Guinan (Star Trek)


Guinan is a recurring character who appears in the American science fiction television series ' and the films Star Trek Generations and '. Portrayed by Whoopi Goldberg, Guinan is a bartender in the Ten-Forward lounge aboard the starship USS Enterprise-D. She was also played as a child by Isis Carmen Jones in the episode "Rascals |Rascals".
The character first appears in the second-season opening episode "The Child |The Child", and makes recurring appearances during the next four seasons. She mainly works in Ten-Forward, which was added after most of the sets were recreated following the first season. The character is an alien who is several hundred years old and is noted for her folk wisdom, which she often uses to defuse difficult situations or comfort other characters aboard the ship as they struggle with something.
In January 2020, Goldberg accepted a personal invitation from Patrick Stewart to reprise her role as Guinan for the second season of , the continuation of Star Trek: The Next Generation.

History

Following the departure of Denise Crosby from the role of Tasha Yar during the of ', well-known actress Whoopi Goldberg believed that there was a vacancy for a female actress on the series. She had been a lifelong fan of Star Trek, having been inspired to become an actress by Nichelle Nichols' appearances as Uhura in '. Goldberg later recalled that she first saw an episode of the series when she was nine years old, and after Uhura appeared on-screen, she went running through her house shouting "Come here, mom, everybody, come quick, come quick, there's a black lady on television and she ain't no maid!" Goldberg approached her friend, actor LeVar Burton, who played Geordi La Forge in The Next Generation, but the producers of the series ignored her, believing that they were being pranked until Goldberg telephoned the production office directly. However, executive producer Rick Berman later recalled that it was Goldberg's manager who made the call, inviting him and series creator Gene Roddenberry out to lunch with Goldberg to discuss her appearing on the series.
At the time, plans were already underway to add a lounge set to the series. Named Ten-Forward, it was created to have a setting where the crew of the USS Enterprise-D could be shown interacting with each other as well as other aliens in a less formal, social setting. At the lunch between Berman, Roddenberry and Goldberg, she explained that Star Trek was the only futuristic science fiction series at the time she knew of that featured black people prominently. She enquired whether they had already cast the new Doctor, following the firing of Gates McFadden from the role of Beverly Crusher. They decided this would not work, so Roddenberry and Berman suggested the creation of a new character specifically for Goldberg. Goldberg was unable to commit to appearing as a permanent member of the cast, which fit in with plans for Ten-Forward as they were not expecting to have that appear in every episode.
The character of Guinan was based on Mary Louise Cecilia "Texas" Guinan, a prohibition-era emcee and owner of the 300 Club in New York City. While the name was adopted, the characterization was changed to a worldly mystic, in line with Yoda from the Star Wars franchise. Gene Roddenberry, the creator of Star Trek, had envisaged the character Guinan as extremely old, leading Goldberg to suggest that she could be the ancestor of some of the other characters on the series.
When Goldberg made her first appearance as Guinan, in the episode "The Child |The Child", she was credited as a "Special Guest Star" alongside Diana Muldaur who appeared throughout the as Doctor Katherine Pulaski. Guinan-centric episodes would end up being scheduled throughout the rest of the run of The Next Generation to coincide with the future availability of Goldberg, who at the time was continuing to appear in films and other work. In one instance, for "Imaginary Friend |Imaginary Friend", Guinan was written in at short notice, taking lines originally intended for other characters after Goldberg became available at short notice unexpectedly.
There were plans to introduce a son of Guinan at some point in The Next Generation, but this never occurred. The idea was resurrected during the writing process of the ' episode "Rivals |Rivals", with the character of Martus Mazur originally intended to be Guinan's son. After Goldberg was unable to make a guest appearance, the relationship between the two characters was written out. However, the first time that the El-Aurian species was mentioned by name was in this episode, but this may have been inspired by the scripts for Star Trek Generations which the writing team would have seen by that point in the production of the series.
Goldberg would go on to become intrinsically linked to Star Trek, and a personal friend of creator Gene Roddenberry, subsequently being one of the eulogists at his funeral in 1991. During the initial production of
', she met with director Nicholas Meyer to discuss appearing as a Klingon in the film. This was vetoed by actor Leonard Nimoy, who had taken the lead on arrangements for the film, as with Christian Slater already set to appear in the film he did not want to be overwhelmed with celebrity cameos. She later described Guinan as a combination of Yoda, herself and Andrei Sakharov, adding that she was "more grateful for Star Trek now as a mother and grandmother." and described the prospect of Star Trek, saying "We all need to believe there is a good, positive future for us."
Goldberg stated at her first Star Trek convention in 2016 that she wishes to return to the franchise and appear on in the future since the character was specifically designed to be able to appear at any point in the timeline. Returning actor-character combination are famous in the Star Trek franchise, and popular also; TNG's "Unification |Unification" diology featuring Leonard Nimoy as Spock in Part II brought in the highest Nielsen ratings of that season, and the highest for TNG except for the pilot and finale. During a January 22, 2020, appearance on The View, the talk show of which Goldberg is a co-host, Patrick Stewart helped realize Goldberg's wish, inviting her to appear as Guinan during the second season of .

