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Shiboline M'Ress

  • 1.2 Early Life
  • 1.3.1 Enterprise
  • 1.4 The 24th century
  • 2.1 Appearances
  • 2.2 References
  • 3.1 External links

History [ ]

M'Ress has three littermates , and comes from a long family-line. Her parents are both honored Caitian citizens. Some wonder if she had a connection to Egyptian goddess Bast-Ra , based on her similar appearance. ( ST website : StarTrek.com )

Early Life [ ]

During her school days , M'Ress specialised in history , sociology , and anthropology , but found difficulty with spatial engineering . Her main hobby all her life was poetry . ( TAS novelization : The Ambergris Element )

Starfleet [ ]

Mress

M'Ress attended Starfleet Academy as its youngest-ever entrant, aged just sixteen in December 2260 , and was the roommate of a Human female called Lena Goldblum . After her graduation in 2266 - in which M'Ress came 22nd highest out of 400 cadets graduating, M'Ress was assigned to USS Hood as a Third-Shift communications officer with the rank of Ensign . When the ship's entire bridge crew were later killed in a Kzinti attack, M'Ress was the highest-ranking communications officer left, and took initiative in deceiving the Kzin long enough for the Hood to summon help. She served aboard a scoutship , and earned the rank of lieutenant in only two years . ( TAS novelization : The Ambergris Element , ST website : StarTrek.com )

Enterprise [ ]

M'Ress later served on the USS Enterprise under Captain James T. Kirk in 2269 and 2270 , first joining the crew in the former year during a crew rotation at Starbase 8 , as a Communications trainee under Lt. Uhura . ( TOS novel : The Face of the Unknown , TAS episode : " The Survivor ", et al .)

She later served under Kirk again, this time on the USS Enterprise -A in 2286 and 2287 . ( DC Comics first series, issues #37-56) M'Ress, along Commander Uhura and Ensign Sherwood helped Ensign Nancy Bryce paint her up as a green Orion dancer. They were then allowed to come in to Ensign Konom 's bachelor party , where she got a little drunk. M'Ress then got together with an equally drunk Hikaru Sulu . ( TOS comic : " The Stars in Secret Influence ") The next day, M'Ress openly flirted with Sulu on the bridge. She then received a message from Klingon commander Kron , informing her of the captain's and his team's status. ( TOS - Who Killed Captain Kirk? comic : " Aspiring to be Angels ")

She then attended the wedding of Ensigns Konom and Nancy Bryce. When Sulu caught Bryce's wedding bouquet , M'Ress asked as to why he felt upset. Pavel Chekov told her about how whoever caught the bouquet would be married next. When Sulu left the wedding, M'Ress asked Chekov what was bothering Sulu, to which Chekov said, "Sulu's inscrutable." M'Ress then confronted Sulu in the turbolift as to why he was avoiding her. Sulu told her that what happened between them at Konom's bachelor party, since he was drunk and not thinking right, that it should not have ever happened. M'Ress replied that it did happen, and despite being different species, that they could just fool around. The two of them then went to the bridge, where something appeared on sensors . ( TOS - Who Killed Captain Kirk? comic : " Haunted Honeymoon ")

M'Ress, along with the rest of the bridge officers, started to see hallucinations being created by Lt. Castille . In these hallucinations, M'Ress had to swim through water . She then saw Spock speaking with Plato , Socrates , and Euclid . M'Ress and Sulu then fought against Trojan warriors . She was then attacked by a dragon and was then rescued by Sulu. M'Ress then rescued Sulu from Medusa by using her sense of smell and hearing to behead Medusa. The two of them then shared in a kiss . ( TOS - Who Killed Captain Kirk? comic : " Hell in a Handbasket ")

The 24th century [ ]

Via a time-portal , not dissimilar to an Iconian Gateway , M'Ress found herself in the late 24th century . Strangely enough, her old shipmate aboard the Enterprise , Arex , was similarly displaced in time , and both were posted on the USS Trident under Captain Elizabeth Shelby. ( NF novel : Cold Wars )

In 2376 , the Selelvian Gleau , also serving on board the USS Trident , mentally assaulted M'Ress. When she told the superior officers , they didn't believe her. Only Mueller and Janos believed her. When Gleau was murdered , she was one of the suspects. The evidence, though, supported the theory that her close friend and lover, Janos, instead was the person who so brutally killed the Selelvian. ( NF novels : Gods Above , Stone and Anvil )

Appendices [ ]

Appearances [ ], references [ ].

  • ↑ TOS reference : Who's Who in Star Trek 2

Connections [ ]

External links [ ].

  • Shiboline M'Ress article at Memory Alpha , the wiki for canon Star Trek .
  • StarTrek.com: M'Ress
  • 1 Ferengi Rules of Acquisition
  • 2 Odyssey class
  • 3 Constitution class

Lieutenant M'Ress was a Caitian Starfleet officer who lived during the mid-23rd century. She served in the operations division aboard the U.S.S. Enterprise under Captain James T. Kirk , during the five-year mission that starship undertook. From 2269 to 2270, M'Ress served as a communications officer under Nyota Uhura .

M'Ress appeared only in Star Trek: The Animated Series , where she was voiced by Majel Barrett.

star trek animated series m'ress

External Links

  • M'Ress at Memory Alpha
  • Pages using DynamicPageList parser function
  • Appears in The Animated Series

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Published Jan 4, 2019

Star Trek 101: Arex and M'Ress

All about these two colorful characters, Arex and M'Ress

The Animated Series

startrek.com

Star Trek 101 debuted in October 2016 -- and the latest regular StarTrek.com column serves two functions: succinctly introduce Star Trek newcomers to the basic foundations and elements of the franchise and refresh the memories of longtime Trek fans. We're pulling our entries from the book Star Trek 101: A Practical Guide to Who, What, Where, And Why , written by Terry J. Erdmann & Paula M. Block and published in 2008 by Pocket Books. An invaluable resource, it encompasses The Original Series , The Animated Series , The Next Generation , Deep Space Nine , Voyager and Enterprise , as well as the first 10 Trek feature films.

Today, we share Star Trek 101 's files on two colorful characters from The Animated Series , Arex and M'Ress.

star trek animated series m'ress

AREX (James Doohan), navigator

"Approaching parking orbit, Capain."

star trek animated series m'ress

Arex sits next to Sulu on the bridge and handles the ship's navigational functions. He has a bright red complexion and yellow eyes. Although Arex's planet of origin isn't mentioned in the episodes, the background notes for the show indicate that he is from Edos, where the number three obviously is popular. His people have three arms, three legs and three fingers on each hand.

Key Arex Episode:

" Mudd's Passion "

star trek animated series m'ress

M'Ress (Majel Barrett), communications officer

"You're funny -- and very attractive for a human." -- "Mudd's Passion"

star trek animated series m'ress

Lieutenant M'Ress is an attractive feline who serves as the ship's relief communications officer. Like Arex, M'Ress' homeworld was never mentioned on air. However, background notes for the show suggest that she's from the planet Cait, in the Lynx system. Visually, she's a cross between a lioness and a shapely human female. Although Earth's lions don't sport manes, M'Ress has long flowing locks on her head, which emphasize her femininity. Her voice is soft and sexy, and she tends to use throaty purrs for punctuation.

Key M'Ress episode:

"Mudd's Passion"

Paula M. Block and Terry J. Erdmann are coauthors of numerous books about the entertainment industry, including Star Trek 101; Star Trek Costumes: Fifty Years of Fashion from the Final Frontier; Star Trek: The Original Series 365 ; and Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion . They currently are writing the latest in their series of Ferengi novellas, which (so far) includes Lust’s Latinum Lost (and Found) ; and Rules of Accusation . Their most recent non- Star Trek book is Labyrinth: The Ultimate Visual History .

