William Riker: Difference between revisions
No edit summary Tag: 2017 source edit |
Tag: 2017 source edit |
||
Line 27: | Line 27: | ||
[[File:Assimilation 1 RIA.jpg|thumb|A live-action image of Riker as seen on the wraparound cover of [[STTNGDWA 1|''Assimilation²'' #1]].]] | [[File:Assimilation 1 RIA.jpg|thumb|A live-action image of Riker as seen on the wraparound cover of [[STTNGDWA 1|''Assimilation²'' #1]].]] | ||
* ''Assimilation²'' depicts Riker with the likeness of actor {{w|Jonathan Frakes}}, who originally portrayed him in ''[[Star Trek: The Next Generation]]''. | * ''Assimilation²'' depicts Riker with the likeness of actor {{w|Jonathan Frakes}}, who originally portrayed him in ''[[Star Trek: The Next Generation]]''. | ||
** Frakes was one of many names put forward for the role of {{Roberts|n=the Master}} in [[Doctor Who (TV story)|the 1996 TV Movie]].<ref>http://www.shannonsullivan.com/drwho/serials/tvm.html</ref> | |||
== Footnotes == | |||
{{Reflist}} | |||
== External links == | == External links == |
Revision as of 17:18, 11 January 2023
In a parallel universe, Commander William Thomas Riker was the first officer of the Starfleet vessel USS Enterprise-D during the 24th century. As such, Capt. Picard often referred to him as "Number One."
Biography
Early career
Riker had a friendship with fellow Starfleet officer Marcus Bertrand, who he remembered as a "strong, fiercely independent man." Together, they played music at "...isko's", with Riker playing the trombone. (COMIC: Assimilation²)
Locutus
During the Borg invasion of the United Federation of Planets, Riker took command of the Enterprise after Picard was kidnapped by the Borg and taken aboard their cube. As Riker and the crew discovered, Picard had been assimilated into the Borg Collective as his identity was suppressed by Locutus, the emissary of the Borg. After the Borg used Picard's knowledge to easily defeat a Starfleet task force in battle of Wolf 359, Riker devised a plan to turn the tables against the Borg as they proceeded to Earth, entailing the retrieval of the Captain from the Borg cube by Lieutenants Data and Worf. Back aboard the Enterprise, Picard was freed from the Collective as he assisted Data in incapacitating the Borg cube, leading to its self-destruction. (COMIC: Assimilation²)
The Doctor and the Cybermen
In 2368, Picard sent him on a mission to check up on mining operations on Naia VII. He took Data and Worf with him and found that the mines, which were below the water level of the largely aquatic planet, had been built with insufficient regard to safety. In fact, a section of the mines flooded while he and his team were visiting. Riker was saved from drowning by Lt Cmdr Data.
After Riker returned to the Enterprise, Capt. Picard suggested that he inspect the ship's holodeck, which had just received a systems upgrade. Accompanied by Data and Beverly Crusher, he began a Dixon Hill programme set in 1940s San Francisco. He heard the Doctor's TARDIS materialise, but thought it was a bug in the upgrade. Similarly, when the Eleventh Doctor, Amy Pond and Rory Williams arrived and the Doctor identified Data as an android, Riker assumed that the simulation was malfunctioning, recognising Data as an anachronistic element in the setting. He ended the programme and was surprised to see that the Doctor, Amy, Rory and the TARDIS were not part of the simulation. After Worf escorted the trio to the ship's observation lounge, Riker asked Deanna Troi if she could sense anything from their visitors. The introductions were interrupted by news of the attack on Delta IV. (COMIC: Assimilation²)
Behind the scenes
- Assimilation² depicts Riker with the likeness of actor Jonathan Frakes, who originally portrayed him in Star Trek: The Next Generation.
- Frakes was one of many names put forward for the role of the Master in the 1996 TV Movie.[1]
Footnotes
External links
- William T. Riker at Memory Alpha, the Star Trek canon wiki
- William T. Riker at Memory Beta, the wiki that covers all licensed Star Trek works