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1[[foldercontrol]]
2
3!!Enterprise Crew
4
5[[folder:General]]
6Some general notes on the crew's national origins:
7
8* Captain Jonathan Archer was born in [[UsefulNotes/NewYorkState Upstate New York]], but as a child, he moved to UsefulNotes/SanFrancisco and spent the rest of his life there. Logically, because Starfleet Headquarters is in San Francisco, his father was nearby working on the Warp 5 engine project, and afterwards Archer himself was around Starfleet Headquarters continuing to work on the Warp 5 test flights.
9* Chief Engineer Trip Tucker is from UsefulNotes/{{Florida}}.
10* T'Pol and Phlox are aliens, from Vulcan and Denobula respectively.
11* Lieutenant Malcolm Reed is from [[UsefulNotes/{{Britain}} England]].
12* Ensign Hoshi Sato is from UsefulNotes/{{Japan}}.
13* Ensign Travis Mayweather was born on a trading ship during a deep-space run, making him the only human main cast member not from Earth.
14
15[[/folder]]
16
17[[folder:Captain Jonathan Archer]]
18!!Captain Jonathan Archer
19[[quoteright:225:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/trek_archer_7280.jpg]]
20[[caption-width-right:225:''"[[PatrickStewartSpeech We're going to stumble, make mistakes...I'm sure more than a few before we find our footing. But we're going to learn from those mistakes. That's what being human is all about.]]"'']]
21!!!'''Played By:''' Creator/ScottBakula
22
23TheCaptain of Earth's first Warp 5 starship, Archer spent most of his life dreaming of going to the stars and, since his father Henry was a major player in humanity's achievement of Warp 5 in the first place, his command is rather personal. This is also where he got his distrust of Vulcans, as they had spent most of his life attempting to keep humanity in and around its own solar system.
24----
25* AcePilot: He was one of the test pilots for the NX prototypes and handles quite a number of shuttlepod flights. Most notable in "Singularity," in which he manages to fly ''Enterprise'' out of a black hole while half-awake.
26* AuthorityEqualsAsskicking: Not really in the beginning, where Archer frequently gets into fistfights with various enemies, but pretty much all of them tend to result in him at least getting his ass handily kicked and they just about as often end with him knocked out for the count. He does grow into this trope, but only after he's been pummeled into a thin paste a few dozen times by some aliens who don't like him. And even by some aliens who ''do'' like him. He learns by experience.
27* BewareTheNiceOnes: Archer gives off an "everyday Joe" vibe more than any other captain (which is what happens when your captain is played by Creator/ScottBakula), but beneath that vibe lies a lot of [[TheResenter resentment]] and [[HairTriggerTemper general insecurity]]. Archer invokes this trope and uses it to his advantage in "Fusion" when he drops the gee-whiz exterior and calls Tolaris out for his MindRape of T'Pol. This of course is truly demonstrated in season 3 where once broken he is capable of a level of violence that includes beating unarmed prisoners.
28* BoldExplorer: A classically bold example in the mold of Kirk.
29* ButtMonkey: Most of the captains of ''Star Trek'' have their moments, but ol' Jonathan Archer is one of the worst of the lot. All he wants to do is peacefully explore the galaxy, making friends of the many species across the galaxy in the ship his father built, but he continuously ends up putting himself and his ship in ludicrously dangerous situations both by chance and due to his ChronicHeroSyndrome; gets captured constantly, nearly gets killed or sentenced to death countless times; and if the plot requires somebody to get badly injured and/or beaten up by the VillainOfTheWeek that episode, it's him, especially during the first season.
30* TheCaptain: One of the first in Starfleet.
31* CharacterCatchphrase: "We're making history with every light year."
32* CharacterDevelopment: Seasons 1 and 2 have an idealistic, somewhat naive Archer who just wants to make peaceful contact with other species. Then the Xindi attack Earth, and season 3 brings a darker, grittier Archer who's willing to do some nasty things to others in the name of saving humanity. He even spends the start of season 4 lamenting his lost innocence to a fellow captain who represents everything he used to be.
33* TheChosenOne: [[DownplayedTrope Downplayed]]. Though it doesn't have that much of an effect outside of the Vulcan Reformation Arc in Season 4, Archer [[TheChooserOfTheOne was chosen]] by both [[CrystalDragonJesus Surak]]'s katra and [[LegacyOfTheChosen its previous bearer, Syrran]], to be the next bearer of the katra and carrying on the work of finding the [[MacGuffin Kir'shara]] and restoring Vulcan to "the Path" (of Surak).
34-->'''Archer:''' Syrran did something to me before he died.
35-->'''Surak:''' [[LampshadeHanging He chose you]]. You don't trust Vulcans, Captain. And, given your experiences with them, I can't say I blame you. The culture you've come to know isn't the one I helped to create. My people have strayed, and someone must restore them to the path.
36-->'''Archer:''' You've got the wrong man.
37-->'''Surak:''' Sorry, Captain. There's an Earth Expression; we're stuck with each other. Don't fight what's been given to you. Open your mind and your heart and the way will become clear.
38%%* ClintSquint
39* CompositeCharacter: Archer could be considered an amalgam of past ''Star Trek'' captains. He shares the corn-fed hokum of [[Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries Kirk]]'s upbringing, [[Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration Picard]]'s zeal for exploration, [[Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine Sisko]]'s emotional baggage, and [[Series/StarTrekVoyager Janeway]]'s [[GrayAndGreyMorality greying morality]].
40* ContrastingSequelMainCharacter: Archer is virtually the opposite to his predecessors (or at least his successors since ''Enterprise'' is the chronological prequel to the franchise's timeline). While his successors are bound to the rules by-the-book, Archer isn't, who makes up any rules he wants in a time before the Federation even exists as an organization. He is also willing to commit morally ambiguous, ethically questionable acts to complete his objective like piracy and even withholding a cure to a dying species, unlike his predecessors who are at least on the side of the law. He is also a pathfinder unlike the previous Captains, who has to rely on navigating uncharted regions of space with just his crew and whatever resources he has in store, while suffering from bad luck along the way. He is also diplomatic like Janeway and Picard, but he has some contrasts to both of them, being that his diplomacy borders between reasonable and outright explosive (the latter being the engine to the Federation's creation), neither traits his predecessors has.
41* DependingOnTheWriter: From ''[[http://them0vieblog.com/2015/08/05/star-trek-enterprise-extinction-review/#comments the m0vie blog]]'':
42-->''"I think what becomes quite obvious as the third season progresses is that everybody on staff has their own version of Archer. André Bormanis seems like the most traditional ''Star Trek'' writer on staff, so it's not surprising that ''Extinction'' has a nod toward franchise utopianism that [[{{Glurge}} doesn't make a lick of sense]]...In contrast, David A. Goodman seems write Archer only [[BlackAndGreyMorality a shade or two more cynical]], trying to avoid harming the Vulcans in ''Impulse'' and playing cowboy in ''North Star''; Goodman writes a version of Archer who actually seems more well-adjusted than he was for most of the first two seasons. Sussman and Strong both play up Archer's angst. Braga likes [[{{AntiHero}} gritty action hero]] Archer.\
43Coming from outside the show, Coto writes Archer as the gritty character he needs to be for the story to work, even if Coto's scripts (particularly ''Azati Prime'' and ''The Council'') seem to suggest that this is not sustainable in the long term. It is no wonder that Coto was the big fan of the ''"Archer dies at the end of season three"'' idea... ''Azati Prime'' is the episode that really suggests Archer [[RedemptionEqualsDeath might have to die]] to redeem'' [the Alpha Quadrant]'', and ''The Council'' alludes to it with the death of Degra to redeem the Xindi."''
44* DesignatedVictim: The writer(s) need to show that the aliens are hostile? Punch Archer!
45* {{Determinator}}: The result of being a DesignatedVictim and resident [[TheChewToy Chew Toy]]. He ''has'' to be a Determinator to resolve the episode in the ship's favor.
46* DisneyDeath: A couple of times, like at the end of Season 3, he's presumed dead in a HeroicSacrifice.
47* DistressedDude: He is very frequently captured by the enemy of the week, necessitating an escape coupled with a rescue operation from the crew.
48* EagleLand: Represents Flavor 2, with a UnitedSpaceOfAmerica coloring. Archer has an incredibly hard time comprehending that aliens are, well, ''alien'', and frequently runs in trouble directly resulting from this. It extends even to Phlox and T'Pol at times (and definitely to Vulcans as a whole). He has repeated problems with the Kreetassans precisely because he simply cannot grasp how different their culture is from that of United Earth and becomes angry and frustrated over their complex social protocol.
49** In "Judgment," where Kolos mounts a surprisingly stirring defense of Archer that boils down to, "He's a bumbling idiot, but his heart is in the right place."
50* TheEveryman: Since his era was much closer to the present day, Archer comes across as more of an average Joe rather than an [[TheAce Ace]] JackOfAllStats or OmnidisciplinaryScientist, compared to other ''Star Trek'' captains or even Starfleet characters in general.
51* FamedInStory: He gains notice for being the captain of the first warp 5 ship, but it's completing the Xindi mission that makes Earth view him as a hero.
52* FantasticRacism: In early series, he ''really'' hates the Vulcans. He gets better later.
53* AFatherToHisMen: He maintains a FirstNameBasis with his command staff and will go after any member of his crew who's captured, injured, or stranded with every resource he has. He lampshades this in one episode, commenting that he once had a captain who kept a professional distance with his crew, but given that ''Enterprise'' is alone on its missions, the crew has to be more of a family than a group of coworkers in order to survive.
54* FireForgedFriends: ''Slowly'' becomes this with T'Pol.
55* GeneralRipper: In the early half of Season 3. Archer changes his tune pretty damn quickly when he realizes that the Xindi have been manipulated and lied to for generations and have been screwed over pretty severely. The Sphere-Builders [[EnemyMine are not happy with the outcome]].
56* HairTriggerTemper: While his default setting is fairly pacific and easygoing, Archer in the first few seasons is ''very'' easy to frustrate, annoy, or anger. The show does attempt to explain this by noting the many long years of frustration and condescension [[FreudianExcuse he and his father have received]] from the Vulcans, but his impatience and temper usually lead him to ignore valid advice or criticism and [[LeeroyJenkins bull ahead, heedless of the consequences]].
57* HeroesLoveDogs: He wouldn't hesitate to stand himself in space go to war with entire planets to save his dog.
58* HeroicBSOD: His actions in Season 3 clearly weigh on him, but it's not until Season 4's "Home" that he finally has to deal with it.
59-->'''Archer:''' ''[to Hernandez]'' I lost something out there, and I don't know how to get it back.
60* IDidWhatIHadToDo: ''"This isn't open to debate!"'' Mostly in Season 3; he's most definitely ''not'' happy about being forced into positions where it's either ShootTheDog or let billions of humans be destroyed by the Xindi superweapon. The decisions he makes weigh on him [[MyGodWhatHaveIDone quite heavily as seen in season 4]].
61* InformedAbility: We're told he got trained to be a diplomat in "A Night In Sickbay," where he does virtually everything a diplomat should never, ever do. (It should be emphasized that, to be fair, he doesn't do any of the above ''in the presence of'' the aliens.) Likewise, for a supposed "skilled" diplomat, he barely tries to hide his utter contempt for the Vulcans. (Though, again to be fair: considering how ''[[AssInAmbassador Ambassador]]'' Soval constantly treats ''him'', he may have viewed it as par for the course...)
62** The concept of "protocol" is completely absent from his awareness. Even when first contact situations start off positively, Archer almost never bothers to do the research to find out what kinds of customs and cultural rules an alien race may have. Shown twice with the Kreetassans in "Vox Sola" and "A Night In Sickbay". The first time he eats in front of them (considered incredibly vulgar by their standards) and the second time, despite knowing how touchy they are, he brings his dog Porthos to an important meeting taking place in a sacred grove of trees. [[UrineTrouble Guess what happens...]]
63** His attempts to make peaceful first contact in general don't fare any better, typically ending in either a shootout, crewmembers getting taken hostage, or Archer having the stuffing beaten out of him.
64** Archer even struggles with cultural differences among ''humans'', finding himself at odds with those who do not share his idealistic notions ("Fortunate Son"), even though he himself will not behave very differently when faced with similar circumstances ("Silent Enemy").
