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The streams started crossing a lot more when Star Trek got its first big revival in the ’80s, as the original series movies released (mostly to acclaim), and The Next Generation premiered in 1987. Doctor Who had been running the whole time, from 1963 through to the eighties, when the original run ended in 1989. Doctor Who would get a brief revival with a TV movie in 1996 (and the franchise’s first foray into productions in America), but it wouldn’t get a proper revival until March 2005 — ironically, Trek‘s first great revival would end quietly two months later, with the finale of Enterprise.
Still, for two massive science fiction franchises, there have been surprisingly few actors who have appeared in both. Considering how many guest stars Who tends to go through, and how many guest stars the various Trek spinoff series have had, this feels unusual. The most likely cause is probably the most obvious, though: they’ve both typically been produced on opposite sides of the Atlantic.
The Torchwood: Miracle Day Caveat

This list comes with the serious caveat that the American co-production of Doctor Who spin-off Torchwood‘s fourth season (subtitled Miracle Day) threw a wrench into the rare occasion that was a Who actor appearing in the Trek franchise (and vice versa). Torchwood: Miracle Day, which was in part filmed in the United States (rare for the Who franchise overall), has at least thirteen actors with credits in both Star Trek and Torchwood: Miracle Day. The most notable of those thirteen actors are John de Lancie and Nana Visitor. De Lancie plays the oft-recurring space deity “Q” in Trek — at this point, the character has appeared in some capacity in The Next Generation, Deep Space Nine, Voyager, Picard and Lower Decks. Visitor played Kira Nerys on Deep Space Nine as a series regular; she’s also lent her voice to the character’s appearance on Lower Decks.
The eleven other actors (that we know of) all had small parts in the films or one-time guest spots in the shows, including: Alan Dale, Van Epperson, Robin Sachs, Amy Benedict, Bari Hochwood, George Murdock, Richard Wharton, David Youse, Kelvin Yu, Eric Steinberg, Paul Hayes, and Jason Brooks were all credited in at least one episode of Torchwood: Miracle Day. Since Torchwood isn’t exactly Doctor Who, we thank them for their service to the over hanging umbrella of both franchises before moving on — a lot of actors have also surely appeared in various Trek properties (such as the many video games, including Star Trek Online) and the countless Doctor Who audio dramas. They’re both massive franchises, and it would hard to do justice to every single actor who has lent their talents to both franchises.
1) David Ajala (Star Trek: Discovery)

David Ajala is known to many Star Trek fans as the enigmatic Book in Discovery at this point — he first appears at the start of season three, and would recur until the end of the series. He was a fun addition to the first Trek series since Enterprise, injecting life into a show that didn’t always know how to use its colorful cast of characters. Well before Discovery, however, he starred as Peter, a cyborg in the Doctor Who episode “The Beast Below,” which was just Eleventh Doctor Matt Smith’s second episode. Peter was the chief of the Winders, who patrolled Starship UK, which the UK built in the far-flung future to save its population.
2) Daphne Ashbrook (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine)

Daphne Ashbrook is a rare example of an American actor who appeared in Doctor Who before the reboot (and that’s still rare); Ashbrook appeared in Star Trek: Deep Space Nine as Ensign Melora Hardin in a 1993 episode of the series. Then, she was cast in the 1996 attempt at rebooting Who: the TV movie, where she played Dr. Grace Holloway. She’s the Eighth Doctor’s companion, and while we’d all love to see her return in some capacity, any return of Dr. Holloway is wrapped up in complicated rights issues, according to Ashbrook (via Radio Times). Ashbrook herself has appeared in various Big Finish audio dramas, however. Melora Hardin in DS9 was notable for being a disabled Starfleet officer; she used a wheelchair.
3) Steven Berkoff (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine)

That a longtime English actor appeared in a Trek show long before he would eventually make an appearance on the Doctor Who reboot seems odd. Steven Berkoff was active when the original Who was on the air, but his one and only appearance in the franchise is 2012’s “The Power of Three,” where he played an unnamed Shakri, who were meant to be a pest control species. In Deep Space Nine, Berkoff played Hagath, an arms dealer, in “Business as Usual,” a fifth season episode. Berkoff has had a long and legendary career in theater outside of his many film and television appearances.
4) Orla Brady (Star Trek: Picard)