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Memory Alpha

  • 3 Individuals
  • 4.1 Appearances
  • 4.2 Background information
  • 4.3 Apocrypha
  • 4.4 External links

History [ ]

Hundreds of years before the 24th century , Caitians hunted and ate Betazoids . After this practice was discontinued, the Caitians developed a synthetic substitute for Betazoid flesh . ( LD : " Empathological Fallacies ")

Caitians were attending Starfleet Academy by the early 2250s , and the Caitian homeworld was a Federation member with members on the Federation Council by 2286 . ( DIS : " Brother "; Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home ) Caitians were present on Qualor II in 2381 . ( LD : " We'll Always Have Tom Paris ")

In the alternate reality , Caitians were present on Earth by 2259 . ( Star Trek Into Darkness )

Biology [ ]

Caitian child

A Caitian child

Caitians exhibited feline features, such as short faces , triangular ears , large eyes with vertically slitted pupils , whiskers , fangs , and a tail . Most were entirely covered with fur that could be orange , brown , gray , or black , and could also be solid, multicolored, or patterned. Some Caitians had four fingers (including a thumb) on each hand , while others had five. Additionally, the feet of some Caitians possessed a digitigrade configuration, while others had a plantigrade foot structure. There were also at least a few Caitians who had a very different, more Human -like appearance. ( Star Trek: The Animated Series ; Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home ; Star Trek Into Darkness ; Star Trek: Lower Decks ; PRO : " Lost and Found ")

When they needed to move quickly, Caitians could switch to quadrupedal locomotion, displaying feline agility and reaction times. They had sharp claws on their hands and feet, which led some to prefer going without footwear . Their claws could be used combatively, or to scale vertical surfaces, such as cliffs . ( Star Trek: The Animated Series ; LD : " Mugato, Gumato ", " I, Excretus ", " wej Duj "; PRO : " A Moral Star, Part 2 ")

The voices of some female Caitians had a soft purring quality. Agitated Caitians could also make a variety of cat -like hisses and yowls. ( Star Trek: The Animated Series ; Star Trek: Lower Decks )

Caitians experienced several hormonal cycles. One of these was the need to have sex once a year , or else their hormones would drive them crazy ; this could be alleviated using a libido post . Caitian females had coital hooks as part of their reproductive anatomy . When stressed , Caitians enjoyed playing inside boxes . ( LD : " No Small Parts ", " We'll Always Have Tom Paris ")

Caitians were mainly carnivorous, and skilled hunters. In the past, they had no qualms about hunting Betazoids , a fellow sentient race, for food. Caitian doctors took an oath not to consume their patients. Even so, they could still determine the specific presence of Betazoids just by scent and considered the smell to be delectable. ( LD : " Empathological Fallacies ")

Individuals [ ]

  • Unnamed Caitians

Appendices [ ]

Appearances [ ].

A list of all appearances of Caitians (excluding the regular appearances of T'Ana):

  • " The Survivor "
  • " Once Upon a Planet "
  • " Mudd's Passion "
  • " The Eye of the Beholder "
  • " The Practical Joker "
  • Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home
  • Star Trek Into Darkness
  • " Temporal Edict "
  • " Crisis Point " ( hologram )
  • " We'll Always Have Tom Paris "
  • " An Embarrassment Of Dooplers " ( photograph )
  • " Crisis Point 2: Paradoxus " (hologram)
  • " The Inner Fight "
  • " Old Friends, New Planets "
  • " Lost and Found "
  • " Starstruck "
  • " A Moral Star, Part 1 "
  • " A Moral Star, Part 2 "
  • " Preludes "
  • " Skin a Cat "
  • " Walk, Don't Run "

Background information [ ]

The name of the species comes from a biography of Lt. M'Ress , published by Lincoln Enterprises in 1974 , which claims that the Caitians are related to the Kzinti , and were from Cait . This is corroborated by extensive commentary by Larry Niven, author of most of the Known Space books and virtually the entire Known Space sub-series The Man-Kzin Wars, primarily found in his short story books "N-Space", "Playgrounds of the Mind", and "The Patchwork Man".

From StarTrek.com , "The felinoid Caitians and the warlike Kzinti share common roots in the deep past — as do Vulcans and Romulans . As with the Vulcans and the Romulans, the two groups went their separate ways to develop as two entirely different civilizations. The Caitians are fierce warriors when so called upon, but pride themselves on their accomplishments in arts and philosophy rather than on the martial arts. Natives of Cait tend to be small and sinewy; the females are as delicately dainty as the Siamese or Abyssinian cats of old Earth. Their family units are extremely close."

The Lincoln Enterprises biography of M'Ress similarly expanded on the Caitians, stating that they tended to be small and sinewy, with their females delicately dainty. [1]

Damon Lindelof has confirmed that the alien twins Kirk slept with in Star Trek Into Darkness were Caitians. [2]

According to Akiva Goldsman , Bjayzl from the Star Trek: Picard episode " Stardust City Rag " was originally intended to be a Caitian. [3]

Apocrypha [ ]

The Caitians are expanded upon in FASA 's Star Trek IV Sourcebook Update , which indicates that the feline humanoids seen in The Voyage Home were intended to be the same species.

The Last Unicorn and Decipher RPG books had to use the name "Regulans" because of copyright issues. [4]

M'Ress is also referred to as a Caitian in the audio story " Passage to Moauv ".

Set in 2409, the computer game Star Trek Online features the Caitians as a playable species of the Federation faction, which also employs ships of unique Caitian design, e.g., the Atrox Carrier, Aspero Support Carrier, Shikaris Escort, and Stalker Stealth Fighter. According to their description, Caitians are "known throughout their quadrant for their intelligence, curiosity, loyalty and love of beauty". The game includes several Caitian NPCs, including Enterprise -F Tactical Officer and Security Chief Commander Kyona. It also depicts a species closely related to the Caitians called Ferasans, who genetically engineered themselves which resulted in some Caitians leaving their homeworld of Ferasa, settling on Cait and taking the demonym "Caitian".

In Star Trek: Lower Decks - Crew Handbook , T'Ana's Profanity being censored out is suggested to be the Universal translator being unable to properly translate such words from Caitian and, thus, replacing it with "beep"s.

External links [ ]

  • Caitian at Memory Beta , the wiki for licensed Star Trek works
  • 1 Daniels (Crewman)
  • 2 Jamaharon

star trek animated series m'ress

M'Ress

Character » M'Ress appears in 35 issues .

Communications officer on the USS Enterprise during the animated show.

Summary short summary describing this character..

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M'Ress last edited by mshirley27 on 10/06/23 11:32PM View full history

Communications Officer

Star Trek Canon Special Note

Not everything listed in the origin is Canon. That is because only television shows and movies are considered canon. This being a comic website there are many things here that are not canon. So unless it is contradicted in film it should be listed as part of the character biography.

M'Ress joined the crew of the U.S.S. Enterprise as a Communications Officer. She is a Caitian from the planet Cait. She has very feline appearances and mannerisms. She also has abilities that make her superior to humans. She has the strength of two men and can see much further in the dark than humans. She can also hear better and sense temperature changes. After a little over a year on the Enterprise she went back to Cait to work in communications but she came back to Starfleet and requested to serve on the newly commissioned Enterprise.

M'Ress and Scotty

M'Ress was created for the animated series Star Trek. It is because of this it is believed that that she may have joined the crew during the second five year mission of James Kirk . She could have also joined as part of the last two years of his first five year mission. She never appeared in any movies or episodes after the cartoon but she has appeared in many comics afterwards.

Character Evolution

The Blue M'Ress

In one comic book printer in 1975 M'Ress appeared as a blue alien with green hair. She was from the same race and had the same feline attributes but looked very different. In the same comic Nyota Uhura was depicted as a blue eyed white woman and Hikaru Sulu as a black man. This book is an outlier and she has never appeared this way in any other book.

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Star Trek: The Animated Series (TV Series)

Once upon a planet (1973), majel barrett: lt. m'ress, queen of hearts, photos .

Majel Barrett in Star Trek (1973)

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Western Animation / Star Trek: The Animated Series

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Star Trek: The Animated Series is an Animated Adaptation and the first Spin-Off from the original series , continuing the initial five-year mission.

Given the reality that it was produced by Filmation , the animation is typically the studio's ultra-cheap style. However, they more than made up for that with the presence of all of the original cast except Walter Koenig (Chekov), and the writers as well. The result is a show that might not have had the best animation, but still boasts spectacular imagery and believably non-human aliens that the original show could never depict, while still reasonably keeping to its artistic spirit. As a result, this series is the best example of the Animated Adaptation concept in The Dark Age of Animation , and was so good that it won the franchise's first ever Emmy Award.