65** "Desert Crossing" seems him claiming to be trained in desert survival. However, when picking up supplies for a mission on a desert planet in the same episode, Archer fails to bring along even the most elementary of amenities for a trip to a desert, such as appropriate clothing, sunglasses, sunscreen, or even a plentiful supply of water, and later in the episode, he decides that he and Trip should wander across the desert ''during the day'' when one of the fundamental teachings of desert survival says you should always walk during the night and rest when the sun is out.
66** He does, however, start to get better in Season 2--with his efforts to end the cold war between the Vulcans and the Andorians. Also, in Season 4, he manages to successfully ensure the cultural reformation of the Vulcans back to the teachings of Surak and prevent an interstellar war, as well as negotiate several disputes between the Tellarites and Andorians, averting yet ''another'' conflict. Furthermore, according to the (possibly canon) biography shown in "In a Mirror, Darkly," Archer eventually would go on to serve as an ambassador to Andoria for several years. As such, it makes Daniels' claims that he'll be instrumental in forming the Federation ''far'' more believable.
67* JackBauerInterrogationTechnique: Season 3 in particular, where he shoves an alien pirate into an airlock and starts to depressurize it until he talks (with Malcolm hovering in the background wondering what the ''hell'' he's doing) and later punches the 20th-century medical tech who was working for the Xindi.
68* JamesBondage: While previous captains had certainly had their share of captivity, with Archer it is almost predictable, along with the fact that he will also get the snot beaten out of him.
69* TheKirk: He's got a [[TheSpock Spock]] in T'Pol and a [[TheMcCoy McCoy]] in Trip. He tends to lean more towards the Id than Superego.
70* LanternJawOfJustice: Made of pure glass however, which causes him to be TheChewToy for every hostile species they encounter.
71* LeeroyJenkins: Archer is the captain you'd want to have a beer with, so to speak. He's not a high-falutin' bigwig with grand ideas about the future of the universe; he just wants to get things done. Which usually means running head-first into situations he doesn't understand, getting beaten up and taken hostage.
72* MadeOfIron: Good thing, considering how often he gets the crap beaten out of him.
73* MrFanservice: In the fourth episode, he almost floats out of his shower thanks to a gravity malfunction.
74* NoIndoorVoice: In most conversations that aren't one-on-one, Archer's voice would be clearly audible in the back of an auditorium.
75* NonActionGuy: He's quick to jump into fights but clearly has no actual skill or training, consistently going down in one hit. At least for the first few seasons.
76* OddFriendship: With Shran.
77* TheResenter:
78** Archer feels that the Vulcans held humans back, not allowing his father to live to see his warp 5 engine finally fly. He has to begrudgingly change his position when he gets a glimpse of some of the ethical dilemmas that the Vulcans had to deal with when it comes to humans.
79** His MirrorUniverse self, still only NumberTwo on ''Enterprise'', is furious to discover his alternate universe self is already captain and will eventually become the most famous explorer of the era.
80* TeamDad: To the ''Enterprise'' crew.
81* TookALevelInBadass: He becomes ''much'' more competent as both a captain and a combatant after the first couple seasons.
82* UnresolvedSexualTension: With T'Pol, mostly in Season 2. This is a rather odd and strangely realistic variation, in that it's more the result of T'Pol being the only humanoid female that he is close to for over a year, her being his trusted second-in-command with all the loyalty and bonding such a position entails (as is consistent with all other ''Star Trek'' series), and Archer not having the opportunity to *cough* "release any tension" for a ''very'' long time while on the first two years of the mission, rather than the result of any romantic affiliation between the two. It stays unresolved and eventually dissipates as they both find partners that they have actual feelings for.
83* UsefulNotes/WaterPolo: Archer played in college (implied to be Stanford) and is still a big fan. A water polo ball appears several times in the series, and he is often seen watching the game in his quarters.
84* WhatTheHellHero: Gets called out on his borderline-amoral or dangerous actions more than once. Usually by Trip.
85[[/folder]]
86
87[[folder:Subcommander (later Commander) T'Pol]]
88!!Subcommander (later Commander) T'Pol
89[[quoteright:225:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/trek_tpol_4349.jpg]]
90[[caption-width-right:225:''"If we expect to continue our relations with humanity, we have to earn their trust."'']]
91!!!'''Played By:''' Creator/JoleneBlalock
92
93Archer's Vulcan science officer and [[NumberTwo second-in-command]], T'Pol did not like humans when she first joined ''Enterprise'''s crew. Of course, as the years wore on, she came to respect her human crewmates more and more, and shifted her loyalty from the Vulcan High Command to Starfleet and, more specifically, Archer, with whom she would develop a strong friendship. (Falling in love with Trip certainly didn't hurt, either.)
94----
95* BecomingTheMask: The High Command puts her on the ship to keep the humans from getting into too much trouble. When she's recalled at the start of Season 3, she resigns and joins Starfleet.
96%%* BelligerentSexualTension: With Trip. Also has hints of this with Archer.
97* BotheringByTheBook: The Xindi attack makes T'Pol something of a standard-bearer for TOS-era values, both as the StrawVulcan on the crew and with Trip implicitly equating her with the Prime Directive and the ethics of peacetime, and making it no secret that he wants her '''out'''.
98* TheCaretaker: In the alternate timeline of "Twilight," T'Pol spent over a decade looking after an amnesiac Archer.
99* ComicallyMissingThePoint: Most notably when giving her review of ''Film/{{Frankenstein|1931}}''.
100* CommanderContrarian: At first, she opposes basically ''any'' idea that Archer has.
101* ConsistentClothingStyle: T'Pol's outfits are generally catsuits with the top half being wraparound.
102%%* CulturalPosturing: Frequently.
103* DefrostingIceQueen: At the start, she's contemptuous of humans and convinced that they'll fail. She gradually develops a respect for their abilities and even their emotions.
104%%* DistaffCounterpart: Probably intended to be this for [[Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries Spock]] and/or [[Series/StarTrekVoyager Tuvok]].%%Examples aren't "probable", and also ZCE.
105* EmotionlessGirl: Supposedly. It's become more and more obvious throughout the series that T'Pol has far more difficulty keeping her emotions in check than most Vulcans.
106* ExpositoryHairstyleChange: Subtle, but her haircut gets less severe as she reduces her distance to the crew.
107* FutureSpandex: Her first uniform was very form-fitting (''a la'' [[Series/StarTrekVoyager Seven of Nine]]), but still distinctly Vulcan. She ended up having the most costume changes of any character in ''Trek'', but they're all variations of this trope.
108* HollywoodAutism: Autistic-coded and Vulcans go hand in hand as much as being AmbiguouslyJewish, and she gets shit from Phlox early on about only wanting to eat the foods she’s accustomed to.
109** Additionally, even among other Vulcans, it's repeatedly noted that she often has trouble controlling her emotions. (Emotional dysregulation can be a symptom of autism, and, generally speaking, facing ridicule for "overreacting" or "being too emotional" is something that many autistics experience).
110* {{Jerkass}}: In the early seasons, at least, although it's obvious by the end of Season 1 that she's ready to defend ''Enterprise'' and Archer against the High Command if she thinks it's necessary, with hints of HiddenDepths.
111* JerkassHasAPoint: She’s not the nicest in her logic, but frequently she’ll be right and the others will be forced to admit that she has a point after ignoring her.
112* NotSoStoic: Over the course of four years, T'Pol undergoes a MindRape that brings up traumatic memories of losing her emotional control in a jazz nightclub, remembers repressed memories of a line-of-duty killing (that also led to a loss of emotional control), suffers from ''Pa'nar'' Syndrome that degrades her neural pathways (leading to loss of emotional control), becomes addicted to Trellium-D (which causes loss of emotional control), and is infected by a microbe that makes her undergo a premature ''pon farr'' (leading to loss of emotional control and clothing). During the Vulcan arc, this trope was [[HandWave hand-waved]] as T'Pol just having poor control for a Vulcan, and a WhatCouldHaveBeen plotline for the next season would have been that T'Pol had Romulan ancestry.
113* NumberTwo: To Archer. Even during his early Vulcan-hating days as captain, it's standard for him to give her the ship while he's not aboard. Lampshaded in the pilot, where she has a debate with Tucker over the matter (she has a higher rank than him, but, since she isn't Starfleet, he argues that she is outside the chain of command).
114* OfficialCouple: With Trip. It turns out that, even in alternate timelines and mirror universes, the odds favor them ending up together.
115* OmnidisciplinaryScientist: Although it becomes obvious that, even if she has a wide range of theoretical and applied sciences under her belt (which is somewhat understandable considering she's in her late 60s and has had a long time to study under the Vulcan Science Directorate), she is nowhere near as proficient with hands-on engineering and often requires Trip's expertise.
116* ScullySyndrome: Particularly in regards to TimeTravel. In spite of all the evidence and personal accounts that Archer gives, she insists that the Vulcan Science Ministry has declared time travel to be impossible.
117* TheSpock: Always the one to offer the more pragmatic explanation or advocate leaving an alien conflict alone.
118* StandardFemaleGrabArea: Very rarely, if ever invoked. T'Pol has taken far more licks than any female ''Franchise/StarTrek'' character to come before her.
119* StrawVulcan: In Season 1, to the point where it's a ConflictBall. More than once she would not give the crew basic information on a matter and then act superior when she corrected their subsequent mistakes. Other times, she ''would'' give legitimate advice that Archer then ignored, leading to disaster.
120* {{Stripperific}}: If she's not dressed in her duty catsuit, she's usually wearing pajamas that are one size too small or skivvies.
121* StrongAsTheyNeedToBe: The second variant, where T'Pol is as strong as the ''writers'' need her to be. Unlike Spock whose super strength is fairly consistent, T'Pol often loses fights that she should win -- particularly fights against Archer. In [[Recap/StarTrekEnterpriseS02E025Bounty one episode]], she both flung Phlox across the room AND got subdued by Malcolm at close range within a five-minute span.
122* SugarAndIcePersonality: Usually ice, but there are moments even in Season 1 where she admits a respect for the captain and crew.
123* TokenNonHuman: {{Justified|Trope}} as she's basically forced on the human crew by the Vulcans to keep an eye on them. T'Pol ends up GoingNative and joining Starfleet.
124* UnresolvedSexualTension: With Archer. In the alternate timeline seen in "Twilight," the scene cuts out before the audience finds out exactly ''how'' the relationship between Archer and T'Pol evolved. However, we do know that, although it does take a good decade plus of constantly caring for him for T'Pol to manifest romantic feelings for Archer, it's her loyalty and bond of friendship with him that is strong enough to make her throw away her career to take care of him in the first place.
125[[/folder]]
126
127[[folder:Commander Charles 'Trip' Tucker III]]
128!!Commander Charles 'Trip' Tucker III
129[[quoteright:225:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/trek_tucker_5596.jpg]]
130[[caption-width-right:225:''"You expect us to sit up here for a week while the probes have all the fun?"'']]
131!!!'''Played By:''' Creator/ConnorTrinneer
132
133''Enterprise'''s Chief Engineer and Archer's long-time best friend, Trip Tucker's "good ol' boy" Southern charm disguised one of the sharpest minds in Starfleet. Between his engineering genius and security head Malcolm Reed's deep and lasting desire to blow things up, ''Enterprise'' kept flying even when she probably shouldn't have and exceeded all expectations in the process.
134----
135* BelligerentSexualTension: With T'Pol. He even spells it out in "Home," where he tells her mother that he felt like they had chemistry (his word) the first time they got into an argument.
136* BookDumb: Basic Algebra eludes him, yet he's an engineer. Although with his habit of ObfuscatingStupidity and hiding his genius, the audience is not entirely sure whether he just consistently ''pretends'' to be BookDumb or actually is. The fact that his understanding of warp theory is second-to-none indicates the latter.
137* CynicismCatalyst: His little sister Elizabeth is killed in the Xindi's attack on Earth in the Season 2 finale. He becomes much more cynical, but bottles up his anger and grief until "The Forgotten."
138* DeadpanSnarker: SarcasmMode is his mode of choice.
139* FamedInStory: By the time of ''[[WesternAnimation/StarTrekLowerDecks Lower Decks]],'' he's mentioned in the same breath as ''Captain Kirk'' as a measuring stick for how cool someone is.
140* FanOfThePast: Like Tom Paris in ''[[{{Series/StarTrekVoyager}} Voyager]]'', Trip has a nostalgia for the 1950s. The majority of movies he shows for Movie Night are from that decade.
141* FireForgedFriends: He and Malcolm have a rocky start, but after being stranded alone in a shuttlepod together, they become close friends.