Orla Brady has two Trek characters under her belt: Laris, Jean-Luc Picard’s Romulan housekeeper, who has a bit of a crush on him, and Tallinn, her doppelganger, who revives the Supervisor archetype from Star Trek: The Original Series. Brady was a new face to the cast of Star Trek: Picard, which increasingly relied on fan favorites for its casting. She brought a genuine warmth to the characters she originated. On Doctor Who, she played the final Mother Superious of the Papal Mainframe, Tasha Lem, in the Eleventh Doctor’s final chronological appearance.
5) Dominic Burgess (Star Trek: Picard)

Dominic Burgess’s first ever TV credit was his Doctor Who role. He played Agorax, a doomed game show contestant on the show’s send-up of The Weakest Link. On Picard, he played Mister Vup, a bodyguard for a crime lord. Interestingly, Burgess recently joined the rare group of actors who have appeared in Who, Trek, and Star Wars. He had a recurring role in Skeleton Crew as Beef, a pirate.
6) Christina Chong (Star Trek: Strange New Worlds)

Christina Chong is the only actor on this list to be a series regular on a Star Trek show, in addition to her appearance in Doctor Who (Ajala would probably be considered a recurring character on Discovery). Chong plays La’an Noonien Singh, a descendant of Khan on the prequel series Strange New Worlds where she is the Enterprise‘s Chief of Security. On Doctor Who, she played Lorna Bucket in “A Good Man Goes to War,” the mid-season finale of the sixth season of the Who reboot.
7) Noel Clarke (Star Trek Into Darkness)

Despite personal controversy as of late, Noel Clarke was a series regular in the second series of the Who revival, playing lovable Mickey Smith. Mickey was often used for comic relief, and he was Rose’s boyfriend at the start of their appearances, but not by the end. Clarke made a short appearance in Star Trek Into Darkness as a Section 31 agent who is bribed by Benedict Cumberbatch’s Khan into committing a terrorist attack.
8) John Franklyn-Robbins (Star Trek: The Next Generation)

John Franklyn-Robbins was in so many early TV shows it’s almost hard to keep track. Those shows included the original run of Doctor Who, in the 1975 serial “Genesis of the Daleks,” where he played a Time Lord opposite Tom Baker’s Fourth Doctor. In Star Trek: The Next Generation, he played Macias in “Preemptive Strike,” the penultimate episode of the show. This episode was directed by Patrick Stewart, so perhaps Franklyn-Robbins, who was also a Shakespearean actor, was cast in a sort-of tribute. Franklyn-Robbins’s Star Trek credit is one of his few American film and TV credits.
9) Sonita Henry (Star Trek reboot)

Sonita Henry’s Star Trek role is essentially a cameo, but it’s included because the design of the alien she plays in the first twenty minutes of the 2009 film was so interesting, and threw a lot of fans, initially, for a loop. Because Star Trek (2009) is set before The Original Series, fans were curious how alien designs would be handled, given many of the original designs in the show itself were… minimalist at best. Henry’s doctor on the Kelvin still has a minimalist design, but she’s clearly an alien. Her Doctor Who appearance comes later; she played Colonel Meme in “The Time of the Doctor,” the same episode that Orla Brady appeared in.
10) Barrie Ingram (Star Trek: The Next Generation)

Barrie Ingram is another English actor on this list who had a long and historic career, where appearances in both Doctor Who and Star Trek are mere footnotes. In Doctor Who, he was in both in the film Dr. Who and the Daleks and in the third series serial “The Myth Makers,” which were both released in 1965. Over twenty years later, he appeared in “Up the Long Ladder” as the very Irish Danilo Odell. Another notable Ingram role is Basil of Baker Street in The Great Mouse Detective: he takes on the voice of the mouse modeled after Sherlock Holmes with aplomb.


