The Animated Series remains the shortest-lived series of the Star Trek franchise, with just 22 episodes airing over a 13-month period in 1973-74 on NBC . It was also the last Trek series to air in first-run on network television until Star Trek: Voyager debuted in 1995 on UPN . The franchise would not return to the medium of animation again until the release of Star Trek: Lower Decks in 2020.

However, the franchise creator, Gene Roddenberry , later insisted that the animated show be kept out of continuity since he never anticipated that Star Trek would later be revived in live action on such a scale as would happen, with the film series and The Next Generation . Still, many fans insisted that at least the best episode, " Yesteryear ", be counted, considering that it gives a valuable look into Spock's youth and character as well as the planet Vulcan, as told by the most authoritative voice on the matter, D.C. Fontana. Because of the information about Vulcan presented in the show, as well as the introduction of the Holodeck and Kirk's middle name, and the fact that many of the Star Trek writers and actors were involved with the production, many fans consider it a part of their personal Star Trek Canon , depicting the final two years of Enterprise's five year mission. In addition, the producers of Star Trek: Enterprise used numerous references from this series. The Star Trek Expanded Universe , already having less of a need to adhere to strict canon, even went so far as to revive the series' Sixth Ranger alien crew members, Cat Girl Lt. M'Ress and tri-symmetrical Lt. Arex .

CBS declared this series full canon around the time they released it on DVD.

The title used here and on the DVD release is a retronym , as the show originally aired as simply Star Trek . It's also known by the more ponderous title of The Animated Adventures of Gene Roddenberry's Star Trek .

In 2018, IDW Publishing used this series for a Crossover with The Transformers , entitled Star Trek vs. Transformers . Read more about tropes pertaining to that particular story on that page.

To celebrate the show's 50th anniversary, a series of Short Treks produced and animated by the Lower Decks team were produced. These shorts veer towards Affectionate Parody territory as opposed to the original series, with the Enterprise crew being put into more outlandish situations.

This series provides examples of:

  • AI Is A Crap Shoot : The planetary computer in " Once Upon a Planet ", as a result of the Caretaker's death in the time since the Original Series episode " Shore Leave ". It creates things like the Queen of Hearts and dangerous animals when nobody is thinking about them, and it captures Uhura.
  • Alternate Universe : "The Magicks of Megas-Tu" has a world in which practicing magic is the norm and "The Counter-Clock Incident" has a universe in which everything works backwards, including aging.
  • Ancient Astronauts : Kukulkan in "How Sharper than a Serpent's Tooth". He visited Earth in the distant past and was the basis for the Mayan god of the same name, the Toltec god Quetzalcoatl, and the Chinese dragons.
  • Animal Motifs : Lieutenant M'Ress has a cat smile constantly, due to her cat-like anatomy.
  • Animated Adaptation : The best example thereof in the 1970s.
  • Animation Bump : A slight example took place in the second season, firstly due to them already having a lot of stock animation from the first season that they were able to re-use, thus letting them give more time and attention to the new animation, and secondly due to first season director Hal Sutherland — whose color-blindness resulted in him often going with muted purple-pink color schemes for episode he directed — being replaced by Bill Reed, who gave the show a somewhat more vibrant visual style.
  • Apocalyptic Log : "Beyond the Farthest Star". The dead ship's log entry/warning.
  • The Enterprise's computer shuts off the gravity in "The Practical Joker."
  • The fortress in "The Jihad" loses its gravity when the questers try to get at the MacGuffin in its center.
  • "Ass" in Ambassador : The title character in "Bem". He swaps out Kirk's and Spock's communicators and phasers for counterfeits, runs off from the landing party, doesn't even bother separating himself to escape when he is first captured, and leaves Kirk and Spock in their wooden cages when he does manage to escape.
  • Asteroid Thicket : In " The Pirates of Orion ", the Enterprise pursues the Orion ship into one.
  • The episode "Mudd's Passion" features two gigantic rock-like creatures who attack Mudd, Chapel, Kirk, and Spock on a desert world, then begin fighting each other after Kirk uses some of Mudd's love crystals to befriend one of the behemoths. "The Ambergris Element" features a massive tentacled sea serpent creature as the top predator and main threat on the water world Argo.
  • Barefoot Cartoon Animal : Lt. M'Ress, who wears a full Starfleet uniform, except for footwear. Justified because she has digitigrade paws (meaning she walks on her toes).
  • Bathtub Mermaid : In "The Ambergris Element" Kirk and Spock fall victim to a sur-snake while exploring the planet Argo, and are rescued by the natives, who convert them to water-breathers to make recuperating easier. Unfortunately, while this saves their lives and restores their health, Kirk and Spock must reside in a room-sized water tank aboard the Enterprise. This doesn't sit well with Captain Kirk: Kirk : I can't command a ship from inside an aquarium.
  • Being Watched : Episode "Beyond the Farthest Star". While the Enterprise landing party is on board the alien ship, Dr. McCoy says being on the ship gives him the creeps and that he feels like something's watching them. He's right: there's an intangible alien being on the ship that's trying to return to the Enterprise with the team.
  • Big Dumb Object : "Beyond The Farthest Star" featured an alien podship a mile long and 300 million years old whose pods were exploded from the inside. The ship's insectoid crew left behind only a message warning of an invasive being that forced them to self-destruct rather than bringing it to their homeworld, which the mains take down fairly easily. The same ship (or a very similar one) is a level in the Star Trek: 25th Anniversary point-and-click adventure game. Instead of the invader it is occupied only by the trader called Mudd, who has legally established salvage rights. The cause of its destruction is not discovered, but there are plenty of pirates in the area.
  • Big Red Button : "Beyond The Farthest Star". The auxiliary warp drive controls are activated with a red button. Kirk presses it to send the Enterprise on a desperate slingshot maneuver to escape the dead star's gravity and get rid of the alien intruder.
  • Bowdlerise : By German TV station ZDF .
  • Briar Patching : In " The Practical Joker ", passing through an energy field causes the Enterprise computer to play jokes on the crew. Captain Kirk pretends to be scared of the field and tricks the deranged computer into taking the ship through the field again , which reverses the effect that made the computer go bonkers.
  • Sulu does the same at the end of "The Infinite Vulcan."
  • Broad Strokes : The timeframe this series depicts is an accepted part of Star Trek lore, but the actual details have been rearranged since.
  • Build Like an Egyptian : Kukulkan's city in "How Sharper than a Serpent's Tooth" has the Mayan pyramids.
  • Canon Discontinuity : The series was declared non-canon by Gene Roddenberry himself, with the sole exception of the episode "Yesteryear". (Until CBS later declared the whole thing canon, anyway.)

