surveillance on Romulus. His stint at the Cardassian Embassy coincided with a number of mysterious deaths that year, including a Romulan proconsul who was found poisoned. This is an in-joke by Andrew Robinson, who is passionate about gardening in real life but hasn't murdered anyone. (That we know of.)
15** When Kira is complaining about how she feels being pregnant with the O'Brian's baby she says "This is YOUR fault!" to Dr. Bashir. Nana Visitor was [[RealLifeWritesThePlot really pregnant]] with Alexander Siddig's child. Also, in the Bennyverse ("[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS06E13FarBeyondTheStars Far Beyond the Stars]]"), the pulp authors played by Visitor and Siddig are a couple, just like in real life.
16** Sisko has an extensive collection of African art (like Avery) which he gradually moves to his new space station digs. In "Past Tense" and "[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS07E15BaddaBingBaddaBang Badda-Bing, Badda-Bang]]" he's revealed to be something of a Civil Rights historian (again, like Avery), making him a perfect guide into the underbelly of Federation culture. Also, Avery is [[{{Cloudcuckoolander}} a little off-beat at times.]]
17--->'''Creator/WilliamShatner''': Creator/AveryBrooks, what a great guy. But he's a little out there. He's doing Jazz things in his head.
18* ApprovalOfGod: Garak/Bashir shippers frustrated that a pairing with so much subtext and build-up over time never became canon can at least rest assured that Creator/AndrewRobinson and Creator/AlexanderSiddig, the actors who played them, have both been vociferous in their desire for the relationship to have been able to go there, and speculation about it at conventions. They even wrote a play called "The Nexus" where they practice confessing love to each other, and performed a fanfiction on Zoom where Garak and Bashir [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Tq8zaSObWU&ab_channel=SidCity are a married couple 20 years after the end of the series]]. Writer and showrunner Ira Stephen Behr also said in the [=DS9=] documentary that it was a missed opportunity not to have Garak come out as gay.
19* AuthorsSavingThrow: Early in the show's run it was established that Bashir had missed out on top spot in his class because he mixed up a pre-ganglionic fiber with a post-ganglionic nerve. The wife of Robert Hewitt Wolfe, who wrote the episode, was actually a medical student herself, and pointed out that this was as idiotic as a final-year engineering student not knowing the difference between a wrench and a drill, and so when it came to the third season episode "Distant Voices," Wolfe wrote that Bashir deliberately answered the question wrong because he didn't want the pressure of finishing first in his class. And this was later expanded further as his wanting to hide his being genetically engineered. Siddig ''hated'' this abrupt retconning of his character, but in this case his objections were, frankly, irrelevant given how neatly the GE reveal brings the character's hazy five-year history into sharp focus. He changed his mind once the Section 31 plot gave him and Miles more to do.
20* BTeamSequel: The first ''Trek'' series to be created without direct input from Creator/GeneRoddenberry, and it shows, especially in the later seasons, which are much DarkerAndEdgier than Roddenberry's optimistic vision of humanity's future.
21* CastTheRunnerUp:
22** The producers were so impressed by Creator/AlexanderSiddig's performance in ''A Dangerous Man: Lawrence After Arabia'' that they intended to offer him the role of Sisko, until they actually met him and realized he was far too young for the part (having been aged up for the film). Instead, they cast him in the role of the station's doctor, originally called Julian Amoros but renamed Julian Bashir to better suit Siddig's background.
23** Creator/WilliamSadler was considered for Sisko. He later went on to portray Section 31 operative Luther Sloan.
24** Creator/AndrewRobinson tried out for the part of Odo before being cast as Garak.
25** Tim Ransom (Jack the Augment) had previously auditioned for Bashir.
26** Hilary Shephard Turner (Lauren) also tried out for the role of Jadzia. This is referenced in "Chrysalis" when she turns up in a Starfleet sciences uniform. Alarmingly, she is a dead ringer for the dearly departed Trill!
27** Creator/TonyTodd was among those considered for Sisko. He played the adult Jake in "[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS04E03TheVisitor The Visitor]]" and reprised his role as Kurn in "[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS04E15SonsOfMogh Sons of Mogh]]".
28** Creator/KurtwoodSmith was offered the role of Odo, but turned it down, as he didn't want a role that required prosthetics Ironically, he would show up in an episode as Odo's Cardassian predecessor as chief of security on Terok Nor.
29* TheCastShowoff: Inverted in "[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS07E04TakeMeOutToTheHolosuite Take Me Out to the Holosuite]]". Max Grodénchik was actually a successful semi-professional baseball player who seriously considered going pro before becoming an actor instead. The reason Rom plays left-handed in that episode despite not being left-handed in the rest of the show is that Max simply ''couldn't play badly enough'' to convincingly portray the worst player on the team any other way.
