STARFLEET PERSONNEL FILE -- Picard, Jean-Luc
Played By: Patrick Stewart
Rank: Captain
Current assignment: Commander, U.S.S. Enterprise
NCC-1701/E
Full Name: Jean-Luc Picard
Date of birth: July 13, 2305
Place of birth: Labarre, France, Earth
Parents: Maurice and Yvette Picard
Education: Starfleet Academy, 2323-27
Marital status: Single
Children: None
Quarters: Formerly, Enterprise: Deck 9, Room 3601
Office: Enterprise: Deck 1 Ready Room, adjoining Main Bridge
Starfleet Career Summary
2333 -- Assigned as commander and first officer on USS
Stargazer, later promoted to captain after death of his superior
in battle
2355 -- Forced to abandon Stargazer after encounter with
then-unknown Ferengi, with few casualties
2356 -- Cleared of negligence in Stargazer loss by routine
inquiry
2363 -- Chosen to command relatively new Galaxy class U.S.S.
Enterprise
2364 -- Offered but turned down promotion to admiral as
commandant of Starfleet Academy
2366-7 -- Declared missing in action during Borg invasion,
later rescued from assimilation and returned to Enterprise
command
2369 -- Assigned to covert raid and captured by Cardassians on
Celtris III, later returned to Enterprise command
2371 -- Lost Enterprise at Veridian III while opposing
El-Aurian scientist Tolian Soran
2372 -- Chosen to command relatively new Sovereign class
U.S.S. Enterprise, SD 49827.5
2373 -- Deflected Borg invasion of Earth; risked further
contamination to restore Borg temporal sabotage of human first
contact
Psychological Profile: Report of Ship's Counselor Deanna Troi
Updated from Starfleet File Reports
An accomplished diplomat and tactician, Picard managed to
surpass a 22-year career as first officer and later captain of
the U.S.S. Stargazer with an even more impressive record as
captain of the fleet's former flagship U.S.S. Enterprise. In the
latter role he not only witnessed the major turning points of
recent galactic history but played a major role in them as well,
from surviving as the only human abductee of the Borg invasion in
2366, to becoming the chief contact point with the Q Continuum,
to serving as arbiter choosing the current ruler of the Klingon
Empire and exposing the Romulans as backers of his chief rivals,
later helping a pacifist underground movement to gain a toehold
there.
Owing to a single-minded drive since childhood for a Starfleet
career, Picard has "never been a family man" and was
long uncomfortable with the Galaxy-class starship's civilian
family contingent; the orphaned son of Lt. Marla Aster again
raised this concern, although his unease with children has
dissipated since being stranded with three youths during a
shipboard quantum filament crisis. His initial reaction to family
is also reflected in the friction with his father and, later, his
older brother over leaving the family business, a winery.
However, when asked about having children of his own Picard once
replied that "wishing for a thing does not make it so."
The issue of lineage and his lack of offspring caused a sustained
yet brief period of depression upon the sudden accidental deaths
in 2371 of Robert and his nephew Rene, his only other family
members. His outlook was also affected by the chance to
experience a traditional family through an encounter in the Nexus
in 2371, as recounted later, and after having relived 40 years of
a Kataanan native's life three years earlier; in the latter case
the decades of experience compressed into 30 minutes from a
Kataanan archival probe was overwhelming.
Lingering throughout Picard's life is a series of unsuccessful
romantic relationships, stemming in part from his introspective
nature as a career officer and his self-professed desire to avoid
long-term commitments. Significant adult romances have included
Jenice Manheim in 2342, Capt. Phillipe Louvois in 2356, rogue
archeologist Vash in 2366-68, and Lt. Cmdr. Nella Darren in 2369.
In addition, he also had barely acknowledged feelings for Ens.
Marty Batanides following their Starfleet graduation; the
Kriosian metamorph Kamala; and the widow of his best friend Lt.
Cmdr. Jack Crusher, Beverly - a Starfleet doctor, longtime friend
and his chief medical officer on the Enterprise.
Aside from these feelings regarding children, family and
women, Picard was even aloof with those he considered his close
friends. Nevertheless, he has shown a willingness to stake his
career for them - as when defending the inherent sentient's
rights of first Data and then his daughter Lal against Starfleet
confiscation, then acting as Worf's cha'dich before the Klingon
High Council and stepping in on behalf of Crewman Simon Tarses
during Adm. Satie's virtual witchhunt. Also, a Q-induced
encounter in 2370 with a possible future timeline seems to have
diffused this separation from friends somewhat. While he has had
no more encounters with his best Academy mates, both of Picard's
closest friends from his early career, Jack Crusher and Walker
Keel, were killed in the line of duty.
Part of Picard's private nature includes a difficulty in
confronting deep personal issues, which then tend to become
suppressed. Philosophically, he sees life and death as more than
two choices of eternal or momentary existence; in fact, he
believes there is another concept yet beyond human understanding.
