- William Shatner
William Alan Shatner (born on March 22, 1931) is a Canadian actor who gained fame for playing James Tiberius Kirk of the "USS Enterprise" in the television show "Star Trek" from 1966 to 1969 and in seven of the subsequent movies. Shatner has written a series of books chronicling his experiences playing James T. Kirk and being a part of "Star Trek". He also played the title role as veteran police sergeant "T.J. Hooker", from 1982 to 1986.
- Leonard Nimoy
Born in Boston, Massachusetts to Ukrainian-Jewish immigrants, Leonard Nimoy spent much of his early career in the 1950s doing small parts in B-movies, TV shows such as 'Dragnet', and serials such as Republic Pictures 'Zombies of the Stratosphere' in 1952.
- James Doohan
James Montgomery Doohan (March 3, 1920 - July 20, 2005) was a Canadian character and voice actor best known for his role as Montgomery "Scotty" Scott in the television and film series "Star Trek". Doohan's characterization of the Scottish Chief Engineer of the Starship "Enterprise" was one of the most recognizable elements in the "Star Trek" franchise. He also made several contributions behind the scenes for the "Star Trek" franchise.
- Mark Lenard
Mark Lenard (October 15, 1924 - November 22, 1996) was an American actor, primarily in television. Lenard was known as the actor who played Spock's father, Sarek, in "Star Trek: The Original Series". He was one of the first actors to either appear in more than one "Star Trek" series as the same character and play more than one character. He played the first Romulan seen on the show and the first Klingon with a ridged forehead.
- Nichelle Nichols
Nichelle Nichols (born Grace Nichols on December 28 1932) is an American singer, actress, and voice actress. She sang with Duke Ellington and Lionel Hampton before turning to acting. Her most famous role may be that of communications officer Lieutenant Uhura aboard the USS "Enterprise" in the popular "Star Trek" television series, as well as the succeeding motion picture spinoffs, …
- George Takei
George Hosato Takei (born April 20, 1937) is an American actor known for his role in the TV series "Star Trek", in which he played the helmsman Hikaru Sulu on the USS "Enterprise". Takei is also known for his baritone voice and deep-throated catch phrase, "Oh my!" Consequently, Takei began recurring appearances as the announcer for "The Howard Stern Show" on January 9, 2006, after that show's move to satellite radio.
- Majel Barrett
Majel Barrett-Roddenberry is an American actress, and producer. She is also the widow of television director/producer/writer and "Star Trek" creator Gene Roddenberry. As a result of her marriage to Gene Roddenberry and the fact that she has been in every "Star Trek" series, she is sometimes referred to as “"the First Lady of Star Trek".” She and Gene Roddenberry were married in Japan on August 6, 1969, …
- Deforest Kelley
Jackson DeForest Kelley was an American actor known for his starring role as Dr. Leonard "Bones" McCoy of the USS "Enterprise" in the television series "Star Trek" and six of its subsequent movies.
- Grace Lee Whitney
Grace Lee Whitney (born April 1, 1930) is an American actress and entertainer, also known as 'Ruth Whitney' and 'Lee Whitney'. She is most famous for playing the role of Janice Rand in a number of Star Trek television series and films.
- Jane Wyatt
Jane Waddington Wyatt (August 12, 1910 - October 20, 2006) was an American actress in films and television. Her most famous role was as Ronald Colman's love interest in Frank Capra's "Lost Horizon" (1937). Other film appearances included 1947's "Gentleman's Agreement" (with Gregory Peck), "None but the Lonely Heart" (with Cary Grant), and "Boomerang" (with Dana Andrews). For many people, she is best remembered for her television roles, …
- Frank Gorshin
Frank Gorshin (April 5, 1933 -) was an American actor and comedian from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA. He was best known as an impressionist, with many notable guest appearances on the "Ed Sullivan Show" and on "The Tonight Show" with host Steve Allen. His most famous role was The Riddler in the "Batman" live action television series.
- Walter Koenig
Walter Marvin Koenig (born September 14, 1936) is an American actor, writer, teacher and director, known for his roles as Chekov in "Star Trek", and as Bester on the series "Babylon 5".
- Gary Lockwood
Gary Lockwood (born John Gary Yusolfsky on February 21, 1937 in Van Nuys, California) is an American actor who is probably best known for his role as astronaut Dr. Frank Poole in "2001: A Space Odyssey" (1968). A very familiar face to movie and television audiences for nearly fifty years, Lockwood was a movie stuntman and stand-in for Anthony Perkins prior to his film acting debut in an uncredited bit role in 1959's "Warlock".