30* CreatorsFavoriteEpisode:
31** Creator/AveryBrooks' favourite episode was "Far Beyond the Stars". Creator/ArminShimerman also named it as his favourite.
32** Creator/TerryFarrell's favorite episodes are "Far Beyond the Stars", "Fascination", "Playing God", "Blood Oath", "You Are Cordially Invited", and "Change of Heart".
33* CreatorsPest:
34** Creator/AndrewRobinson didn't care much for [[EvilCounterpart Mirror Garak]], finding him to be a boring [[FlatCharacter one-note]] toady who lacked all of his Prime counterpart's nuance and menacing aura. The character's [[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS07E12TheEmperorsNewCloak final appearance]], where the Prime Universe Ferengis brag about how much cleverer and more competent their Garak is, followed by [[spoiler:Mirror Garak being injected with his own virus and left for dead]] may have been a wink to that sentiment.
35** He made similar comments about the episode "Empok Nor," where Garak is infected with a virus that turns him into a deranged serial murderer (whereas the other murders Garak does when he's his normal self are all very deliberate and serving some larger purpose). Robinson felt it was too similar to his character in ''Film/DirtyHarry'', which had previously defined his acting career and made it difficult for him to get any other type of role.
36* DawsonCasting:
37** Even though Nog was supposed to be in his mid-teens at the start of the show, Aron Eisenberg was 24 years old when it premiered, and nine years older than Cirroc Lofton, who played Jake. Eisenberg had kidney problems since birth, which limited his growth. Lampshaded in the episode "The Visitor", where a flashforward some twenty years in the future featuring Nog and Jake has the latter transforming from Lofton into Creator/TonyTodd... while the former is still being played by Eisenberg.
38** Major Kira was supposed to be 26 at the start of the series, however Creator/NanaVisitor was 35 at the time.
39** Avoided with Creator/TerryFarrell and Creator/AlexanderSiddig, who were their characters' age (28 and 27 respectively) when the show started.
40** Melanie Smith was 34 when she played 20-year-old Tora Ziyal in the show's fifth season. Oddly enough, this was downplayed by Ziyal's first two actresses, Cyia Batten and Tracy Middendorf, who were 22 and 25 years old respectively; however, the producers decided they were both too young for the ShipTease they wanted to set up between Ziyal and Garak (Andrew Robinson was 55 at the time).
41* {{Defictionalization}}: Beyond the examples shared with other Trek media, the scifi novel "[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS06E13FarBeyondTheStars Far Beyond the Stars]]" from the episode of the same name was later written and published.
42* DevelopmentGag: The name of the episode "[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS07E08TheSiegeOfAR558 The Siege of AR-558]]" comes from 558 being the development number of the episode. It fits the overall idea of the battleground being such a random nondescript place that it doesn't even have a real name.
43* DirectedByCastMember: Creator/AveryBrooks, Creator/ReneAuberjonois, Creator/MichaelDorn, Creator/AlexanderSiddig and even guest stars Creator/AndrewRobinson and Creator/JonathanFrakes get at least one shot behind the camera. And Creator/LeVarBurton, who appeared in ''[[Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration The Next Generation]]'', took a spin as well. In fact, Burton was the fifth most prolific director on the series, while Brooks and Auberjonois share sixth place.
44* DoingItForTheArt: Creator/FrankLangella's uncredited appearance in the first three episodes of Season 2. He didn't want to make it seem like he was appearing on ''[=DS9=]'' for money or exposure.
45* DuelingShows: With ''Series/BabylonFive'' during its '94-'95 run. B5 auteur Creator/JMichaelStraczynski has claimed for years that {{Creator/Paramount}} stole his story treatment, but internal company memos have come to light hinting that the idea was circulating around before he pitched his show. The two would remain rivals throughout their respective runs, with [=B5=] wrapping up a year earlier in 1998. The two shows' similarities begin at being set on a space station at a trade crossroads and don't stop there:
46** At the beginning of the series, the human station commander is a traumatized veteran of a space battle near Earth, where humanity was almost defeated for good. He has an important destiny in the religious prophecies of one of the major alien races, which he initially doesn't understand but eventually comes to embrace.
47** The series takes place in the aftermath of formerly occupied planet regaining its independence from its imperialistic oppressors. The most prominent character from the imperialist race, seeking to recover his planet's former glory, allies his people with a powerful, sinister alien race from the other side of the galaxy, leading to an all-out war between the powerful aliens and the station's staff. The most prominent character from the formerly subjugated race plays a major role in helping the former imperialist race escape the powerful aliens' control.
