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  1. May 11, 2024 · Summary. Tom Paris underwent significant character growth from a playboy to a loving partner over Star Trek: Voyager's seven seasons. The episode "Blood Fever" highlighted Tom's development and laid the foundation for his romance with B'Elanna Torres.

    • Overview
    • Early life
    • Starfleet career
    • Personal interests
    • Personal relationships
    • Alternate Tom Paris
    • Appendices

    "And you, Tom Paris. Sexy, in a Howdy Doody sort of way. Pretty goofy, although sometimes I think you're the smartest man I've ever met."

    – Rain Robinson, 1996 ("Future's End, Part II")

    Thomas Eugene "Tom" Paris was a 24th century Human Starfleet officer who served for seven years as flight control officer of the Federation starship USS Voyager, under the command of Captain Kathryn Janeway.

    The son of a prominent Starfleet admiral, he was dishonorably discharged from Starfleet and later joined the Maquis before being captured and serving time at the Federation Penal Settlement in New Zealand. After joining Voyager to retrieve Chakotay's Maquis ship from the Badlands, he was transported 70,000 light years across the Milky Way Galaxy, deep into the Delta Quadrant, before returning in 2378. (VOY: "Caretaker", "Non Sequitur", "Thirty Days", "Pathfinder", "Fury") He later became, in essence, a morale officer to the rest of Starfleet, following his return, with a handshake tour. (LD: "We'll Always Have Tom Paris")

    Paris was the son of a Starfleet admiral, Owen Paris. (VOY: "Caretaker", "Vis à Vis")

    Growing up, Paris often felt inadequate, due to the pressure his father put on him to excel and feeling like a failure as a result. The alienation continued throughout his adulthood to the point where Tom would just ignore his father altogether, "tuning out" to what he referred to as yet another "holiday sermon" about the Prime Directive. (VOY: "Time and Again")

    Throughout Tom's life and career at Starfleet, his father remained tough and remote, telling him, for instance, that crying was a sign of weakness. Crying, incidentally, was the one thing Tom recalled doing the most as a teenager. (VOY: "Threshold") As a result, Paris and his father had a rather troubled relationship, and, at some point, Tom just wanted him out of his life. Despite this, Paris loved his bedroom back home, as he often locked himself away in there, not only to cry, but also to play games and listen to music. After it landed on his windowsill next to his bed, young Paris also fed a baby bird water with an eye dropper to keep it alive. (VOY: "Parturition") Moreover, he lost his virginity in his bedroom at the age of seventeen, while his parents were away for the weekend. (VOY: "Threshold")

    Paris had a desire for adventure while growing up, feeling he had to climb the largest tree and scale the tallest cliff. (VOY: "Real Life") As a buff of early Human missions into space, he also memorized the recording from the Friendship 1 probe and built a model of it as a young boy. (VOY: "11:59", "One Small Step", "Friendship One")

    While he considered most of his early family to be rather ordinary people, referring to them as "salt of the earth" type of people with some "farmers" and "colonists", he held great respect for one of his ancestors, a pilot who flew the first orbital glider over the lower Martian plateau. (VOY: "11:59") Tom himself had a passion for piloting, too, which he really discovered at the age of eight, when his father took him for a trip in an S class shuttle. (VOY: "Alice") He also used to take Tom up in an "old Class 1 shuttle". (VOY: "Fury") When he was sixteen years old, Tom took his father's shuttle out for a joyride, ending up frying all the relays and landing it at the bottom of Lake Tahoe, where it sat for years to come. (VOY: "Vis à Vis")

    Despite this, Tom's first love was the sea. He was obsessed with stories about the ocean – e.g., Captains Courageous as well as Moby Dick – and once said that he had read Jules Verne's Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea "at least twenty thousand times." Due to this love, Tom had planned to join the Federation Naval Patrol after high school. However, his father had other plans for him and did not understand his son's passion. As far as he was concerned, the only ship Tom ever was going to serve on had to have a Starfleet insignia on it. Eventually, Tom applied to Starfleet Academy. (VOY: "Thirty Days")

