DS9 Stories/News: Birthday Alert – Colm Meaney’s 3 Day Birthday Special

It’s Colm Meaney’s Birthday

30/May/1953

Colm J. Meaney (Irish: Colm Ó Maonaigh) (born 30 May1953; age 58) is the Irish actor best recognized by Star Trek fans for his portrayal of Chief Miles O’Brien on bothStar Trek: The Next Generation and Star Trek: Deep Space Nine from 1987 through 1999. He also played Albert Macklin in the acclaimed episode “Far Beyond the Stars“.

Courtesy of Memory Alpha.org

Here, we’ll concentrate on Mile’s of DS9

O’Brien was a character favorite to DS9 Writers, where they had a recurring motto “O’Brien Must Suffer”

Ira Behr once confessed that while he was persuaded to work on DS9 by Michael Piller, he responded to him that he would only do it if he had a chance to work on O’Brien’s character and have him with a real, true friendship with Julian Bashir.

The relationship between Bashir and O’Brien is the best relationship… the best friendship in the history of the franchise.”
Ira Steven Behr, Season Six dvd set, Crew Dossier: Julian Bashir”

So, let’s explore those two themes today shall we?

First, The Whole “O’Brien Must Suffer” Thing

Luck of the Irish? The Tragedies of Miles O’Brien

by Ryan Britt

It’s Saint Patrick’s Day and that means celebrating the best Irishman in space: Chief Miles Edward O’Brien from The Next Generation and Deep Space Nine! Played by noted Irish actor Colm Meaney, O’Brien always came off as one of the most relatable and down-to-earth (put intended) characters in all of Star Trek. But, this likability and good-heartedness is often rewarded with bad luck and sorrow for poor O’Brien and his family. He certainly has the Irish gift of gab, but not the luck of the Irish. How does he suffer so? Let me count the ways.

John Lennon’s little-known protest song “The Luck of the Irish” points to the irony of this famous phrase by outlining just how incredibly unlucky the people of Ireland have been throughout the years. And when it comes to the 24th century, all the unluckiness of the Emerald Isle seems to be heaped all on the shoulders of Miles. And we’re not just imagining this. According to both the special features on the DS9 DVDs and the book The Deep Space Nine Companion writers of the show actively sought to make sure at least one episode a year would feature an “O’Brien must suffer” plotline.

According to Ira Steven Behr, “If O’Brien went through something torturous and horrible, the audience was going to feel that, in a way they wouldn’t feel it with any of the other characters.”

While this is certainly true, it’s also possible that the tremendous acting chops of Colm Meaney allowed us to really believe that what he was going through was real, as opposed to the stiffer characters in the series. (Or, for that matter, all Star Trek series.) But another important reason why O’Brien’s various plights seem particularly relatable is because there are actual stakes for his character. Unlike a lot of other Trek regulars, O’Brien has a family, and fairly normal”one at that. When things on the Enterprise or Deep Space Nine go pear-shaped, it feels really scary for O’Brien. Sure Sisko has a family too, but his son Jake is a little older and savvier. Miles’s daughter Molly is just a little kid!

In DS9’s “Time’s Orphan” the notion of the O’Brien family getting seriously screwed up by a science fictional premise is particularly heartbreaking. Due to a freak time vortex showing up and ruining a perfectly good picnic, a feral 18 year-old Molly suddenly replaces little kid Molly. Despite their efforts at reintegrating Molly back into civilized society they make no headway and Miles and his wife Keiko eventually send the feral version of Molly back into the vortex in hopes of swapping her for Molly’s younger self. Basically, Miles exiles a version of his daughter. Heavy.

And if that wasn’t bad enough, he’s also been tortured, held captive, betrayed and possessed a whole slew of times. In the TNG episode “Power Play” O’Brien is one of three crewmembers whose body is occupied by malevolent aliens hell-bent on taking over the Enterprise. With bad-O’Brien pointing a phaser at his wife Keiko for pretty much the entire episode, it’s a minor miracle they stayed together. In fact, Keiko must be some kind of saint for putting up with O’Brien. Now, I’m not saying O’Brien isn’t a stand-up guy and good father and good husband. He totally is.

And though she does suggest moving back to Earth a few times, Keiko is a pretty good sport about pretty much everything that happens to her family. Though when she was turned into a little kid in “Rascals” you could really feel O’Brien’s pain in just how weird that relationship was going to be.

However, the whole spouse-possessed by really mean aliens thing gets switched in the DS9 episode “The Assignment. “Here, the Pah-wraiths take over poor Keiko’s body and tell him he has to do what they want or Keiko gets it. This is made even worse by the fact that not only does O’Brien have to try and destroy the wormhole against his will, but also that he rarely even gets to see Keiko. Life-threatening, space station-destroying stakes AND their quality time taken away!

 

Oh no! Somebody stop him! Oh no! Somebody stop him!

 

Basically, every member of the O’Brien family has to be put through some kind of time-futzing shenanigans. In “Hard Time” Miles himself experiences 20 years in an alien jail cell, even though almost no time has passed at all. With all the perspective shifts in this guy’s life it’s amazing he keeps it together at all. Which is why he has a drinking buddy: Dr. Bashir. And even though we all love Kirk and Spock, Miles and Julian just might be the best Trek bromance of them all. Actor Alexander Siddig backs me up here by saying “…O’Brien and Bashir are the only real friendship that’s ever happened on Star Trek. Those two are really friends…

Even in a bizzaro universe, Miles O’Brien can’t escape from being the nice guy who sort of gets screwed over all the time. In the various mirror universe episodes on DS9, “Smiley” might seem more hardcore than our Miles, but he’s still an everyman and stand-up person, despite kidnapping the regular-universe version of Sisko. Notably, the alternate version of drinking buddy Bashir is a total jerk in the bizarro universe.