48** The station's second-in-command is a tough woman with a take-no-prisoners attitude. The doctor is talented but arrogant and a bit of a playboy. At the beginning of the third season, a CoolStarship is introduced, enabling more episodes set away from the station. A main actress unexpectedly quits the show before the final season.
49** A (barely) oblique reference is made to this on B5. In one episode, a gift shop is set up on the station. One of the characters loudly derides this idea, saying "This isn't some deep-space franchise! This station is ''about'' something!" It should be noted that the writer of this episode, Creator/PeterDavid, has written several ''Franchise/StarTrek'' novels. (When he wrote that line into the B5 script, it was with the expectation that JMS and friends would change it, if only to a more subtle jab, before shooting; upon learning that the line was filmed and broadcast verbatim, David remarked to JMS that "...you people are dangerous over there, aren't you?")
50** The ''Deep Space Nine'' writers weren't above including their own subtle jabs at ''B5''. One episode featured Bashir having to chaperone a cadre of Ambassadors visiting the station and putting up with all the crap that comes with it. According to JMS, the writers of ''[=DS9=]'' actually liked ''[=B5=]''. The ''producers'', not so much.
51** There are massive parallels between the Sheridan/Shadows and the Sisko/Pah-Wraith arc. [[spoiler:Sisko is marked for death by the Prophets for defying them and takes a high-dive into the Fire Caves, 'killing' him while transferring his essence to a spiritual realm]]: the situation is a mirror of Sheridan's trip to Z'ha'dum and his later vanishing into the Rim.
52** ''[=DS9=]'' had trouble finding its feet initially, leaning on unresolved arcs from TNG and more or less sticking to its episodic format (not unlike VOY & ENT). As ''Babylon 5'' began to make waves with its much-hyped, five-year war saga, the Dominion War was shortly introduced.
53** The intrusion of Section 31 into Federation politics is incredibly similar to B5's [=PsiCorp=]. J.J. Abrams revived Section 31 for the film reboot, making it ''Deep Space Nine''[='s=] longest-lasting influence on ''Trek'' as a whole.
54** There was also an amusing incident involving actor Creator/RobertFoxworth, who had appeared on ''B5'' as Earthforce General William Hague, part of the conspiracy to overthrow [[PresidentEvil President Clark]]. He was then mistakenly double-booked by his agent as the very similar Admiral James Leyton on ''[=DS9=]''[='s=] "[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS04E11Homefront Homefront]]"[=/=]"[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS04E12ParadiseLost Paradise Lost]] " two-parter, resulting in Hague being killed offscreen in "Severed Dreams". (Bruce [=McGill=] said in an outtake for that episode that Hague couldn't be present because he was "doing ''Deep Space Nine''.")
55* EnforcedMethodActing: To have an episode where a character questions their entire sense of self is a big ask of any actress, but to claustrophobe Creator/NanaVisitor (who was used to a teeny prosthetic on the nose), it was like entering an iron maiden. In "[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS03E05SecondSkin Second Skin]]", she claws at her Cardassian face as though it is a mask that she wants to rip off – and she actually did, pulling apart her latex and fleeing the set in terror. They somehow managed to get the episode in the can, but it was her hardest episode to film.
56* ExecutiveMeddling: A good one. The idea of the Vorta being entirely a cloned species was the result of the producers being extremely impressed with Creator/JeffreyCombs' performance of Weyoun and wanting to bring him back.
57* ExecutiveVeto:
58** Creator/AndrewRobinson explicitly played Garak as bisexual in his first scene with Dr. Bashir. Writer Robert Hewitt-Wolfe corroborated this, adding that Bashir was supposed to be oblivious to his advances (though in more recent discussions on [[Creator/AlexanderSiddig Alexander Siddig's]] Zoom club, Siddig and Ira Stephen Behr have suggested otherwise). This plot thread was swiftly bundled out of sight by Paramount, though it doesn't ''entirely'' go away (at least as far as Garak's mannerisms go.) In the documentary about the show, Behr has said that everyone knew Garak was "gay" but that they knew that it was a fight with Paramount that they wouldn't win.
59** In "[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS03E25Facets Facets]]", Sisko [[WillingChanneler willingly allows himself to be possessed by Joran Dax for a short time]]. Creator/AveryBrooks was required to do this scene twice. The reason? Brooks' performance was way too scary for a TV-PG show.