Films

The decision was made to feature Goldberg prominently in the first feature film based on The Next Generation, Star Trek Generations. This was due in part to her being far more well known to the general public than the majority of the main cast, having won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress at the 63rd Academy Awards in 1991 for her role in the film Ghost. During the course of the film, the character is revealed to be an El-Aurian for the first time. Upon arriving on the first day of production of Generations, Goldberg began looking around the set for Nichols, having expected her to be there since it was a cross-over film between The Original Series and The Next Generation. It was later reported by Walter Koenig that Goldberg was annoyed as she saw that the fans wanted a scene with Guinan and Uhura together. Nichols was not in Generations.

Production

Producer Rick Berman was noted as being "extremely sensitive" about who interacted with Whoopi on the set, according to the book The Making of Yesterday's Enterprise by Eric A. Stillwell. In one instance where a co-writer of Yesterday's Enterprise talked with Whoopi, Berman found out about it and said he did not want this kind of interaction which was oriented towards the production office.

Appearances

In "Rascals", Guinan's younger self is played by Isis Carmen Jones, who also played Whoopi's character as a child in the film Sister Act. Guinan works in Ten-Forward and is one of Picard's friends, and they often chat about problems the ship is having.
Guinan made her first appearance in the opening episode "The Child |The Child" on November 21, 1988, on first-run syndicated television. During the course of the episode, she gives advice to Wesley Crusher about whether or not he should leave the ship to join his mother when she transferred to Starfleet Medical on Earth. In this episode, she refers to meeting Captain Jean-Luc Picard for the first time when she came on board the Enterprise-D, something which would later be ignored and discounted. She made further appearances in the second season, including in "The Outrageous Okona" where she advises Data to use the holodeck to help him better understand comedy, and again in the Data-centric episode "The Measure of a Man |The Measure of a Man", as well as "The Dauphin |The Dauphin" where she and Commander William Riker attempt to explain flirting to Acting Ensign Wesley Crusher.
The first revelation of Guinan being something more than a simple barkeeper came later that season in the episode "Q Who". After Q sends the Enterprise-D across the galaxy, causing them to encounter the Borg, she trades barbs with the omnipotent being who reveals that he knows Guinan from past encounters and suggests she may have been known by other names in the past. Q attempts to remove Guinan from the Enterprise, only to have her hold up her hands to him in response implying she possessed the power to do battle with him or at the very least to defend herself. She also informs Picard that the Borg drove her species into near extinction over a century earlier. She returned once more in second episode of the, "Evolution |Evolution", in which she explains she has many children, and later in the season in "Booby Trap |Booby Trap" where she reveals that she finds the heads of bald men attractive. She once again comes face to face with Q in "Deja Q". Guinan is central to the plot of "Yesterday's Enterprise", when the timeline is changed after the USS Enterprise-C appears from a spatial rift. Guinan is the only member of the crew who is aware that something has changed, and believes that Lieutenant Tasha Yar should not be on the ship. The timeline is restored when the Enterprise-C re-enters the rift.
Guinan appears in "The Best of Both Worlds |The Best of Both Worlds" part one, where she and Captain Picard mull over his tactics defending the ship from a Borg vessel, contemplating the potential end of human civilization. Guinan assures Picard that, based on her experience with the Borg, "humanity will survive" even if only a handful of humans live to "keep the spirit alive". Guinan also plays a role in the second part which started the. She advises Commander William Riker in his predicament in dealing with the Borg-assimilated Picard. She tells him that her relationship with Picard "goes beyond friendship and beyond family". She appears in the following episode broadcast, which follows up on Picard's experiences as a Borg, "Family |Family". In "The Loss", Guinan advises Counselor Deanna Troi when she loses her empathic senses, telling her that she still has her skills as a counselor to rely on. Guinan joins Picard in his holodeck program Dixon Hill in the episode "Clues |Clues". Her other appearances in the season included "Galaxy's Child", "Night Terrors |Night Terrors" where she reveals she keeps a rifle behind the bar, "In Theory |In Theory", and the first part of "Redemption |Redemption" where she scores higher than Klingon Security Chief Worf on a firing range on the holodeck.