- Elizabeth Rogers
Elizabeth Rogers (May 18, 1934 - November 6, 2004) was an American actress. Born Betty Jayne Rogers in Austin, Texas she is famous for being the relief communications officer for Lt. Uhura in some episodes of the 1960s television series "Star Trek". During the 1970s she also appeared in a string of Irwin Allen produced disaster films including "The Poseidon Adventure" and "The Towering Inferno" as she was a good friend of Allen.
- David Soul
David Soul (born August 28, 1943 in Chicago, Illinois) is an American actor and British citizen and singer best known for his role as the "seat-of-the-pants" California police detective Ken 'Hutch' Hutchinson (opposite co-star and long-time friend Paul Michael Glaser) in the cult television program "Starsky and Hutch" (1975-79). Originally David Richard Solberg, he was born the son of a Lutheran minister.
- Joan Collins
Joan Henrietta Collins OBE (born May 23 1933) is a Golden Globe Award winning British actress and bestselling author. She is most widely known for her role as Alexis Colby in the 1980s primetime soap opera "Dynasty". She was born in London, England, Great Britain and is one of the United Kingdom's most popular actresses.
- Charles Napier
Charles Napier (born April 12, 1936) is an American character actor, known for his portrayals of square-jawed tough guys and military types.
- Arnold Moss
Arnold Moss (born January 28, 1909 in Brooklyn, New York; died December 15, 1989 in New York City) was an American character actor often playing sly or sinister foreigners. He is the father of songwriter Jeff Moss. Moss made two memorable appearances in Bob Hope films, as Hope's Casablanca contact in the espionage spoof "My Favorite Spy" and as a conniving Venetian doge in "Casanova's Big Night".
- James Daly
James Daly (born October 23, 1918; died July 3, 1978) was an American actor born in Wisconsin Rapids, Wisconsin. He is best known for his role in the long-running hospital drama series "Medical Center", where he played Chad Everett's superior. He is also remembered for his portrayal of Mr. Flint (an apparently immortal human) in the "Star Trek" episode Requiem for Methuselah.
- Clint Howard
Clinton E. Howard (born April 20, 1959) is an American film and television actor.
- John Winston
John Winston (born October 24, 1933 in Leeds, Yorkshire) is an English actor best known for his appearances as Lieutenant Kyle, the Transporter Chief on "Star Trek: The Original Series". Currently, he resides in North Hollywood.
- Marj Dusay
Marj Dusay is an actress known for her roles on American soap operas. She is especially known for her role as "Alexandra Spaulding" on "Guiding Light", a role she has played on and off since 1993. She also played "Vanessa Bennett Cortlandt" on "All My Children" from 1999 to 2002, "Pamela Pepperidge Capwell Conrad" on "Santa Barbara" in 1987–1988, 1991 and "Myrna Clegg" on "Capitol" from 1983 to 1987.
- Malachi Throne
Malachi Throne (born December 1 1928) is an American character actor, most noted for his roles on "Star Trek" and "It Takes a Thief". He was born in New York City.
- Michael J. Pollard
Michael J. Pollard (born May 30, 1939) is an American actor. Pollard was born Michael John Pollack, Jr. in Passaic, New Jersey to Sonia Dubanowich and Michael John Pollack. He attended the Montclair Academy and the Actors Studio. Pollard played the character C. W. Moss in the film "Bonnie and Clyde", …
- Jill Ireland
Jill Ireland (April 24, 1936 - May 18, 1990) was an English actress.
- Michael Forest
Gerald Michael Charlebois, better known as Michael Forest (born April 17, 1929 in Harvey, North Dakota, USA), is an American voice actor who has voiced in many anime titles. However, one of his best-known roles was a live-action voice-over, that being the voice of Prince Olympius in "Power Rangers: Lightspeed Rescue". Formerly, Forest was a film and television actor in his heyday, but has since been well-known for his voice-acting roles.
- Susan Howard
Jeri Lynn Mooney (born January 28, 1943), better known as Susan Howard, is an American actress, writer, and political activist; best known for portraying the character Donna Culver Krebbs on the soap opera "Dallas", Maggie Petrocelli on the television show "Petrocelli", and to "Star Trek" fans for portraying the first female Klingon. Howard is also a screen writer and member of the Writers Guild of America.