star trek animated series m'ress

  • Cat Folk : The Caitian Lieutenant M'Ress, as well as the Kzinti in "The Slaver Weapon". Some of the Expanded Universe material around it suggests that the Caitian relationship to the Kzinti is essentially the same as the one between the Vulcans and the Romulans, only with the ones that left (the Caitians) being the "good guys" that ended up part of the Federation and the ones that stayed (the Kzinti) as the militaristic bad guys with historic conflicts with the Federation (and possibly with some ill-advised genetic engineering on the part of the Kzinti).
  • Episodes like "The Slaver Weapon," "The Infinite Vulcan," and "The Lorelei Signal" give Sulu and Uhura more to do than they usually got on the Original Series.
  • Chekhov's Gun : In "How Sharper than a Serpent's Tooth", Dr. McCoy 's medical kit provides a hypo to calm the Capellan Power Cat.
  • Children Are Cruel : In " Yesteryear ", we get our first glimpse at Spock's childhood... and it's not pretty.
  • Clone Angst : In " The Infinite Vulcan ", the giant clone of Spock experiences an existential crisis when he realizes he is quite out of scale with the Enterprise and everything he is familiar with. He ultimately elects to remain on the planet.
  • Comic-Book Adaptation : IDW's Star Trek vs. Transformers used the character designs from the Animated Series, to bettter blend in with the animated characters from The Transformers. It was a good choice, and the characters look surprisingly natural standing next to each other.
  • As in "Journey To Babel," the Orions are again depicted as pirates in "The Pirates of Orion," though their name is pronounced "OR-ee-on" throughout the episode for some reason. Also, they're depicted as blue-skinned here rather than green. note  In "Journey to Babel," the only male Orion we meet in TOS is disguised as a blue-skinned Andorian. In "The Menagerie" and "Whom Gods Destroy" we only see female Orions. In other appearances since the original series, we see male Orions as well, and they are green.
  • Contrived Coincidence : "How Sharper than a Serpent's Tooth". If Ensign Walking Bear hadn't been on the bridge, Kukulkan would have destroyed both the Enterprise and the entire human race.
  • Creator In-Joke : Captain Robert T. April in "The Counter-Clock Incident". April was the original name for the character that eventually became Kirk.
  • Crossover : One episode was a nearly 1:1 adaptation of a Known Space short story, save for Kirk and the gang as the heroes ; specifically "The Soft Weapon," called here "The Slaver Weapon." The belligerent, lynx-like Kzinti find a shape-shifting Swiss-Army Weapon that looks like a watermellon on a pistol grip, and try to use it to start a fifth man/kzin war.
  • Darker and Edgier : Than most other cartoons on television at the time. The Animated Series tended to work with the same style of cerebral stories that the previous live-action series did, and references to death were not glossed over at all . In fact, "Yesteryear" deals with a child version of Spock losing his beloved pet , and the "death words" weren't glossed over or replaced with Lighter and Softer equivalents. This has helped the series gain a strong following within the Star Trek fan community, as well as with the creative staffs involved with the franchise.
  • Detachable Lower Half : The title character in "Bem" has the ability to separate his body into different parts.
  • Detachment Combat : The title character in "Bem" was a colony creature who could separate his head, upper torso, and lower torso (at least).
  • Did We Just Have Tea with Cthulhu? : In "Once Upon a Planet", several characters end up roasting marshmallows with the dragon that was trying to kill them a few minutes earlier.
  • Did You Just Punch Out Cthulhu? : "The Magicks of Megas-Tu" has James T. Kirk defeating Satan! (Or at least a being claiming to be him as part of a Secret Test of Character .) For an added bonus, they become friends at the end .
  • Dolled-Up Installment : "The Slaver Weapon", from Larry Niven 's " The Soft Weapon ".
  • Doomed Defeatist : Subverted with M-3-Green in "The Jihad", who despite calling their mission "mad" and saying "We're all going to die", makes to the end alive.
  • Empowered Badass Normal : Kirk (and a few others) gain magical abilities in "The Magicks of Megas-Tu".
  • In "Bem", one of these was protecting a primitive species from outside interference.
  • Energy Ring Attack : One episode has a Klingon warship test out a stasis field ray against the Enterprise. When fired, concentric circles engulf the Enterprise, immobilizing it. The stasis ray is also fired at two supply drones that the Enterprise was escorting.
  • Everyone Is a Super : "The Magicks of Megas-Tu" has beings who have the ability to practice magic.
  • Expressive Ears : The Kzinti in "The Slaver Weapon" lay their ears back when angry..
  • Expospeak Gag : Between Spock and McCoy . McCoy : Why couldn't you have just said [x]? Spock : I believe I just did.
  • Extreme Close-Up : Used frequently, often with the speaking character's mouth out of frame (presumably to save on animation costs)
  • Fainting : Kirk does something akin to the exhaustion- or anemia-based variety in "Albatross" when The Plague kicks in. Luckily, Spock is there to catch him. Also, in "Pirates of Orion", the first sign that something is seriously wrong with Spock happens when he collapses suddenly.