Her first appearance in the comes in the first episode, the second part of "Redemption". In "Ensign Ro |Ensign Ro", she strikes up a friendship with Ensign Ro Laren which would continue for the rest of the other recurring character's appearances in the series. In "Imaginary Friend |Imaginary Friend", Guinan discusses the nearby nebula with Data in Ten-Forward. In the following episode, "I, Borg", Guinan objects to the presence of the Borg known as Hugh on the Enterprise-D. Further revelations of Guinan's backstory are made in the season finale, the first part of "Time's Arrow |Time's Arrow", when after travelling back to 19th century San Francisco, California, Data discovers a photograph of Guinan in a local newspaper. Meanwhile, on the Enterprise-D, Guinan advises Picard that he must lead the away team to travel through a temporal rift to save Data in the past.
Central to the plot of the second half of "Time's Arrow" which opened the, Guinan meets Picard for the first time in her timeline and works with him and Samuel Clemens to prevent a plot by the aliens of Devidia II. In "Rascals |Rascals", alongside Picard, Ro, and Keiko O'Brien, her body is de-aged to that of a child following a transporter accident, where the younger Guinan was portrayed by actress Isis Jones. Guinan reveals that her father is still alive at the time, having previously been hiding from him on Earth during "Time's Arrow". In "Suspicions |Suspicions", she advises Doctor Beverly Crusher on whether to trust her instincts when a Ferengi scientist is killed during an experiment on board.
Guinan is originally from El-Auria. Her people, sometimes called "listeners", had been scattered throughout the galaxy after the Borg invaded their homeworld. As a refugee aboard the El-Aurian vessel Lakul, she is rescued from the Nexus by the USS Enterprise-B. This is part of the opening act of Star Trek Generations, the 1994 film made after the series' seven-year run concluded. Guinan did not appear in the next two Star Trek films.
Guinan reveals in ' that she has been married 23 times. She states in "Evolution |Evolution" that she has many children, including a son who went through a phase when "he wouldn't listen to anybody"—something unusual "in a species of listeners".
In "Yesterday's Enterprise", which involves a disruption of the timeline, Guinan is able to sense the disruption, even though everyone else believes it to be the natural course of events. As later explained in Generations, an echo of her is left inside the Nexus, which is said to exist outside of time. In that film, it is not clear however if Picard is just experiencing what he wants, to talk with Guinan and rescue the Enterprise with Kirk. At the time no one knew if this would be the last film, which made it more likely the timeline continued, but if had been the actual end like Nemesis was, this reading of what happened is more obvious. Picard was only seeing a Nexus-created sequence of events according in that interpretation. If he did leave, then it means he also left echo-Picard in the Nexus, and may finally explain the mysterious relationship "deeper than friends or family"-part of each is stuck in the Nexus together.
One of the more extreme interpretations is that Guinan was imagined by Picard after he was killed was similar to B'Elanna Torres near-death experience in "Barge of the Dead", where in the Star Trek universe people have naj; a dream-like hallucination before actual death. This may have happened to Picard before in "Tapestry |Tapestry". One problem is that there is logical do-loop created when Picard stops himself from ever entering the Nexus, how does he leave it?at face value it breaks causality when he stops himself from entering the Nexus because how could he leave it if he never entered it. Because the Nexus is not fully explained, it may be part of its nature, or Guinan may simply have been part of his near-death dream before the Star destroys that solar system. The continuation of movies makes it more clear that the timeline continued at least until Nemesis. After Nemesis, TNG line continues in the quasi-canonical
' bridging the gap to the Kelvin reboot timeline in Star Trek. If the Nexus could be found in that timeline, it might be possible to access Picard, Guinan and Kirk nexus "echos" since it can survive across time alterations.