Genetic engineering with its pre-determination disturbs him,
saying it robs humanity of the unknown factor that makes life
worth living. Having to be patient in the presence of mounting
problems, even if it is unavoidable or even the best path to
take, is unsettling to him; nevertheless, he has shown a clear
skill in knowing when to solicit opinions and when to act
decisively. His Enterprise operations officer, Data, once
estimated only a 17% chance that Picard would be so indecisive in
a crisis as to call Starfleet for instructions.
Though he often heatedly defends a strict interpretation of
the Prime Directive, he has broken it numerous times when he felt
it was warranted. For example, during his Enterprise career he
allowed an Edo female to confront her "god" from space
and brought a pre-spaceflight Mintakan leader aboard so as to
undo the damage done by cultural contamination. (He later offered
his life to a distressed Mintakan's arrow to prove he was no
immortal himself.) He also chafes at the Starfleet directive
banning captains from most away-team missions in uncertain or
hostile situations.
Picard had few friends as a youngster and self-admittedly
"skipped his childhood," due to his early,
single-minded drive to be in Starfleet. Though shy, he took piano
lessons only to please his mother; he hated public performance
and soon quit - a move he now regrets. He did build airships in
bottles when young, and like his nephew years later he wrote a
ribbon-winning report on starships; reading of the ancient
Bajorans in the fifth grade might have been another influence on
is lifelong passion for archeology. Later he was school
president, valedictorian and a star athlete.
Picard failed his first try on the Academy entrance exams but
only required one more to pass. As a student athlete, he became
the only freshman ever to win the Academy marathon - the event at
Danula II marked the beginning of his friendship with Admiral
Hanson - and he once out-wrestled a Ligonian in 14 seconds with a
reverse body lift for a pin. He graduated at or near the top of
his Academy class, even though he once failed an Academy class
over a woman he refers to only as "A.F.," the initials
he carved into gardener Boothby's prize campus elm tree; he was
called at least once to the Academy superintendent's office, and
he credits Boothby for helping him through an ordeal that saved
his graduation. His lack of self-discipline as a young officer
nearly led to his death in a near-fatal stabbing at Starbase
Earhart in 2328 while awaiting post-graduation assignments.
Picard went on as a lieutenant to meet Ambassador Sarek at the
wedding of his son Spock.
Another mentor of those years was archeology professor Richard
Galen, whose fatherly approach was a trait sorely missed by the
son estranged from his true father. In fact, it was not until
after his abduction during the Borg crisis that Picard ventured
home, the first time in 20 years, and began to heal the rift with
his brother Robert, who had been jealous of his high-achieving
younger brother whom he viewed as getting away with spurning
family traditions and responsibilities.
In an early highlight of his illustrious and fondly recalled
years aboard the U.S.S. Stargazer, First Officer Picard took
command of the bridge upon his captain's death and saved the
ship, leading to his permanent promotion to captain. His command
has abruptly halted in 2355 when the vessel was abandoned with
relatively little loss of life during an encounter that, years
later, was realized to be the first UFP-Ferengi contact;
casualties would have been much higher had he not devised a
deceptive warp-speed jump maneuver that today is still studied
and bears his name. Even so, he endured a standard inquiry a year
later but was cleared of all negligence.
It was only a year before the Stargazer's loss, in 2354, that
Jack Crusher was killed on an away team, and he had returned the
body to his widow at Starbase 32. That same year he visited
Chalna; earlier, the Stargazer had barely eluded ambush while on
an unsuccessful truce mission during the Cardassian border wars.
Picard assumed captaincy of the NCC-1701/D on SD 41124, having
hand-picked much of his senior staff - such as two young officers
who impressed him enough upon first meeting to win a place in the
senior staff: Geordi LaForge once piloted his inspection tour
shuttle and stayed up all night to refit an engine part he'd made
a passing comment on, and he witnessed Tasha Yar risk her life to
save colonists amid a Carnelian mine field. Finally, he had
picked Riker from among simple resumes as his first officer and
promoted him to commander sight unseen, impressed by his record
of independence. His command presence and ethics persevered even
through the Satarran memory wipe - despite orders, he would not
fire on unarmed people.
Within months of his Enterprise captaincy he was offered
admiral's rank and the job of commandant of Starfleet Academy by
Admiral Quinn but turned it down to retain his flagship. He also
commanded the 23-ship blockade fleet to deter Romulan
interference along the Klingon border during the empire's civil
war of 2367-68, and undertook a covert raid in 2369 with two
Enterprise officers on Celtris III to investigate a reported
Cardassian metagenic weapons base, later found to be a hoax.
Following the loss of the Enterprise at Veridian III, Picard
won command of the ship's next namesake, one of the new Sovereign
class, in 2172 on SD 49827.5. While Lt. Cmdr. Worf chose to be
the exception, Picard's entire senior staff and many junior
officers made the transfer with their captain. That continuity
proves fortuitous: less than a year later, Picard was ordered
away from repelling a second Borg attack for fear of giving
unwitting aid to the enemy, but after reconsidering he led a
deflection of the main assault. From there, a risky time-travel
gambit paid off to correct temporal sabotage involving human
first contact.