    Starfleet Academy

    During his first year at the Academy, Paris fell in love for the first time, with a girl named Susie Crabtree. When she broke off the relationship, he broke out in hives, unable to get out of bed for a week, and almost failed Stellar Cartography. He spent much of that year in a daze, and, even years later, he thought of her from time to time, never really being able to completely forget her. (VOY: "Lifesigns") During his second semester at the Academy in the 2360s, Paris chose Marseille, France as the site of his physical training. There, he frequented a bistro located near his living area, known as Chez Sandrine, where he once met a girl by the name of "Ricky". (VOY: "The Cloud", "Meld", "Lifesigns", "Vis à Vis") Advanced Subspace Geometry was the only class at the Academy in which he actually paid attention. (VOY: "Vis à Vis") He did hone his natural aptitude for piloting skills on craft large and small, and he proved adept at holo-engineering. (VOY: "Thirty Days", "Fair Haven", "Fury", "Body and Soul") He once told Neelix that his father was the instructor of his course on Survival Strategies and that he gave Tom a mere "B-minus". (VOY: "Parturition") Paris managed to graduate from Starfleet Academy after a stormy four years, with a major in astrophysics. (VOY: "Lifesigns", "Future's End")

    Early postings

    Upon graduating from the Academy, Paris was assigned to the USS Exeter. (VOY: "Non Sequitur") His career in Starfleet was short-lived, however, and ended after he was involved in covering up his own pilot error which had led to the death of three fellow officers at Caldik Prime. Paris initially denied responsibility for the accident, but later admitted he had falsified reports to hide his culpability; for his actions he was ultimately discharged from Starfleet. (VOY: "Caretaker", "Persistence of Vision", "Vis à Vis") He once sarcastically remarked that "the ghosts of those three dead officers came to me in the middle of the night and taught me the true meaning of Christmas," when asked why he had finally confessed. (VOY: "Caretaker")

    The Maquis

    After being expelled from Starfleet, Paris wandered around, "looking for a fight," and found it as working as a mercenary for the Maquis. He was with them for a few weeks before he was arrested by Federation authorities while on his first assignment for the resistance group, convicted of treason, and sentenced to eighteen months' imprisonment at the Federation Penal Settlement in New Zealand. (VOY: "Non Sequitur", "Vis à Vis") While he was serving time at the Federation penal colony for his involvement with the Maquis, Paris received a visit from Captain Kathryn Janeway – who had served her first post out of the Academy under Owen, when he had captained the USS Al-Batani – gave him the opportunity to redeem himself, as well as be paroled, by participating in a mission. His assignment was to help track down the Maquis ship Val Jean, which had disappeared in the Badlands with Janeway's security officer Tuvok, who had been undercover. After some initial hesitation, Paris decided to take this opportunity and join Captain Janeway on Voyager. He was very cynical when asked to join. He couldn't care less about the crew of that ship, and only agreed to be brought on-board as a Starfleet observer after being assured that, when it was over, he would be cut loose and Janeway would give him a favorable report at his next review. (VOY: "Caretaker", "Vis à Vis")

    Tom Paris had a variety of interests, but many of them focused on 20th century North American culture, specifically the latter half of that century's pop culture. However, his knowledge of general history was slightly more limited, to the point that he initially believed that the Soviet Union was still active in the late 1990s, whereas it had actually collapsed at the beginning of that decade. When Voyager landed in 20th century Los Angeles on Earth, his knowledge about the existence of surveillance satellites at that time helped them remain undetected. Janeway took him on the subsequent away mission because of his knowledge of 20th-century Earth. When asked what they needed in order to pass as locals, he said, "Nice clothes, fast cars, and lots of money." (VOY: "Future's End") He also possessed considerable knowledge of the early Mars projects, from the first missions of the 1970s to the first colony. (VOY: "11:59", "One Small Step")