star trek animated series m'ress

  • Fish People : "The Ambergris Element" features fish-like aliens who can only breath underwater.
  • A Form You Are Comfortable With : "The Magicks of Megas-Tu". The inhabitants of Megas-Tu do this for their own bodies and their planet's surface for the benefit of the Enterprise crew.
  • Forgotten Phlebotinum : "Life-support belts" that allow the crew to survive in vacuum without spacesuits only ever appear in this series.
  • Fountain of Youth : The reverse-entropy universe in "The Counter-Clock Incident".
  • Four-Fingered Hands : Spock, in a blooper in "Yesteryear".
  • Freudian Trio : Just like the live-action version, we have Kirk , Spock , and McCoy .
  • Friendless Background : "Yesteryear" lets us see Spock having this. His agemates torment him endlessly for being "a Terran" and Sarek, who expects his son to act like a Vulcan, is disappointed by Spock reacting to their teasing.
  • Giant Flyer : "The Infinite Vulcan" and "The Eye of the Beholder" featured flying plant creatures called Swoopers.
  • Girl's Night Out Episode : In "The Lorelei Signal", Uhura and Chapel have to lead an all-female rescue team due to the planet's inhabitants' ability to drain men of their Life Energy .
  • God Guise : Keniclius 5 with the Phylosians in "The Infinite Vulcan", and Kukulkan by the ancient Mayans in "How Sharper than a Serpent's Tooth".
  • Haunted Technology : The Enterprise computer gains a prankster personality in "The Practical Joker".
  • Healing Hands : "The Infinite Vulcan". Spock's clone revives his original with a mind meld. Because of the difference in scale (the clone is a giant), he uses just one fingertip.
  • High-Tech Hexagons : "Beyond the Farthest Star". The Enterprise crew discovers a highly advanced alien ship in orbit around a dead star. The alien ship's interior structure is made up of interlocking hexagons.
  • Holodeck Malfunction : "The Practical Joker" includes a proto-holodeck in the Enterprise's rec room long before TNG's . McCoy , Uhura, and Sulu are trapped in it when the Enterprise computer gains a trickster mentality.
  • Hollywood Psych : "Mudd's Passion" mixes up two types of love: friendship and eros.
  • Human Aliens : Although there are still a fair few, this show takes advantage of the animated format to avert the trope whenever they can and come up with more divergent alien designs.
  • Humanity on Trial : "The Magicks of Megas-Tu." Humanity is put on trial by the Megans, for the crime of being xenophobic jerks. The trial is actually for "humanity and those who would aid them" in order to account for the nonhuman crew members. Humanity initially has its sentence suspended because it is concluded that they do not pose a threat to the Megans since it is nearly impossible to locate the Megan homeworld. Humanity is found not guilty after Kirk risks his life to protect a Megan who had been sentenced to a Fate Worse than Death for associating with humanity. When asked why they didn't just use the Enterprise's records to discover for themselves that humans were capable of things like a Heroic Sacrifice , the Megans reply the records could have been faked.
  • Improbably High I.Q. : The Lactrans in "The Eye of the Beholder". A six-year-old Lactran has an IQ in the thousands.
  • In Space, Everyone Can See Your Face : Life-support belts take this to its logical extreme—the production team doesn't have to draw spacesuits, but can simply use its normal character models with a belt and a glowing outline.
  • Indy Hat Roll : In "Once Upon a Planet", Kirk leaps through a sliding rock door in the side of a mountain just before it closes.
  • Insectoid Aliens : The episode "Beyond The Farthest Star" has the Enterprise encounter an alien spacecraft orbiting a lifeless planet at the edge of the galaxy. Its organic shape resembles the chambers and tunnels of an ant colony, and its metal hull isn't rolled or cast, it's been drawn into filaments and spun like spider silk. When the landing party attains the ship's command section, they activate an Apocalyptic Log which shows the insectoid captain on a viewscreen.
  • Instant A.I.: Just Add Water! : The planetary computer in "Once Upon a Planet" develops artificial intelligence on its own.
  • Intelligent Gerbil : The Kzinti in "The Slaver Weapon", and the Caitian M'Ress.
  • It Belongs in a Museum : Sulu in "The Slaver Weapon". Spock sets him straight.
  • Just Between You and Me : In "The Jihad", after Charr is revealed as The Mole , he reveals his plan to start a holy war between his people, the Skorr, and the rest of the galaxy.
  • The Ken Burns Effect : Just as the live action series would often come back from a commercial break to have Kirk deliver his "Captain's Log" to a stock shot of the Enterprise floating above the Planet of the Week , the animated series would have Kirk deliver the log as we slowly pan across a background painting of an exotic alien landscape.
  • Life Drinker : "The Lorelei Signal". The women of the planet Taurus II drain the Life Energy of men to maintain their youth, causing Rapid Aging in the men.
  • Limited Animation : Filmation 's Signature Style . Lacking much range in facial expression, the onus was on the voice cast to convey the characters' emotions, which (being made up of mostly Original Series alumni) they largely succeeded.
  • Losing Your Head : The title character in "Bem" has the ability to separate his body parts.
  • Lost Colony : Terra Ten in "The Terratin Incident"... only it wasn't really lost—just shrunken to an extremely tiny size.
  • Lotus-Eater Machine : In "How Sharper Than A Serpent's Tooth", the animals in Kukulkan's zoo believe that they are living in their natural environment, a hallucination generated by Kukulkan's machines.
  • Louis Cypher : Lucien claims to have been Satan, in "The Magicks of Megas-Tu".
  • Love Potion : "Mudd's Passion". Mudd himself thought it was Snake Oil , and is shocked to find out it works.
  • Mage Species : "The Magicks of Megas-Tu" features aliens who are able to practice magic (unusual in a science fiction series).
  • Meaningful Name : Bem, which means "Bug-Eyed Monster" in SF fandom.
  • Mega Neko : The Kzinti in "The Slaver Weapon", as well as Lieutenant M'Ress.
  • Merlin Sickness : Inhabitants of the alternate universe in "The Counter-Clock Incident" age backwards.
  • Mobile Fishbowl : "The Ambergris Element". At the end of the episode, two Aquans (aliens who can only breathe water) are shown on the bridge of the Enterprise wearing water-filled helmets on their heads.
  • The Mole : Charr in "The Jihad" reveals himself as the person behind the theft of the Soul of the Skorr.
  • Morph Weapon : The titular device in "The Slaver Weapon" can turn into a a telescope, a personal rocket sled, a tiny computer, and an energy-beam weapon of a power never before seen. Among other things.
  • My Future Self and Me : Spock uses the Guardian of Forever to travel back in time and meet himself as a child in "Yesteryear."
  • Mysterious Middle Initial : It was actually in this show that Kirk's middle name was first revealed to be Tiberius, though it wouldn't officially enter canon until the sixth film .
  • Neglectful Precursors : The Slavers' stasis boxes.
  • No MacGuffin, No Winner : In the end of "The Slaver Weapon", both the Starfleet personnel and the Kzinti renegades want to get the titular Lost Technology because of its awesome power: a beam that causes total conversion of matter into energy . Sulu: It would have looked nice in some museum. Spock: It never would have reached a museum, Lieutenant. There was too much power in that one setting. If not the Kzinti, the Klingons or some other species would have tried to possess it.
  • Non-Malicious Monster : The Lactrans in "The Eye of the Beholder" put the crew of the Enterprise in a massive People Zoo , but Spock quickly catches on they legitimately are so intelligent they don't realize humans are sentient beings. They let the crew go once Kirk figures out how to communicate with them.
  • No One Gets Left Behind : Kirk and Spock in "The Jihad" when the Vulcan gets thrown from a vehicle into the path of a lava flow.
  • Novelization : All of the animated episodes were novelized by Alan Dean Foster for a series of books published as the Star Trek Log series, 10 in total. Initially, Foster adapted three storylines per book in novella format. The last few books, however, saw the writer take some of the 25-minute teleplays and expand them considerably into full-length standalone novels.
  • Now Do It Again, Backwards : How the computer is repaired in "The Practical Joker"—Kirk tricks it into taking the Enterprise back through the Negative Space Wedgie the other way, by pretending to be scared of it.
  • Ocean Punk : "The Ambergris Element" took place on the water world Argo.
  • Opening Narration : An animated version of the one in Star Trek: The Original Series .
  • Patchwork Map : Justified in "The Eye of the Beholder". On the planet Lactra VII the Enterprise crew finds deserts right next to forests, and Mr. Spock comments on how unnatural it is. It's eventually revealed that the alien Lactrans did it to make their planet a giant zoo.
  • Patchwork World : In "The Eye of the Beholder", the planet Lactra VII had a series of different environments right next to each other, such as a desert next to a forest, each with appropriate animal and plant life. The Enterprise crew eventually discovered that they were deliberately created as part of an open air zoo.
  • People Zoo : The Lactrans in "The Eye of the Beholder" capture the landing party and put them in their zoo.
  • Planet Eater : "One of Our Planets Is Missing" features a space cloud that eats planets.
  • Pleasure Planet : "Once Upon A Planet" featured the same planet that first appeared in the Star Trek TOS episode " Shore Leave ".
  • Portal to the Past : The Guardian of Forever returns from the Original Series episode " The City on the Edge of Forever " to provide a portal to Vulcan's past in " Yesteryear ".
  • Power Perversion Potential : In "The Magicks of Megas-Tu," Sulu uses the magic of Megas-Tu's plane of existence to summon a beautiful woman... who transforms into Lucien when he goes to make out with her.
  • Precision F-Strike : A quite mild example from "The Magicks Of Megas-tu," when Asmodeus describes the Earth from where the Enterprise crew came as "hellish."