60** Executive Producer [[http://www.startrek.com/article/rick-berman-looks-back-at-18-years-of-trek-part-2 Rick Berman]] admitted he's unhappy with the direction the series took, but he mostly let Ira Behr do what he wanted, as Rick already had his hands full with VOY and the TNG films. It's reported that Berman reluctantly approved the Dominion war, but only if it lasted for only four or five episodes. The ''[=DS9=]'' writers ignored this mandate and the war stretched out for two years![[note]] [[WebVideo.RedLetterMedia Fuck you, Rick Berman! Yer ruined this, too?! Stop rui-- oh? You didn't ruin this... you were too busy ruining the movies and ''Voyager''... well then... *eats a pizza roll*]][[/note]]
61* FakeBrit: Actually averted with Julian Bashir, played by Creator/AlexanderSiddig, an English Arab born in Sudan. This makes one of only three times in the franchise a non-American main cast member was played by an actor of the same nationality (the others being Colm Meaney as Miles O'Brien, and Dominic Keating as Malcolm Reed).
62* FakeRussian: Major Kira is reimagined as Colonel Anastasia Komananov ("''[[UsefulNotes/MoscowCentre Gay-Chee-Pee]]''") in Bashir's totally-not-Franchise/JamesBond holoprogram. Even Creator/NanaVisitor, an American, gleefully admitted that it's a terrible accent. This is commented on by Vic in "His Way". When pressed, he admits that his sexy Kira duplicate, "Lola Chrystal", is just a modded version of the Colonel Komananov hologram and that it took him forever to [[BitingTheHandHumor get rid of her horrid accent]].
63* FanCommunityNickname: Fans of the series are called "Niners".
64* FriendshipOnTheSet: The behind-the-scenes relationship between Creator/ReneAuberjonois (Odo) and Creator/NanaVisitor (Kira Nerys) was apparently a warm and mutually affectionate one which endured long after the show ended. Visitor was heartbreakingly [[https://twitter.com/NanaVisitor/status/1203822496161517568 lost for words]] when he passed away in late 2019.
65* GayPanic: This was the initial reasoning behind the character of [[MadScientistsBeautifulDaughter Ziyal]] - Garak was just a little ''too'' into Bashir for the executives' comfort (this was absolutely deliberate, by the way - Andrew Robinson, who played him, said he played Garak as omnisexual and very into Julian). He never got together with her, and seemed frankly baffled by her romantic feelings toward him, so the jury's out on how effective she was.
66* HostilityOnTheSet: Nothing too extensive, but the behind-the-scenes attitude was very dour:
67** It's been said that Creator/AveryBrooks, Creator/ArminShimerman, and Marc Alaimo took their roles very seriously (Brooks' temperament was partially due to MethodActing, Shimerman always fought against Ferengi as comic relief and Alaimo, despite [[FakeGuestStar technically being a guest star]], would behave as though he was the lead). During the first few years with ''TNG'' filming next to them, when people were actually talking and laughing, the producers knew that Creator/MarinaSirtis had wandered over to visit some friends. Upon joining the cast in the fourth season, Creator/MichaelDorn said it took him some time to get everyone to lighten up.
68** Creator/AlexanderSiddig claimed that Avery Brooks took to him early on in the series, noting that they were both POC on a sci-fi show. This bond did not last, when Brooks terminated their friendship mid-way through the run and was hostile to him from then on. Siddig claims to not know what he'd done.[[note]]The difference may have been ideological: Siddig is on record saying that Bashir just happening to be of North African descent and that being wholly incidental to his character was enough of a powerful statement for him in terms of racial progressivism (he also changed his stage name from the very Arabic "Siddig El Fadil" to the European "Alexander" partway through the show's run); Brooks, on the other hand, grew increasingly vocal about addressing Benjamin Sisko's African-American heritage in-story, from directing the acclaimed episode "Far Beyond the Stars" to adding in a line denouncing the inherent racism of 20th century Las Vegas and convincing the writers to change the show's ending as it looked like Sisko was abandoning his pregnant wife.[[/note]] Brooks allegedly was difficult to work with as a director as well as a cast member, and only a few of the regular cast would consider him a friend.
69** Many years later, in Creator/WilliamShatner's ''The Captains'' documentary, Brooks (alone among the captains - by contrast, Kate Mulgrew in particular has a very good rapport with Shatner) is unresponsive and evasive toward Shatner's line of questioning, frequently trying to change the subject by playing music. Shatner plays this off as Brooks being something of a CloudCuckooLander but it's clearly not good faith interview conduct.
70** Brooks declined to be interviewed altogether for the ''What We Left Behind'' documentary, the only major cast member to do so (though according to Ira Steven Behr he did have input behind the scenes). He has also made it clear that he has no intention to reprise his role despite Creator/PatrickStewart, Creator/KateMulgrew, and Creator/ScottBakula all agreeing to return to the franchise.
