Played
By: Gates
McFadden
Rank: Commander
Current assignment: Chief Medical Officer, U.S.S. Enterprise
(detached service upon loss of vessel in 2371)
Full Name: Beverly Cheryl Howard Crusher
Date of birth: Oct. 13, 2324
Place of birth: Copernicus City, Luna
Parents: Paul and Isabel Howard
Education: Starfleet Academy and Medical School, 2342-50
Marital status: Widowed; married Jack Crusher 2348-55
Children: One son, Wesley Robert Crusher, born July 29, 2349
Quarters: Formerly, Enterprise-D: Deck 8/Room 2133
Office: Formerly, Enterprise-D: Deck 12/Room 1629
Starfleet Career Summary
2352 -- Medical internship under Dr. Dalen Quaice, Delos IV
2363 -- Passed Bridge Officers Examination
2364 -- As commander, named Chief Medical Officer, U.S.S. Enterprise,
under Captain Jean-Luc Picard
2365 -- Headed Starfleet Medical one year
2366 -- Reassigned as Chief Medical Officer, U.S.S. Enterprise
2369 -- Temporarily relieved of duty amid Reyga incident, then
reinstated
2372 -- Transferred with remainder of Picard's senior staff to
Sovereign-class U.S.S. Enterprise
2373 -- Acted as first officer during attempt to repair Borg temporal
sabotage of Earth's first contact with an alien race
Report of Admiral Brooks, Starfleet Medical CMO Career Review and
Proficiency
Doctor Crusher has consistently shown to be not only thorough but
conscientious in her daily work and routine. She is a superior scientist
in various fields of research medicine such as xenoimmunology, curing or
treating the so-called Tsiolkovsky virus, the airborne virus known as
Ligonese poison, and Barclay Syndrome, which she discovered and named
after its first patient. Her contributions in practical forensic
medicine have had galactic import, leading to improved trust with the
Klingon Empire after her investigation of former Chancellor K'mpec's
murder, and with the Ferengi Alliance regarding the murder of Doctor
Reyga by the Takaran rival Jo'Bril. Unfortunately for this office, her
unorthodox methods bordering on cultural insult proved quite troublesome
at times in the latter case even though she was later exonerated.
Even so, Starfleet Medical applauds Doctor Crusher for her stand
against a lack of concern for experiment research on patients while
other treatments are still viable, citing her logs concerning Lieutenant
Worf's spinal paralysis and Doctor Toby Russell's genotronic research.
And her use of ship's phasers, of all things, to deliver a live-born
spacefaring alien as large scale Caesarean section procedure is nothing
short of ingenious.
UPDATE: SD 50900
In view of reports testifying to Doctor Crusher's actions to care for
21st century natives aboard her vessel during temporal maneuvers with
possible Prime Directive implications, this office finds no fault with
her performance in light of the greater temporal crisis at hand.
Psychological Profile: Report of Ship's Counselor Deanna Troi
Although suffering her share of life tragedies, Beverly Crusher
brings to her work and her relationships a deep-rooted sense of ethics
as well as a freshness and good humor that is infectious. Indeed, at
times she has served as the glue to hold situations together, while at
other times acting as the needler to provoke a necessary reaction or
course.
Doctor Crusher spent her formative years with her grandmother, Felisa
Howard, who raised her from an early age after her mother died. In fact,
it was Felisa's knowledge of folk medicine which allowed the two Howards
to be among the few survivors of the Arvada III colony disaster -
inspiring the younger Crusher to choose medicine as her life's work.
Unknown to her at the time, Felisa was involved with an anaphasic
"lover" who derived life-affirming sustenance in return for
the companionship - a secret stretching back through generations of the
family which nearly consumed Doctor Crusher herself.
The discovery occurred only upon Felisa's death in 2370 on Caldos IV,
where they had lived after Arvada III until Crusher left her to attend
Starfleet Academy. Before those moves with Felisa, young Beverly had
spent her earliest years on Earth's North America, which she still
considers "home"; she studied tap and jazz dance there and won
several awards in competition in St. Louis. Intimate relationships have
been mostly healthy for Crusher, who suffered with typical human
growing-up angst: getting a crush on a soccer player three years her
senior, Stefan, at age 8, and dying her naturally red hair brunette at
age 13 when she fretted over teenage popularity.
