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Third Party Sources needed

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I happen to have several back issues of the now out of print "star Trek: The Magazine". Now, to the best of my knowledge these magazines use official canon, and I was curious if anyone had any objections to using these as sources in the article.

Move to Elim Garak

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I don't understand why the title of this article is only "Garak"? Elim is his first name. It should be the title of the article, not a redirect.--Fallout boy 08:32, 18 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Gary Monak Conjecture

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I wonder if Garak was named after special effects guy Gary Monak, who's listed in the end credits of some DS9 episodes. ShutterBugTrekker 17:57, 29 Mar 2004 (UTC)


One of the absolute best Garak lines ever...

"You know what the worst part is? ... I'm a very good tailor."


-Yeah, Garak was my favorite character on the show. I always liked the expat dynamic, the exile's love of country, all the intrigue of his past, of which we've only seen a little...Garak rocks.

Complete Garak Episode List

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Could I recommend this for a future update? I have looked around, but have not found a complete episode list for Garak. So, I just added a link to StarTrek.com's 10 greatest Garak episodes. I think a complete list would be a nice addition to this marvelous entry. MetaChimp

Done 68.12.156.234 (talk) 06:29, 22 March 2011 (UTC)[reply]

Garak gay?

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The controversy section about Garak possibly being bisexual or gay is complete conjecture and the justifications for this belief are quite juvenile.

Juvenile? Hmmm...that sounds biased.
Never said Garak was gay, I said that this was a popular fan interpretation that was not, I repeat NOT canon. I included that because A) there's an LGBT characters in Star Trek article on Wikipedia, and therefore thought it relevant, and B) it offers another interpretation on the deterioraton of Garak and Bashir's friendship, which played a significant part in his character's development.

How for instance, having a mysterious past would lead one to believe that you might be gay, is beyond me. And the idea of his profession as a tailor being "more gay" than others is just playing on the current stereotype of gays having a good sense of style, which somehow is supposed to tell you something about an alien, living on an alien space station, 400 years in the future? And "effeminate mannerisms"? Some examples would be nice because I do not remember any of Garak’s mannerisms that scream gay.

I agree, Garak was not effeminate, Garak was camp. Re-watch "Our Man Bashir" for ample examples.

Just because some "gay friendly" Star Trek fans go out of their way to see hints of gayness does not mean that their intuition has any basis in fact. The only piece of information that could be possibly worthwhile in this whole section is about Robinson mentioning that he played the character as if he were bi-sexual. But the quote is paraphrased and not sourced.

Quote and source-"I had planned Garak not as homosexual or heterosexual but omnisexual, and the first episode I had with Bashir played that way gave people fits. So I had to remove that characteristic from him."-Andrew J. Robinson, "The Great Link"
And here's another-"The important thing about Garak is that he lives in the subtext. Again, with the iceberg analogy, the substance of Garak is what you don't hear. It's what he doesn't say."-Andrew J.Robinson, "The Great Link"
The actor who played him didn't intend Garak to be straight or gay, but more fluid, and those acting choices bled through. As such it isn't "intuition" or "conjecture" that those "gay friendly" Star Trek fans picked up on, but a subtextual interpretation intended by Mr. Robinson which is why I thought it was relevant to note.

It is also brought into doubt by the fact that Garak had a female love interest in a book about Garak’s past written by Robinson himself.

As per an interview about his book,
Amazon.co.uk: Were you given guidelines about what you could and couldn't say?
Robinson: "There were two things really. They were very free in terms of the story that I wanted to tell, but I had to be faithful to what has gone before."
"Basically his sexuality is inclusive. But--it’s Star Trek and there were a couple of things working against that. One is that Americans really are very nervous about sexual ambiguity."
"For the most part, the writers supported the character beautifully, but in that area they just made a choice they didn't want to go there, and if they don't want to go there I can't, because the writing doesn’t support it." "Amazon.co.uk-Tailor Made".
Even if he wanted to write Garak a little more outside the box character-wise(even though he didn't need to because the book is amazing anyway), Garak was already established as canonically straight, and Star Trek's people weren't all that jazzed about gay or bi characters. See Ron Moore's assessment.

And I'm still not sure what playing a character as if he were bi-sexual means. Far as I remember, Garak did not make any moves on anybody, male or female. I guess he tended to stand a little too close to people, and stare them down with an insincere smile, but that was just to unnerve them.

I agree about the smile, but do you have a verifiable source for that opinon?(j/k :D )

Basically I think that the section should be removed, unless someone can come up with some decent sources for this information.

Done and done.

That being said, i removed a line at the end of the "Exile" paragraph where it states that Garak and Ziyal fell in love with eachother. Anyone who watched the series would/should know that, while Ziyal was in love with Garak, he never returned those feelings. Sure, he never told her to stop, but he never did anything back either. When Ziyal died, he said that he did not understand what she had seen in him.