71* IronyAsSheIsCast:
72** Baseball players in "[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS07E04TakeMeOutToTheHolosuite Take Me Out to the Holosuite]]". Aside from Creator/AveryBrooks (Sisko) and Cirroc Lofton (Jake), the actors playing the Ferengi were the best baseball players in the cast. In fact Max Grodenchik (Rom) played college ball. The [[ButtMonkey Ferengi]] being who they are, however, forced them to play left-handed and employ other tricks to look horrible on film.
73** Creator/ArminShimerman has been on the board of directors of the Screen Actors Guild and worked against various entertainment corporations to secure actor's rights. Quark is a staunch anti-union and anti-worker's rights Ferengi. Then again, since ''{{VideoGame/Bioshock}}'' came out, he's given interviews stating his appreciation of Creator/AynRand's books [[note]]Which is even more ironic, considering that the character Shimerman plays in ''[=BioShock=]'', Andrew Ryan, and pretty much the entire rest of the game, is a [[{{Deconstruction}} slow, surgical dismantling of Rand's entire ideology]][[/note]], so he may not be so easy to pigeonhole.
74** Similarly, avowed socialist Creator/WallaceShawn plays Grand Nagus Zek, leader of a race whose greatest value is acquiring profit.
75* MethodActing: Casey Biggs really did knock back the stuff they used for kanar, instead of taking stage sips or just holding the glass, because Damar was supposed to have a drinking problem. Unfortunately for Biggs, they originally used karo syrup and he'd get sick because he had to consume many glasses across multiple takes. A new, sugarless concoction was eventually created out of consideration.
76* MoneyDearBoy: Creator/MichaelDorn did not want to reprise his role as Worf, since the daily make-up application was exhausting, and he was relieved to be able to move on. Dorn said that the salary he was offered made him reconsider.
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82* TheOtherDarrin:
83** Quark's mother, Ishka was played by Andrea Martin in her first appearance, and Cecily Adams in all subsequent appearances. According to Creator/ArminShimerman, Martin disliked acting in heavy makeup, and declined to reprise the part.
84** Tora Ziyal was played by Cyia Batten for her first two appearances, but the producers decided that she was too young for the part and replaced her with Tracy Middendorf for Ziyal's third appearance. Due to Middendorf proving allergic to the prosthetics and having poor chemistry with Garak's actor, Andrew Robinson, however, she was replaced by Creator/MelanieSmith for all of Ziyal's subsequent appearances.
85** The actor who plays Alexander is a different one from any of the actors who played him in ''Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration''. Interestingly, more people are upset about this than either of the above actors, possibly due to his SoapOperaRapidAgingSyndrome.
86*** Though apparently Klingons physically mature faster than most races... Alexander would have been about 8 years old when he began military service. Being 1/4 human didn't seem to matter any [[spoiler:considering future Alexander seen on TNG looked fully Klingon regardless of minor human genetics.]]
87*** It's mentioned in an episode of ''Voyager'' that in Klingon/human hybrids, Klingon DNA is dominant for several generations (hence why Miral Paris, who is only 1/4 Klingon, still has visible ridges on her forehead).
88* ProductionPosse: Ira Steven Behr was the executive producer and showrunner of both this series and ''Series/TheTwilightZone2002''. Seven writers (Behr himself, Hans Beimler, Robert Hewitt Wolfe, Bradley Thompson, David Weddle, James Crocker and Frederick Rappaport) and four directors (Creator/JonathanFrakes, Winrich Kolbe, Allan Kroeker and John T. Kretchmer) worked on both series.
89* RealLifeRelative: Kitty Swink, who is Armin Shimerman's wife, played a Bajoran bureaucrat in "[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS02E10Sanctuary Sanctuary]]" and a Vorta named Luaran in "[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS07E22TackingIntoTheWind Tacking into the Wind]]".
90* RealLifeWritesTheHairstyle: Creator/AveryBrooks was initially required by contract to appear with hair in order to prevent confusion with his ''Series/SpenserForHire'' character, Hawk. In later seasons, as Sisko became established, Brooks was allowed to shave his head and re-grow his beard.
91* RealitySubtext: Behind the scenes, Armin Shimmerman frequently campaigned for Quark and Ferengi in general to be treated with more respect by the show and not be used simply as comic relief. While the various characters get to kick Quark pretty much at will through the whole series, he occasionally gets the opportunity to stand up for the dignity of his species.
92* RoleReprise: Creator/JohnColicos, William Campbell, and Creator/MichaelAnsara reprise their roles from ''Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries'' as the Klingon generals Kor, Koloth, and Kang.