Television

Guinan appears in 29 episodes of ', and in two theatrical films, Generations and Nemesis.
  • "The Child |The Child"
  • "The Outrageous Okona"
  • "The Measure of a Man |The Measure of a Man"
  • "The Dauphin |The Dauphin"
  • "Q Who"
  • "Shades of Gray |Shades of Gray"
  • "Evolution |Evolution"
  • "Booby Trap |Booby Trap"
  • "Déjà Q"
  • "Yesterday's Enterprise"
  • "The Offspring |The Offspring"
  • "Hollow Pursuits"
  • "The Best of Both Worlds |The Best of Both Worlds"
  • "Family |Family"
  • "The Loss"
  • "Clues |Clues"
  • "Galaxy's Child"
  • "Night Terrors |Night Terrors"
  • "In Theory |In Theory"
  • "Redemption |Redemption"
  • "Ensign Ro |Ensign Ro"
  • "Imaginary Friend |Imaginary Friend"
  • "I, Borg"
  • "Time's Arrow |Time's Arrow"
  • "Rascals |Rascals"
  • "Suspicions |Suspicions"
Among the episodes with Guinan, "The Measure of a Man" and the two-part episode "The Best of Both Worlds" received noted acclaim, and an extended cut of "The Measure of a Man" was released in 2012.
In 2020, Guinan was planned for a return in season two of
'.

Film

;Generations
In Star Trek Generations, released in 1994, Guinan explains the Nexus to Picard.
;Nemesis
In this 2002 Star Trek film, Goldberg reprises her role as Guinan. In Star Trek: Nemesis, Guinan has attended the wedding between Riker and Troi.

Comics

The character Guinan, looking like the TNG character, appears in various TNG comics series including: A line and ink style Comic version of Guinan appears on the cover of Star Trek: The Next Generation Special "Good Listener/A True Son of Kahless" published September 1, 1993.
The first novel to include Guinan was Strike Zone by Peter David, published in March 1989. This novel included elements from both Star Trek and the new Next Generation show The later Stargazer novel Oblivion features Picard's first meeting with Guinan when he was still captain of the Stargazer, where the meeting helps Guinan overcome her severe depression after she was pulled out of the Nexus.

Reception and commentary

Dany Roth in his article for Syfy Wire on Guinan's quintessential moments, described her as "easily one of the best characters in the history of Star Trek". His list of moments consisted of the one in "The Measure of a Man" where Guinan explains slavery to Picard; the time that she stabbed Q with a fork in "Déjà Q"; the discussion she has with Commander Riker in "The Best of Both Worlds" part two and her lack of sympathy for the Borg in "I, Borg". Roth did state that his favourite moment came in the second part of "Time's Arrow" where she and Picard are trapped in the cave and the sexual tension between the pair, comparing the relationship between that of River Song and The Doctor in Doctor Who whereby they meet each other for the first time but out of sequence.
Terry J. Erdmann and Paula M. Block state in their 2008 book Star Trek 101 that the key Guinan episode is "Yesterday's Enterprise". They describe her role in the episode as that of a Greek chorus to explain that a change has taken place in the timeline.
Film reviewer Roger Ebert described Guinan as "the Enterprise's resident mystic".
Her last episode "Rascals" had a rating of 13.5, only surpassed later in the season by "Aquiel" and "Tapestry" in Season 6. That would prove to be the turning point downward for TNG as only the finale in Season 7 likely surpassed "Rascals". The franchise, while still massively popular, lost millions of viewers throughout the late 1990s, DS9's pilot, "Emissary" was probably the only DS9 to have higher ratings than this turning point down in Season 6. The first episode with Guinan, "The Child", had a Nielsen rating of 10.9. Although DS9 was not as popular, it was in many ways more critically acclaimed. The late 1990s also saw an increase in Star Trek production, including the conclusion of TNG's three movies and the launch of Voyager, while DS9 was still on air.
"The Best of Both Worlds, Part I" was ranked No. 70 on TV Guides 100 Greatest Episodes of All Time. In 2002, Star Trek: The Next Generation was ranked #46 on TV Guides 50 Greatest TV Shows of All Time list, and in 2008, was ranked No. 37 on Empires list of the 50 greatest television shows.
"Yesterday's Enterprise" was rated as the top episode of TNG by Entertainment Weekly.
In 2016, SyFy rated Guinan as among the top 21 most interesting supporting characters of Star Trek. In 2017, IndieWire rated Guinan as the 3rd best character on Star Trek: The Next Generation, noting her as a "fascinating character". In the summer of 2019, Screen Rant suggested that Guinan could get her own series more easily, due to the character being hundreds of years old there would be many, many stories to tell. In 2018, CBR ranked Guinan the 8th best recurring character of all Star Trek.
In 2018, Screen Rant ranked Guinan as one of the top eight most powerful character's of Star Trek, remarking "Guinan is one of Star Trek’s greatest enigmas." In July 2019, Screen Rant ranked Guinan the 7th smartest character of Star Trek.