  • Pre-emptive Declaration : In "Albatross", when a native from the planet that put McCoy on trial follows them. Kirk: Besides, he'll be sure to take advantage when he sees that we've carelessly left our shuttle bay door open. Uhura: But we didn't, sir. Kirk: Oh yes. See to that little oversight, will you, Mr. Sulu?
  • Pretending to Be One's Own Relative : In the episode "Yesteryear", Spock goes back in time to his own childhood and pretends to be a cousin named Selek.
  • Psychic Static : Used to defeat the Kzinti telepath in "The Slaver Weapon".
  • The Quest : The hunt for the "Soul of Alar" artifact in "The Jihad".
  • Rapid Aging : What the Life Energy draining by the women of Taurus II does to men in "The Lorelei Signal".
  • Real Men Wear Pink : The Klingons in "The Practical Joker" and the Kzinti in "The Slaver Weapon", courtesy of a colorblind director.
  • Reality Is Out to Lunch : The planet Megas-Tu in "The Magicks of Megas-Tu" is in a part of the universe where reality breaks down. One character has their arm break off of their body and drift away.
  • Reality Warper : The inhabitants of the title planet in "The Magicks of Megas-Tu" can bring anything into existence with but a thought. While they were on Earth they were considered to be witches and magicians due to their powers.
  • Recycled Soundtrack : Well, duh, it's Filmation. While yes, this was also done on The Original Series , it definitely wasn't to the same extent.
  • Replacement Goldfish : Carter Winston (actually a shape shifting alien).
  • Ret-Gone : Spock in "Yesteryear" is temporarily Ret Gone until he creates a Stable Time Loop preventing his death as a child.
  • Ripple-Effect-Proof Memory : Only Spock and Kirk remember the original timeline in "Yesteryear".
  • Rite of Passage : The Vulcan kahs-wan in "Yesteryear", an ordeal in which Vulcan children must survive in the desert for 10 days by themselves with no supplies to prove their courage and strength. For young Spock, it becomes even more when his companion sehlat, I-Chaya, who had followed him against his wishes, was mortally wounded and the attending vet could only give Spock two choices, an extended life in agony or putting him out of his misery; Spock made the mature and logical choice to put him down.
  • Robo Speak : Any computer voice done by James Doohan.
  • Sequel Episode : "Mudd's Passion" is a sequel to "I, Mudd", "More Tribbles, More Troubles" is a sequel to "The Trouble with Tribbles", "Yesteryear" is a sequel to "The City on the Edge of Forever", and "Once Upon a Planet" is a sequel to "Shore Leave".
  • Sdrawkcab Name : The retlaw plant in "The Infinite Vulcan" (named after Walter Koenig , the episode's author), and the planet Arret in "The Counter-Clock Incident".
  • "Beyond The Farthest Star". An evil Energy Being is trapped in a 300 million year old starship orbiting a black hole.
  • Played with by the eponymous weapon in "The Slaver Weapon". Spock and Sulu discuss the potential for such a weapon to destabilize the entire galaxy if it were to fall in to the wrong hands; however, the weapon is self-aware to the extent that it can determine that it's not being handled by an authorized user and self-destructs when the Kzinti try to activate it .
  • Secret Test : "The Magicks of Megas-Tu". The Megans test the Enterprise crew to verify their good intentions.
  • Self-Destructing Security : "The Slaver Weapon". The title device tricks the Kzinti into using a self-destruct setting to destroy it—and them.
  • Self-Guarding Phlebotinum : In the episode "The Jihad", the Soul of the Skorr is protected by a force field.
  • Shock and Awe : The Capellan Power Cat in "How Sharper Than A Serpent's Tooth" can generate and launch massive amounts of electricity in lightning bolts so powerful they leave visible damage on the floor and walls and would have roasted Kukulkan to cinders if Kirk hadn't tranquilized it.
  • Shoot the Dog : Young Spock is forced to make this choice in "Yesteryear" when his pet sehlat, I-Chaya, takes an attack for him. The local healer tells him that he can save I-Chaya, but the creature's venom would leave him in constant pain. Spock chooses the Mercy Kill .
  • Sickeningly Sweethearts : Spock behaves this way toward Nurse Chapel for a large part of "Mudd's Passion", because he's reacting to a Love Potion .
  • Single-Biome Planet : A Volcano Planet in "The Jihad", an Ice Planet in "The Slaver Weapon" and a Water Planet in "The Ambergris Element".
  • Harry Mudd in "Mudd's Passion", though he is unaware that the Love Potion he's peddling actually works.
  • Cyrano Jones in "More Tribbles, More Troubles" tries to convince the Enterprise crew that his new breed of tribble is harmless, without the Explosive Breeder properties of the original. (Instead, they grow so large, they eventually explode into a pile of tribbles anyway).
  • Space Pirates : "The Pirates of Orion", complete with a pirate spaceship
  • Starfish Aliens : Edosians, Vendorians, Phylosians, Lactrans, and M/3/Green. The production team was clearly thrilled to not have to worry about budget constraints when designing the aliens, to the point that they probably went overboard with it. (Also, if the aliens naturally fly, swim, or slither, you don't have to animate them walking. )
  • Steal the Surroundings : In "The Terratin Incident", an entire miniaturized city is beamed aboard the Enterprise in order quickly to save the inhabitants from impending doom.
  • Stock Sound Effects : Aside from the time it once used a Godzilla roar, it also replaced the typical red alert with the one from a single episode of the show this spun-off from.
  • Swiss-Army Weapon / Talking Weapon : "The Slaver Weapon" has the titular device. It can function as a communicator, a laser, an energy-absorber, a ballistic weapon, a monosword, and has a total conversion setting. It even tells the K'zinti pirates which setting is its most powerful. (Too bad this was a Batman Gambit .)
  • Tie-In Novel : Alan Dean Foster wrote adaptations of the episodes, and many Trek novels reference it.
  • Temporal Paradox : "Yesteryear" revolves around a Reverse Grandfather Paradox in which Spock prevents his own death as a child. He doesn't do it quite right this time around, resulting in a slightly revised timeline when he gets home. Originally, his pet had lived. This time, he arrives a moment late, and the pet dies.
  • The Time Traveller's Dilemma : It's unknown what happens to Thelen the Andorian (who replaced Spock as Science Officer) after the timeline is fixed in "Yesteryear".
  • There Is No Kill Like Overkill : "The Slaver Weapon", a hand weapon capable of generating a Hiroshima-like detonation complete with shockwave!
  • Title: The Adaptation : As noted, however, this is only the case for the re-releases. It originally aired just as "Star Trek," with no subtitle.
  • Trap Is the Only Option : Hints of this in "The Pirates of Orion". McCoy and Scotty are suspicious when the Orion captain asks Kirk to beam down to an asteroid to get the medicine he and his crew stole. Kirk agrees that it's dangerous, but he also knows that "without it, Spock doesn't have a chance."
  • 20 Minutes into the Future : Thanks to a blooper involving the mustached Lt Kyle, one shot of Scotty working the transporter momentarily showed him with a mustache, five years before his live action mustache's debut in Star Trek: The Motion Picture .
  • Two of Your Earth Minutes : "The Lorelei Signal". Every 27 years, a starship is lured to a planet where female aliens drain the Life Energy of the male crew members. While explaining the situation to Lieutenant Uhura: Head Female Theela: To survive we must vitalize each 27 years of your time.
  • Vengeful Vending Machine : "The Practical Joker". After the Enterprise passes through a mysterious energy field, the ship's computer starts playing practical jokes on the crew. When Scotty tries to obtain a sandwich from the food synthesizer, it sprays food all over him, including a custard Pie in the Face .
  • "Well Done, Son" Guy : In "Yesteryear" Spock wants to prove to his father Sarek that he is a true Vulcan by undergoing the Kahs-wan Rite of Passage .
  • Where the Magic Went : The Episode " The Magicks of Megas Tu " reveals that the denizens of Megas Tu (an alternate dimension that runs on magic rather than traditional physics) visited Earth long ago, giving rise to all manner of stories about magical beings, before fleeing when the witch trials started up. In particular, the jolly Satyr-like guy named Lucien who befriends the Enterprise crew? That dude was the inspiration for Satan .
  • Who Wants to Live Forever? : In "The Lorelei Signal", the women of the second planet of the Taurean system neither age nor die. However, any men on the planet die quickly. They must lure humanoid males to their planet once every 27 years and drain them of their Life Energy in order to survive. They can't escape their planet and they can't even have children.
  • Winged Humanoid : The Skorr, a race of bird-people who were the focus of the episode "The Jihad".
  • Wise Serpent : " How Sharper Than A Serpents Tooth " has the Enterprise encounter a starship shaped like a winged serpent. This alien ship is piloted by an actual winged serpent named Kukulkan, who visited Earth thousands of years earlier . Kukulkan guided the early Mayans out of tribalism, and into civilization and academia. He's pleased that his name and legacy are remembered, but still regards humans as childlike: inept and immature, still needing his guidance.
  • Wizard Duel : Kirk takes on Asmodeus, the leader of the Megans in "The Magicks of Megas-Tu" despite being hopelessly outclasssed.
  • World of Chaos : The planet in "The Magicks of Megas-Tu", and the so-called "Mad Planet" in "The Jihad".
  • Wrongly Accused : In "Albatross", McCoy is falsely accused of indirectly killing people of a plague they weren't cured of.
  • Year Outside, Hour Inside : This occurs in the titular area in "The Time Trap".
  • You Are in Command Now : Lt. Uhura in "The Lorelei Signal", something which never happened on the live-action show.
  • You Can See That, Right? : Kirk to Spock in "The Time Trap" when the Klingon battlecruiser disappears.
  • You Won't Feel a Thing! : In the episode "The Pirates of Orion"... McCoy : [about to give an injection] This won't hurt a bit, Spock. Spock: An unnecessary assurance, doctor, in addition to being untrue. McCoy : That's the last time I waste my bedside manner on a Vulcan.