    Additionally, Paris was fond of playing practical jokes, particularly on Tuvok. For example, he once reprogrammed, in a variety of ways, a holographic Vulcan monastery that Tuvok used, such as dressing one of the central figures in sleepwear and changing the chants to Ferengi chants about profit. He even once reprogrammed all the systems Tuvok interacted with to say, "Live long and prosper," whenever he used them. In the holographic village of Fair Haven, Paris transformed Harry Kim's date Maggie into a Holstein-Friesian cow when she was about to kiss him. (VOY: "Fair Haven", "Spirit Folk")

    Friends Romance

    Tom Paris was known as somewhat of a ladies' man and he was very cavalier when it came to women and dating. Lieutenant Stadi once asked him whether he always flew at women "at warp speed." (VOY: "Caretaker") During his time on Voyager, he programmed the women in his Chez Sandrine holoprogram to be equally permissive and the pool hustler he had created for that program lived by the motto of "treat a tramp like a lady and a lady like a tramp." (VOY: "The Cloud") When Paris first came on board the ship, he couldn't wait to get together with the Delaney sisters; he even tried to convince Harry Kim to go on a double date with him and the twins and he went so far as to lie about Harry's accomplishments so they would agree to go out with them. (VOY: "Time and Again") During their second year on board Voyager, he told Harry that he had been "chasing" Susan Nicoletti for at least six months but with no luck. (VOY: "The Thaw") Before he became confident with women, Tom Paris had his share of heartbreaks and turn-downs. He recalled Alice Battisti from his time at the Academy, and how she wouldn't give him the time of day. (VOY: "Alice") He also once told The Doctor about his first heartbreak, Susie Crabtree, who broke up with him during his first year at the Academy. He recalled breaking out in hives, unable to get out of bed for a week while almost failing stellar cartography because of her; he eventually got over her, but "walked around in a daze" for the rest of that year and even today would think about her from time to time. He knew that the first one was always the hardest to get over. (VOY: "Lifesigns") Trapped in the Delta Quadrant, Tom Paris' options were somewhat limited. He was attracted to Kes when she first joined the vessel's crew, but because she had a relationship with Neelix, Paris never really pursued her. As a Starfleet conn officer, he eventually became attracted to a former Maquis engineer with a fiery disposition that was tempered by a vulnerable side which he found very endearing. (VOY: "Elogium", "Parturition", "Alter Ego", "Blood Fever", "Day of Honor") Star Trek: Voyager episodes), the writers realized that to continue writing Paris as a womanizer clashed with McNeill's portrayal, as the actor himself is much more of a family man. The writers therefore eventually removed the womanizing aspect of the character. (Star Trek: Voyager - A Vision of the Future

    Holograms

    Tom Paris was holographically duplicated on a number of occasions. •Recreations of crew members from Voyager and the Jupiter Station Holoprogramming Center were seen by The Doctor during a holographic malfunction in 2371. This simulation included Tom. In the illusion, Reginald Barclay told The Doctor that he had programmed the holograms and had modeled Tom after his cousin Frank. (VOY: "Projections") •The entire crew of Voyager was recreated by Tuvok from his Insurrection Alpha program, with Tom's character departing Voyager with Janeway on a diplomatic mission shortly before the mutiny began. (VOY: "Worst Case Scenario") •The Kyrian Museum of Heritage in the 31st century used the program The Voyager Encounter to detail their encounter with the warship Voyager, as an aid to a history lesson. A backup of The Doctor remarked that Tom was the only crewmate of his whose portrayal in the biased and wildly inaccurate holoprogram was even slightly accurate. (VOY: "Living Witness") •Lt. Barclay's recreated most of the crew of USS Voyager at the Communications Research Center on Earth for the Pathfinder Project in 2376. (VOY: "Pathfinder") •In 2378, Seven recreated the crew of Voyager to perfect her social skills, including Tom. (VOY: "Human Error") •The Doctor's holonovel, Photons Be Free, was set aboard the USS Vortex and crewed by characters based on the crew of USS Voyager, although the names were changed to protect the innocent. The character of Marseilles was based on Paris. When Tom found out about this, he "revised" the story, making himself the new narrator and changing the ship to the USS Voyeur. (VOY: "Author, Author")

