(covers information from several alternate timelines)
List of unnamed fictional characters.
Contents
- 1 Holographic
- 1.1 Bashir 62 characters
- 1.2 Crisis Point: The Rise of Vindicta characters
- 1.3 Dixon Hill series characters
- 1.4 Hotel Royale characters
- 1.5 Janeway Lambda one characters
- 1.6 The Adventures of Captain Proton characters
- 1.7 Orion slave girls program characters
- 1.8 Photons Be Free characters
- 1.9 Photons Be Free (altered version) characters
- 1.10 Nude Olympic athletes
- 1.11 Freecloud advertising characters
- 2 Hypothetical
- 2.1 Alsia's father
- 2.2 Alsia's husband
- 2.3 American missionary
- 2.4 Archer's brother
- 2.5 Bashir's "patient"
- 2.6 Cusak's "attacker"
- 2.7 Dahj and Soji Asha's father
- 2.8 Dahj and Soji Asha's father's friend
- 2.9 Dark-haired girl
- 2.10 Distress caller
- 2.11 Ethan's parents
- 2.12 Iconian scientist
- 2.13 Jakara's father
- 2.14 Jakara's neighbors
- 2.15 Kalara's crew
- 2.16 Kapec's parents
- 2.17 Keel's brother
- 2.18 Kodrak's son
- 2.19 Little old lady from Leningrad
- 2.20 Narek's brother
- 2.21 Native American legend characters
- 2.22 Rasmussen's colleague
- 2.23 Risa kidney donor and thief
- 2.24 Seska's brother
- 2.25 Starfleet ensign in riddle
- 2.26 Starfleet ghost
- 2.27 Starnes' relatives
- 2.28 Ten plus good men
- 2.29 Tilonus captives
- 2.30 Turkish pirates
- 2.31 Vina's parents
- 2.32 Valerie Archer's parents
- 3 Literature
- 3.1 Butler
- 3.2 Commodore Hornblower character
- 3.3 Dara's brother
- 3.4 Evil changeling
- 3.5 "Falor's Journey" monks
- 3.6 "Frame of Mind" characters
- 3.7 The girl who made the stars characters
- 3.8 "Hamlet" character
- 3.9 Humpty Dumpty characters
- 3.10 The Never Ending Sacrifice family
- 3.11 Odo's romance novel characters
- 3.12 Please, Take Me With You characters
- 3.13 Rumpelstiltskin
- 3.14 Snail and turtle
- 3.15 Vok'sha saint
- 4 Movies and television
Holographic
Bashir 62 characters
- See: Bashir 62 holograms
Crisis Point: The Rise of Vindicta characters
Borg drone head
In Ensign Beckett Mariner's role as Vindicta for her holodeck program, she used the head of a Borg drone to erect a force field, which blocked the beam of the holographic Shaxs' phaser bazooka. Vindicta then threw the head at Shaxs, who caught it just before it inexplicably detonated, "killing" him. (LD: "Crisis Point")
Idlocana VI president
In Beckett Mariner's movie-styled holodeck program, Admiral Vassery informed Captain Carol Freeman that the President of Idlocana VI had sent a message thanking the USS San Clemente for "a wonderful second contact". This was considered to be quite suspicious, as Starfleet did not have a ship named the San Clemente. (LD: "Crisis Point")
Dixon Hill series characters
Hotel Royale characters
Janeway Lambda one characters
Burleigh's "deceased" wife

Lord Burleigh's late wife, whose shadow looms over the house
This woman was said to have acted as a buffer for Lord Burleigh's overbearing personality until her "death". According to her father and brother, Beatrice Burleigh missed her very much, and hadn't gotten over her death. Despite this, Beatrice claimed to have given her first sampler to her mother more recently. She later broke her mother's tea cup, one with flowers on it, and was sorry for having done so. When Lucille Davenport went to Lord Burleigh with her concerns about Beatrice's supposedly "false" belief that her mother was alive, he asked Davenport to drop it. (VOY: "Cathexis", "Learning Curve", "Persistence of Vision")
The Adventures of Captain Proton characters
Orion slave girls program characters
Three Orion slave girls were part of a holoprogram that Quark recommended to an injured solid Odo. Odo was not interested in the least. (DS9: "The Begotten")
Photons Be Free characters
Photons Be Free (altered version) characters
Chief Medical Officer