93* RomanceOnTheSet: Creator/AlexanderSiddig (Bashir) and Creator/NanaVisitor (Kira) got together and had a son, with Visitor's pregnancy [[RealLifeWritesThePlot being written into the show]]. They married the next year and divorced in 2001. Which leads to a rather hilarious in-joke in the episode where Kira says "This is all your fault!" to Bashir during an argument, since (in universe) he was the one that did the fetal transplant from Keiko to Kira. Funnier still because [[BizarreAlienBiology Bajoran labor is usually quiet and easy]].
94* ThrowItIn:
95** A joking reference by Odo to Admiral Ross as "Bill" in "[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS07E01ImageInTheSand Image in the Sand]]" was taken literally by the writing staff, resulting in his canonical first name. (As well as confusion for sharp-eyed viewers, as his office nameplate had previously established his first name to be Cliff!)
96** Morn was originally scripted and shot to speak a few lines early on in the series. However, when the episodes were edited down to fit the time slot, all of Morn's speaking scenes ended up on the cutting room floor. When the writers noticed the coincidence, they decided to turn Morn's silence into a RunningGag. Reportedly the guy who went through the effort of designing and building Morn's prosthetic makeup to include a moving mouth was not happy.
97** The entire concept of the Vorta being a clone race came about entirely because the crew regretted killing Weyoun off after seeing Jeffrey Combs' fantastic performance, and wanted some way to bring him back.
98* TrollingCreator: "[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS07E12TheEmperorsNewCloak The Emperor's New Cloak]]" sought to combine all three of Trekkies' bête noires: Ferengi, Mirror Universe, and Vic Fontaine. It's thanks to this episode that [[AlternateUniverseReedRichardsIsAwesome Vic Fontaine the Rambo-esque android]] has a ''Memory Alpha'' entry. Because Ira is a crazy person.
99* TroubledProduction: This was probably the ''Star Trek'' series with the least problematic production history, though there were a few speedbumps in the seventh and final season:
100** The first was a result of Jadzia Dax actress Creator/TerryFarrell quitting the series after a dispute with executive producer Rick Berman, resulting in Jadzia getting a [[DroppedABridgeOnHim bridge dropped on her]] in the sixth season finale. She was replaced by Nicole de Boer, playing the new part of Ezri Dax; the producers tried to distinguish her from the extremely competent ActionGirl Jadzia by making her more nervous and incompetent, but this backfired and resulted in a widely negative response to the character, forcing the later spin-off novels to retool Ezri to make her more like Jadzia had been.
101** The second major issue came when they ended up massively over-spending on the visual effects for the [[spoiler:destruction of the USS ''Defiant'']] in "The Changing Face of Evil", leaving them with only about two or three episodes' worth of effects budget for the final ''six'' episodes (bearing in mind that the finale was a two-parter). This limited them to largely using StockFootage for effects shots in the rest of the season, and notably hurt the third-last story, "Extreme Measures," by forcing them to ditch the surreal dreamworld originally planned in favor of just re-using the regular [=DS9=] and ''Defiant'' sets with no alteration.
102** The first six episodes of Season 6 were also a doozy. Designed as a very tight story arc involving the Dominion taking over the station and ultimately being expelled by the returning heroes, it quickly became clear that the crew were completely out of their depth in creating such an intensive long term story. The various episode crews were constantly over- or underestimating how much time and resources they would need, and eventually the B-plots of two episodes had to be completely switched so the first could be done on time, requiring some significant rewrites to keep the continuity making sense. Remarkably, this all turned out very well and the arc is generally regarded as one of the best parts of the show.
103* UnderageCasting:
104** In "Dax," Ilon Tandro is played by Creator/GregoryItzin, born in 1948. His mother, Enina Tandro, is played by Creator/FionnulaFlanagan, born in 1941.
105** Paul Dooley, who plays Enabran Tain, is only 14 years older than Andrew Robinson, who plays his son Garak.
106* VindicatedByReruns: The series polarized ''Star Trek'' fans when it aired, but years after it left TV it found a new audience on Creator/{{Netflix}} which was the perfect platform for extensive {{Myth Arc}}s and binge watching.
107* WagTheDirector:
108** The behind-the-scenes mood was very dour. Creator/AveryBrooks, Creator/ArminShimerman and Marc Alaimo took their roles very seriously: Brooks' temperament was partially due to MethodActing, Shimerman always fought against Ferengi as comic relief and Alaimo, though technically being a guest star, would behave as though he were a regular. Whenever people were actually talking and laughing, the producers knew that Creator/MarinaSirtis had wandered over from the nearby TNG set. Michael Dorn said it took him awhile to get everyone to lighten up after he crossed over.