142%%* HeterosexualLifePartners: With Malcolm.
143* TheLancer: He's been this to Archer for some time when the series begins.
144* LeeroyJenkins: Trip has a habit of leaping before he looks in combat and isn't usually reluctant when it's time to fight. [[spoiler:This gets him killed in the finale, when he decides the best way to get rid of the intruders is to set off an explosion in a room he's in.]]
145* TheMcCoy: Got the accent for it, too. Is constantly arguing the values of humanity and emotion against T'Pol's logic and rationale. Of course, their arguments [[BelligerentSexualTension tend to find other outlets]].
146* MrFanservice: "Acquistion" has him running around in his underwear for a good chunk of the time. And well, check out his [[ShirtlessScene well-muscled chest]] in his numerous decontamination scenes.
147* MrFixit: A few times, he helps another ship fix a broken system or has to deal with malfunctioning equipment of his own. Even when he visits T'Pol's house, he ends up fixing her mom's fridge.
148* NumberTwo: Early on, anyway. He's actually Number Three, but he's much closer to Archer than the ''actual'' Number Two. Lampshaded in the pilot, where he has a debate with T'Pol over the matter (she has a higher rank than him, but since she isn't Starfleet, he argues that she is outside the chain of command). More than likely, he ''would'' have been the ship's first officer if T'Pol's assignment hadn't been imposed by the Vulcan High Command.
149* PreMortemOneLiner:
150-->[[spoiler:'''Trip:''' There's just one other thing I need to tell you--you can all go straight to ''Hell''!]]
151* ScottyTime: He has to deal with it less than other Starfleet engineers, but he's pretty ticked off when he has to work in it.
152* StupidSacrifice: [[spoiler:Decides to blow up himself and the aliens boarding the ship despite the fact that Archer is out of harm's way and after he knows that security is on the way to deal with the invaders.]]
153* SouthernFriedGenius: He hails from Florida and is the best engineer in Starfleet.
154* SpeakNowOrForeverHoldYourPeace: {{Subverted|Trope}}. T'Pol declines to declare the ''kal-i-fee'' at her wedding to Toss. When her mother suggests that Trip tell T'Pol about his true feelings before the ceremony, he refuses because she's got enough pressure on her.
155* TechnoWizard: If you give him a few minutes with a piece of technology (from just about any species), he'll be able to fix it or jury-rig it into something useful for the situation.
156* TrademarkFavoriteFood: Pan-fried catfish. His favorite dessert is pecan pie.
157* TheWatson: Often the one to ask questions that T'Pol could then explain to the audience.
158[[/folder]]
159
160[[folder:Lieutenant Malcolm Reed]]
161!!Lieutenant Malcolm Reed
162[[quoteright:225:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/trek_reed_3768.jpg]]
163[[caption-width-right:225:''"They're called 'phase pistols'. They have two settings: 'stun' and 'kill.' It would be best not to confuse them."'']]
164!!!'''Played By:''' Creator/DominicKeating
165
166British, shy, quiet, and reserved unless someone was in danger, Reed had a talent for getting himself injured while trying to protect his crew and his captain. As it turns out, he also had a talent for blowing things up, and with Trip's engineering genius, did it much better than the weapons specifications said he should have been able to. Although he started out isolated from everyone, he went on to develop a strong friendship with frequent verbal sparring partner Trip and became an anchor for Archer during the Xindi crisis.
167----
168* AmbiguouslyGay: Dominic Keating is on record as saying, "God knows I played him gay!" but [[SarcasticConfession no one's sure whether he's joking or not]]. There is some evidence that Reed was slated to be the first gay character in ''Franchise/StarTrek'', but this was apparently later revoked. (Trek would get its first official gay character sixteen years later, in the next TV series to be developed: Lt. Paul Stamets of [[Series/StarTrekDiscovery Discovery]].) Considering he's had significant HoYay with at least three characters (Archer, Tucker, and Hayes), however, Keating may not have been joking all that much. It's worth noting that when ''Enterprise'' was sent back in time, Malcolm never got married or had kids, and he was the only member of the main cast (and possibly the whole crew) that didn't. Possibly CampStraight, as he has a string of ex-girlfriends and flirts with various female alien visitors (awkwardly, usually) throughout the series. (And he admitted once to [[CovertPervert taking notice of T'Pol's bum.]]) [[ZigZaggedTrope Still, that doesn't prove he's straight; he could always be bisexual.]]\
169\
170An interview with Keating from 2013 confirms the speculation about Malcolm: "I played him so gay ... I mean, it was always rumored that Malcolm was gay, wasn't it?", he says. "It was that one line of his three-line bio, 'Shy around women,’ that just shockwaved across the gay community." He includes some remarks on the showrunners' reluctance to portray a gay character onscreen. "I don’t want to say it was dry and they didn’t want to take any risks, but there was an element of that." [[https://web.archive.org/web/20130621060823/http://www.thecinemasource.com/blog/interviews/dominic-keating-interview-for-star-trek-enterprise/]]
171* BewareTheQuietOnes: Malcolm doesn't really talk much. He lets his guns do the talking.
172* TheBigGuy: If someone needs to lead a security team through the corridors or a rescue team on the surface, Malcolm's the guy.
173* BloodKnight: Reed ''really'' likes blowing shit up. [[LampshadeHanging Lampshaded]] when they find a hatch and Reed immediately starts talking about where he can place charges before he even looks for the latch device (which Archer locates within seconds).
174* ButtMonkey: Almost as frequently as ''Archer'', it's Reed who is the designated victim, although he's more an accident-prone victim of circumstances than a constant villain target. He seems like a {{Redshirt}} with PlotArmor, forever doomed to be injured or trapped in order to provide dramatic tension. This may also be a symptom of TheWorfEffect, given that he is the ship's tactical officer and thus the one who should be most capable at looking out for his own well-being, but also the one who is first to confront danger.
175* BritishStuffiness: The only Brit in the main cast, Malcolm is noticeably more reserved and uptight than his American colleagues. Well, except when he gets to blow things up.
176* ConsummateProfessional: Despite most of the main characters being in Starfleet, Reed is pretty much the only one who consistently ''acts'' like he has undergone military training. This brings him into conflict with the [=MACO=]s in Season 3, due to their differing military disciplines and protocols clashing. Lampshaded in "Minefield" when Archer inquires why he was so uncomfortable being invited to dine at the Captain's table. Reed eventually admits that throughout his career, he's tried to remain professional and avoid "fraternization" with his superiors and fellow officers.
177* DarkAndTroubledPast: [[spoiler:He used to be an agent for Section 31. This ends up putting ''Enterprise'' in a tight spot in Season 4.]]
178* DeadpanSnarker: Approaches every setback with a certain amount of wit.
179* DemolitionsExpert: The closest thing they've got. Reed also successfully dismantled a Romulan mine on the ship's hull despite lacking a full understanding of its specs.
180* FireForgedFriends: He and Trip have a rocky start, but after being stranded alone in a shuttlepod together, they become close friends.
181* FreudianExcuse: Malcolm's aquaphobia is attributed in a tie-in novel to a near-drowning he experienced as a child in a confrontation with a school bully.
182* GeniusBruiser: Malcolm is a very innovative weapons designer, he's good at hand-to-hand combat, and he's quite the tactical thinker. Also, if there is a way to make something explode, he ''will'' find it.
183* HatesBeingTouched: Too bad Archer has NoSenseOfPersonalSpace.
184%%* HeterosexualLifePartners: With Trip.
185* HomoeroticSubtext: According to Dominic Keating, it was intentional. He has this with [[NoSenseOfPersonalSpace Archer]], [[BelligerentSexualTension Tucker]], and [[SlapSlapKiss Major]] [[TheMasochismTango Hayes]], at the very least.
186* MilitaryBrat: His family served in the Royal Navy for generations. He's consequently very knowledgeable about military matters and personalities.
187* TheMole: [[spoiler:Although to be fair, it wasn't precisely his fault. In Season 4, Section 31 forces him to hinder ''Enterprise'''s investigation into Phlox's kidnapping.]]
188* NotSoStoic: In "Shuttlepod One", he confides in Trip that he's upset to be seen as a "grim reaper" and explains that he doesn't ''want'' to die, but doesn't want to have unrealistic expectations either. Also, later in the series, he [[WhatTheHellHero calls out]] his fellow officers on their seeming lack of reaction to a MACO {{Redshirt}}'s death, and is visibly upset by just how many people they've lost while in the Expanse.
189* PintsizedPowerhouse: He's fairly unassuming compared to the more built Archer and Trip, but he's still successfully takes the role of TheBigGuy.
190* TheQuietOne: Very rarely ventures his opinion in a conversation unless it's asked for.
191* ShrinkingViolet: Except where his crew's safety is concerned. While he's not timid, he is very uncomfortable around other people and has difficulty making close friendships.
192* SociallyAwkwardHero: It's more pronounced in the [[Literature/StarTrekEnterpriseRelaunch tie-in novels]], but even in the series proper, it's obvious that Malcolm has a lot of trouble opening up to people.
193* TheStoic: How he's usually seen. He even suggests that Archer abandon him when a mine traps him on a detachable section of hull while a Romulan ship threatens.
194* StiffUpperLip: From attempting to perform a HeroicSacrifice ("Minefield") or being forced to eat emergency rations that he doesn't like ("Shuttlepod One"), Reed rarely ever complains about the situation. At most, he'll make a dry, sarcastic quip before getting right back to business.
195* StuffBlowingUp: 90% of the time, when Reed is openly happy/gleeful about something, it's related to weapons—usually using them.
196* TalkingInYourSleep: He says the word "stinky" in his sleep while having a dream about flirting with T'Pol.
197* TrademarkFavoriteFood: Pineapple, despite being allergic to it. He takes injections to help himself tolerate it.
198* TheUnfavourite: His father was a life-long Navy man, and has remained aloof, cold, and generally disappointed in Malcolm because he didn't follow the family tradition (Malcolm's afraid of water).
199%%* WellDoneSonGuy: He starts to thaw out a bit once Archer makes a point of befriending him.
200* WhyDidItHaveToBeSnakes: It doesn't help to have aquaphobia when your family have served in the Royal Navy for centuries.
201[[/folder]]
202
203[[folder:Doctor Phlox]]
204!!Doctor Phlox
205[[quoteright:225:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/trek_phlox_4749.jpg]]
206!!!'''Played By:''' Creator/JohnBillingsley
207
208->''"I must admit, I wasn't planning to stay this long, but the opportunity to observe your species on their first deep-space venture has proven irresistible."''
209
210[[Series/{{NCIS}} Ducky Mallard]] [[AC:in space]], a Denobulan doctor who volunteered for a medical exchange program to serve as the NX-01's sawbones. Phlox had an unorthodox and almost homeopathic approach to medicine, habitually using alien critters to assist in healing, as well as a curious interest in human "mating habits". Luckily for the crew, he was more skilled than he looked; also quite good at keeping them alive.
211----
212* AlienAutopsy: He does a ''lot'' of these. With great interest, too.
213* BizarreAlienBiology: He has striped toenails that grow extremely quickly, an incredibly long tongue that needs to be dried out for unspecified reasons, and an unusually wide grin. Season 4 reveals that, when threatened, he can ''inflate his head like a blowfish!'' Of special note is that he's the first being in the entire franchise, aside from species 8472, that has ''ever'' defied Borg nanoprobes without having to be rescued from the Collective afterwards. He had to use a considerably DangerousForbiddenTechnique to do it and required a seriously extended recovery, but again, aside from species 8472, he's the only one to ever last more than a few seconds after being injected before showing signs of assimilation.
214* BlueAndOrangeMorality: Much like [=DS9's=] Garak, Phlox presents a menu of options to Archer; some legal, others not. His ethics are decidedly neutral. He also tended to be more pragmatic than his Vulcan counterpart (organ-farming from clones, freely [[DrFeelgood supplying T'Pol with drugs]]). In contrast, T'Pol is increasingly on the side of Roddenberry ethics in Seasons 3 and 4, warning Archer against some of the Doctor's methods.
215* BunnyEarsLawyer: Very eccentric, but deadly serious when it comes to medicine. Notably, Phlox makes no mention of any qualifications that suggests he should be working on ''humanoid'' patients ("As a matter of fact, I've also earned degrees in dentistry, hematology, botanical pharmacology...").
216* BourgeoisBohemian: He's a respected professional in his field, but he's keenly interested in learning about new cultures and attitudes.