The CMO in the altered version of Photons Be Free
In Tom Paris' version of The Doctor's holonovel, the CMO of the USS Voyeur was portrayed as a sleazy, unethical individual who resembled The Doctor, albeit with a bad comb-over. (VOY: "Author, Author")
Triplet sister
In Tom Paris' version of The Doctor's holonovel, there was a female individual who was the triplet sister of One of Three and Two of Three. (VOY: "Author, Author")
Nude Olympic athletes

Nude Olympians
Ensign Beckett Mariner apparently enjoyed using the holodeck on the USS Cerritos. One particular program, with the file name "All-Nude Olympic Training Facility" , depicted multiple male athletes training and exercising naked. In 2380, Mariner showed this program to fellow ensign, D'Vana Tendi, who abashedly stated that it was "a very detailed program." (LD: "Second Contact")
Freecloud advertising characters
Feely's Venom Garden mascot

The Feely's Venom Garden mascot, before being closed by Raffi
The mascot for Feely's Venom Garden was one of several holographic characters that appeared within La Sirena shortly upon her arrival at the planet Freecloud. (PIC: "Stardust City Rag")
Freecloud Grand Hotel mascot

The Freecloud Grand Hotel mascot appears before Picard
The mascot for the Freecloud Grand Hotel was one of several holographic characters that appeared within La Sirena shortly upon her arrival at the planet Freecloud. (PIC: "Stardust City Rag")
Freecloud Institute of Entertainment Robotics mascot

The Freecloud Institute of Entertainment Robotics mascot startles Dr. Jurati
The mascot for the Freecloud Institute of Entertainment Robotics was one of several holographic characters that appeared within La Sirena shortly upon her arrival at the planet Freecloud. (PIC: "Stardust City Rag")
The Red Bolian mascot

The mascot for The Red Bolian was one of several holographic characters that appeared within La Sirena shortly upon her arrival at the planet Freecloud. (PIC: "Stardust City Rag")
Hypothetical
Alsia's father
Alsia's father was apparently a stellar cartographer, who, in 2340, had apparently conducted a mineralogical analysis of the Vlugta asteroid belt, but was never able to follow up what he found there. In an attempt to con her mark, she wished to procure the proper funding so as to file her stake on the claim. (DS9: "Rivals")
Alsia's husband
Alsia's husband was apparently in business until his death sometime prior to 2370. During their marriage, she managed to put away a little bit of money each year, and after his death, according to her con, she planned on carrying out her dream of fulfilling her father's desire of filing a stake on the claim with the money she had, which she didn't quite have enough to fulfill. (DS9: "Rivals")
American missionary
This American missionary was also a plastic surgeon, who at one point lived in China. In 1930, to explain "Chinese" Spock's oddly-shaped ears to a police officer, James T. Kirk explained that as a child, the Vulcan had gotten his head caught in a mechanical rice picker and was treated by this doctor, who happened to be living nearby at the time. The officer, unswayed, continued to detain them. (TOS: "The City on the Edge of Forever")
Archer's brother
Jonathan Archer claimed to have a brother who owned a ranch down south of the Skagaran colony, and that he was headed there to look for work. When the bartender asked if his brother raised bluehorns, Archer asked him how he knew. The bartender explained that the land down south was good for little else. (ENT: "North Star")
Bashir's "patient"
To avoid having to linger and explain his over-watering and killing Keiko O'Brien's Idran hybrid bonsai trees, Julian Bashir told Miles O'Brien he had an operation to perform. When Miles asked who the patient was, Bashir said he'd find someone. Later, the doctor expressed his regrets to Keiko, saying he had left a patient on the operating table. (DS9: "The Assignment")
Cusak's "attacker"
Trying to get the attention of a distracted Bashir, Lisa Cusak pretended to be attacked by an unknown lifeform. Alarmed, Bashir cried out to her, only to hear an unfamiliar voice claim to have eaten Cusak. This further disturbed him, and the voice continued, asking him why he cared that Cusak had died, as he hadn't been listening anyway. The "voice" was in fact Cusak herself, something Bashir realized after the "attacker" also remarked on his inattention. (DS9: "The Sound of Her Voice")
Dahj and Soji Asha's father