    Alternate realities and timelines

    •In an alternate timeline, for his first official away mission, Tom Paris joined Kathryn Janeway, B'Elanna Torres, and Tuvok on a planet devastated by the detonation of a polaric ion device. Due to a subspace fracture, he and Janeway were pulled back in time prior to the detonation. They were taken hostage by protesters demonstrating against the use of polaric energy. When being escorted to a polaric power plant, along with a boy named Latika, Janeway told a guard that she and Paris were hostages. One of the protesters went to shoot at Latika, but Paris took the bullet. (VOY: "Time and Again") •When Kim mistakenly entered an alternate reality in which he was never assigned to Voyager, Paris helped him return to his own reality. In that timeline, when he arrived at Deep Space 9, Paris got into a bar fight with Quark and was sent to the brig by Constable Odo, forcing Voyager to leave without him. Having served his sentence at a penal colony, Paris moved to Marseilles where he spent his time at Sandrine's drinking and hustling pool. He did not know Kim, but nevertheless helped him return to his own timeline at the cost of his life, as the runabout they were on was destroyed while they attempted to duplicate the accident that sent Kim to this reality. (VOY: "Non Sequitur") •In another alternate timeline experienced by Kes traveling back through time, Paris married and had a child with Kes, named Linnis Paris, following Torres' death during the "Year of Hell" conflict in 2374. Linnis went on to marry Harry Kim, and the two of them had a son called Andrew. Paris had also seemed to attain the rank of Lt. Commander, evidenced by three pips on his collar. He was also seen wearing a command division uniform, indicating that he might have been chosen by Chakotay to be his First Officer over Second Officer Tuvok, who still wore an operations division uniform. In this timeline, Kes was experiencing time jumps that were taking her back in time, caused by her contamination from the Krenim's temporal weapons, and was subsequently erased when The Doctor cured Kes of the contamination. Any feelings Kes had for Paris as a result of the experience were never explored before her departure. (VOY: "Before and After") •In the alternate timeline in which Voyager crashed on an L-Class world in the Alpha Quadrant after an accident with an experimental quantum slipstream drive, Paris died upon impact, along with the rest of the crew, save Harry Kim and Chakotay, who were aboard the Delta Flyer, and The Doctor, who was merely deactivated. (VOY: "Timeless") •In an alternate timeline in which it took Voyager sixteen more years to return to Earth, Paris retired from Starfleet and became a holonovelist. He and The Doctor retained their typical bantering relationship, with Paris teasing The Doctor about the fact that it took him thirty-three years to choose the name 'Joe'. (VOY: "Endgame")