217* CheshireCatGrin:
218-->'''Phlox:''' ''[to Archer, as he displays his grin for the first time]'' [[CatchPhrase Optimism, Captain!]]
219* CrazyCulturalComparison: His reaction to Tucker nervously informing him that his (Phlox's) wife made a pass at him is to immediately suggest that he sleep with her! Denobulans are polygamists and actively embrace the concept of open marriage.
220* DeliberateValuesDissonance:
221** Denobulan medical ethics are not precisely aligned to the Hippocratic Oath. For example, he refuses to treat patients without their consent, even if their condition is lethal.
222** He also has very few qualms discussing a person's medical information with others, even if he is going behind the person's back to do it (i.e., giving out information about Reed's allergy treatments to Hoshi). No [=HIPAA=] in space, evidently.
223** While he cares very deeply for all his "pets" they are also used as raw materials for many medical treatments and expiraments, something that humans might consider animal cruelty.
224* DissonantSerenity: Especially in early episodes, when he seems to be the only one having fun amongst a crew still trying to get used to each other.
225* ExoticExtendedMarriage: Like all Denobulans, Phlox has three wives, each of whom has two other husbands. It has been stated that the Denobulan homeworld is a single continent that is vastly overpopulated.
226* FantasticRacism: Phlox admits that he has some ill-feeling towards Antarans because of a war the two species fought in the past, but he tried to teach his children to be free of prejudice. Later, he is on the receiving end of this on Earth after the Xindi crisis awakens humanity's own tendencies towards xenophobia.
227* {{Foil}}: To T'Pol, particularly early on. Though they are both in the "outsider" position, his keen interest and enthusiasm for human culture contrasts her contempt and discomfort with it, and he advises her to be more open-minded.
228* FriendToAllLivingThings: He dearly loves his pets. He also took to Porthos, becoming the one who'd look after him when Archer was away.
229* FunnyForeigner: Or in this case, Funny Alien. His BizarreAlienBiology and BlueAndOrangeMorality are often PlayedForLaughs in day-to-day interactions with the crew, who are as yet unused to aliens.
230* GeniusesHaveMultiplePhDs: Dr Phlox has at least a "dozen" degrees, mentioned subjects include Interspecies Veterinary Medicine, Dentistry, Hematology, Botanical Pharmacology and Psychiatry. It is not specified if these degrees are all doctorates (or if Denobulans even have doctorates), but their number and breadth help establish him as a renowned SuperDoc. This lengthy academic record is explained by the fact that Denobulans don't share the same sleeping patterns as humans, only needing about five to six days sleep per year which means Denobulans have more time for academic pursuits if they so wish.
231* HeavySleeper: His species only sleeps once a year, for a period of several days. He's incredibly loopy when a medical emergency forces the crew to wake him up after only a few hours of sleep.
232* JarOfTheBizarre: His sickbay contains many jars of various substances, which include medicines, samples, and food for his alien pets.
233* MadDoctor: When the crew starts becoming obsessed with mundane tasks in "Singularity," Phlox becomes hyper-focused on finding out why Travis has a headache and nearly dissects his brain to solve the mystery. Fortunately, T'Pol steps in with a well-timed nerve pinch. The MirrorUniverse version is just as bubbly and curious as regular Phlox, only he ''really enjoys'' performing brutal medical experiments.
234* TheMedic: He has his work cut out for him to keep the crew in shape between space mines and many, many angry aliens.
235* MissionControl: John Billingsley is even less mobile than the EMH. Phlox spends nearly all his time on the ship, though he does get out a bit more in the fourth season. No wonder the Klingons abducted him on his trip to the Chinese; they would have been waiting for years otherwise!
236* MyGodWhatHaveIDone: In "Singularity," he nearly lobotomizes Travis to find out what's causing his headache and threatens T'Pol with a scalpel when she questions this course of action. Afterwards, he's ''very'' subdued and thanks her for intervening before he could do any harm.
237* RenaissanceMan: In addition to his skill with standard and non-traditional medicine, he apparently is something of an anthropologist, joining the Interspecies Medical Exchange so he could study new species and cultures.
238* SixthRanger: He was present from the pilot, but Archer added him to the crew at the last minute after they met at Starfleet Headquarters.
239* TheStoic: His baseline is more cheerful and friendly than most stoics, but it nonetheless stands out as notable exclusions whenever he shows strong emotions like anger or fear.
240* WouldBeRudeToSayGenocide: In "Dear Doctor," he openly refuses a cure to the Valakians, who are the edge of extinction, on the basis that Menk, a more primitive culture sharing the same planet, would thrive.
241[[/folder]]
242
243[[folder:Ensign Travis Mayweather]]
244!!Ensign Travis Mayweather
245[[quoteright:225:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/trek_mayweather_6956.jpg]]
246!!!'''Played By:''' Creator/AnthonyMontgomery
247
248->''"I couldn't call a place home unless it came with a pair of warp nacelles."''
249
250''Enterprise'''s pilot, Travis was a "space boomer," born on one of the slow-moving cargo transports launched right after humans discovered warp flight. Since transports usually took years to get between ports, Travis grew up on the cargo ship ECS ''Horizon'' and probably knows more about living in space than anyone else on board. This also translated into a talent for flying spacecraft.
251----
252* AcePilot: He's the helmsman for the whole of the series and maneuvers ''Enterprise'' through some very tricky situations, including the highly dangerous Delphic Expanse. He also manages to figure out how to pilot a Xindi-Insectoid shuttle despite it being designed for someone with compound eyes.
253* AdvertisedExtra: To absurd degrees. He's one of the least-developed "mains" in ''Trek'' history. It ''seemed'' like he was going to get some characterization in Season 2 with the episode "Horizon", but most of his dialogue in other episodes were cut or made into offscreen events. Season 4's writers actually gave him some important stuff to do, but it seemed odd to have the others acting chummy with someone they'd barely interacted with previously.
254-->'''[[http://h2g2.com/edited_entry/A6756294 h2g2]]''': This complete lack of presence has made him [[GiftedlyBad legendary among the fans]]. It's ironic that Morn, the bar-fly from ''[[Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine DS9]]'' who (purposely) [[TheSpeechless never spoke a word]], has better character development than Travis.
255* BadassAdorable: Has his moments.
256* {{Catchphrase}}: Mayweather loves to frequently remind people "Did you know I've been in space?!"
257* ADayInTheLimelight: We meet his family and titular home ship in the episode "Horizon."
258* ClarkKentOutfit: Somehow, despite wearing a nearly skintight uniform, his clothes function as this. The man is jacked.
259* InformedAbility: Phlox is the biologist, Hoshi the linguist, Trip the mechanic, and Travis...the ''climbing expert''. Pray tell, ''how'' do you become a climbing expert when you live in space? [[SarcasmMode It really came in handy, too]], considering he gets hurt ''while climbing'' three times on the show.
260* LesserStar: Although he's billed as a member of the main cast, he usually has very little focus apart from his capacity as the helmsman, and he rarely goes beyond being TheGenericGuy characterization-wise.
261* LikeBrotherAndSister: With Hoshi.
262* MandatoryLine: Sometimes not even given afforded this much by the writers. Seriously, it reached a point where he didn't even say "Aye, sir". Mayweather's subplots tend to involve being injured and sent to sickbay, simply in order to give him at least ''some'' dialogue.
263* MrFanservice: Welcome to the gun show. If this Starfleet gig doesn't work out for him, Mayweather can always model underwear.
264* NaiveNewcomer: In the first season, at least, despite having lived in space his whole life. Possibly it was intended as being a newcomer to ''Starfleet'', but as noted, his lack of development makes it hard to say.
265* NiceGuy: He's one of the more consistently upbeat members of the crew.
266* TokenMinority: Unfortunately, his lack of development essentially made him this.
267* WideEyedIdealist: Usually the one most likely to see things with a [[BlackAndWhiteMorality black-and-white mentality]].
268* WellDoneSonGuy: In "Horizon," he notes that his dad, the captain of a cargo ship, was disappointed that Travis didn't follow in his footsteps. Following Mr. Mayweather's death, Travis confides in Archer his regrets over never having reconciled with him. Archer, though, reveals that when he was looking through the candidates for helmsman, Travis' father provided the shortest recommendation he had seen, writing "he'd never met a more natural stick and rudder man in his life" and that Archer would be a fool if he didn't pick him.
269[[/folder]]
270
271[[folder:Ensign Hoshi Sato]]
272!!Ensign Hoshi Sato
273[[quoteright:225:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/trek_hoshi_4749.jpg]]
274!!!'''Played By:''' Creator/LindaPark
275
276->''"[[ImADoctorNotAPlaceholder I'm a translator]]; I didn't come out here to see corpses hanging on hooks!"''
277
278Not a fan of space travel, getting eaten, or aliens, Hoshi Sato was on ''Enterprise'' for one reason: She had an unmatched gift for languages. In the days before the Universal Translator, she was a critical part of FirstContact missions.
279----
280* AllAsiansKnowMartialArts: In Season 4, Hoshi is retconned with a black belt in Aikido to make her more of an ActionGirl (whereas in the Season 3 Xindi War arc, she's shown learning simple take-downs from the [=MACOs=] with no mention of these skills).
281* BadassBookworm: Although she rarely gets the opportunity to show it, when Phlox is kidnapped in Season 4, she ''kicks ass''!
282* BoldlyComing: In "Two Days and Two Nights." While the others have run-ins with hostile forces on Risa, Hoshi winds up being the only one who gets laid. Get it, girl.
283* {{Claustrophobia}}: Played up in "Fight or Flight." Archer is stunned to find this out right before a mission, but Hoshi is quick to remind him that ''he'' talked her into taking the position.
284* CunningLinguist: It generally takes her just a few hours to start getting the hang of a new language.
285* DownerEnding: The Mirror Universe episode reveals in a barely-visible text blurb that Hoshi ends up marrying, leaving Starfleet, and settling on [[spoiler:Tarsus IV, where she is ignominiously executed by Kodos during a famine ([[{{Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries}} a young James T. Kirk]] is witness to her death)]]. The set designer for that episode has said not to take that as {{canon}}, though.
286* FightingFromTheInside: When the Xindi-Reptilians inject her with brain parasites to make her decrypt the superweapon's launch codes. She manages to add a new layer of encryption, although the next set of parasites forces her to comply.
287* FishOutOfWater: She's really uncomfortable with space travel with the weirdness and dangers involved.
288* TheGift: Hoshi is not just a CunningLinguist; one telepathic alien points out that it seems that her brain is uniquely wired for multiple languages.
289* TheHeart: She's one of the most openly emotional (in the "sensitive" vein, not "angry and HotBlooded") officers, especially in the first season when she doesn't have much confidence in herself. She is also one of the friendliest bridge officers. She's shown to be close with all of her fellow bridge crew and often spends her downtime getting to know new people, or trying to, as with the [=MACO=] squad.
290* HeroicBSOD: After being rescued from the Xindi thanks to brain scrambling and guilt over not being able to prevent the Xindi from hijacking her skills.
291* IronicFear: Anything space-related. This was later echoed by [=McCoy=] in the [[Film/StarTrek2009 first J.J. Abrams Trek film]].
292%%* LikeBrotherAndSister: With Travis.
293* MeaningfulName: ''Hoshi'' (星) means "star", which is quite appropriate for a space-traveler. ''Sato'' (里) can also be translated as "home", "village", or "native land", suggesting that she feels most at home in the stars.
294* MovingAngst: In "Fight or Flight?", Hoshi is unnerved by her new home on a spaceship— she thinks the stars are "going the wrong way" out her window, she feels like she's bad at her job when dead bodies make her scream, and she's afraid of the noises the engine makes.
295* MoreThanJustATeacher: Before she got her job on the ship, Hoshi Sato was a language teacher.
296* NervousWreck: She’s very anxious at first, feeling like she’s useless for screaming at dead bodies, and not able to sleep on one side of the ship.
297* {{Omniglot}}: It comes naturally to her. It's the reason she's on the ship. (According to ''Series/StarTrekStrangeNewWorlds'', she learns how to speak 86 languages.)
298* OutOfFocus: Relatively prominent in Season 1, she gradually gets less and less to do. Season 2's [[Recap/StarTrekEnterpriseS02E010VanishingPoint "Vanishing Point"]] literally has her slowly fading away, which is almost ''too'' good a metaphor. Season 4 gives her a few more moments of spotlight, culminating in one instance of her in command of the ship.
