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Ensign Melora Pazlar was 24th century Elaysian Starfleet officer. She was the first Elaysian to enter Starfleet, graduating in Stellar cartography.

Personal Life

Being a species form a low-gravity planet, it was extremely difficult for her to function in "standard" gravity. As a result of this limitation, only a small number of her kind actually left the Elaysian homeworld to explore space.

The limitation she experienced did not stop her, however, and she soon enlisted in Starfleet. Part of the reason for joining Starfleet was to encourage others and show them that she could overcome any adversity; however, she also had a strong desire to explore space and other worlds instead of merely being confined to her planet.

At some point in her life, she learned to speak Klingonese to a fluent level and developed an interest in Vulcan music such as etudes by Delvok. She also enjoyed Klingon food, preferring to see "the blood running through the veins" of her racht. (DS9: "Melora")

Starfleet Career

Melora was the first Elaysian to enter Starfleet. During her studies she kept people at arm's length, believing other people would treat her differently because of her limited mobility in "normal" gravity. Her servo controls and anti-grav chair were needed for her to operate effectively at Starfleet Academy which she felt distinguished her from the rest of the students. She eventually graduated as a stellar cartographer.

Melora Pazlar tests her wheelchair

Melora, after arriving on Deep Space 9

Her first deep space assignment came in 2370 when she was temporarily assigned to Deep Space 9 to survey a sector in the Gamma Quadrant.

Upon arrival at the station, Melora requested permission from Commander Benjamin Sisko to conduct the survey alone, believing she could accomplish the task quicker and to a better standard than if somebody accompanied her. When he refused, she treated it as evidence that he thought she was disabled in some way, though Sisko eventually made it clear that Starfleet policy did not allow anyone to go on a mission alone, especially not an ensign.

Her stubbornness to do things by herself caused her to have an accident while attempting to get an astrophysics array for her mission. When entering the cargo bay, she tripped, landing on her servo controls. It was only after Lieutenant Dax found her that she was taken to the infirmary and her controls repaired. Subsequently, the mission to the Gamma Quadrant was delayed by a day, in order to give her time to recover.

Bashir tells Melora she can't use zero gravity

Melora is told the neuromuscular procedure is irreversible

During her time on the station, Doctor Bashir researched and further developed Nathaniel Teros's work on neuromuscular adaptation. If successful, the therapy would have made it possible for a low-gravity species, such as Elaysians, to move in an Earth-like gravity by elevating the motor cortex neural output of the brain. Melora was initially ecstatic by the news that she may be able to function in "normal" gravity like the rest of the crew, but after her second treatment a disadvantage emerged; once the procedure was complete, it would be irreversible, and any exposure to low-gravity could seriously disrupt her nervous system. Melora decided she would take the time to think about the treatment over the course of her mission in the Gamma Quadrant.

Upon returning from the mission, she and Dax were ambushed by the criminal Fallit Kot and forced back into their runabout, the Orinoco. When Commander Sisko prevented their departure by means of a tractor beam, Kot shot Melora, forcing an overload in her servo controls and knocking her to the deck. The tractor beam was subsequently released and Melora, along with Quark and Dax, were taken through the wormhole. Commander Sisko, accompanied by Chief O'Brien and Doctor Bashir, quickly beamed to the runabout Rio Grande and initiated pursuit.

Melora flies into Fallit Kot on Orinoco

Melora flies herself into Fallit Kot

On the Orinoco, an injured Melora lay on the floor as the ship accelerated to warp. Believing she was dead, Kot payed her no attention, thereby enabling Melora to reach the gravity controls by the transporter pad, where she disabled gravity on the runabout. While everybody floated in the air, she kicked herself away from a console and into Kot, knocking him against the cockpit window, allowing Dax to gain control of the situation. The Rio Grande eventually caught up with them and Melora was taken back to the station.

After having given some thought into her neuromuscular treatments, Melora ultimately decided not to go ahead with them, believing it would strip her of what it meant to be an Elaysian.

She was later reassigned to another position within Starfleet. (DS9: "Melora")

Personal Relationships

Family

Melora on Elaysian homeworld

Melora and her brother on the Elaysian homeworld

Melora had a brother who resided on Elaysia with her family, none of whom had been off-world before. When she decided to leave her homeworld for a career in Starfleet, they gave her a cane made from the wood of a garlanic tree as a gift.

Melora also kept a picture of her brother on a table in her quarters.

The names of Melora's family have not been mentioned in any canon production though her personnel file in the non-canon video game Star Trek: Starship Creator lists her mother's name as Tomara, her father's name as Zembrin and her brother's name as Azmarin.

Julian Bashir

Bashir and Melora kiss

Bashir and Melora kiss

Doctor Bashir was the officer who prepared the station for Melora prior to her arrival. During the course of his preparation, he came to know her Starfleet record by heart, greatly admiring her devotion to overcome any adversity. As a result of this, he once said he felt as though he had known her for years. Upon her arrival, he took the time to befriend her and attempt to see beyond her defensive exterior. He eventually managed to get Melora to realize that nobody is completely independant, when he pointed out that "in space we all depend on one another to some degree."

