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Michael Pataki (16 January 193815 April 2010; age 72) was an actor who played Korax in the Star Trek: The Original Series second season episode "The Trouble with Tribbles" and Karnas in the Star Trek: The Next Generation first season episode "Too Short A Season". Archive footage of his role in "The Trouble with Tribbles" was used in the Star Trek: Deep Space Nine fifth season episode "Trials and Tribble-ations".

Early life and career[]

Pataki was born in Youngstown, Ohio, to Hungarian parents. He was a graduate of the University of Southern California, where he majored in drama and political science. Pataki had a career in film and on television which spanned over five decades. He made his debut with an uncredited role in the classic 1958 war film The Young Lions, which also featured fellow Trek alumni Parley Baer, Hal Baylor, Paul Comi, and Robert Ellenstein. Later that year, he made his first television appearance in an episode of M Squad, working with fellow Next Generation alum Bill Erwin.

Throughout the 1960s, Pataki acted predominantly on television, appearing on such series as The Twilight Zone (in a 1961 episode starring Original Series actor Leonard Nimoy and Star Trek: Enterprise guest actor Dean Stockwell), Rawhide (with Paul Comi and John McLiam), My Favorite Martian (starring Ray Walston), Voyage to the Bottom (with Arch Whiting and Jason Wingreen), and Mission: Impossible. Pataki also appeared in multiple episodes of the hit sitcom The Flying Nun, playing three different characters over the show's three seasons. Among those he worked with on this series were Original Series actresses Susan Howard, Sandra Smith, Tania Lemani, and Louise Sorel.

Pataki also appeared in two 1966 "King Tut" episodes of Batman, both co-starring Sid Haig and Marianna Hill. In 1969, Pataki appeared in his first feature film since the 1950s, playing one of the mimes in the classic biker film Easy Rider. Original Series guest performers Sabrina Scharf and Robert Walker also had roles in this film. In the same year he appeared as the villainous J.C. in the movie The Sidehackers (also known as Five the Hard Way), which also included Original Series guest actor Richard Merrifield and Next Generation actor/stuntman Erik Cord.

Career during the 1970s and 1980s[]

Pataki and fellow Original Series guest actors Stewart Moss and Paul Carr frequently worked in films and made-for-TV movies from director Jerry Jameson. These productions included the films Brute Corps (1972, sans Moss), The Dirt Gang (1972, also with Michael Forest), The Bat People (1974), Airport '77 (1977, with Robert Foxworth and Robert Hooks but not Carr or Moss), and Raise the Titanic (1980, also with Mark L. Taylor and Michael Ensign). Pataki alone appeared in Jameson's TV movies The Call of the Wild (1976, with John McLiam), Superdome (1978, with Jane Wyatt), and The Cowboy and the Ballerina (1984, with Antoinette Bower and Christopher Lloyd).

In 1971, Pataki appeared in the B-movie The Return of Count Yorga. That same year, he also appeared in The Andromeda Strain, directed by Robert Wise, who went on to direct Star Trek: The Motion Picture. Both of these films featured performers from the Original Series episode "All Our Yesterdays": Mariette Hartley appeared in the former, Kermit Murdock in the latter. (Bart La Rue and Garry Walberg also appeared in The Andromeda Strain.) The following year, Pataki appeared in an episode of Bonanza; a year later, he appeared on All in the Family (and would do so again in 1977), as well as Cannon with Stewart Moss and Arch Whiting and on the series Shaft with Michael Ansara and Ron Soble.

Pataki and Original Series guest actress Marianna Hill, having previously worked together on two episodes of Batman, reunited for The Baby (1974) and The Last Porno Flick (1974). Also in 1974, Pataki appeared in the TV movie Indict and Conflict with William Shatner. Pataki later co-starred with Shatner in Disaster on the Coastliner (1979) and in a 1982 episode of T. J. Hooker, with Jonathan Banks, James Darren, and Richard Herd.

In 1974, Pataki also made the first of three appearances on McCloud, on which Ken Lynch was a regular. His first episode also featured Terri Garr, Eugene Roche, and Gregory Sierra. When he next appeared on the program in February 1976, Diana Muldaur had become a regular. Pataki and Muldaur were also seen in an episode of Ellery Queen, which aired earlier that month. Pataki's third episode of McCloud also featured Vince Howard. Pataki and Muldaur would later appear together in the 1982 Fitz and Bones TV movie Terror at Alcatraz, along with Roger C. Carmel, Elisha Cook, and Marc Lawrence.

In 1975, Pataki played the lead in Carnal Madness (1975). Two years later, he began playing one of his more well-known roles, as Captain Barbera in the 1977 TV movie The Amazing Spider-Man. This movie spawned a made-for-TV sequel called Spider-Man Strikes Back the following year, for which Pataki returned, and led to a short-lived cult TV series later in 1978. Pataki played Captain Barbera through both seasons of The Amazing Spider-Man, which aired from 1978 through 1979.

Pataki is well-remembered for his role as Count Mallachi in a three-part episode of the sitcom Happy Days in 1976. Cult movie fans will also remember him for playing Count Dracula in the 1978 B-movie classic Dracula's Dog, co-starring Jan Shutan. Also in 1978, Pataki appeared in the TV movie When Every Day Was the Fourth of July, which featuring his The Flying Nun co-star (and Trek alum) Louise Sorel as well as Michael Durrell, Bruce French, and Harris Yulin.

Pataki was one of the many Trek performers to appear in the acclaimed 1979 drama The Onion Field. Among his co-stars in this film were John Savage, Ronny Cox, Christopher Lloyd, Richard Herd (who also appeared with Pataki in TV's Marciano that same year), K Callan, Phillip Richard Allen, and John de Lancie. He also appeared in the popular horror comedy Love at First Bite with Robert Ellenstein that same year.

Pataki's career showed no sign of stopping by the time the 1980s arrived. In addition to appearances in such hit TV series as Charlie's Angels, WKRP in Cincinatti (with Sam Anderson and Robert Hooks), Laverne & Shirley (with David L. Lander and Michael McKean), The Jeffersons, Scarecrow and Mrs. King (including one episode with Stephen Macht), Cagney & Lacey (with Janet MacLachlan and Natalia Nogulich), and St. Elsewhere (with Ed Begley, Jr., Ronny Cox, Norman Lloyd, France Nuyen, Jennifer Savidge, Alfre Woodard, Jane Wyatt, and Star Trek: Voyager regular Robert Picardo), he also appeared in such major feature films as Dead & Buried (1981, with Ed Bakey, Glenn Morshower, and Bill Quinn), Remo Williams: The Adventure Begins (1985, with Voyager star Kate Mulgrew as well as George Coe, Patrick Kilpatrick and Jeff Allin), Rocky IV (1985, edited by John W. Wheeler), and Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers (1988, music by Alan Howarth).

In addition, Pataki made numerous appearances on the series The Fall Guy, co-starring with Gary Lockwood. He and Lockwood also appeared in a 1988 episode of The Highwayman, which was a series starring a pre-Voyager Tim Russ.

Later career and death[]

By the 1990s, the majority of Pataki's work became voice-over roles on such animated shows as Batman, Ren & Stimpy, and Dexter's Laboratory. In the 2000s, he made on-screen appearances in a few low-budget independent films, including 2003's Edge of Nowhere. In 2010, he appeared in a film called Trim, which also featured Voyager regular Ethan Phillips.

Pataki died in North Hollywood, California, on 15 April 2010. He was 72 years old. [1]

Other Trek connections[]

External links[]

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