299* ThePiratesWhoDontDoAnything: When was the last time we actually saw her ''translate'' something? It's not entirely her fault; Archer seems to go out of his way to find her tasks that involve everything but her ''actual'' job.
300* ShrinkingViolet: Hoshi's definitely very sweet, but a little socially awkward and shy at first. She shakes this off by the end of the series, with what little CharacterDevelopment she gets.
301* TheStarscream: In the MirrorUniverse. As the crew put it, the episodes "Put the Ho back in Hoshi."
302* TomboyishPonytail: Often has this throughout the series.
303* TookALevelInBadass:
304** Hoshi [[AllAsiansKnowMartialArts suddenly acquires martial arts skills]] in Season 4. In the penultimate episode, the former ShrinkingViolet not only commands the ship but also takes on the Minister of Earth in a battle of wills and wins. (Which [[FridgeHorror sort of suggests]] that Starfleet is a bit too comfortable with ignoring the civilian government. Might explain why every third admiral was planning a coup from ''[[Film/StarTrekVITheUndiscoveredCountry ST VI]]'' on.)
305** In the MirrorUniverse, Mirror Hoshi manages to take on Mirror T'Pol in a knife fight and hold her own for some time. T'Pol only loses because after she knocks Hoshi down for the count, she gets shot InTheBack by a MACO. [[spoiler:Mirror Hoshi would then go on to become ''Empress'' of the Terran Empire!]]
306[[/folder]]
307
308[[folder:Porthos]]
309!!Porthos
310[[quoteright:225:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/trek_porthos_1480.jpg]]
311!!!'''Played By:''' Prada (early Season 1) and Breezy & Windy (late Season 1-on)
312
313Archer's utterly adorable beagle.
314----
315* AngryGuardDog: In the MirrorUniverse, Porthos is a [[RightHandAttackDog snarling Rottweiler]]. Beagle Porthos can't quite compete in that area, but when [[spoiler:Ferengi]] board the ship in one episode, he does his best to bark his disapproval.
316* EvilDetectingDog: In "Anomaly," he sits up and starts barking before the ship is rocked by a massive spatial anomaly.
317%%* LoyalAnimalCompanion
318* MeaningfulName: He was part of a litter of four males, dubbed "the Four Musketeers", hence how he got the name "Porthos." Also a [[ShoutOut Shout Out]] as that makes Porthos a [[WesternAnimation/DogtanianAndTheThreeMuskehounds Muskehound]].
319* PreciousPuppies: Okay, so he's a mature dog, but still...
320* SilentSnarker: Often, Archer will mull over his thoughts out loud, [[TheConfidant play-acting his inner struggles as conversations with Porthos]]. On occasion, we cut to the dog's reaction—then back to Archer, who says something like, "Yeah, you're right," and otherwise acts like Porthos just chided him. He also gives the visiting [[spoiler:Ferengi]] [[TheReasonYouSuckSpeech a real barking-to]]. Ah-hem...
321%%* TeamPet
322* TimmyInAWell: Deliberately averted by the scriptwriters.
323* TrademarkFavoriteFood: Cheese. Unfortunately it also gives him gas.
324* UrineTrouble: He didn't pee on a person, but he got Archer in trouble by peeing on a tree sacred to the locals.
325[[/folder]]
326
327!!''Enterprise'' NX-01
328[[folder:''Enterprise'' NX-01]]
329[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/enterprise_nx_01.jpg]]
330Earth's first NX-class starship and the first to achieve warp 5.
331----
332* TheAce: Specifically designed to be the best starship of the United Earth Starfleet, and is the first to reach warp 5.
333* CelebrityParadox: The ''Enterprise'' NX-01 was named after the space shuttle ''Enterprise'' OV-101, which was named after the starship ''Enterprise'' NCC-1701. The OV-101 was originally going to be named ''Constitution'', but NASA renamed it ''Enterprise'' after a letter writing campaign from ''Franchise/StarTrek'' fans convinced them to do so. The unveiling of the ''Enterprise'' orbiter, which most of the cast of ''TOS'' and Creator/GeneRoddenberry himself attended, is even seen in the opening credits of ''Enterprise'' itself.
334* CosmeticallyAdvancedPrequel: She's more detailed inside and out than the ''Constitution'' class vessel that would succeed her a century later (though ''Series/StarTrekDiscovery'' and ''Series/StarTrekStrangeNewWorlds'' show off what what the ''TOS'' Constitution-class would have looked like if the show had been made after ''Enterprise'' chronologically).
335* FlawedPrototype: That said, she was rushed out into service early thanks to time travelling interference, meaning she lacked a few of the features she was ''supposed'' to have. Especially weapons, which her crew had to upgrade on the fly.
336* LegacyVesselNaming: She's named after five ''Enterprise'''s before her--the ''H.M.S. Enterprise'' of 1775, the ''CV-6'' and ''CVN-65'' of the United States Navy, the ''OV-101'' space shuttle of NASA, and the ''XVC-30'' Earth[=/=]Vulcan collaboration vessel. She too is the first Starfleet vessel to bear the name, and the U.S.S. [[Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries Enterprise NCC-1701]] was not only named after her, but bears a piece of her hull inside of it to carry on the tradition. An additonal seven ships, at the very least, would carry on her name into the future, the ''Enterprises'' NCC-1701-A, B, C, D, E, F, and G, with far more implied coming after even that.
337* MadeOfExplodium: ''[[Series/StarTrekStrangeNewWorlds Strange New Worlds]]'' reveals that the NX-01's hull was made out of a synthesized alloy called horonium, which is extremely rare and explosively dangerous to manufacture, but incredibly durable. This explains why ''Enterprise'' was able to take as much punishment as it did without the benefit of shields, and why later Starfleet vessels would look radically different, as horonium was phased out for other, easier to replicate materials.
338* TheOnlyOne: Since she's the first Warp 5 capable Earth vessel around. Less so come season 4, when her sister ship ''Columbia'' launches and even fights alongside her. It's also stated that additional NX-class ships are on the way.
339* RememberTheNewGuy: ''[[Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration The Next Generation]]'' usually refers to the ''Enterprise''-D as being the fifth ship to bare that name, implying that Kirk's ''Enterprise'' was the first. It has since been rationalized that this distinction referes to ''Federation'' starship ''Enterprises'', with the NX-01 falling outside that category by being a United Earth starship first, with the NCC-1701 being the first Federation starship ''Enterprise''.
340* TheSpeechless: Unlike future starships, ''Enterprise'' doesn't give vocal responses to commands.
341* TookALevelInBadass: Several times. First is when Trip and Malcolm upgrade her weaponry with phase cannons (the precursors to phaser banks). Then, after the Xindi attack, she gets photonic torpedoes, improved hull plating, and a contingent of SpaceMarines, turning her into a full-fledged warship. (WordOfGod suggests that if the show had gotten a fifth season, she could've received far more extensive upgrades. Those upgrades would later be canonized in ''Series/StarTrekPicard'' via her appearance at the fleet museum.) She also goes from barely achieving Warp 5 in Season 1 to safely maintaining 5.1 for short periods in Season 4.
342[[/folder]]
343
344!!Other Starfleet/Human characters
345[[folder:Vice Admiral Maxwell Forrest]]
346!!Vice Admiral Maxwell Forrest
347[[quoteright:225:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/trek_forrest_9189.jpg]]
348!!!'''Played By:''' Creator/VaughnArmstrong
349
350->''"[[SarcasmMode Well, this may come as a surprise to you, Jon]], but the Vulcans aren't talking."''
351
352The crew's ReasonableAuthorityFigure based on Earth, Forrest was ''also'' not a fan of Vulcans. He was, however, Archer's friend and patron, and was unusual for an Admiral in that he actually ''helped'' the crew instead of hindering them.
353----
354* CastingGag: Vaughn Armstrong had been playing various characters in the franchise since the early days of TNG. Forrest, however, was the first time he played a human.
355%%* FourStarBadass
356* HeroicSacrifice: [[spoiler:Dies protecting Soval from a terrorist attack on Vulcan. His death inspires Soval to re-evaluate his position concerning humans and leads to greater cooperation between the two races. He even fulfills the trope in the MirrorUniverse where he's captain of ''Enterprise'', GoingDownWithTheShip so his crew will have a chance to escape.]]
357%%* KilledOffForReal
358* MythologyGag: The three Admirals seen in "Broken Bow" are Admirals Forrest, Leonard, and Williams, after Creator/DeForestKelley, Creator/LeonardNimoy, and Creator/WilliamShatner, respectively. As Kelley had died roughly a year prior to the start of filming (the only one of the three who'd passed away at that time), Forrest has, by far, the largest role in the show.
359* OOCIsSeriousBusiness: "First Flight" is the first time we see him get angry at Archer.
360* ReasonableAuthorityFigure: Forrest is Archer's patron and friend; somewhat unusual for ''Franchise/StarTrek'', where admirals tend to be [[ObstructiveBureaucrat indifferent]] or [[DaChief outright hostile]] towards the crew, or [[InsaneAdmiral go insane]]. On the rare occasions where he disagrees with Archer's decisions, he does acknowledge that Archer and ''Enterprise'' are the ones in the thick of things and will back his play. Even his EvilCounterpart in the MirrorUniverse is respected more than he's feared.
361%%* TakingTheBullet
362[[/folder]]
363
364[[folder:Major J. Hayes]]
365!!Major J. Hayes
366!!!'''Played By:''' Creator/StevenCulp
367
368The commanding officer of a group of [=MACOs=] detatched to ''Enterprise'' on their mission to the Delphic Expanse after the Xindi attack. His very straightforward and military demeanor highlights the change in their mission as well as causing some friction with the existing crew.
369----
370* TheBigGuy: He and his platoon are explicitly military and trained for combat. Their skills are very useful on various infiltration misions.
371* ConsummateProfessional: Hayes is even more military than Reed is, with his training regimens and never forgetting to append his statements with "sir" or "ma'am."
372* AFatherToHisMen: {{Downplayed|Trope}}, but noticeable. He's upset when his people die on missions he's not leading because he feels personally responsible for everyone on his team.
373* InterserviceRivalry: He and Reed clash over security and military operations at first, which culminates in a fistfight. They eventually understand each other better.
374* JustFollowingOrders: In "Hatchery," he admits after it's all done that the others had to mutiny because he would have kept following Archer's enzyme-induced orders even if they had explained their concerns to him.
375* MauveShirt: He's the leader of a squad of RedShirts, although the [=MACOs=] actually have a pretty good survival rate for that trope. [[spoiler:He dies right at the end of rescuing Hoshi, shot during beam-out.]]
376* NoNameGiven: His first name is left as "J." His actor and ExpandedUniverse materials name him "Joss," "Jeremiah," or "Jay."
377* SpaceMarine: He and his squad are tough, serious, combat-ready fighters who don't fraternize much with the rest of the crew; they're there to fulfill a mission.
378[[/folder]]
379
380[[folder:Captain Erika Hernandez]]
381!!Captain Erika Hernandez
382[[quoteright:225:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/trek_hernandez_9395.jpg]]
383!!!'''Played By:''' Creator/AdaMaris
384
385->''"I'm married to Starfleet...just like you."''
386
387Archer's old flame and the captain of ''Enterprise'''s sister ship ''Columbia'' (NX-02), Erika Hernandez was a fiery ActionGirl who appeared in only three episodes of the show's fourth and final season. [[spoiler:Somebody liked her, though, because she played a major part in the Literature/StarTrekNovelVerse]].
388----
389* ActionGirl: Gets as down and dirty in combat as any of the boys.
390%%* AloneInACrowd: [[spoiler:In ''Literature/StarTrekDestiny'', leading to her [[DrivenToSuicide attempted suicide]].]]
391%%* EmergencyTransformation: [[spoiler:By the Caeliar, when she begins to die of old age.]]
392%%* GoingNative: [[spoiler:After nearly a millennium, Erika is finally able to admit that she is, indeed, Caeliar.]]
393* HeroOfAnotherStory: Her time on the ''Columbia'', which could easily have been the basis for its own spinoff.
394* NewOldFlame: To Archer. They were forced to break up when he was promoted and she wasn't, but it's made quite clear that they've never really gotten over each other. Once she gets ''her'' promotion, they rekindle their romance.
395* ReplacementFlatCharacter: Hardened by the Xindi mission, Archer draws this kind of comparison to her.
396-->'''Archer:''' I look at you, and I see the person I was three years ago--the explorer that my father wanted me to be.