Melora quickly became romantically involved with the Doctor. Although she initially questioned whether a relationship between two such different species could work, the two of them did enjoy meals at the Klingon restaurant. She even lowered her guard enough to allow Bashir to experience weightlessness with her, where they also shared their first kiss.

When Melora decided not to continue with her neuromuscular treatment, Bashir was disappointed but respected her decision and offered to continue with it at any point should she change her mind. Before leaving Deep Space 9, Melora had one last meal with him at the Klingon restaurant, where they were serenaded with Klingon lullabies by the chef.

It is unknown if their relationship ended here, though by 2371, Bashir had entered into a relationship with Leeta.

Jadzia Dax

Dax and Melora discuss romance in Starfleet

Melora and Dax discuss romance

Commander Sisko assigned Lieutenant Jadzia Dax to the survey mission after he had refused Melora's request to conduct it alone.

Though Melora initially objected, she soon came to develop a working relationship with her, even going as far as to ask Dax's advice on long distance relationships after she became involved with Doctor Bashir.

Though Dax agreed that "love across lightyears" was hard and lacked intimacy, she partially illeviated Melora's fears by recounting the story of a hydrogen breathing Lothra and an Oxygene who fell "hopelessly in love", staying together for fifty-seven years despite the fact they could only spend forty minutes a day in the same room.

Concluding, Dax told her to focus on the present, enjoy the moment, and not look to the future until it was necessary. (DS9: "Melora")

Memorable Quotes

"I'm sorry if I seem overly sensitive. But I'm used to being shut out of the 'Melora' problem. The truth is there is no 'Melora' problem. Until people create one."

- Melora to Sisko, in their first meeting.


"I don't need a medical opinion to tell me my own capabilities..."

- Melora, defending her request to pilot the runabout alone.


"I've been in one chair or another since I left my homeworld. My family gave me this cane made from the wood of a garlanic tree...they had no idea what it would be like to live off-world...in what you consider "normal" gravity. Only a handful of Elaysians have ever left home. But I always knew I had to be one of them. I dreamed about exploring the stars as a girl. And I wasn't going to allow any... "handicap," not a chair, not a Cardassian station... to stop me from chasing that dream."

- Melora, on her reasoning for joining Starfleet.


"Melora... no one on this station is completely independent... in space, we all depend on one another to some degree..."
"I just want you all to know you can depend on me..."
"Okay, you've proven that... what do the rest of us have to do to convince you?"
"Of what?"
"That you can depend on us."

- Julian Bashir and Melora, on her determination to be completely independent.


"I don't understand myself... how can I possibly have second thoughts... this would mean real independence... it's everything I ever wished for...But then I start to think about home... and how I won't ever be able to go back... maybe just for a short visit... but never really go back..."

- Melora to Dax, on whether or not to go ahead with the neuromuscular treatment.


"Let's just sit here awhile and listen... I want to remember all of this..."

- Melora to Bashir, as the Klingon chef serenades them.

Appendices

Background information

Melora Pazlar hover chair design

The early design sketch for Melora's chair

Melora Pazlar exoskeleton design

The early design sketch for Melora's exoskeleton

Melora Pazlar was played by Daphne Ashbrook in her only Star Trek appearance. The character was initially to be Deep Space 9's science officer because the producers liked the idea of a character who came from a low-gravity environment, but this was changed to the Trill Jadzia Dax, as it would lead to fewer complications. (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion, p.93)

Ashbrook prepared for the role by taking a wheelchair to a local shopping mall. Commenting on the experience, she said, "Everything's an obstacle and also nobody looks at you. I think because people are uncomfortable and they don't know what to do." [1]

The character was created by Evan Carlos Somers, who wrote the initial draft of "Melora". As Somers himself is confined to a wheelchair, the story held special importance for him, with his experiences of working in the narrow studio offices contributing to the personality of the character. (The Official Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Magazine Vol 6, p. 60)

The producers initially thought the character would be male, but Somers always envisioned her as a female, and love interest for Bashir; "'Zero-gravity sex with Bashir' was a prime element to the story in my mind. I also liked the idea that by falling in love with someone who isn't disabled, and having this cure presented to her concomitant to a growing love affair, maybe Melora is doing it for him. How can she turn this cure down? He loves her and he would never want to do anything wrong for her. But she didn't really think it out. In fact, she was surviving, and functioning very well, prior to her arrival on the station. Now, she's faced with a difficult assignment, but when she leaves, things are going to be OK again. She doesn't have to be cured, and she doesn't have to do it to please Bashir" (The Official Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Magazine Vol 6, p. 60)

Because she was to be involved in a romantic relationship that had to be believable for Bashir, the producers wanted Melora to have a strange-looking forehead but wanted no extensive makeup below her eyes and instructed make-up supervisor Michael Westmore to keep her beautiful although she was an alien. The makeup department designed and created an interesting and enhanced appliance that ran the from the ridge of her nose and stopped at her forehead. A blond wig with a receded hairline was used to allow for the forehead appliance. (Star Trek: Aliens & Artifacts, p. 152; DS9 Season 2 DVD special "Michael Westmore's Aliens: Season 2")

