Played By: Kate
Mulgrew
Rank: Captain
Current assignment: Commanding officer, U.S.S. Voyager
Full Name: Kathryn Janeway
Home region: Indiana, North America, Earth
Parents: Late Admiral and Mrs. Janeway
Siblings: One sister
Education: Starfleet Academy graduate
Marital status: Single, engaged
Office: U.S.S. Voyager, Deck 1 Ready Room adjoining Bridge
Starfleet Career Summary:
Science officer under Adm. Paris on the U.S.S. Al-Batani , Arias
mission 2171 Given command of U.S.S. Voyager, new Intrepid-class
starship, presumed lost in Badlands
Bio-Psychological Profile: Report of Starfleet Medical/Counselor's
Office
Janeway is a tough captain who is not afraid to take chances, while
her intelligence, thoughtfulness, dedication and diplomacy have earned
her respect and recognition as one of the best in Starfleet. Her talents
in engineering and science allow her hands-on expertise, if necessary;
as such she has shown a tendency to defy the Starfleet protocol against
beam-down of commanding officers into unsecured away team missions. She
prefers to be addressed as "Captain" rather than either the
gender-based "sir" or "ma'am." Aside from math and
the sciences her studies have included chromo-linguistics, American Sign
Language, and the gestural idioms of the Leyron.
This subject's penchant for the scientific method and clear-cut
choices has given her a healthy dose of skepticism, which usually
provides a command asset in dealing with new situations. Her preference
for difficult studies is self-traced back to childhood, when she would
prefer that to outdoor play. Since then she has indicated no pleasure in
outdoor camping, hiking, or cooking.
For relaxation, Janeway enjoys role-playing and recreation in
Holodeck programs, such as Gothic novels, skiing and sailing. In her
youth in rural agricultural Indiana she played tennis, and at age 12
walked back from a match she lost for 7 km in a thunderstorm; however,
she has not played the game regularly since 2354, when a member of her
high school tennis team. As a child she also studied beginning ballet
and performed the "Dying Swan" at age 6, but in all her
activities - many of them pushed by her parents, such as gardening - she
never studied a musical instrument. She has often ascribed this
situation to her sister being the artist of the family.
The subject reports one severe depression in life, when her father
died under the polar ice cap on Tau Ceti Prime in the mid 2350s. She
stayed bedridden with grief until her sister finally coerced her into
accepting the fact and moving on, literally dragging Janeway out of bed.
The captain has credited her father with forcing her to learn her own
lessons and not shielding her from life.
In 2171, Janeway gambled on giving troubled Starfleet renegade Tom
Paris a reprieve from his Rehabilitation Settlement in New Zealand by
tapping him as a scout for a search-and-rescue mission of her security
chief gone undercover aboard a Maquis vessel. However, contact with her
new ship, the U.S.S. Voyager, was lost after SD 48307.5 and all hands
were presumed lost.
File Update: Delta Quadrant Addendum
Report by Cmdr. Chakotay, First Officer, U.S.S. Voyager
As with all captains through the ages, Janeway looks to her crew like
a flock of sheep, but being thrown into the Delta Quadrant and being
utterly cut off from home has intensified that burden to levels few
commanders may have endured. The loneliness has also led her to relax at
times the separation that commanders usually impose upon themselves
purely to maintain the "respectful distance" - such as an
occasional Sandrine's Bar pool game on the Holodeck.
Her Starfleet training and the graciousness and grit obviously
instilled in her upbringing are to blame and to credit for the situation
her ship is in: following the Prime Directive to the letter, even if it
means stranding oneself 70 years from home, and melding a crew of Maquis
and other non-regulation members into an effective force and family that
can live as well as merely survive.
Although we have our differences, my respect and admiration for her
grow with each day. I appreciate her gamble in my suggestion to select
B'Elanna Torres as chief engineer, while we all now know her instincts
were correct when she originally opposed my desire to enter alliances
with the Kazon or Trabe. We see eye-to-eye on numerous issues,
especially a healthy respect for life and other cultures no matter what
shape or form, and I cannot fault her on the handling of our encounter
with the suicidal Q and his Q pursuer.
She has not only refrained from creating a shipboard fraternization
policy but feels eventually the crew will pair off anyway - except for
her; I can sense the captain yet fears to "give up" and fully
separate emotionally from her fiance Mark. Her trusted Tuvok's disobeyal
of direct orders on the grounds of logic when it seemed to help our trek
home clearly hit home as well, though overall she takes confidence in
the strength of her people.
Amelia Earhart was a personal heroine, so meeting her on the '37s
planet was an indescribable event - as was the gratification that not
one of the combined Maquis-Starfleet crew would choose to stay behind on
the human colony.
Personnel Medical File, EMH Acting CMO:
SD 50500
While amazed at her durability and courage, I must go on record after
over two years with my concern at the captain's bent toward constantly
putting her personal security at risk. I trust it will not be her
undoing, and this ship's.
While my confidence in her mental state has not wavered, I am pleased
she has taken my shipwide advice to pursue arts and recreation forms as
a diversion to our long journey. The captain has returned to tennis
after 19 years, taken up watercolors, and even shared a childhood ballet
with the ship on talent night.
DQ Addendum, Cmdr. Chakotay
SD 50525
The captain would never admit it, but for the record I would note her
action beyond the call of duty in almost single-handedly saving this
ship from the strain of macrovirus that nearly killed its crew. The
captain also amazed me by offering to sacrifice her life to save Kes on
Nichristi, even though its spiritualism was a puzzle to her, and her
strength of will was never stronger than when defeating what I would
call a life entity succubus.
As our journey grows I cannot help but grow in respect and affection
for our captain, stirred on by our short-lived planetary abandonment
before our viral infection could be cured. Thanks to that incident I
have every confidence that Kathryn Janeway will see us through our
predicament with high spirits in, dare I say it, the best Starfleet
tradition. |