397* {{Retcon}}: Her presence as a starship captain undoes the 30-year-old embarrassment of "[[Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries Turnabout Intruder]]," which claimed that women were forbidden from that position, apparently confirming the long-held {{Fanon}} belief that this was another one of Janice Lester's delusions and Kirk couldn't be bothered to argue with her.
398[[/folder]]
399
400[[folder:Crewman Daniels]]
401!!Daniels
402!!!'''Played By:''' Creator/MattWinston
403
404Captain Archer's steward... supposedly. He's actually an undercover [[TimePolice Timecop]] stationed on ''Enterprise'' to help them through the Temporal Cold War.
405----
406* AmbiguouslyHuman: Apparently.
407--> '''Archer:''' Are you human?\
408'''Daniels:''' More or less.
409* BodyHorror: When he reappears in "Storm Front", he's... not in a good way. Due to time going all monkey-flark, various parts of his body are different ages.
410* CovertGroupWithMundaneFront: "Captain's steward" is probably the least-illustrious position on the ship... but it gives him immediate access to Archer and allows him to build up a base of trust, while allowing him to observe events from an inconspicuous position.
411%%* HeyYou
412* DeathIsCheap: Doubtlessly owing to the fact that he's a time traveler. When he shows up after getting shot in his first episode, he tells Archer that he only died "in a manner of speaking." [[spoiler:It happens again in the Season 4 opener. And unhappens in the second half of the Season 4 opener.]]
413* TheMole: A benevolent one, as he was assigned to protect ''Enterprise'' in general and Archer in particular.
414* NeverGiveTheCaptainAStraightAnswer: {{Justified|Trope}} since he can't say too much or risk messing up the timeline.
415* NiceJobBreakingItHero: His bringing Archer to the future causes the destruction of the entire Federation, stranding the two of them in a ruined 31st century. "Whoops" just doesn't quite cut it here.
416* NoNameGiven: His first name is never revealed. (If he ''has'' one.)
417* PutOnABus: Once the Temporal Cold War arc ends with "Storm Front", Archer tells him to get the hell out of his life and never come back. And he doesn't.
418* RememberTheNewGuy: He doesn't actually show up until the episode where he reveals his identity.
419* TimePolice: He's a temporal agent from the Federation of the 31st century and gives Archer various assignments, which Archer is never happy about.
420[[/folder]]
421
422!!Villains
423!!!The Suliban
424[[folder:Silik]]
425!!Silik
426[[quoteright:225:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/trek_silik_7180.jpg]]
427!!!'''Played By:''' Creator/JohnFleck
428
429Archer and Daniels' main adversary in the Temporal Cold War. He's the head of the Suliban Cabal, a group of genetically-enhanced Suliban who want to change history to their advantage, which is apparently to humanity's disadvantage.
430----
431* ArcVillain: He's the main bad guy of Season 1, doesn't show up as much in the second season, and is largely replaced by the Xindi in the third. He comes back for the Season 4 opener.
432* EnemyMine: He teams up with Archer to fight Vosk in "Storm Front" because Vosk wants to destroy the Suliban too.
433* FirstNameBasis: He's fond of calling Archer "Jonathan."
434%%* HeyYou
435* KarmaHoudini: In "Shockwave, Part 2," he escapes after helping cause massive destruction in the preceding episode.
436* KilledOffForReal: [[spoiler:In the fourth season opener.]]
437* LEGOGenetics: He can shapeshift and compress his body to squeeze through narrow spaces thanks to genetic modifications.
438* SmugSnake: Often. In "Storm Front, Part 2," it gets him assaulted by Archer.
439* WorthyOpponent: He calls Archer one in "Storm Front."
440[[/folder]]
441
442[[folder:"Future Guy"]]
443!!"Future Guy"
444[[quoteright:225:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/trek_futureguy_5089.jpg]]
445!!!'''Played By:''' Creator/JamesHoran
446
447The Suliban Cabal's MysteriousEmployer from the future, who gifts them genetic enhancements in exchange for their obedience. Though primarily an antagonist to the crew of the ''Enterprise'', little is known about his true motivations.
448
449His role is expanded in the Literature/StarTrekNovelverse, where he is known InUniverse as "[[Characters/StarTrekDepartmentOfTemporalInvestigations The Sponsor]]". ''VideoGame/StarTrekOnline'' similarly went this route, dubbing their version "[[Characters/StarTrekOnlineTemporalColdWarFactions The Envoy]]".
450----
451* AscendedMeme: Fans dubbed him "Future Guy." Then the writers started labeling him that in scripts.
452* BigBad: Of the Temporal Cold War arc.
453* EnemyMine: While he is clearly manipulating the timeline to his own ends, he tells Archer about the Xindi and their plan to destroy Earth because he considers their benefactors to be a far greater threat. Given what we later learn about the Sphere Builders and their long-term plans, he did have a common enemy with Archer.
454* {{Expy}}: As the shadowy benefactor of a group of alien antagonists who appears via a blue-tinted hologram, his role is reminiscent of Darth Sidious in ''Film/ThePhantomMenace.''
455* TheFaceless: We don't ever see his face.
456* HiddenAgendaVillain: We never actually find out what he's changing history ''for''. [[spoiler:In the Franchise/StarTrekExpandedUniverse, it's revealed that his manipulations of time were motivated by a desire to ensure his own existence, making him something of an AntiVillain. In ''VideoGame/StarTrekOnline'', he's instead a [[Series/StarTrekVoyager Krenim]] scientist out to destroy the Federation to avenge the loss of his wife and unborn child thanks to a Federation-involved temporal incursion.]]
457%%* MakeWrongWhatOnceWentRight
458* TheManBehindTheMan: For the Suliban Cabal; they follow his orders.
459* TheOmniscientCouncilOfVagueness: A one-man band version.
460* SetRightWhatOnceWentWrong: He tells Archer about the Xindi attack to ensure Earth won't be destroyed. At first, he seems motivated by little else than EvenEvilHasStandards but, as Season 3 later reveals, had the Xindi succeeded, it would've doomed the entire galaxy.
461* SinisterSilhouettes: We only see him like one of these.
462* WhatMightHaveBeen: WordOfGod has it that the original "idea" was that "Future Guy" was originally supposed to be a ''Romulan'', presumably tampering with the timeline so as to ensure victory for the Empire in the upcoming (for Archer and company) Earth-Romulan War. As time went on and the Temporal Cold War was developed further (such as it was), the Romulan idea was dropped. Years after the fact and with the Temporal Cold War still unresolved, Brannon Braga [[http://img1.wikia.nocookie.net/__cb20121129115935/memoryalpha/en/images/7/7c/Braga_reveals_Future_Guy.jpg casually dropped the reveal]] that, well... [[FutureMeScaresMe Archer did it]]. (This reading, if it is to be believed, makes the time travel arc even more nonsensical.)
463[[/folder]]
464
465!!!The Xindi
466[[folder:Degra]]
467!!Degra
468!!!'''Played By:''' Creator/RandyOglesby
469
470A Xindi-Primate leader and the man who fired the prototype weapon on Earth. Killing seven million people has a profound effect on him, eventually making him open to talking with Archer.
471----
472* AntiVillain: He truly believes it's a choice between his people or humans. When Archer proves that he's been lied to, Degra allies with him.
473* FamilyValuesVillain: Has a wife and two children. He wants to protect them, but being a father also gives him a lot of guilt thinking about how many children he killed on Earth.
474* HeelFaceTurn: After Archer reveals to Degra that the Xindi are being manipulated, Degra becomes an ally of the Enterprise crew.
475* IDidWhatIHadToDo: This is what he continually tells himself about attacking humanity.
476* MindRape: Archer subjected him to amnesia and a prison break simulation to try and get information on the Xindi superweapon from him.
477* PunctuatedForEmphasis: In his defense, he's under a lot of stress throughout the third season.
478[[/folder]]
479
480[[folder:Mallora]]
481!!Mallora
482!!!'''Played By:''' Creator/TuckerSmallwood
483
484The second Xindi-Primate representative and Chairman of the Xindi Council.
485----
486* AllThereInTheManual: He isn't named in the show. His name comes from the novelization of "The Expanse"/"The Xindi."
487* AntiVillain: He's doing what he believes is in the best interest of the Xindi people, because his gods have lied to him.
488* EveryoneHasStandards: He's utterly disgusted by the Reptilians' aggressive callousness.
489* HeelFaceTurn: He initially believes that humans are a threat and must be destroyed. He also suspects that Archer might have manufactured his supposed evidence in a desperate bid to save his world. But he slowly becomes convinced that he's telling the truth, and once Dolim murders Degra and steals the weapon, he does everything in his power to help Archer destroy it.
490* ReasonableAuthorityFigure: While he doesn't initially believe Archer's testimony, he does his utmost to ensure that he gets to say what he came to say.
491[[/folder]]
492
493[[folder:Jannar]]
494!!Jannar
495!!!'''Played By:''' Creator/RickWorthy
496
497The Xindi-Arboreal leader, and a friend and confidant of Degra.
498----
499* AgentScully: When he and Degra visit ''Enterprise'' to see Archer's evidence, Jannar is not as easily convinced.
500* WhyDidItHaveToBeSnakes: His people don't like water, making him uncomfortable on an Aquatic ship.
501[[/folder]]
502
503[[folder:Kiaphet Amman'sor]]
504!!Kiaphet Amman'sor
505!!!'''Played By:''' N/A
506
507The Xindi-Aquatic leader.
508----
509* ReasonableAuthorityFigure: She's usually the one keeping the other Xindi from going at each other's throats. She's also willing to listen to Archer, even though swaying her is no simple task.
510* TheSmurfettePrinciple: She is the only female Xindi seen on screen.
511[[/folder]]
512
513[[folder:Dolim]]
514!!Dolim
515!!!'''Played By:''' Creator/ScottMacDonald
516
517The Xindi-Reptilian leader. He's very eager to carry out his people's mission to destroy humanity.
518----
519* BerserkButton: Any insults to his intelligence.
520* DragonAscendant: Takes center stage as the main villain in the last part of Season 3, working to forward the Sphere-Builder plan.
521* EvenEvilHasStandards: Dolim gets more than a little ticked off at the Sphere-Builders for his having to create a rift among the Xindi Council. [[DownplayedTrope Milder than most examples of the trope, though.]]
522* FantasticRacism: He holds a strong contempt towards the human race. And generally anything that's not a reptile.
523* GeneralRipper: And ''how''.
524* OffingTheOffspring: Degra recounts a story about how Dolim's daughter gave birth to a son was born with a deformity which wasn't life-threatening but would've prevented him from serving in the military. Dolim thus had his own grandson poisoned. While Degra notes it might not be true, what we see of Dolim is enough to suggest it easily could be.
525* ReptilesAreAbhorrent: Of all the Xindi, he's the only one who remains unwilling to listen to Archer's side.
526* TheSocialDarwinist: Sneers at the fate of the Xindi-Avians, claiming the Xindi Council's world smells "of a race that ''failed'' to survive".
527* UnwittingPawn: [[spoiler:For the Sphere-Builders's plan to wipe out all life in the galaxy.]]
528* WhyAmITicking: [[spoiler:Archer kills him by sticking a bomb on him.]]
529* YouHaveFailedMe: Seems to love threatening to do this...and occasionally carrying it out.
530[[/folder]]
531
532[[folder:The Insectoid Councilor]]
533!!The Insectoid Councilor
534!!!'''Played by:''' Tarik Ergin (CGI stand-in)
535
536The leader of the Xindi-Insectoids and ally of Dolim.
537----
538* BloodKnight: While Dolim demonstrates tactical sensibilities, the Insectoid wishes to jump in and destroy ''Enterprise'' right away.
539* HeelFaceDoorSlam: After realizing that the anomalies were far too fortuitous to be a coincidence, the Insectoid becomes convinced that Archer was telling the truth. Dolim then kills it.
540* NoBiologicalSex: Insectoids are genderless and reproduce asexually.
541* NoNameGiven: According to Degra, Insectoid names become longer the older they get and so are difficult to pronounce.
542* YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness: After escaping with Dolim with the now-armed PlanetKiller, the Insectoid begins to wonder if Archer was telling the truth about the Guardians building the spheres. Dolim thanks it for its launch code and destroys its ship.
543[[/folder]]
544
545!!!Other
546
547[[folder:Duras]]
548!!Duras, Son of Toral
549!!!'''Played By:''' Creator/DanielRiordan
550
551A Klingon with a serious grudge against Archer after an incident involving refugees fleeing the Klingon Empire.