109** If you study the behind-the-scenes' trivia, you realize a good number of the regular and recurring actors became very involved with their character. Especially people like Creator/AndrewRobinson, Creator/ArminShimerman and J.G. Hertzler, who each wrote a whole novel about their characters Garak, Quark and Martok; or Nana Visitor, who met with the writers whenever she felt a scene was wrong about Kira. Another big name actor, Creator/ReneAuberjonois, consulted regularly with the writers (requesting a new uniform for Odo, etc.), though he was a ''little'' more subdued--even if he didn't particularly care for this or that plot development:
110--->'''Ira Behr''': Being the pro that he was, he sucked in whatever dismay he was feeling--though I still got some of those vibes. He didn't do a screaming, "I won't do it, I won't play it! No no no!"
111** "Rumpelstiltskin" was originally going to be a leprechaun who follows O'Brien around the station like a bad smell. A [[StopBeingStereotypical less-than-amused]] Creator/ColmMeaney (who had earlier endured an episode full of horrific Irish stereotypes in TNG's "[[Recap/StarTrekTheNextGenerationS2E18UpTheLongLadder Up The Long Ladder]]") made the writers change it.
112** According to Behr, Armin Shimerman was reluctant to go for broad humor since it went against his deep respect for the Ferengi. (One of Armin's {{old shame}}s is his goofy and [[SpaceJews oddly racist]] turn as Letek in the TNG's "[[Recap/StarTrekTheNextGenerationS1E4TheLastOutpost The Last Outpost]]", which cemented the Ferengi as the laughingstock of the galaxy.) Quark is often the odd man out in {{panto}} storylines such as "[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS05E20FerengiLoveSongs Ferengi Love Songs]]", "[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS06E23ProfitAndLace Profit and Lace]]", and "[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS07E12TheEmperorsNewCloak The Emperor's New Cloak]]". While the other Ferengi (Combs, Shawn, et al.) seem to be getting into the spirit of things, Armin's 'zany' dialog is delivered oddly straight.
113** Gul Dukat (Creator/MarcAlaimo) was introduced as TheHeavy of [=DS9=]. Very shortly he got sick of playing the baby-eating bad guy and began to play the character as a [[TheCharmer Charmer]]. Problem is, he [[DracoInLeatherPants charmed the audience too.]]
114--->"I could have gone one-dimensionally aggressive and mean and ugly with this character if I'd chosen to. I have the feeling that's what they kind of wanted. I thought, 'I've done that a hundred and fifty times already.'"
115*** On his approach to playing the role, Ira Behr observed that Marc Alaimo reads every line like he's the hero of every episode he's in. "You listen to Marc talk about Dukat, and it's totally different than I see the character." The writers shrugged and let him carry on believing that, as it added some interesting flavor, but by Season 7 even Alaimo had fallen under Dukat's spell. He decided that Dukat's feelings for Kai Winn were genuine and that he would never strike a monk in a temple. Y'know, this guy who once declared the Bajoran religion a "superstition" and supervised the genocide on Bajor. Slugging a senior citizen over a book rental was beyond the pale for him.
116--->'''Behr''': In Marc's mind, I believe he felt his relationship with Winn was legitimate in some way, and that, in some wacky fashion, it was Dukat's bid for legitimacy. I mean Marc was actually ''upset'' when we had him hit Solbor. Until the very end, he wanted Dukat to be the hero of ''Deep Space Nine''.
117** Ira Behr and Ron Moore got the itch to pursue a Kira/Dukat romantic scenario (season 4's "[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS04E05Indiscretion Indiscretion]]", introducing Dukat's half-Bajoran love child Ziyal, is a clue to [[WhatCouldHaveBeen where things may have headed]]). Alaimo was all for it (what better way to secure a character's redemption than a romantic storyline with the female lead?) but Nana Visitor (Kira) [[NoYay flatly refused to do anything of the sort]], pointing out that he was guilty of the brutal occupation and genocide of Kira's species. ("If you put a gun to her head, I don't think Kira would ever consider it.") Behr tried his best to jimmy the lock in various ways, such as forming a 'family unit' with Dukat, Kira and Ziyal during the Dominion occupation of Bajor. But in the end, Nana was unmovable. Finally, the storyline was handed off to Kira's mother Meru, who turns out to have been Dukat's "comfort woman" in "Wrongs Darker Than Death Or Night" (co-written by Behr).
118** Out of all the cast members, Creator/MichaelDorn probably had the most pull. After seven years of makeup calls, he wasn't interested in reprising his old role, but the showrunners were so desperate to have Worf cross over that they bent over backwards to make him happy. No longer would Worf be the big guy who got tossed around cargo holds!