    Appearances

    •VOY: •"Caretaker" •"Parallax" •"Time and Again" •"Phage" •"The Cloud" •"Eye of the Needle" •"Ex Post Facto" •"Emanations" •"Prime Factors" •"State of Flux" •"Heroes and Demons" •"Cathexis" •"Faces" •"Jetrel" •"Learning Curve" •"The 37's" •"Initiations" •"Projections" •"Elogium" •"Non Sequitur" •"Twisted" •"Parturition" •"Persistence of Vision" •"Tattoo" •"Cold Fire" •"Maneuvers" •"Resistance" •"Prototype" •"Alliances" •"Threshold" •"Meld" •"Dreadnought" •"Death Wish" •"Lifesigns" •"Investigations" •"Deadlock" •"Innocence" •"The Thaw" •"Tuvix" •"Resolutions" •"Basics, Part I" •"Basics, Part II" •"Flashback" •"The Chute" •"The Swarm" •"False Profits" •"Remember" •"Sacred Ground" •"Future's End" •"Future's End, Part II" •"Warlord" •"The Q and the Grey" •"Macrocosm" •"Fair Trade" •"Alter Ego" •"Coda" •"Blood Fever" •"Unity" •"Darkling" •"Rise" •"Favorite Son" •"Before and After" •"Real Life" •"Distant Origin" •"Displaced" •"Worst Case Scenario" •"Scorpion" •"Scorpion, Part II" •"The Gift" •"Day of Honor" •"Nemesis" •"Revulsion" •"The Raven" •"Scientific Method" •"Year of Hell" •"Year of Hell, Part II" •"Random Thoughts" •"Concerning Flight" •"Mortal Coil" •"Waking Moments" •"Message in a Bottle" •"Hunters" •"Prey" •"Retrospect" •"The Killing Game" •"The Killing Game, Part II" •"Vis à Vis" •"The Omega Directive" •"Unforgettable" •"Living Witness" (hologram) •"Demon" •"One" •"Hope and Fear" •"Night" •"Drone" •"Extreme Risk" •"In the Flesh" •"Once Upon a Time" •"Timeless" •"Infinite Regress" •"Nothing Human" •"Thirty Days" •"Counterpoint" •"Latent Image" •"Bride of Chaotica!" •"Gravity" •"Bliss" •"Dark Frontier" •"The Disease" •"Course: Oblivion" •"The Fight" •"Think Tank" •"Juggernaut" •"Someone to Watch Over Me" •"11:59" •"Relativity" •"Warhead" •"Equinox" •"Equinox, Part II" •"Survival Instinct" •"Barge of the Dead" •"Tinker Tenor Doctor Spy" •"Alice" •"Riddles" •"Dragon's Teeth" •"One Small Step" •"The Voyager Conspiracy" •"Pathfinder" •"Fair Haven" •"Blink of an Eye" •"Virtuoso" •"Memorial" •"Tsunkatse" •"Collective" •"Spirit Folk" •"Ashes to Ashes" •"Child's Play" •"Good Shepherd" •"Live Fast and Prosper" •"Muse" •"Fury" •"Life Line" •"The Haunting of Deck Twelve" •"Unimatrix Zero" •"Unimatrix Zero, Part II" •"Imperfection" •"Drive" •"Repression" •"Critical Care" •"Inside Man" •"Body and Soul" •"Flesh and Blood" •"Nightingale" •"Shattered" •"Lineage" •"Repentance" •"Prophecy" •"The Void" •"Workforce" •"Workforce, Part II" •"Human Error" •"Q2" •"Author, Author" •"Friendship One" •"Natural Law" •"Homestead" •"Renaissance Man" •"Endgame" •LD: "We'll Always Have Tom Paris"