It was her marriage to Lt. Cmdr. Jack Crusher that provided the major
trauma of her adult life when he died on an away team mission off the
U.S.S. Stargazer under Captain Jean-Luc Picard in 2355. Before their
wedding on July 20, 2348, during her medical schooling, the future
Crushers had dated for several months until he finally proposed by
sending her the book "How To Advance Your Career Through
Marriage." The two had first been introduced by Walker Keel, who
with Jack had been Picard's closest friend during their early years in
Starfleet; ironically, her relationship with Jack followed an intense
but brief affair that had already run its course.
The new couple and Picard became close friends during those years the
men served on Picard's U.S.S. Stargazer. The captain later accompanied
her to the Starbase 32 morgue to view Jack's corpse, but it was not
until years later again - again, in 2370 - that Picard confirmed her
suspicion that he too was attracted to her, thanks to a telepathic
linkage while held as spies on Kesprytt. Picard had denied there would
be any personal problems when she signed aboard the U.S.S. Enterprise as
his CMO in 2364 at Farpoint Station, but in reality both knew they
shared a latent interest in each other by the time of the Tsiolkovsky
virus epidemic that brought it out only a few weeks later.
Her husband's death also left a void for their son, Wesley, who had
been born a year after they married. A lieutenant at the time, Jack
Crusher recorded the first and only entry in a series of holo-tape
messages to his infant son, but she opted not to share it with Wesley
until 2367. As a mother, Doctor Crusher raised a gifted, intense young
man alone, never resorting to corporal punishment until suffering the
effects of Sarek's bendaii syndrome. Astounded at the Traveler being's
prognosis for his development in 2364, she fretted later that he was
working too hard at the expense of a social life. His role in the Nova
Squadron scandal at Starfleet Academy in 2368 shocked and saddened her
without affecting their basic relationship until his departure with the
Traveler two years later.
In her later years Dr. Crusher had another intimate yet short-lived
relationship with the Joined Trill ambassador Odan, and had displayed
affection for an evolving Zalkon called "John Doe" and
visiting historian Berlinghoff Rasmussen - the latter only until his
time-traveling story turned out to be a hoax.
Doctor Crusher, who often serves a night watch on the bridge, aided
in the capture of the renegade Borg under Lore in 2370 with the
strategic loss of their craft while in command of the Enterprise. She
has not shirked from risk on away missions, as when exploring the Borg
ship upon Picard's abduction in 2366. She was taken as a hostage by the
Ansata terrorists to provide their medical care on Rutia IV earlier that
same year, and was nearly captured by Cardassians with Worf on a covert
raid on Celtris III with Picard, who was taken. Ironically, she almost
died in a diminishing universe created from her own mind, thanks to a
subspace warp bubble experiment of her son gone awry.
As can be seen from the theatre masks decorating the walls of her
quarters, much of the doctor's well-rounded personality stems from her
many interests in the stage arts. Although she hid her dance skills in
later years to avoid the hated nickname of "The Dancing
Doctor" that stuck in medical school, she has actively fostered her
own acting class and theatre troupe here aboard the Enterprise. Among
the productions she has directed are "Cyrano de Bergerac,"
"The Pirates of Penzance," "Frame of Mind," and
"Something for Breakfast"; her students have included
Lieutenant Barclay, a reluctant Commander LaForge, and even Commander
Riker, whose halting first scenes improved dramatically under her
coaching before culminating with his riveting performance in "Frame
of Mind."
Beyond the arts, another hobby is ethnobotany, and she can more than
hold her own in poker. She is fond of fine-weave metallic fabrics. She
reports a mild fear of heights, although this counselor has not seen it
detract from either her duties or recreation.
Counselor's update, SD 50950 review:
Having survived the second Borg invasion and its temporal
repercussions, I am pleased to review logs revealing Doctor Crusher's
clear-headed, quick-thinking actions to evacuate her patients and as
Picard's temporary XO during the ship evacuation process.
I also admire how she overcame her long-time disinclination toward
Emergency Medical Holograms to use it as a tactical tool during the
crisis.