119** Siddig wasn't too happy about his character being revealed to be an Augment. He interpreted it as Behr/Berman et al. attempting to squeeze him into a "Data" role without consulting him, and responded by deliberately reading long equations and statistics in a drowsy, non-eloquent manner in order to discourage that kind of dialog.
120** The romance between Worf and Jadzia was encouraged by Dorn and Creator/TerryFarrell, who had become very fast friends on set and wanted more scenes together. Fortunately it suited their characters because one of Dax's previous hosts (Curzon) was basically an honorary Klingon and so was very well integrated into that culture, making it sensible that Jadzia would be drawn to Worf and vice-versa.
121* WhatCouldHaveBeen: [[WhatCouldHaveBeen/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine has its own page.]]
122* WordOfDante: Barry Jenner was mostly winging it while playing the Admiral Ross character. He decided that Ross was a conflicted family man whose son enlisted and died in Starfleet, twisting him into a KnightTemplar who will stop at nothing to preserve the Federation. Internally, at least, he regrets dragging the [=DS9 crew=] (whom he admires) into his machinations.
123* WordOfGay:
124** Creator/AndrewRobinson has commented in multiple interviews that he considered Garak "omnisexual," and also strongly implied it in the character book he wrote. Robert Hewitt Wolfe has [[http://www.exisle.net/mb/index.php?showtopic=38718&st=160&p=857040&#entry857040 stated]] that he wrote Garak to be attracted to Bashir, but Bashir [[ObliviousToLove never realized this]]. And in the documentary ''What We Left Behind'', Ira Stephen Behr flat out stated that Garak was obviously gay, and that it was a missed opportunity not to acknowledge and explore that.
125--> '''Ira Behr''': What did Garak think of Bashir? Were they friends? Did the develop a friendship? Or was [Garak] using him the whole time?
126--> '''Andrew Robinson''': Well, at first Garak just wanted to have sex with him.
127** For Bashir's part, Creator/AlexanderSiddig has on his Zoom club disputed that "oblivious" characterization and suggested that he felt that Bashir was attracted to people regardless of gender.
128** [[https://www.cbr.com/star-trek-deep-space-nine-jadzia-daxs-pansexual/?fbclid=IwAR3bjhoxEcCjy1kPAbZa_xARfLTHyTYICgkgQTH6Kh8anFfQsoyg6RUjsas Jadzia Dax was later confirmed to be pansexual]].
129* WordOfGod: Ron Moore stated that although the background check in "Doctor Bashir, I Presume?" ended up marring Bashir's exemplary reputation, this didn't preclude him from being the new template for the Emergency Medical Hologram and -- despite Dr. Zimmerman's complaints -- he did actually end up being selected. Therefore fans assume that either the (unseen) EMH Mark III or Mark IV was based on Bashir.
130* WrittenInInfirmity:
131** Dax was benched (again) in "[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS06E02RocksAndShoals Rocks and Shoals]] " after sustaining injuries from the ship crash. Actually, Terry Farrell was suffering from a skin disorder which made her allergic to sunlight. This made it impossible to shoot scenes in the quarry, so she slept through the episode in a cave.
132* YouLookFamiliar:
133** Creator/BrockPeters (Joe Sisko) had previously been Admiral Cartwright in the 4th and 6th movies.
134** Odo's actor Creator/ReneAuberjonois likewise had a side role in the 6th movie.
135*** As did Creator/MichaelDorn--although his character there is addressed as "Colonel Worf," implying that he's probably an ancestor of the current Worf.
136** Creator/JeffreyCombs as Brunt and Weyoun, among others.
137** Creator/ArminShimerman and Max Grodenchik had previously played Ferengi in TNG's "The Last Outpost" and "Captain's Holiday". Marc Alaimo also played the very first Cardassian, Gul Macet, in TNG's "The Wounded". (Word of God said that Macet and Dukat are [[UncannyFamilyResemblance cousins]].) He also played one of the first Romulans to appear on TNG.
138** J.G. Hertzler, most well-known among [=DS9=] aficionados for playing Martok, also played Sisko's soon-to-be-dead commanding officer, the Vulcan captain of the ''U.S.S. Saratoga'' in the pilot. He also later played changeling Laas in Season 7's "Chimera". This earned him the distinction of playing ''two'' Changelings in the show: Several times in the guise of Martok (before we meet the genuine, one-eyed one), and again as Laas. This also meant that he [[ChronicallyKilledActor died twice]], and possibly a third time after Laas contracted Section 31's virus.
139
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