    Background information

    Tom Paris was played by Robert Duncan McNeill throughout the entire run of Star Trek: Voyager. In the episode "Vis à Vis", he was also played by Dan Butler, after exchanging bodies with the "Steth" impostor. The young Paris in "Thirty Days" was played by Randy Riener. Tom Paris' character was largely based on the character of Nicholas Locarno from The Next Generation episode "The First Duty", who was also played by Robert Duncan McNeill. In interviews the producers of Voyager have said they felt Locarno's actions in that episode made him "irredeemable". (TNG Season 5 DVD-special feature, Memorable Missions Year Five: "The First Duty") Later, a photo of McNeill as Locarno was used as a photo of young Tom Paris on Admiral Paris's desk in the episode "Pathfinder". In the script of "Caretaker", Tom Paris was initially described as "an athletic Human in his late twenties." The first draft of the "Caretaker" script also referred to him as wearing an operations division uniform, rather than a command division one. Tom Paris was written into the first half-dozen or so Star Trek: Voyager scripts with little or no knowledge as to who would play the part. These episodes included "Ex Post Facto", which centrally features the character. (Star Trek: Voyager - A Vision of the Future, p. 174) Robert Duncan McNeill as Nicholas Locarno in When the producers were trying to cast the role of Tom Paris, they couldn't find anyone that seemed to match Robert Duncan McNeill's persona, so they eventually just asked him to read for the role, and he got the part. The producers at the time wanted him to bring some of the same edginess and qualities he had brought to Nick Locarno, to the character of Tom Paris, with the difference that Paris' character would be redeemable. McNeill explained, "Locarno seemed like a nice guy, but deep down he was a bad guy. Tom Paris is an opposite premise in a way. Deep down he's a good guy. He's just made some mistakes." He went on to say, "Star Trek, in a way, is like Shakespeare. We say what we mean. One of the things that makes Tom Paris unique is that he uses plain English when everyone else is talking technobabble. He cuts to the chase. He's a red-blooded, all-American kind of guy. I like that." Some early notes for Voyager actually referred to the character as "Locarno," before the producers decided that the character had too much baggage and was too compromised. They then issued a casting call, assuming they would need a new actor, and issued a casting call for a "Robert Duncan McNeill type." McNeill himself heard of the role and was confused, that surely nobody was more of a Robert Duncan McNeill type than himself. He sent an audition to Los Angeles and was asked by the producers to come to Hollywood for a full audition, and was cast the same day. (Star Trek Voyager: A Celebration, p. 55) Paris' middle name, "Eugene", is a tribute to Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry whose middle name is Eugene. (Star Trek Encyclopedia (4th ed., vol. 2, p. 125)) When Paris was promoted to lieutenant at the end of "Caretaker", he was described in the episode's first draft script as receiving the rank pips of a full lieutenant. He was not only shown that way in the final version of that episode but also wore the lieutenant pips for several subsequent episodes. However, as of the episode "Faces", this costume gaffe was corrected to reflect Paris' actual rank of lieutenant junior grade. In the It's A Wrap! sale and auction, two uniforms used by McNeill in his portrayal of Tom Paris that were up for auction contained pectorals to show increased musculature. The usage of this is unknown, although a racquetball uniform used by Alexander Siddig as Julian Bashir had muscle padding as well. An unproduced Voyager script was to include a flashback to his time at Starfleet Academy, which would've revealed that one of his classmates was Ro Laren. The cast of the film Star Trek Beyond includes a character named Commodore Paris, in command of Starbase Yorktown; Simon Pegg confirmed that her name is a reference to Tom Paris, suggesting that she is the alternate reality counterpart to Tom's grandmother.

