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Star Trek: Enterprise is an American science fiction television series that debuted on UPN on September 26, 2001, and ran for four seasons until May 13, 2005. [1] The show was the fifth live-action series in the Star Trek franchise, [2] and was intended to serve as a prequel to Star Trek: The Original Series. [3]
Star Trek: Enterprise is an American science fiction television series that originally aired on the UPN network from September 26, 2001 to May 13, 2005. [1] Until the episode "Extinction" towards the start of the third season, the series was called simply Enterprise without the Star Trek prefix. [2]
The crew faces situations that are familiar to Star Trek fans, but are unencumbered and unjaded by the experience and rules which have built up over hundreds of years of Trek lore and canon established in previous Star Trek series. Star Trek: Enterprise takes pains to show the origins of some concepts which have become taken for granted in Star ...
This is a list of recurring characters from the live-action science fiction television series Star Trek: Enterprise, which originally aired on UPN between 2001 and 2005. The television show takes place in the 22nd century of the Star Trek universe and takes place on a starship (NX-01 Enterprise) exploring space.
Star Trek: Enterprise, originally titled simply Enterprise for its first two seasons, is an American science fiction television series created by Rick Berman and Brannon Braga. It originally aired from September 26, 2001 to May 13, 2005 on UPN. The sixth series in the Star Trek franchise, it is a prequel to Star Trek: The Original Series.
"Two Days and Two Nights" is the twenty-fifth episode (production #125) of the television series Star Trek: Enterprise. The episode won the 2002 Emmy Award for Outstanding Hairstyling For A Series. [3] The television show episode first aired on UPN on Wednesday May 15, 2002. [4]
Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens joined the team, having been known previously for writing Star Trek novels. [31] These books included collaborations with William Shatner on his Shatnerverse novels. Their first television episode written for Star Trek: Enterprise was the first part of the planned Vulcan story arc in season four, "The Forge". [32]
Season 3 was the first to use a single story arc for an entire season and is only one of two seasons (of every Star Trek series) not to feature a Klingon character, [26] the other being the first season of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds. [27] The season was cut from 26 to 24 episodes by Paramount, following some disappointing early ratings.