Jim Martin designed Melora's exoskeleton; "I started with a basic framework for her limbs. The producers didn't want any chest or waist pieces. They just wanted it to be around her arms, her neck, and her legs. And they didn't want regular hinges, because hinges aren't futuristic enough. So [Senior llustrator] Rick Sternbach designed an expanding and contracting kind of hinge, something that pulls in rather than rotate, that I incorporated into my drawings. But the metallic bands kept popping off, once right in the middle of a scene. Joe Longo never let me forget it!" (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion, p. 94)

Melora's chair was initially to have utilized the anti-grav technology that has been a part of Star Trek since The Original Series and the chair from TNG: "Too Short a Season" was to be pulled out of storage and remodelled. However, the chair had originally been designed with the larger set of the USS Enterprise-D in mind and it was quickly realized that it would not be practical in the relatively small Deep Space Nine corridor sets. (The Making of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, p. 108)

Set Decorator Laura Richarz purchased the chair seen in the finished episode, which was revamped by Property Master Joe Longo. Longo said of how the production crew decided to keep the wheelchair as simple as possible, recalling that he, "...added a control panel and some wheel covers to block out the spokes in the wheels, and changed the joystick. Basically we tried to keep it as simple as possible, because of our experience on "Too Short a Season". We had made a big albatross of a moving chair for that, and it was bad. But this one worked great." (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion, p. 93)

The final script describes Melora as "a cool, professional young woman in her mid- to late-20s [..] although her face is a mask, the extraordinary pressure from gravity is apparent in every move she makes." [2]

Apocrypha

Melora Pazlar Starship Creator personnel file

Personnel file for Melora Pazlar in Star Trek: Starship Creator

Orions Hounds

Melora, as she appears on the cover of Orion's Hounds

  • Melora Pazlar appears as a selectable crewmember in the video game Star Trek: Starship Creator, in which her personnel file states she was assigned to the USS Yellowstone conducting deep space surveys, prior to arriving on Deep Space 9. It further states that following the events depicted in "Melora", she is assigned to the stellar cartography department on the USS Prokofiev.
  • According to Pocket TNG novels, Gemworld Book One and Gemworld Book Two, following the Dominion War, Pazlar is assigned to the USS Enterprise-E, under the command of Captain Jean-Luc Picard, where she assists in a scientific study on the effects of low-gravity on Primus IV. Before arriving at the planet, Pazlar receives a telepathic distress call from one of her worlds species, the Lipul, that indicates Gemworld is in catastrophic danger. Pazlar convinces Picard of the threat and upon arrival at Gemworld, the Enterprise discovers that the machinery that maintains Gemworld's atmosphere is failing. Pazlar and the Enterprise crew manage to save the artificial world from destruction, but in doing so, Melora is forced to take the life of one of her own people. The books also detail a brief romance between her and Reginald Barclay.
  • The first book of the Star Trek: Titan series, entitled Taking Wing, establishes Melora Pazlar as serving as a lieutenant and head of the stellar cartography lab aboard the USS Titan at Captain Riker's request. It also mentions her being decorated for valor after saving 192 of her shipmates during the Dominion War.
  • In the third Titan novel, Orion's Hounds, Pazlar is viciously attacked by her shipmate Tuvok, who is under the telepathic control of the star-jellies. Shortly after the incident, Melora asks Tuvok to train her in various means of self-defense. She is also depicted in the cover illustration.
  • In the Star Trek: Destiny novel, Gods of Night, Pazlar is promoted to Lieutenant Commander and made chief science officer. Titan Chief Engineer Xin Ra-Havreii also makes several upgrades to the stellar cartography holotank which allows her to not only operate in a zero-gravity environment, but also project a holographic avatar of herself into every major area on the ship, via a complex holopresence system. This allows her to participate in senior staff meetings without the need to leave the holotank. Xin also makes a romantic advance towards Melora but she declines, although she did not understand why.
  • In the Destiny novel, Mere Mortals, the Titan arives at New Erigol and is threatened by a Caeliar ship. Riker assigns Pazlar and Ra-Havreii to search for non-tactical weaknesses to exploit and towards this end, they calculate the size of the sphere surrounding the planet and prepares a strike team. During the attempt, Pazlar initiates the subspace trajectory, but the attempt is aborted when a scrambling field prevents the transport from working. Pazlar is later visited by Counselor Huilan Sen'kara in what she thinks are her quarters but is actually the holotank; the counselor expresses concern that she is using the tank to completely isolate herself from the rest of the crew physically and emotionally. He further expresses that by not using her exoskeleton, she would likely forget how to, losing the ability to ever leave, a thought she dismisses. After continuing to work, Pazlar and Ra-Havreii are able to discover the soliton pulses keeping open micro-subspace tunnels and then tap into them to witness the invasion of the Borg Collective at the Azure Nebula.

External links

  • [3]
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