    Apocrypha

    In the Pocket VOY novel Pathways, Paris has two older sisters, named Kathleen and Moira. Moira is described as having dark hair and blue eyes. She was studying to be a doctor while Tom was at the Academy. The novel also revealed more about Tom's past: he blamed the deaths of the three officers at Caldik Prime on one of the deceased, Brunolf Katajavuori and applied for a helmsman position aboard the USS Enterprise-D, but was furious to learn that his father had decided to remove his name from consideration, as he believed that while Tom did have the skills, it would show favoritism if an admiral's son was posted to the Federation flagship straight out of the Academy. After being assigned to the Exeter, he was promoted to lieutenant junior grade and had a romantic (and partially telepathic) liaison with a Betazoid woman who learned of his cover up which led to his expulsion from Starfleet. On Tom's first mission with the Maquis, the vessel he was piloting took heavy damage in battle with a Cardassian ship. Tom took a shuttle and attempted to contact a sympathetic colony on Selka for assistance for his crew, but he was intercepted by the USS Bradbury, apprehended, and returned to Earth to stand trial. In the Voyager relaunch book series, Paris moved to Boreth with his wife and daughter to help B'Elanna find her mother. He later rejoined the crew of the USS Voyager under the command of Captain Chakotay and was promoted to lieutenant commander. He served as Voyager's first officer after the original first officer was revealed to be a renegade Changeling. He continued to serve in that capacity after the Borg Invasion of 2381 – the same year he also got word of his father's death at Starbase 234, joining Voyager in its return to the Delta Quadrant via the new quantum slipstream drive as part of 'Project Full Circle'. In A Pocket Full of Lies, B'Elanna gives birth to her and Tom's second child, their son Michael Owen Paris. In the Star Trek: Stargazer series of novels written by Michael Jan Friedman, there is an officer on the USS Stargazer under the command of Captain Jean-Luc Picard named Cole Paris. Cole was Owen's brother, and hence, Tom's paternal uncle. An earlier Paris ancestor, Michael "Iron Mike" Paris, appeared and died in the Star Trek: The Lost Era novel Serpents Among the Ruins by David R. George III. According to this book, Mike was the father of Owen and Cole and therefore Tom's paternal grandfather. In the alternate future of the Deep Space Nine Millennium book trilogy, Paris and the rest of the Voyager crew returned to the Alpha Quadrant at an unspecified time. He was married to B'Elanna Torres, and both were later assigned to the USS Enterprise-F under Captain William T. Riker. Paris, along with the Enterprise and her crew (including Deanna Troi and Geordi La Forge), was killed during the destruction of Earth in 2388. His mirror universe counterpart (β) was depicted as a sex slave of B'Elanna, the half-Klingon, half-Terran Supervisor of Ardana, in the novel The Mirror-Scaled Serpent. A different mirror universe interpretation of Tom Paris appeared in Star Trek: Voyager - Mirrors and Smoke, wherein Paris is a member of the Terran Rebellion who was displaced to the Delta Quadrant, thereafter serving in "Pirate Queen" Janeway's campaign for local supremacy. Tom Paris appears in Season 10 of Star Trek Online, voiced by Robert Duncan McNeill. In the game, set about 30 years after Voyager's return to Earth, Paris is still in Starfleet, serving as the captain of the USS Mercury, a fast escort ship as befitting a former helmsman. Dialogue by Fleet Admiral Jorel Quinn in a short story published on the Star Trek Online website suggests that Paris may have once been an admiral himself, but voluntarily took a demotion to captain to serve in the field (similarly to James T. Kirk accepting the same to command the Enterprise again in Star Trek: The Motion Picture). He leads a task force called "Delta Flight", made up of the best pilots from Starfleet, the Klingon Defense Force, and the Romulan Republican Forces, and aids the player in defending the Milky Way galaxy from invasion by the Iconians and their Herald servants. According to The Autobiography of Kathryn Janeway, Tom and B'Elanna had a second child named Eugene Owen Paris.

  2. Dec 15, 2023 · Published Dec 15, 2023. Celebrating One of Star Trek: Voyager's Great Friendships. Let’s explore the friendship between Harry Kim and Tom Paris with some of the best moments over the years! By Christine Dinh. StarTrek.com / Charlotte Tegen.

    • Christine Dinh
  3. Feb 13, 2020 · Published Feb 13, 2020. Tom Paris and B'Elanna Torres: A Realistic Love Story. Voyager's major romance embraces love through individual growth. By Breana Harris. StarTrek.com. Valentine’s Day is this Friday. In celebration, we’re spending the week celebrating love in all the forms it takes throughout the quadrants. L (ove)LAP ?

    • Breana Harris
  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Tom_ParisTom Paris - Wikipedia

    Tom Paris. Lieutenant Thomas Eugene "Tom" Paris is a fictional character in the American science fiction television series Star Trek: Voyager and is portrayed by Robert Duncan McNeill. Paris is the chief helmsman, as well as a temporary auxiliary medic, of the USS Voyager, a Starfleet ship that was stranded in the Delta Quadrant by an alien ...

  5. Tom Paris | Memory Beta, non-canon Star Trek Wiki | Fandom. in: Articles with spoilers, Memory Beta articles sourced from novels, Memory Beta articles sourced from episodes and movies, and 23 more. Tom Paris. Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow: The following content contains spoilers!

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