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Insectoid ship

The Enterprise crew encounter a peculiar ship. Multiple beehive like structures strung together, with no visible means of propulsion like any other ship.

Example of: Eldritch Starship

Sulu and Arek's...

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star trek animated series m'ress

A Caitian is an intelligent felinoid species first appearing in Filmation's Star Trek: The Animated Series , and represented by the character of Lieutenant M'Ress , voiced by Majel Barrett . The character has been included in numerous licensed Star Trek novels and comics over the years. Alan Dean Foster 's Star Trek Logs adaptations of the episodes often included extra scenes and backstory featuring M'Ress and her family. The Logs also suggest that Caitians share distant ancestry with the kzin .

While two live-action Caitians were glimpsed as members of the Federation Council in Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home , it wasn't until the 2020 launch of the animated series Star Trek: Lower Decks that another Caitian, Chief Medical Officer T'Ana (voice of Gillian Vigman ), made regular appearances. The shortness of Dr. T'Ana's tail is yet to be explained. Other Caitians have been seen in this series.

An unnamed juvenile Caitian slave appeared in the first few episodes of Star Trek: Prodigy .

Canon Information

More information about Caitians can be found at Memory Alpha . For a time (1989-1991), the canonicity of the animated series was put into limbo, while Filmation was being wound down and the rights issues for all of the company's back catalogue of productions were being clarified.

Additional information about Caitians in licensed tie-in media can be found at Memory Beta . Lincoln Enterprises used to sell a short biography of M'Ress (from the 1974 mail order catalog). [1] The licensed book Worlds of the Federation (1989) suggests that Caitians call themselves "Ferasa". Decipher's licensed roleplay gaming materials referred to the Caitians as "Regulans" by request of then-Paramount/Viacom Licensing.

star trek animated series m'ress

In the absence of consistent official information, fans have been quite imaginative when building backstories for Caitians. For example, a 1976 fan article by Theresa Holmes , in Sehlat's Roar #1, named the race "Mrraneti" [2] and used references from the piece in her "The 'Les Mesdamoiselles Federation' Affair" serial in issues of Sehlat's Roar . The author said, "In presenting these thoughts on the physical, social and cultural aspects of the Mrraneti of Cait, I hope I have succeeded in conveying some of the essence of this mysterious people. If I have, that is enough for me." [3]

Curt Danhauser has been creating and uploading his own animated episodes in the distinctive style of Filmation. Several of these feature Caitians. [4] Go to Curt Danhauser's Guide to Animated Trek: New Episodes .

There is also keen interest in the Caitian species from various Furry fan groups and Star Trek cosplayers .

Kearstin Nicholson played a live-action M'Ress (right), opposite Wayne W. Johnson as Dawson Walking Bear , in a fanfilm by Glen L. Wolfe , Walking Bear, Running Wolf - A Star Trek Fan Production (Uploaded 5 January, 2018.) Both of these characters originated in Star Trek: The Animated Series .

Example Fanworks

  • "Some Thoughts on the Mrraneti of Cait" article by Theresa Holmes in Sehlat's Roar #1.
  • "Alien Cultures: The Caitians" in Atavachron issue V.2 N.1.
  • "Make Way for M'Ress" article by Jordan Hoffman in One Trek Mind #61 (Uploaded 1 February, 2013).
  • "Images of Flame: Cave of the Kzin" by Johanna T. Cantor in R & R #23. M'Ress has unique insights into the Kzinti which are crucial to the success of a mission. [5]
  • "Lt. M'Ress at the Federation Masquerade" by Mary Gress in Warped Space #5. Written in character as M'Ress, with the Caitian describing the Masquerade at the 1975 Star Trek Lives! convention .
  • "... Not Quite a Love Story" by Damon Hill in Future Wings issue #2, Future Wings Flypast . A touching vignette about M'Ress and her views on human crewmates.
  • "The 'Les Mesdamoiselles Federation' Affair (Part 1)" by Theresa Holmes in Sehlat's Roar #1 .
  • "Star Trek: Ocelot" - stories by Tim Holtorf at Star Trek Fan Fiction blog. [6] Concerning a completely Caitian crew on a starship captained by M’iaa T’Chall.
  • "The Wrath of Ricardo Montalban" by Bill Hupe & Anne Hupe in Abode of Strife #3. A Caitian (sister of M'Ress) features in a serious Star Trek / Fantasy Island / The Price of the Phoenix fusion / crossover novel that asks, "What would have happened if the Enterprise returned to the Genesis Planet to find Khan reborn as Mr Rourke, and he has the staying power to raise Spock from the dead?"
  • "Hoodwinked" by Ian McLean in Beyond Antares #18/19. In the weeks after Star Trek: The Motion Picture , several old friends return and a new Andorian first officer fills in for Spock on the USS Enterprise .
  • "And Other Duties As Assigned: Special Delivery" by Mijan at The Introspective Geek blog. [7] A Caitian Ambassador gives birth on the USS Enterprise .
  • "The Sins of the Fathers" by Jim Price in The Clipper Trade Ship #39/40. A M'Ress love story.
  • " Beyond the Barrier " by CatalenaMara (aka Kathy Resch ) in California K/S #1 and Side by Side #23. The USS Enterprise and The Heart of Taenor , a Caitian ship, are on a joint mission to the galactic rim.
  • " Within the Prism " by Kathy Resch in T'hy'la #1. The USS Enterprise crew explore an archaeological dig on a Caitian colony.
  • "Samurai Kitty" by Paula Smith in Obsc'zine . A satirical vignette about M'Ress in heat on the Shore Leave planet.
  • " You May Deny ", a novel by Jean L. Stevenson . After the death of Stonn, botanical scientist T'Pring is assigned to a survey/scoutship with a tightly knit Caitian-Human crew.
  • "For Enterprise" by Steve Wilson in Vault of Tomorrow #11. Arex and M'Ress do their bit to help Kirk steal the Enterprise. [8]
  • "First Contact" by Gerald Roberts (aka Anne Elizabeth Zeek ) in Time Warp #1 and The Compleat Zeek . The story of the Federation's first encounter with the Caitians gives an insight into why James T. Kirk is the way he is. (Revised extensively and reprinted in Rising Star .)

Fanfic Archives

  • Caitians - Archive of Our Own
  • Caitian Stories - Wattpad
  • "The Caitian's Paw" by RaceCloud - Fanfiction.net
  • Shiboline M'Ress - Archive of Our Own
  • "Surefoot" by Deggsy - adult-fanfiction.org
  • "Freighter Tales: The Misadventures of Mzzkiti" by Paul S. Gibbs & Bill Redfern. Starting out as an illustrated "Star Trek" parody in 1998, "Haul Trek: Misadventures of M'Iskiti" featured a Caitian and an Andorian as regulars. After Gibbs' death, Redfern voluntarily deemphasised the "Star Trek" elements and morphed their main character into Lieutenant Mzzkiti to avoid being ordered to Cease & Desist by Paramount. [9]
  • Kail Tescar's original TAS comics in the Filmation art style.
  • M'Ress fan art - Deviantart
  • M'Ress fan art - Tumblr
  • Star Trek animated characters by drakefenwick - Deviantart
  • T'Ana fan art - Deviantart

star trek animated series m'ress

M'ress the Caitian at the Masquerade , from Warped Space #5, 1975.

star trek animated series m'ress

Caitian art from "The 'Les Mesdemoiselles Federation' Affair" by Theresa Holmes, Sehlat's Roar serial, 1976. (Thanks Randy Ash )

star trek animated series m'ress

Inside page from Fleet #15, the "all art issue". Caitian by Mark Peters , 1977.

star trek animated series m'ress

Caitian art by Jeff Sutton , from "The Wrath of Ricardo Montalban" in Abode of Strife issue #3, from, 1984.

star trek animated series m'ress

Caitian featured on the front cover of Atavachron newsletter, issue V.2 N.1, 1986.

star trek animated series m'ress

M'Ress cosplayer and Astrex members interviewed in Sydney, Australia, about The Firm's song, "Star Trekkin'", 1987.

star trek animated series m'ress

Ian McLean 's customized M'Ress the Caitian action figure meets Playmates Toys' Sulu, 1996.

star trek animated series m'ress

M'Ress the Caitian appears in a fan-made Starship Exeter online comic, Home is Not a Place , 2004. (Thanks Kail Tescar )

  • Lieutenant M'Ress Character Info page by Curt Danhauser at their Definitive Guide to ST: TAS
  • Caitian - Memory Alpha
  • Caitian - Memory Beta
  • Caitian - Star Trek Online Wiki
  • M'Ress - Star Trek Expanded Universe
  • The Starfleet Handbook, Issue #11: Kzinti, Caitians, Tholians (1977)
  • Toon Trek: References to Filmation's Star Trek: The Animated Series in latter day Star Trek tie-ins
  • ^ "Guide to Animated Star Trek - Biography of M'Ress" (Accessed 14 November, 2021) by Curt Danhauser .
  • ^ "Some Thoughts on the Mrraneti of Cait" in Sehlat's Roar #1 (Accessed 14 November, 2021).
  • ^ Sehlat's Roar #1 (Uploaded in blog format, 17 April, 2007).
  • ^ Curt Danhauser's Guide to Animated Trek (Accessed 15 November, 2021.)
  • ^ "Cave of the Kzin" (1989) by Johanna T. Cantor on 1001 Trek Tales website (Accessed 15 November, 2021).
  • ^ Star Trek Fan Fiction blog (Accessed 14 November, 2021)
  • ^ The Introspective Geek blog (Accessed 14 November, 2021)
  • ^ "For Enterprise: A Star Trek Short Story" by Steven Howell Wilson on Taken Liberty blog (Uploaded 3 March, 2013).
  • ^ A Rogues Gallery of Andorians blog (Accessed 14 November, 2021)
  • Star Trek Species

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COMMENTS

  1. M'Ress

    The voice of M'Ress file info was provided by Majel Barrett in Star Trek: The Animated Series, and by Cristina Milizia in Star Trek: very Short Treks. In the final draft script of " Mudd's Passion ", M'Ress was described as "a felinoid female, delicate, sleek, reminding one of an Earth Siamese or Abyssinian cat."

