Toggle menu
Toggle preferences menu
Toggle personal menu
Not logged in
Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits.

Editing Ronald D. Moore

From the only original and legitimate Battlestar Wiki: the free-as-in-beer, non-corporate, open-content encyclopedia, analytical reference, and episode guide on all things Battlestar Galactica. Accept neither subpar substitutes nor subpar clones.
Warning: You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you log in or create an account, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
The edit can be undone. Please check the comparison below to verify that this is what you want to do, and then publish the changes below to finish undoing the edit.
Latest revision Your text
Line 26: Line 26:
By the end of the series, he was serving as a producer and obtained a number of accolades. As a member of the production team, he earned an Emmy nomination for Outstanding Drama Series, and, along with writing partner [[MemoryAlpha:Brannon Braga|Brannon Braga]], a [[w:Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation|Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation]] for "[[MemoryAlpha:All Good Things... (episode)|All Good Things...]]," the series finale. They went on to earn Hugo nominations for the first two ''Next Generation'' films, 1994's ''[[MemoryAlpha:Star Trek Generations|Star Trek Generations]]'' and 1996's ''[[MemoryAlpha:Star Trek: First Contact|Star Trek: First Contact]]''. Braga and Moore also collaborated on the story for 2000's ''[[w:Mission: Impossible II|Mission: Impossible II]]''.
By the end of the series, he was serving as a producer and obtained a number of accolades. As a member of the production team, he earned an Emmy nomination for Outstanding Drama Series, and, along with writing partner [[MemoryAlpha:Brannon Braga|Brannon Braga]], a [[w:Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation|Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation]] for "[[MemoryAlpha:All Good Things... (episode)|All Good Things...]]," the series finale. They went on to earn Hugo nominations for the first two ''Next Generation'' films, 1994's ''[[MemoryAlpha:Star Trek Generations|Star Trek Generations]]'' and 1996's ''[[MemoryAlpha:Star Trek: First Contact|Star Trek: First Contact]]''. Braga and Moore also collaborated on the story for 2000's ''[[w:Mission: Impossible II|Mission: Impossible II]]''.


After ''The Next Generation'', Moore became a supervising producer on [[MemoryAlpha:Rick Berman|Rick Berman]] and Michael Piller's character-driven spin-off, ''[[MemoryAlpha:Star Trek: Deep Space Nine|Star Trek: Deep Space Nine]]'' (1993). He began by writing the [[MemoryAlpha:DS9 Season 3|third season]] premiere, "[[MemoryAlpha:The Search, Part I|The Search, Part I]]," which saw the introduction of the [[MemoryAlpha:USS Defiant (NX-74205)|USS ''Defiant'']]. Moore had originally intended to name Captain [[MemoryAlpha:Benjamin Sisko|Sisko]]'s starship, ''Valiant'', after the [[MemoryAlpha:SS Valiant|ship]] mentioned in the first [[MemoryAlpha:Star Trek: The Original Series|''Star Trek'']]{{'|s}} second pilot, "[[MemoryAlpha:Where No Man Has Gone Before (episode)|Where No Man Has Gone Before]]". However, as ''[[MemoryAlpha:Star Trek: Voyager|Star Trek: Voyager]]'' was about to premiere and the studio did not want two ships starting with the letter ''v'', he changed it to ''Defiant'' in honor of the [[MemoryAlpha:USS Defiant (NCC-1764)|ship]] from "[[MemoryAlpha:The Tholian Web (episode)|The Tholian Web]]".
After ''The Next Generation'', Moore became a supervising producer on [[MemoryAlpha:Rick Berman|Rick Berman]] and Michael Piller's character-driven spin-off, ''[[MemoryAlpha:Star Trek: Deep Space Nine|Star Trek: Deep Space Nine]]'' (1993). He began by writing the [[MemoryAlpha:DS9 Season 3|third season]] premiere, "[[MemoryAlpha:The Search, Part I|The Search, Part I]]," which saw the introduction of the [[MemoryAlpha:USS Defiant (NX-74205)|USS ''Defiant'']]. Moore had originally intended to name Captain [[MemoryAlpha:Benjamin Sisko|Sisko]]'s starship, ''Valiant'', after the [[MemoryAlpha:SS Valiant|ship]] mentioned in the first [[MemoryAlpha:Star Trek: The Original Series|''Star Trek'']]{{'|s}} second pilot, "[[MemoryAlpha:Where No Man Has Gone Before|Where No Man Has Gone Before]]". However, as ''[[MemoryAlpha:Star Trek: Voyager|Star Trek: Voyager]]'' was about to premiere and the studio did not want two ships starting with the letter ''v'', he changed it to ''Defiant'' in honor of the [[MemoryAlpha:USS Defiant (NCC-1764)|ship]] from "[[MemoryAlpha:The Tholian Web|The Tholian Web]]".