The father in Soji's dream
Dahj and Soji Asha's father was created by Dr. Bruce Maddox in 2396 to give the two androids a backstory. He was a xenobotanist who developed a new breed of orchid, which he named Orchidaceae Dahj oncidium, after Dahj. He gifted two necklaces of a unique design to each of his daughters. He lived in Seattle and had a friend who was a university professor. Soji saw her "father" in her dreams, though she could not picture his face. (PIC: "Remembrance", "Absolute Candor", "The Impossible Box")
Dahj and Soji Asha's father's friend
This male indivdual was created by Dr. Bruce Maddox in 2396 to give the androids Dahj and Soji Asha a backstory. He was a friend of their father and a university professor. Soji supposedly learned the Romulan language from him. (PIC: "Absolute Candor")
Dark-haired girl
Roga Danar suggested that his hostility towards Deanna Troi might be due to having had his heart broken by a girl with long dark hair (much like hers), causing his descent into crime. (TNG: "The Hunted")
Distress caller
This colonist appeared to have sent a distress call from Barisa Prime, saying the colony there was under attack from Tzenkethi warships. In reality, the transmission was a Dominion trick. (DS9: "The Adversary")
Ethan's parents
These Human parents of Ethan were supposedly taken from a research station on Miridian VI to Alpha Onias III, along with their son, by Tomalak and other Romulans. "Ethan" claimed that they had been taken away. In reality, there were no Romulans or Humans; "Ethan" was in fact, a boy named Barash whose mother had spirited him to the planet when his people were killed. (TNG: "Future Imperfect")
Iconian scientist
In an attempt to prove that Harry Kim would fall for anything, Tom Paris claimed to have been on USS Voyager's bridge when an Iconian scientist hailed the ship, claiming he had a trans-dimensional gateway that could take them anywhere in the galaxy. Kim didn't believe him until B'Elanna Torres "confirmed" his statement, saying she'd also been there when he contacted them and believed that they'd be home by the end of the week. Kim finally believed him, prompting Torres to declare that Paris was right about Kim. (VOY: "Inside Man")
Jakara's father
This Malcorian was the father of "Rivas Jakara". He had suffered from the same birth defect that Jakara did, which caused his hands to appear unlike those of most Malcorians. He was part of William T. Riker's improvised cover story while operating under the Malcorian alias of "Rivas Jakara" in 2367. (TNG: "First Contact")
Jakara's neighbors
"Jakara" also claimed that his phaser was a toy he was taking home as a present. When Berel challenged him, reminding Jakara that he had earlier claimed to have no family, he said it was for the child of a neighbor. (TNG: "First Contact")
Kalara's crew
This crew was made up by Kalara in 2263 of the alternate reality as part of a story to lure the USS Enterprise to Altamid. (Star Trek Beyond)
Kapec's parents
These parents were invented by Flint in 2266 to explain Rayna Kapec's presence on the planet Holberg 917G. He claimed that they had died in an accident while working for him, and had made him her legal guardian shortly before their deaths.
In reality, Kapec was the latest in a series of androids created by Flint himself and as such, had no mother or father. (TOS: "Requiem for Methuselah")
Keel's brother
In 2364, when Walker Keel told Jean-Luc Picard that his brother introduced Beverly Crusher and Jack Crusher, Picard corrected him, saying he didn't have a brother, but rather two sisters named Anne and Melissa. The lie was Keel's attempt to get Picard to correct him, and by doing so, prove he really was who he claimed to be. (TNG: "Conspiracy")
Kodrak's son
This child was invented by Worf to legitimize his claims that a polaron emitter that Odo, operating under the Klingon alias Kodrak, had brought into the Hall of Warriors, was a tinghamut, a Vulcan children's toy seized in raids on the Archanis sector and therefore harmless. Worf told "Kodrak" to give the toy to his son, and the "Klingon" agreed. (DS9: "Apocalypse Rising")
Little old lady from Leningrad
According to Pavel Chekov, a little old lady from Leningrad invented Scotch whisky. (TOS: "The Trouble with Tribbles")
The alternate reality version of Chekov made essentially the same claim, though he only specified that the lady was from Russia. (Star Trek Beyond)
Narek's brother
The brother of Narek and Narissa died unexpectedly in 2398, according to Narek when attempting to get close to Soji Asha. (PIC: "Remembrance")
Native American legend characters
In 2372, in an effort to communicate his feelings to Kathryn Janeway, Chakotay made up an ancient legend that he claimed existed among his people. It pertained to an angry warrior finding peace by vowing to protect a woman chief and her tribe. (VOY: "Resolutions")
Rasmussen's colleague
While visiting the USS Enterprise-D in 2368 and passing himself off as a visitor from the future, Berlinghoff Rasmussen claimed to have visited a 22nd century vessel with a colleague. (TNG: "A Matter of Time")
Risa kidney donor and thief
According to a well-known cautionary tale, a man met a beautiful woman on Risa who invited him over for the night. He woke up in the morning happy, but missing a kidney. (VOY: "Fury")
Seska's brother
Seska, a Cardassian spy surgically altered to appear as a Bajoran member of the Maquis, once spoke of having a brother.
