Memory Alpha
Memory Alpha
(+sidebar +bginfo +apoc +ext lk +images)
Tag: sourceedit
mNo edit summary
Tag: sourceedit
(2 intermediate revisions by one other user not shown)
Line 17: Line 17:
 
When Picard learned, however, that it was two Vorgons who attempted to steal the Uthat in the first place, he destroyed it using [[Transporter Code 14]], thus fulfilling his role in history. Failing in their quest to obtain the Uthat, Ajur and Boratus returned to their own time. ({{TNG|Captain's Holiday}})
 
When Picard learned, however, that it was two Vorgons who attempted to steal the Uthat in the first place, he destroyed it using [[Transporter Code 14]], thus fulfilling his role in history. Failing in their quest to obtain the Uthat, Ajur and Boratus returned to their own time. ({{TNG|Captain's Holiday}})
 
{{clear}}
 
{{clear}}
  +
 
==Appendices==
 
==Appendices==
 
===Background information===
 
===Background information===

Revision as of 17:41, 18 April 2015

The Vorgons were a humanoid race who, by the 27th century, had developed the ability to travel through time.

History

In the 27th century, two Vorgon criminals, Ajur and Boratus, attempted to steal a device known as the "Tox Uthat", a quantum phase inhibitor capable of halting all nuclear fusion within a star. In order to prevent the Uthat from falling into the wrong hands, Kal Dano, the Uthat's inventor, traveled back in time to the 22nd century and hid it on Risa.

Having failed to obtain the Uthat, Ajur and Boratus searched historical records and discovered that Jean-Luc Picard would discover and destroy it in 2366. Traveling back to that point in time, they told Picard that they were security agents and that they wished to retrieve the Uthat for safekeeping.

When Picard learned, however, that it was two Vorgons who attempted to steal the Uthat in the first place, he destroyed it using Transporter Code 14, thus fulfilling his role in history. Failing in their quest to obtain the Uthat, Ajur and Boratus returned to their own time. (TNG: "Captain's Holiday")

Appendices

Background information

Vorgon costume - It's a Wrap

The Vorgon costume worn by Karen Landry was later sold off for US$312.00 in the It's a Wrap sale and auction.

The script for "Captain's Holiday" describes Ajur and Boratus as simply, "Two sleek and well dressed aliens". [1]

The Vorgon costume as worn by Karen Landry as Ajur was later sold off in the It's A Wrap! sale and auction for US$312.00. It comprised a purple Lycra jumpsuit with metallic purple and silver crinkled fabric at the knees and elbows, along with long neoprene shorts, an accompanying crop top and matching knee-high boots and gauntlets. [2]

The inspiration for the Vorgon makeup came from the look of a scallopy seashell and consisted of one prepainted headpiece and additional appliances for the head and the throat. After all of the appliances were attached, the makeup artists airbrushed the color to match and then applied a coat of iridescent paint to create a glow on camera. Each Vorgon also wore an electronic earring that had a random pattern of blinking shapes with the intention of showing they were indeed time-travelers from the 27th century. (Star Trek: Aliens & Artifacts, p.118)

In his review of "Captain's Holiday", Star Trek author Keith R.A. DeCandido expressed his distaste at the Vorgons in the episode, writing "Karen Landry and Michael Champion are pretty awful as the Vorgons, though I suspect they were having trouble even talking under that silly makeup." [3]

Apocrypha

The Vorgons and the attempt to steal the Tox Uthat are referenced in the Star Trek: Department of Temporal Investigations novel Watching the Clock.

According to Q's Guide to the Continuum, the Vorgons would not have been a threat even if they had gotten their hands on the device as they would have destroyed themselves with it anyway.

The Vorgons are also featured in the Star Trek Customizable Card Game in the form of a "Vorgon Raiders" card depicting Ajur and Boratus.

External links