As two of the most ardent classic ''Star Trek'' fans on ''Deep Space Nine''{{'|s}} writing staff, Moore and [[MemoryAlpha:Rene Echevarria|Rene Echevarria]] were chosen to write the teleplay for "[[MemoryAlpha:Trials and Tribble-ations|Trials and Tribble-ations]]" as a tribute to the original ''Star Trek'''s 30th Anniversary. Besides bringing [[MemoryAlpha:James T. Kirk|Captain Kirk]] and Captain Sisko together on screen via seamless Emmy Award-nominated visual effects, the episode also brought the pair a Hugo nomination. They went on to write the series penultimate episode, "[[MemoryAlpha:The Dogs of War|The Dogs of War]]," which introduced the new ''Defiant'', formerly the [[MemoryAlpha:USS São Paulo|USS ''São Paulo'']]. The name of the ship and Sisko's line "Hello, ship," were a tribute to the [[w:Steve McQueen|Steve McQueen]] film ''[[w:The Sand Pebbles (film)|The Sand Pebbles]]''. By the time ''Deep Space Nine'' ended, he was a co-executive producer, and moved on to his third ''Star Trek'' spin-off series: ''Voyager''.
As two of the most ardent classic ''Star Trek'' fans on ''Deep Space Nine''{{'|s}} writing staff, Moore and [[MemoryAlpha:Rene Echevarria|Rene Echevarria]] were chosen to write the teleplay for "[[MemoryAlpha:Trials and Tribble-ations|Trials and Tribble-ations]]" as a tribute to the original ''Star Trek'''s 30th Anniversary. Besides bringing [[MemoryAlpha:James T. Kirk|Captain Kirk]] and Captain Sisko together on screen via seamless Emmy Award-nominated visual effects, the episode also brought the pair a Hugo nomination. They went on to write the series penultimate episode, "[[MemoryAlpha:The Dogs of War|The Dogs of War]]," which introduced the new ''Defiant'', formerly the [[MemoryAlpha:USS São Paulo|USS ''São Paulo'']]. The name of the ship and Sisko's line "Hello, ship," were a tribute to the [[w:Steve McQueen|Steve McQueen]] film ''[[w:The Sand Pebbles (film)|The Sand Pebbles]]''. By the time ''Deep Space Nine'' ended, he was a co-executive producer, and moved on to his third ''Star Trek'' spin-off series: ''Voyager''.

To edit this page, please enter the words that appear below in the box (more info):

Refresh
Cancel Editing help (opens in new window)

  [] · [[]] · [[|]] · {{}} · · “” ‘’ «» ‹› „“ ‚‘ · ~ | °   · ± × ÷ ² ³ ½ · §
     [[Category:]] · [[:File:]] · [[Special:MyLanguage/]] · <code></code> · <nowiki></nowiki> <code><nowiki></nowiki></code> · <syntaxhighlight></syntaxhighlight> · <includeonly></includeonly> · <noinclude></noinclude> · #REDIRECT[[]] · <translate></translate> · <languages/> · {{#translation:}} · <tvar|></> · {{DEFAULTSORT:}} · <categorytree></categorytree> · <div style="clear:both;"></div> <s></s>


Your changes will be visible immediately.
  • For testing, please use the sandbox instead.
  • On talk pages, please sign your comment by typing four tildes (~~~~).