When B'Elanna Torres caught Seska daydreaming, Seska explained that "my brother's birthday is in four days; last year I promised I'd meet him on Nivoch, celebrate with him. He'll think I broke my promise, that I'm dead." (VOY: "Prime Factors")
Starfleet ensign in riddle
This ensign, according to a riddle posited by Neelix in 2376, was stranded on an Class L planetoid for a whole year, with nothing but a calendar, yet was found in perfect health. Neelix's answer to the riddle was that he ate the dates (dates). Tuvok initially dismissed his answer as having "no basis in reality", but he later suggested that an alternate solution was that the ensign ate the sundaes (Sundays). (VOY: "Riddles")
Starfleet ghost
This man, wearing an old Starfleet uniform, was apparently seen by Kenicki while the USS Enterprise-D was trapped in a Tyken's Rift in 2367. He rode the lift near the warp core, and when it opened, he was gone. Gillespie told Miles O'Brien about the story, but O'Brien didn't believe a word of it. (TNG: "Night Terrors")
Starnes' relatives
In 2268, Tommy Starnes claimed to have relatives that lived on Marcos XII when asking Captain James T. Kirk if he and the other orphaned children from the Starnes Exploration Party would be taken there. He said this to hide their true motives for wishing to go to the planet. (TOS: "And the Children Shall Lead")
Ten plus good men
Garak suggested in 2374 that Benjamin Sisko could claim that at least ten good men died to bring an optolythic data rod containing a record of Dominion plans to invade Romulus, in order to involve the Romulans in the Dominion War. (DS9: "In the Pale Moonlight")
Tilonus captives
According to "Commander Bloom", a dozen or more Starfleet officers were being held captive at the Tilonus Institute for Mental Disorders along with herself, Sanders, Stafko, and William T. Riker. She claimed that the workers there were taking neurochemicals from their brains. (TNG: "Frame of Mind")
Turkish pirates
These Turkish pirates were part of "Catarina"'s explanation to a hologram of Leonardo da Vinci for how she came to the Americas. She promised to tell him about them later. (VOY: "Concerning Flight")
Vina's parents
These parents of Vina were part of a story created by the Talosians. In the story, they died when the SS Columbia crashed on Talos IV. Before she died, Vina's mother gave birth to her. (TOS: "The Cage")
Valerie Archer's parents
These parents of "Valerie Archer" were starship officers, something which prompted Chakotay to label her a Starfleet brat while conversing with her in 2375. They were a part of "Archer"'s backstory used by the member of Species 8472 that had assumed that name. According to "Archer", she'd seen half of the quadrant as a result of their postings. (VOY: "In the Flesh")
Literature
Butler
The butler was a small part with only two lines in Beverly Crusher's play Something for Breakfast. In 2369, she offered the part to Jean-Luc Picard. (TNG: "A Fistful of Datas")
Commodore Hornblower character
Arthur Wellesley was an aristocratic character in the novel Commodore Hornblower. He was the brother of Barbara Wellesley and the brother-in-law of Horatio Hornblower. Wellesley commanded the British army in Spain, fighting the forces of Napoléon Bonaparte. (DS9: "The Visitor")
Dara's brother
This boy was the brother of Dara. Together, they somehow wound up in the land of Tagas. (TNG: "Hero Worship")
Evil changeling
This changeling was a character in a Yaderan story. Dared by the Great Minra to turn into a loaf of greenbread and was subsequently eaten. (DS9: "Shadowplay")
"Falor's Journey" monks
These monks, mentioned in "Falor's Journey", lived in the city of Kir. Though Falor sought fulfillment from them, he left unsatisfied. (VOY: "Innocence")
"Frame of Mind" characters
These two characters, a doctor (played by Data) and his agitated patient (played by William T. Riker), were the lead roles in Beverly Crusher's play Frame of Mind. (TNG: "Frame of Mind")
The girl who made the stars characters
"Hamlet" character
The Ghost was a character in William Shakespeare's play Hamlet.
Late at night, Prince Hamlet met the Ghost. After being led by this ghost for a time, Hamlet refused to go any further and demanded an explanation for the Ghost's appearance. He replied to the young prince that, upon hearing his tale, that he would seek revenge for his father, for whom the Ghost claimed that he was the spirit of.
In 2266, the Karidian Company of Players performed the play in the USS Enterprise theater. In his last acting role, before his accidental death at the hands of his daughter Lenore Karidian, Anton Karidian portrayed the Ghost. (TOS: "The Conscience of the King")
Humpty Dumpty characters
Neither the king or his men could put Humpty Dumpty back together again. (ENT: "Vanishing Point")
The Never Ending Sacrifice family
This family was the subject of the Cardassian repetitive epic novel The Never Ending Sacrifice. The story followed them over seven generations, during which they, as Julian Bashir summed it up, "lead selfless lives of duty to the state, grow old and die." (DS9: "The Wire")
Odo's romance novel characters
This male and female were involved in a love scene in a romance novel read by Odo in 2373. Quark read a passage out loud detailing a tense romantic moment between them, which caused the Changeling no small amount of embarrassment. (DS9: "The Ascent")
Please, Take Me With You characters