 

True Love

 

What’s also demonstrated here is how unjudgemental the character of O’Brien is. It’s not that he’s amoral about bizzaro Sikso having a mistress, it’s just that he sort of looks past it. The same goes for O’Brien’s relationship with his former Captain, Benjamin Maxwell in the TNG episode “The Wounded.” Despite the terrible things that Maxwell has done, you really get the sense that O’Brien will be able to separate his fond memories of Maxwell from the crazy person the rogue captain eventually became. It’s not just that O’Brien is crazy loyal, it’s that he gets people. Space station Deep Space Nine didn’t really need a counselor for six years because most of the characters probably just went and got plastered with Miles. (We see Worf do this at least once.)

But despite the massacre on Setlik III, his family being screwed with by time vortices and jerky aliens, getting captured and tortured over and over again and not even having a name in “Encounter at Fairpoint,” Miles O’Brien endured. Did he have the luck of the Irish after all? Whatever the answer is, it’s clear we certainly needed him. And on this St. Patrick’s Day, I’ll be lifting a glass in a toast to the one and only Chief O’Brien!

DS9 Stories/News: Key Odo & Kira Moments Part II

Source: http://www.freewebs.com/laurelgirl120/keyodokiramoments.htm

The following scenes are pivotal in depicting the evolution of the relationship between Odo and Kira, as their friendship deepens, survives crises, hits rocky patches and generally follows the path many of us are familiar with as they find their way eventually to love.

It is, IMO, the most intelligently written, natural and believable relationship, not only in the world of Star Trek, but in television. The fact that their friendship and romance captivates us, 15+ years after the debut of DS9, is a testament to the enduring nature of their love.

Enjoy The

Journey!

    

Crossfire

Hesitant to reveal his feelings, Odo loses his chance with Kira when Shakaar, her old Resistance leader, steps into the picture and sweeps her off her feet. A must see for those who revel in Odo-angst.

Things Past

In a scene eerily reminiscent of season 2′s “Necessary Evil,” Kira confronts Odo about a secret he’s kept for seven years. Early in his tenure as Security Chief under Cardassian rule on Terek Nor, Odo mistakenly executed three innocent Bajorans for an assignation attempt on Gul Dukat. The shame of that failure has eaten at him ever since and now it’s become public. This breach of trust puts even more strain on an already frayed relationship between Odo and Kira. Odo found a way to forgive Kira in “Necessary Evil.” Can Kira do the same now?

 

 The Darkness and the Light

 

Someone is killing all Kira’s old Resistance comrades. When two of her dearest Resistance friends come to the station to protect her and are subsequently murdered, Kira goes into warrior mode, but her advanced pregnancy betrays her and she winds up in the Infirmary. In what amounts to a soliloquy, Kira tells Odo how she became a Resistance fighter. He stands silently behind her. It’s a moment that reveals the deep, almost spiritual bond between them – a connection that’s manifested through their unspoken body language.

 The Begotten

 

A baby Changeling comes into Odo’s possession and it’s love at first sight. Odo is still a human at this point. But the baby is sick and eventually dies. It’s dying gift to Odo is the return of his Changeling abilities, but for Odo the change is bittersweet.

In a parallel story, Kira finally delivers the baby she’s been carrying for the O’Briens. She’s been a reluctant surrogate, but now that the baby is with his parents, she feels empty and lonely.

In their only scene together, Kira confides her sadness over ‘losing’ the baby that was never hers (telling point here – Kira reveals these feelings not to her lover, Shakaar, whom she’s just put on a shuttle to Bajor, but to her friend), and Odo admits he understands what she’s going through – “I think I know what you mean, Nerys.” It is the first time he has ever used her given name! They agree to take a walk and share their mutual grief. It’s a tender, affectionate moment as Kira slips an arm across Odo’s shoulders.

 Children of Time

  The episode where Odo tells Kira he’s in love with her. A temporal anomaly causes the Defiant crew to meet their own descendants on a planet called Gaia. Kira had died in that time line, and this Kira will die as well without returning to DS9 for treatment. But a return to the station will wipe out the Gaia colony of nearly 8000 people. A classic no-win scenario, and the Odo from the Gaia time-line, who has had 200 years to mourn the loss of “his” Kira is determined to not let history repeat itself. A wonderful story that carries troubling implications.

 Behind the Lines

 

Heartsore and vulnerable over his unrequited love for Kira, and helplessly drawn by the lure of his own People, Odo is seduced to the “Dark Side” by the Female Founder. In doing so, he betrays Kira and the Federation. An angry and outraged Kira confronts Odo, but by now he is completely bewitched by the Founder and is indifferent to Kira. As Kira storms out of Odo’s quarters, the Female Founder appears and in perhaps the most bone-chilling scene in the entire series, asks Odo if Kira’s anger has bothered him. Odo’s serene, almost offhand answer, “No, not really…” leaves the viewer visibly shaken.