  2. Star Trek: The Animated Series

    Yes, there was an animated Star Trek series that ran on Saturday mornings from late 1973 through 1974. It was a time when there was almost no other Star Trek material being produced. The Trek novels had yet to get into full swing (though there were collected short story versions of episodes written by James Blish) and the only comics were the ...

  3. Animated STAR TREK

    No background information about M'Ress was revealed in the animated series particularly since she only appeared in six shows, and she was never given a first name. The character of M'Ress did, however appear in one STAR TREK Novel, "The Galactic Whirlpool" by David Gerrold published by Ballantine Books in October 1980)

  4. M'Ress Scenes & Other Moments

    M'Ress Scenes & Other Moments from Star Trek The Animated Series.

  5. Shiboline M'Ress

    Shiboline M'Ress was a Caitian female Starfleet officer who served aboard the USS Enterprise under Captain James T. Kirk in 2269, and, following a temporal incident in 2294, she served onboard the USS Trident under Captain Elizabeth Shelby from 2376 until at least 2379. M'Ress has three littermates, and comes from a long family-line. Her parents are both honored Caitian citizens. Some wonder ...

  6. M'Ress

    Lieutenant M'Ress was a Caitian Starfleet officer who lived during the mid-23rd century. She served in the operations division aboard the U.S.S. Enterprise under Captain James T. Kirk, during the five-year mission that starship undertook.From 2269 to 2270, M'Ress served as a communications officer under Nyota Uhura.. M'Ress appeared only in Star Trek: The Animated Series, where she was voiced ...

  7. Animated STAR TREK

    LIEUTENANT M'RESS is a felinoid female, a native of the planet Cait. The Lieutenant joined the crew during the Enterprise's last refitting. She is the alternate Communications Officer, and of course is junior in grade to Lieutenant Uhura. M'Ress graduated from Starfleet Academy three years ago and is a specialist in communications and computer ...

  8. Star Trek 101: Arex and M'Ress

    Today, we share Star Trek 101 's files on two colorful characters from The Animated Series, Arex and M'Ress. AREX (James Doohan), navigator. "Approaching parking orbit, Capain." Arex sits next to Sulu on the bridge and handles the ship's navigational functions. He has a bright red complexion and yellow eyes.

  9. Animated STAR TREK

    M'Ress was a felinoid, with long, thick orange-tan fur and golden yellow eyes. M'Ress spoke very softly and had a cat-like purring quality to her voice, which became especially evident when she was excited. Because she had thick pads on the soles of her feet she required no footwear. M'Ress came aboard the Enterprise in 2269 along with ...

  10. Star Trek: The Animated Series

    M'ress has golden fur and a mane of caramel-colored hair that cascades down her back. Her eyes are amber. While Starfleet's duty uniform for females provides no problems in regard to M'Ress's tail, long dress uniforms, duty coveralls, and other such clothing have to be tailored to accomodate the appendage.

  11. Star Trek: The Animated Series

    The logo is quite similar to The Original Series.. Star Trek: The Animated Series (TAS) is an American animated science fiction television series created by Gene Roddenberry.It originally aired simply under the title Star Trek, subtitled Created by Gene Roddenberry, on Saturday mornings from September 8, 1973 to October 12, 1974 on NBC, spanning 22 episodes over two seasons.

  12. Star Trek: The Animated Series

    Summary []. On the television network NBC, 22 episodes of The Animated Series were aired between September 1973 and October 1974.Reruns continued on NBC through 1975.The series was produced by the experienced animation house Filmation and the episodes were scripted by professional science fiction and Star Trek writers, including Larry Niven, D.C. Fontana, David Gerrold, and Samuel A. Peeples.

  13. M'Ress Voice

    See image of Majel Barrett, the voice of M'Ress in Star Trek: The Animated Series (TV Show).

  14. Star Trek: The Animated Series (TV Series 1973-1975)

    Star Trek: The Animated Series: Created by Gene Roddenberry. With William Shatner, Leonard Nimoy, DeForest Kelley, George Takei. The further adventures of Captain James T. Kirk and the crew of the USS Enterprise, as they explore the galaxy and defend the United Federation of Planets.

  15. Star Trek: The Animated Series / Characters

    The series introduced two Sixth Ranger alien crew members, M'Ress and Arex. Since the animators didn't have to worry about the restrictions of live-action makeup and special effects, these new recruits are not the Rubber-Forehead Aliens often shown in the original series. For a while, they were Exiled from Continuity due to Paramount declaring ...

  16. Caitian

    (Star Trek: The Animated Series; Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home; Star Trek Into Darkness; ... M'Ress is also referred to as a Caitian in the audio story "Passage to Moauv". Set in 2409, the computer game Star Trek Online features the Caitians as a playable species of the Federation faction, which also employs ships of unique Caitian design, e.g ...

  17. The Story Of 'Star Trek: The Animated Series' (And Why ...

    Star Trek: The Animated Series (as it is now known) ... M'Ress, voiced by Majel Barret, was a Caitian engineering officer who also often substituted for Uhurua at communications. Arex, voiced by ...

  18. M'Ress (Character)

    M'Ress and Scotty M'Ress was created for the animated series Star Trek. It is because of this it is believed that that she may have joined the crew during the second five year mission of James Kirk .

  19. Animated STAR TREK

    M'Ress was a felinoid, with long, thick orange-tan fur and golden yellow eyes. M'Ress spoke very softly and had a cat-like purring quality to her voice, which became especially evident when she was excited. ... Another example of the animated STAR TREK series being able to show us interesting non-humanoid aliens. In one scene that seems a bit ...

  20. "Star Trek: The Animated Series" Once Upon a Planet (TV Episode 1973

    "Star Trek: The Animated Series" Once Upon a Planet (TV Episode 1973) Majel Barrett as Lt. M'Ress, Queen of Hearts. Menu. Movies. Release Calendar Top 250 Movies Most Popular Movies Browse Movies by Genre Top Box Office Showtimes & Tickets Movie News India Movie Spotlight. TV Shows.

  21. M'Ress from Star Trek The Animated Series : r/startrek

    I've been watching Star Trek The Animated Series on Netflix streaming lately. Working my way through all the Star Trek series. When I ran across this character, M'Ress. A Caitian Lieutenant. She seemed to replace Uhura as communications officer from time to time and then went on to have some non-canon adventures.

  22. Star Trek: The Animated Series (Western Animation)

    The Animated Series remains the shortest-lived series of the Star Trek franchise, with just 22 episodes airing over a 13-month period in 1973-74 on NBC. It was also the last Trek series to air in first-run on network television until Star Trek: Voyager debuted in 1995 on UPN. The franchise would not return to the medium of animation again until ...

  23. Caitian

    A Caitian is an intelligent felinoid species first appearing in Filmation's Star Trek: The Animated Series, and represented by the character of Lieutenant M'Ress, voiced by Majel Barrett.The character has been included in numerous licensed Star Trek novels and comics over the years. Alan Dean Foster's Star Trek Logs adaptations of the episodes often included extra scenes and backstory ...

  24. A Potential STAR TREK: LEGACY Series Would Be a Fan's Dream ...

    For the last few years, Paramount+ has had three concurrent live-action Trek shows running; Discovery, Picard, and Strange New Worlds.A Starfleet Academy series is spinning-off from Discovery, so ...