- Robert Lansing
Robert Lansing was an American stage, film, and television actor. Born Robert Howell Brown in San Diego, California, Lansing borrowed his stage name from the state capital of Michigan. As a young actor in New York City, he was hired to join a stock company in Michigan but was told he would first have to join Actors Equity Association. Equity would not allow him to join as "Robert Brown" since there was already another actor using that name.
- Don Marshall
Donald James Marshall (born May 2, 1936 in San Diego, California) is an actor best known for his work in the television show "Land of the Giants". He is also known for his portrayal of Lieutenant Boma in the Star Trek episode "The Galileo Seven"
- Bob Johnson
Bob Johnson (born Robert Cleveland Johnson in 1921 in Portland, Oregon - died 1994) was an American actor and voice actor who played supporting roles on series television and in films from the late 1950s til a few years before he died. He frequently read voice-over work on "The Outer Limits", and may have been involved in English-language dubbing on lesser-known spaghetti westerns.
- Brian Tochi
Brian Keith Tochi (born May 2, 1959, in Los Angeles, California) is an American actor, screenwriter, movie director and producer. He attended USC, UCLA, and UCI. Tochi is his stage name; Brian graduated Cypress High School in 1977 as Brian Tochihara. Of Asian ancestry, Tochi frequently plays characters who are Japanese, Chinese, or of other Asiatic origin, adopting the appropriate accent as needed.
- Lou Antonio
Lou Antonio (born January 23, 1934 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA) is an actor and TV director. Two of the most notable movies he has acted in are "Cool Hand Luke" and "America, America". He also starred in two short-lived TV series, "Dog and Cat", and "Makin' It". Antonio's only recurring TV guest role character was on "Here Come the Brides", …
- Ned Romero
Ned Romero (born 1925) is an American actor who has appeared in television and film. Romero was born in Franklin, Louisiana to Anna and Sidney Romero. His ancestry is Chitimacha Native American, as well as Spanish and French. Amongst his roles he has appeared in "Walker: Texas Ranger", "Star Trek: Voyager", "Star Trek: The Next Generation", "Police Woman", "Kung Fu", "Ironside" and "Death Valley Days".
- Fred Williamson
Fred "The Hammer" Williamson (born March 5, 1938 in Gary, Indiana) is a former professional football player, a star defensive back in the AFL during the 1960s.
- Celia Lovsky
Celia Lovsky (February 21, 1897-October 12, 1979) was an Austrian-American actress. She was born Caecilie Lvovsky in Vienna, daughter of Bretislav Lvovsky (1857-1910), a minor Czech opera composer. Her birthday is given by various sources as February 12 and February 21. She studied theater at the Austrian Royal Academy of Arts and Music. She later moved to Berlin, where she met Peter Lorre, who would later become her husband.
- Jack Donner
Jack Donner (born 1928) in Los Angeles, California) is an American actor. He was worked steadily in television and film since the 1950s including early work on "The Guiding Light" and "As the World Turns". Honing his craft, he performed in seven successive seasons of New York regional and stock theater. In the 1960s and 70s he started to receive guest star and co-starring roles in shows such as "The Streets of San Francisco", "Mannix", …
- Ricardo Montalbán
Ricardo Gonzalo Pedro Montalbán Merino is a Mexican/American television, theatre and film actor. He is known as a spokesperson in late '70s advertisements for Chrysler Cordoba (in which he famously extols the "Corinthian leather" used for its interior), and for playing Mr. Roarke in the television series "Fantasy Island" and Khan Noonien Singh in "Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan".
- Mariette Hartley
Mariette Hartley (born Mary Loretta Hartley on June 21, 1940, in Weston, Connecticut) is a prolific American character actress. She began her career in her teens as a stage actress, coached and mentored by the noted Eva Le Gallienne. Her film career began with "Ride the High Country", a classic western with actors Randolph Scott and Joel McCrea; and directed by Sam Peckinpah. She has worked with Rod Serling and Gene Roddenberry, …
- Phil Morris
Phil Morris (born April 4 1959 in Iowa City, Iowa) is an American TV and movie actor.
- Michael Dunn
Michael Dunn (born Gary Neil Miller, reportedly on February 7, 1934 in Shattuck, Oklahoma; died August 30, 1973 in London) was a successful dwarf American actor.