552----
553* GenerationXerox: He's just as big a ''[[PardonMyKlingon petaQ']]'' as his descendant from ''Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration''.
554* LeeroyJenkins: Even by Klingon standards, as he tries to pursue ''Enterprise'' into the Delphic Expanse, which Klingons fear so much that his own wingmen won't follow him in.
555[[/folder]]
556
557[[folder:Sphere Builder woman]]
558!!Sphere Builder woman
559!!!'''Played By:''' Josette Di Carlo
560
561A member of the Sphere Builders, a transdimensional species seeking to reconfigure the prime universe to invade it. She is the benefactor to the Xindi Council and informs them of the supposed threat from humans.
562----
563* DragonInChief: She answers to the Sphere Builder Primary, but is responsible for most of the work in getting the Xindi to build the weapon.
564* GodGuise: The Sphere Builders are worshipped by the Xindi as "the Guardians," as they helped them find habitable planets and vital resources after the destruction of their homeworld. This allows them to manipulate the Xindi into destroying Earth.
565* LastVillainStand: While Archer goes after Dolim and the weapon, ''Enterprise'' targets the primary sphere in order to disrupt the Builders' plans in case Archer fails. The woman leads a boarding party to disable ''Enterprise'', but they fail and their plans are permanently derailed with the destruction of the sphere network.
566* MakeWrongWhatOnceWentRight: The Sphere Builders are able to see alternate timelines and can see that the Federation will one day halt their invasion of the galaxy. The woman convinces the Xindi Council that humans are a threat to them in order to have them destroy Earth and prevent the Federation from ever existing.
567* TheManBehindTheMan: The Xindi are introduced as the main villains of Season 3, but it becomes clear that she and her people are the greater threat.
568* ManipulativeBastard: She tells the Xindi that a small world which never even heard of them will destroy their new homeworld in the future. When Archer manages to convince the friendly Xindi species of her deception, she tells Dolim what he wants to hear, that the Reptilians will emerge as the dominant Xindi species and rule a vast empire once Earth is destroyed.
569* NoNameGiven: She and the other Sphere Builders are never named.
570* UncertainDoom: She and the Primary are still aboard ''Enterprise'' when Trip manages to destroy their control sphere, collapsing the network and their reconfigured space. They both disappear, but it's unclear if they were pulled back to their native dimension or disintegrated completely.
571[[/folder]]
572
573[[folder:Vosk]]
574!!Vosk
575!!!'''Played By:''' Creator/JackGwaltney
576
577The leader of one of the factions in the Temporal Cold War. He allies himself with the Nazis while trapped in World War II.
578----
579* AllThereInTheManual: The name of his species, the Na'kuhl, is never mentioned on-screen.
580* AffablyEvil: He's quite polite and soft-spoken for a time-traveling intergalactic warlord who saw fit to ally with the Nazis.
581* BigNo: He screams this as ''Enterprise'' destroys the temporal conduit, killing him.
582* JustThinkOfThePotential: Vosk views time travel as no different than warp drive, a technology that can be used for the benefit of all species.
583* PiggybackingOnHitler: He works with the Nazis to obtain the materials needed to build a temporal conduit and plasma rifles. While he makes promises of advanced weaponry for the Germans, he makes no intention of giving any to them.
584* YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness: He had been stringing the German ''Generalmajor'' along with promises of advanced weapons in order to get the materials needed to build the temporal conduit. Once they're moments from activating it, he shoots the general.
585[[/folder]]
586
587[[folder:V'las]]
588!!V'las
589!!!'''Played By:''' Creator/RobertFoxworth
590
591The head of Vulcan High Command [[spoiler:who is secretly working with Romulans to unite them with the Vulcans]].
592----
593* BadBoss: He's noticeably angered and subverted the other members of the Vulcan high command, and makes one of his men TheScapegoat for the destruction of the Earth embassy.
594* CallForward: [[spoiler:He's working to reunite the Vulcans and the Romulans, a cause that Spock later takes up by the TNG era.]]
595* CastingGag: [[Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine It's not the first time]] Robert Foxworth has lead TheConspiracy in ''Franchise/StarTrek''.
596* TheConspiracy: He and some of his subordinates are acting to launch a pre-emptive strike on the Andorians, and he's trying to subject the pacifist Syrranites to ThePurge. [[spoiler:Oh, and he's working with the Romulans for reunification...]]
597* DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything: V'las' militaristic fearmongering is notably similar to Mccarthyism, as well as other political tactics that rely on creating a culture of fear.
598** Additional parallels can be drawn between the High Command's actions and the actions of the US Government during the War on Terror.
599** If one takes the comparison to Mccarthyism a step further, it can be argued that the High Command's persecution of melders, who are already queer coded, can be seen as a parallel to the Lavender Scare.
600* MoleInCharge: He's the leader of the Vulcan government, [[spoiler:and is secretly a Romulan collaborator]].[[note]] Some ExpandedUniverse materials have him actually ''be'' a Romulan who has infiltrated Vulcan society, like Talok, though this isn't indicated in canon.[[/note]]
601* PresidentEvil: The script literally notes that he's the closest thing Vulcan has to a planetary president, and the above tropes explain the evil part.
602* SmugSnake: For a supposedly emotionless Vulcan he starts ''oozing'' smugness as things go on.
603[[/folder]]
604
605[[folder:Dr. Arik Soong]]
606!!Dr. Arik Soong
607!!!'''Played By:''' Creator/BrentSpiner
608
609The ancestor of Noonien Soong, imprisoned for genetic experimentation. Archer seeks his help in tracking down a group of Augments wreaking havoc with a Klingon bird-of-prey, but Soong soon breaks away and joins his "children" in trying to prove that they're not that bad, really.
610----
611* AllThereInTheScript: His first name, Arik, is never actually mentioned onscreen.
612* AntiVillain: He causes loads of trouble for Archer (including bringing Orions down on them, which results in several crewmembers ending up in a slave auction), but when he infects a hostage with a horrific virus to make the Starfleet doctors talk, ''he's'' the one who breaks down and begs them to "let" him end it. When his Augments turn out to be inveterate assholes after all, he's quite regretful.
613* CallForward: After returning to custody, he decides to turn his attention to cybernetics, foreshadowing Data, Lore, and B-4.
614* DeadpanSnarker: He's mocking and condescending towards Archer and the ''Enterprise'' crew.
615* EvenEvilHasStandards: He doesn't like anyone getting killed. However, if he feels like it's necessary, he will allow a sacrifice to be made for his cause.
616* EvilutionaryBiologist: He was incarcerated for stealing Augment embryos and is an advocate of genetic engineering, which has been outlawed by the 22nd century.
617* FamilyValuesVillain: He considers the Augments to be his children.
618* IdenticalGrandson: At this point, some fans think that Noonien is a straight-up clone.
619** The [[Series/StarTrekPicard subsequent introduction of Adam Soong]], who was a geneticist, strongly suggests that Arik is a clone.
620* PapaWolf: He's not too thrilled to hear that Malik killed his brothers.
621* TechnoWizard: The guards only let him use paper because he once used a single [=PADD=] to open every single lock in the prison.
622* UncannyFamilyResemblance: Looks ''just'' like his descendants, Noonien Soong and Altan Inigo Soong, and by extention, Data, Lore, and B-4, as well as his ancestor, Adam Soong.
623* VillainHasAPoint: A lot of the theoretical papers he writes in prison propose cures and treatments to various diseases, including the one that killed Archer's father. Phlox also agrees that gene therapy is useful (and widely practiced in Denobulan medicine), but believes that humanity's experience with the type that Soong wants justifies their zero-tolerance policy on it. Archer admits at one point that much of Soong's work hasn't been destroyed as he believed, but has been taken and used where possible, assuring the doctor that his work is recognised despite his personal reputation.
624* WellIntentionedExtremist: He wanted to prove that genetically-engineered humans didn't always have to turn out like Khan. Unfortunately, his "kids" have turned out like Khan.
625[[/folder]]
626
627[[folder:Malik]]
628!!Malik
629!!!'''Played By:''' Alec Newman, Jordan Orr (young)
630
631One of the Augment children Aurik Soong raised, who has his own plans for what to do.
632----
633* ArcVillain: For the Augment arc.
634* BewareTheSuperman: Exhibit B for why genetic engineering is banned on Earth, after Khan. Malik's stronger, faster and smarter than any human... and a raging egotistical maniac who listens to no-one. He lacks Khan's veneer of affability or culture.
635* KickTheDog: Murdering Smyke, one of his fellow Augments, for not being Augment enough.
636* SmugSuper: Why yes, he is aware he's more dangerous than the average human. Very aware. He even tells Archer he's going to attack him, seconds before he does just that.
637* TheStarscream: Starts off by murdering the head Augment to be the chief himself.
638
639[[/folder]]
640
641[[folder:Admiral Valdore]]
642!!Admiral Valdore
643[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/valdore.jpg]]
644[[caption-width-right:350:''"We're all soldiers, Nijil, from the moment we're born. When we forget that we invite disaster."'']]
645!!!'''Played By:''' Creator/BrianThompson
646
647A Romulan officer plotting to avert the alliance that will eventually become TheFederation.
648----
649* AllOfTheOtherReindeer: Once a Senator, Valdore was ostracized from the Romulan Senate and removed by his fellow Senators for openly questioning the Romulan Star Empire's policy of expansionism.
650* CallForward: By the time of ''Film/StarTrekNemesis'' he will have a [[https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Valdore_(starship) Romulan ship]] named after him.
651* OldShame: InUniverse, he once questioned the policy of Romulan expansionism and was booted out of the Senate for it. He since vowed to never make that mistake again.
652* VindicatedByHistory: In-universe, it seems. Despite his failure to disrupt and defeat the Coalition of Planets, and his prior disgraces, Valdore eventually, as noted above, has not just a starship named after him, but the flagship of the Romulan Navy, no less. Given the time frame of his appearance, his doings and his rank, it is likely that he went on to distinguish himself during the [[GreatOffscreenWar Earth-Romulan War]].
653[[/folder]]
654
655[[folder:John Frederick Paxton]]
656!!John Frederick Paxton
657!!!'''Played By:''' Creator/PeterWeller
658
659The leader of Terra Prime, a supremacist group that wants aliens to leave Earth. He creates a binary clone of a Vulcan-Human child from Trip and T'Pol's [=DNA=] to show the "horror" of what's to come.
660----
661* BenevolentBoss: He's rather nice and respectful to his {{mooks}}, as long as [[YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness they haven't outlived their usefulness]].
662* BigBadWannabe: Sees himself as a historically significant leader. His movement amounted to absolutely nothing. Not only did humanity not embrace his xenophobia, they became the most important founding members of the Federation, the antithesis of everything Paxton believed in.
663** Just to hammer in what a cosmic loser he was, he created a half-human half-vulcan clone as a propaganda tool, believing that people would be horrified by the notion of such a thing existing, and that it wouldn’t be able to survive because it’s two halves would be at war with each other. One of history’s most revered heroes ended up being a [[Characters/StarTrekTheOriginalSeriesSpock half-vulcan half-human]] who was renowned for his achievements in fostering positive relations among alien races.
664* BondVillainStupidity: Somehow thought that he could force [[GadgeteerGenius Trip]] to repair his KillSat and he wouldn’t be able to sabotage it.
665* BreakThemByTalking: He attempts to inflame Archer's old prejudice against Vulcans with barbs about how his father was held back by them.
666* CatchPhrase: "Terra Prime... forever."
667* ChekhovsSkill: Due to many years working as a Martian miner, he's able to continue functioning in a low oxygen environment, overpowering Archer and firing his superweapon in the episode's finale. Fortunately, Tucker is able to redirect it harmlessly into the ocean.
668* DeadpanSnarker: He delivers a handful of darkly witty lines.
669* FantasticRacism: Although much of his group was inflamed by the Xindi attacks, Paxton himself applies the views of Colonel Phillip Green, a 21st-century eco-terrorist who ordered the murder of hundreds of thousands of humans suffering from radiation sickness so their descendants wouldn't suffer.
670* FinalBoss: The BigBad of the "Terra Prime" two-parter, he's the last major villain faced by Archer's ''Enterprise'' and ultimately humanity's final obstacle to the formation of what will become the Federation, with the Rigel pirates from "These are the Voyages" serving as a PostFinalBoss of sorts.
671* HostageSituation: He points a giant space cannon at Starfleet Command and orders all non-humans out of the Sol system or he fires.