A little girl meeting aliens
This little girl was to be the subject of the story Please, Take Me With You, co-written by K.C. Hunter and Julius Eaton. Herbert Rossoff imagined her as a "lonely little girl" who made friends with the "empathetic aliens" that would "teach her how to smile". (DS9: "Far Beyond the Stars")
Rumpelstiltskin
King
This king was the queen's husband and the father of a baby. After Rumpelstiltskin angrily disappeared, he lived happily ever after with them. (DS9: "If Wishes Were Horses")
Messenger
This messenger witnessed Rumpelstiltskin dancing, singing and laughing because he thought the queen would never guess his name. (DS9: "If Wishes Were Horses")
Queen
This queen was the king's wife and the mother of a baby daughter. Upon being told by the messenger what Rumpelstiltskin's name was, she guessed wrong twice; first Harry and then Jack before finally answering correctly. After Rumpelstiltskin angrily disappeared, she lived happily ever after with them. (DS9: "If Wishes Were Horses")
Queen's baby
This baby was the child of the king and queen. Rumpelstiltskin wanted her for his own, but the queen managed to vanquish him and thus regain the child. After Rumpelstiltskin angrily disappeared, the child lived happily ever after with the king and queen. (DS9: "If Wishes Were Horses")
Snail and turtle
Trip Tucker once saw a cartoon with two garden snails, one named Fred, riding a turtle. (ENT: "Shuttlepod One")
Vok'sha saint
This hero was the greatest in Vok'sha mythology. He ate stones for twenty-three days to kill hate, believed by them to be a beast that lived in one's stomach. For this, he achieved sainthood. In 2371, Chakotay mentioned this to Tuvok when explaining demons to the Vulcan, whose culture did not have any. (VOY: "Heroes and Demons")
Movies and television
Fighting robot characters
Two fighting robots–one red, the other blue–could be seen battling each other on a large monitor in Stardust City on Freecloud. (PIC: "Stardust City Rag")
Jessica's son
This baby was a character in an unnamed soap opera Neelix and Kes became interested in after having time travelled back to 1996. He was the son of Jessica and either Blaine or his twin brother Jack. (VOY: "Future's End")
The Day The Earth Stood Still Humans
These Humans watched Klaatu's flying saucer soar through the sky in the movie The Day the Earth Stood Still. (ENT: "Cogenitor")
Tribbles commercial mascot

The Tribbles mascot skateboarding in a commercial
This cartoon tribble mascot appeared in a commercial for Tribbles, a cereal invented by Edward Larkin. (ST: "The Trouble with Edward")