Other mission performance highlights of his years on the
Enterprises included his second meeting with Sarek, where at
great personal risk he agreed to a mind-meld to save the Legaran
conference in 2366 with the ailing ambassador; the legendary
Vulcan had taken an interest in his career, calling it
"satisfactory," but Picard was still awed by the UFP
legend. They met again briefly as Sarek lay dying two years later
as Picard was en route to another reunion with Spock, leading an
underground pro-unification movement with Vulcan on Romulus.
Picard has also participated in first-contact encounters with
the Borg, Ferengi, Edo, Aldeans, Tamarians, Jarada, Malcoria III,
Douwd, Mintaka III, Paxans, Cytherians, the Ux-Mal, and
Devidians, among others, and served as a negotiator and diplomat
on missions including Acamar III, Rutia IV, Angosia III, Bajor,
Talarians, Turkana IV, Pentaurus V, Ventax II, Kaelon II,
Lenaria, Gemaris V-Dachlyd, and Krios-Valt Minor.
Picard keeps a healthy outlook on life with a wide variety of
interests and recreational pursuits, including his
near-professional pursuit of archeology, having studied the
Iconian culture since his cadet days and addressed the Federation
Archeological Council as keynote speaker on his oft-studied Tagus
III ruins in 2367. He enjoys Terran literature in its written
rather than holo-visual display, especially detective fiction
such as Dixon Hill, and Shakespearean drama; oddly enough, while
he enjoys role-playing the former in holo-programs, he avoids
acting or any other performance art himself despite an interest
in classical music and attending the shipboard concerts and plays
on the Enterprise. Even so, he overcame his childhood dislike and
began playing a Kataanan flute following his encounter with that
culture.
Picard's interests go well beyond archeology and literature,
however. The subject of planetary motion and physics is another;
he kept up with the Atlantis Project on Earth through journals;
and is fascinated to be the first to discover the spacefaring
life form, communicate with the Crystalline Entity, and reveal an
ancient Promellian battle cruiser. He has studied semantics and
keeps his Latin fresh, but has no interest in politics, dance,
small animals, or the Enterprise senior staff's poker game until
his 2370 encounter with Q and an alternate future timeline.
Medical history: Report of Cmdr. Beverly Crusher, M.D.,
Enterprise CMO
Picard enjoys excellent health, thanks to a regimen carried
over from his days as an athlete. He still finds time for
fencing, racquetball and equine sports, usually by Holodeck, but
he does show a tendency for overwork, avoids formal vacations,
and has reported bouts of insomnia. His aversion to annual
physicals must also be noted and dealt with.
Owing to a fatal stabbing through the heart in a brawl as a
newly-graduated ensign in 2328, a cardiac device later found to
be defective was implanted to save his life. The unit required
replacement when it malfunctioned in 2365, overseen at Starbase
212 by then-CMO Dr. Katherine Pulaski. Four years later in a
near-fatal Lenarian attack using compressed tetryon weaponry, it
was damaged and replaced. He suffered head trauma to the right
temple area in the same incident that led to Jack Crusher's death
in 2355, and has sustained numerous injuries on occasion, none
with long-lasting physical damage.
He was formerly declared dead by Adm. Hanson as a casualty of
war after his assimilation by the Borg; the ruling was rescinded
six days later, after he fought through the imposed Borg mind of
Locutus and got back to his own identity following his recapture.
Along with his physical recovery, the invasive incident took an
enormous emotional toll and required several weeks of counseling.
Picard followed a similar though less lengthy recuperation
following his capture and torture by Cardassians in 2369.
Counselor's update: Report of Cmdr. Deanna Troi, 2373
Less than a year on our new ship and I find myself returning
to the events of 2366-67 regarding our captain: the once-quelled
ghosts of his Locutus experience and his former commands have
returned. It has taken this second Borg experience to remind him
of the existence of a "Borg queen" who pursued him
then, and his reaction to the bureaucratic Starfleet reaction on
his involvement is an issue I am positive will be resolved by the
caption's unusually strong self-ego. However, in dealing with
reports by officers who were present, I have decided to focus
future efforts on the subject's lingering anger toward his
one-time captors in future, if any, Borg encounters.
This episode has also revealed a second and as-yet unexamined
factor in the captain's command decision-making process to be
considered in future crises: his command history itself.
Certainly Picard has compiled an illustrious career and laudable
accomplishments in both diplomacy and tactics, but the fact
remains that he abandoned his first command -- a decision cleared
by court-martial review -- and lost his second. While his quick
accession to a new command betrayed any concern at Starfleet
about his emotional fitness to lead a starship, it did play a
factor in delaying his eventual decision surrounding the aborted
abandonment and self-destruct of the new vessel to stop the Borg
temporal invasion. In this case, thanks to the interference of a
strong-willed contemporary associate of Zefram Cochrane, Picard
was persuaded that self-destruct was his only option, then
thankfully found other options that saved his vessel -- including
his unusually strong bond with longtime second officer Data.