672* {{Hypocrite}}: He espouses anti-alien views, yet he relies on Rigelian gene therapy to extend his own life due to being addled with Taggart's Syndrome. T'Pol threatens to tell his followers, but he scoffs at the idea of them trusting an alien over himself. His disease also means that if he had lived during the Post-Atomic Horror, his idol Colonel Green would've had him euthanized.
673* KilledOffscreen: The ''Literature/StarTrekEnterpriseRelaunch'' novels confirm that Paxton did go to prison for his crimes and died there of Taggart's Syndrome.
674* MissingStepsPlan: Overlaps with EvilCannotComprehendGood. He created a human-vulcan hybrid clone as a propaganda tool. Why he thought that the sight of a completely harmless innocent baby would turn anyone who wasn’t already a FantasticRacist into one, was never explained.
675* TemptingFate: When T’Pol tells him he is not significant, he says “History will decide if I’m significant.” Considering that he hasn’t been mentioned in the history of the franchise [[RememberTheNewGuy before]] or since, it seems history judged him to be quite insignificant.
676* YouHaveFailedMe: He orders the baby's minder killed for getting too attached to her.
677[[/folder]]
678
679!!Other recurring characters
680[[folder:Soval]]
681!!Soval
682[[quoteright:225:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/trek_soval_570.jpg]]
683!!!'''Played By:''' Creator/GaryGraham
684
685->''"We don't know what to do about Humans. Of all the species we've made contact with, [[HumansAreSpecial yours is the only one we can't define]]. You have the arrogance of Andorians, the stubborn pride of Tellarites. One moment, you're as driven by your emotions as Klingons, and the next, you confound us by suddenly embracing logic."''
686
687The Vulcan ambassador, he doesn't trust humans one bit and attempts at all costs to stump them at every turn. T'Pol was his original partner in crime, until she [[BecomingTheMask became the mask]] and decided she'd rather throw her lot in with the humans.
688----
689* {{Ambadassador}}: He has since left that part of his life behind, but a hundred years before the start of the series, Soval was a member of the Intelligence division of the Vulcan High Command. He negotiated one of their original treaties with the Andorians while he was stationed on an occupied planet as part of the occupying forces, and when he returns to that same planet a hundred years later, he is able to keep walking and shooting (albeit without hitting anything) even after having been shot.
690* AssInAmbassador: Soval is an annoying {{Jerkass}} until [[spoiler:Admiral Forrest gets killed off trying to protect him in the fourth season]]. ''Then'' he cooperates with Archer. And even then, he's kinda pushy.
691* ClosetGay: Allegorically. Soval is a member of the minority of Vulcans believed to be able to [[MentalFusion mind meld]]. Previously, this group [[Recap/StarTrekEnterpriseS02E014Stigma has been used by the writers as an allegory for the queer community]]. Though this allegory is later [[DeconstructedTrope deconstructed]], the reveal that Soval is a melder happens before that deconstruction occurs, and some aspects of the allegory, such as the type of descrimination melders face, [[ReconstructedTrope still apply even after the deconstruction]]. This allegorical connection is strengthened by the fact that Soval [[ComingOutStory outing himself]] [[OutOfTheClosetIntoTheFire directly leads to him being fired by the High Command]].
692* GentlemanSnarker: In his better moments.
693-->'''Soval:''' You heard Captain Archer: The "ball" is in our "court."
694** Another notable instance of this occurs while he's ''[[OutOfTheClosetIntoTheFire being fired]]'' by the ''High Command''.
695-->'''Soval:''' Had I revealed my abilities as a melder, my years of service would not have been possible.
696-->'''Minister Kuvak:''' Your accomplishments have been noteworthy.
697-->'''Administrator V'las:''' They don't justify deception.
698-->'''Soval:''' Deception has never been a stranger to this room.
699* HiddenDepths: When [[QueerEstablishingMoment the audience learns he's a melder]], it's also shown that he knows ''how'' to mind meld, implying that he has actively been a part of this marginalized community for a significant amount of time, but has had to hide it to protect his career.
700* InsultBackfire: When he says he's developed an affinity for Earth and its people, Trip remarks that he did a pretty good job of hiding it. Naturally, Soval takes this as a compliment.
701* JerkassHasAPoint: His skepticism of humans becomes clearer in "The Forge," where he explains to Forrest that he (and other Vulcans) have long noticed an uncomfortable similarity to themselves. Both species were nearly wiped out by war, managed to re-build their worlds and then began exploring the galaxy, but while it took Vulcans 1500 years to do so, humans did it in less than 100.
702-->'''Soval:''' ''[to Forrest]'' There are those on the High Command who wonder [[HumansAdvanceSwiftly what humans would accomplish in the century to come]], and they don't like the answer.
703* KnightInSourArmor: In the MirrorUniverse, he's a former idealist beaten down by the brutal Terran Empire. As with Mirror Spock, he has a BeardOfEvil but is not evil himself.
704* ObstructiveBureaucrat: What he starts off as, being the mouthpiece of the Vulcan High Command's disapproving views (and it's implied, motivated a little bit by a total lack of faith in Archer himself).
705* SuddenPrincipledStand: Arguably several in the Vulcan Reformation Arc in Season 4. First he alerts Archer to the aspects of the explanation the High Command has provided for the Embassy bombing that [[TheConspiracy don't line up]]. Then he defies the High Command more openly by agreeing to use his mind melding abilities to help find the real culprit behind the bombing, despite likely knowing that this would get him fired. Finally, he warns the Andorians of the High Command's plan to launch an unjustified preemptive strike on their homeworld.
706* SurroundedByIdiots: Seems to be his normal attitude, particularly when in a non-Vulcan environment. Still, even Vulcans are not immune, as indicated by his attitude in Season 4 when standing before the ''High Command''.
707* TookALevelInBadass: Despite being a desk-bound ObstructiveBureaucrat, Soval manages to withstand Shran's ColdBloodedTorture and win the Andorian's respect for not breaking.
708-->'''Soval:''' Release me!
709-->'''Shran:''' I can't. Not until I'm certain you've told us the truth.
710-->'''Soval:''' Then I suggest you increase the setting and get this over with.
711** His outing himself as a member of a ''heavily persecuted'' minority to the ''head'' of the ''High Command'' also arguably counts.
712* TookALevelInKindness: He becomes much more cooperative with Archer and the ''Enterprise'' crew come Season 4.
713[[/folder]]
714
715[[folder:Commander Thy'lek Shran]]
716!!Commander Thy'lek Shran
717[[quoteright:225:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/trek_shran_8414.jpg]]
718!!!'''Played By:''' Creator/JeffreyCombs
719
720->''"Tell Archer that's ''two'' he owes me!"''
721
722An officer in the Andorian Imperial Guard and captain of the battle cruiser ''Kumari''. Although Andorian interests often put him at odds with the ''Enterprise'' crew, Shran and Archer develop a mutual respect and end up working together on a number of occasions. He would have become a main cast member in the unproduced fifth season, had the show not been cancelled.
723----
724* ByronicHero: In fact, ALL Andorians are walking Romanticism incarnate, praising emotion and the experience of passion; ritualizing the concept of a duel to settle differences, housing probably the greatest Art Academy in the United Federation of Planets...and thoroughly disagreeing with Vulcans (Realists and Rationalists).
725* TheCavalry: Shows up in the nick of time and [[spoiler:destroys a Xindi warship that was about to shoot down Archer's shuttle]] which, in turn, would have allowed the Xindi superweapon to destroy Earth unopposed.
726* CommandingCoolness: Probably the coolest individual to hold that rank in the entire franchise.
727* CommonalityConnection: In Season 4, upon learning of the long history of ''Enterprise'' from Archer, Shran relates that his ship, the ''Kumari'', was similarly named for the first ice cutter to circumnavigate Andoria. It's the first moment in which their animosity begins making way to a true friendship.
728* DebtDetester: Specifically to Archer, though it's a ZigzaggedTrope with YouOweMe. However, this back-and-forth provides a basis for trust between two men who aren't always on the same side due to politics or opposing values.
729* FaceHeelRevolvingDoor: He starts as an antagonist, but then he helps Archer because he feels a personal debt, but then he's robbing a Xindi prototype from him, but then he's TheCavalry... Mainly, it's because he personally likes and trusts Archer and ''Enterprise'', but the Imperial Guard is always ordering him to oppose Archer.
730* FourStarBadass: In the alternate future glimpsed in "Twilight", he's eventually promoted to the rank of General and continues to be an ally of the NX-01 crew, providing Tucker with Andorian shield generators to install aboard ''Enterprise'' to fight the Xindi with. Later in the Prime Timeline, he also becomes a General sometime prior to the signing of the Federation Charter, and even names Archer as an honorary member of the Andorian Imperial Guard.
731%%* HeroOfAnotherStory
732%%* LargeHam
733* MyCountryRightOrWrong: He's a loyal servant of the Andorian Imperial Guard, and will follow their orders even if he doesn't like them. Even if he ''really'' doesn't like them, like having to torture a man to confirm he's telling the truth.
734* NoGuyWantsAnAmazon: {{Averted|Trope}}; his NumberTwo Talas makes what he describes as an aggressive overture towards him, leaving Shran with a choice of charging her with assaulting a superior or mating with her.
735* ObfuscatingStupidity: Plays at being a greedy miner looking for minerals to fool some Xindi weapons testers.
736* OddFriendship: Develops one with Archer.
737* PoliticallyIncorrectHero: More than a little racist towards Vulcans, Tellarites, and "pinkskins" (humans).
738* ProperlyParanoid: Most notably in "The Andorian Incident."
739* ProudWarriorRaceGuy: He's quite a busy one, commanding an infantry regiment on a contested colony and also having his own ship for over a decade.
740* SecondLove: [[spoiler:After the death of Talas, he eventually moves on and, by the time of "These Are the Voyages", has married the Aenar Jhamel.]]
741* SourSupporter: Somewhat in "Proving Ground." He does as he's told, but tries to convince his superior that humans could be a valuable ally instead of mere pawns to be manipulated.
742* WithFriendsLikeThese: Although arrogant, militant, and speciesist (his favorite nickname for Archer is "pinkskin," and he loathes Vulcans and Tellarites), he has a strong sense of personal obligation and provides more practical help than humanity's Vulcan "allies" during the Xindi crisis. Nevertheless, Shran often causes as many problems as he helps to solve.
743[[/folder]]
744
745[[folder:T'Pau]]
746!!T'Pau
747[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/tpau_7945.png]]
748!!!'''Played By:''' Creator/KaraZediker
749
750A leader of the Syrannite sect, which is considered to be dangerous extremists by mainstream Vulcans. Archer and T'Pol search for her when her [=DNA=] is found on the bomb that destroyed the Earth embassy. She's the same T'Pau who turns down a Federation council seat and officiates Spock's wedding in [[Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries TOS]].
751----
752%%* CallForward: Her presence.
753* FantasticRacism: She's mistrustful of humans and thinks the only reason Syrran mind-melded with Archer was because there was no other choice. She's rather taken aback when Surak's ''katra'' ''chooses'' to stay in Archer's head and re-evaluates her views.
754* ForegoneConclusion: That she was framed. It's not that likely that the distinguished figure Kirk wants to impress was ''really'' a terrorist who once attacked Earth's embassy [[spoiler:and caused the death of Admiral Forrest]].
755* TheFundamentalist: She and the other Syrranites are accused of this, and they have to live in a particularly brutal part of Vulcan to avoid persecution. In truth, they're much better followers of logic than 22nd-century Vulcan society.
756* GoodIsNotNice: She openly says she would try and force Surak's ''katra'' out of Archer even if he wasn't volunteering, justifying [[Series/StarTrekVoyager B'Elanna]]'s statement that she could be "ruthless" in her logic. She is, however, rather nice to T'Pol [[spoiler:after T'Pol's mother dies]].
757* OlderAndWiser: {{Inverted|Trope}}. T'Pau is very logical and driven in her younger days, but she's also mistrustful and doesn't yet have the benefit of Surak's original teachings to guide her.
758* TheSpock: To Archer's chagrin, she shoves him down an escape tunnel with the ''Kir'Shara'' rather than letting him retrieve T'Pol, who was knocked out in the fight with Vulcan cops. Getting the artifact to the capital is more important.[[note]]T'Pol, [[TheSpock of course]], doesn't skip a beat when she comes around and immediately tries to misdirect said cops when she wakes up.[[/note]]
759[[/folder]]

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