Frankly, I think that since the actor playing Garak (not "Garek" as noted by The Matrix Prime) considered him bisexual, this concept is worth a mention here (151.152.101.44 (talk) 20:39, 28 March 2008 (UTC)).[reply]

There is something about Garak though. Anyone with a whit of imagination will consider the gay possibility either as fact or metaphor. There's something else though - he's CLEVER. Clever characters in telly programmes are often seen passing. Anyone seen passing is going to invite speculation about why. Seven of Nine is the same.

  • That "something" is just wishful thinking on the part of a few viewers. Garak is suppose to be a shady and suspicious character is lots of eccentricities. No one with a wit of sense would interrupt him as anything else. 173.209.109.254 (talk) 16:34, 24 September 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Sentence does not make sense

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I don't know enough about the subject to correct it, but I can't make sense of it:

Elim Garak was born on Cardassia Prime to Enabran Tain. In the non-canon novel A Stitch in Time it was revealed that his mother was Tain's housekeeper Mila. He was raised by Tain and his Mila and did not know the true identity of his father until much later on.

Anyone know enough to fix it?--Anchoress 22:51, 24 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Thanks for the fix, it's perfectly clear now.--Anchoress 02:17, 26 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]

This article needs a major rewrite

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This article is mostly written well, but it has a major problem: it mixes canon and non-canon material haphazardly. The non-canon material is a book written by Andrew Robinson, which makes it worth mentioning, but the way the article is written, it's impossible to tell what information is from the series, and thus canon, and what information is from the book, and thus not. That's a big problem. The book should be included, but it should have its own section instead of being mixed in throughout, with nothing to distinguish it from the series. I've never read the book (and it's been a while since I've seen much of the series), so I'm not qualified to do this rewrite, but in my opinion, it needs to be done. Jcb9 02:05, 5 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I've rewritten the article to better show what is canon and what is just in the novel and have worked a lot of the non-canon out of the main article. Should be a bit better now. --The Matrix Prime 03:33, 12 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Why does the non-canon material have to be included at all, though?--MythicFox 04:37, 10 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Excluding material because it doesn't fit Paramount's definition of canon is non-npov. I think it's best to present whatever's floating out there and let readers decide what they feel best fits/is worth latching on to. --EEMeltonIV 05:51, 10 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Then perhaps it can be set aside in its own section (as has been previously suggested) just to make it a little more clear what's canon and isn't. It's pretty jarring to be reading the backstory of a character and have it interrupt with "This doesn't really count, because it's not from the show, but..." Maybe a seperate section saying "A novel that features the character prominently suggests these backstory possibilities..." would be sufficient. I'm not entirely sure why excluding it is considered non-npov, though. I don't look at that many Star Trek articles; do many of them go out of their way to point out backstory items that only appear in the novels?--MythicFox 12:03, 10 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Memorable quotes

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I removed this section. "Memorable" is subjective/non-NPOV -- strictly speaking, everything he says (and more Garak than most other Trek characters) is to some degree "[re]memorable", and we're not going to put all his dialog there. "Notable" quotes would be more significant, but lacking a citation about what makes them memorable, that doesn't work either -- and, unfortunately, WP:ILIKEIT isn't a reason to keep this, either. Lastly, straight-up quotes should be over in Wikiquote. If someone wants to move them over there, by all means... --EEMeltonIV 11:47, 20 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Re-vamped Bio

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I revamped Garak's "bio". Garak is a fictional character and being a fictional character, should not have an actual bio like (example) Ghandi. His story needs to be told as being relevent to the rest of the series, not side stories like his stationing on Romulus and stuff like that. --VorangorTheDemon 18:53, 28 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]

What, no Ziyal?

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I'm not the one to add this information, not having yet seen any Garak and Ziyal episodes, but I've read enough on the Net to know they exist! If nothing is added by the time Netflix catches me up on these episodes, I'll add them. (151.152.101.44 (talk) 19:36, 28 March 2008 (UTC))[reply]

Yes, Ziyal Definitely Needs to be in this Article

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Here is a quote from the Star Trek company site which in turn quotes from their official book, Deep Space Nine Companion:

"Of the death of Ziyal itself, Hans Beimler says, "We understood the ramifications on all the characters. We'd built up her relationship with Garak. The girl who always told the truth had fallen in love with the guy who never tells the truth - or all of the truth. It made for a nice tragic love story, and her death served to motivate Garak in his future actions." (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)."

I think removing her wholesale from past versions of this page represents personal interpretations (or even wishful thinking about) the character of Elim Garak rather than canon and what the creators of canon said they had in mind. 151.152.101.44 (talk) 19:00, 1 May 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Garak is listed as a "fictional murderer"?

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1) Within the series he killed a Romulan official but this would be considered "assassination". 2) During the Dominion War he was part of the resistance but this would not be considered murder. 3) He killed during the defense of DS9 at the beginning of season 4, but once again, not murder. 4) During the occupation he most likely killed Bajorans. However, this was part of his duties as an intelligence officer. So once again, this would not count as murder.


For these reasons, I suggest removing Garak's listing under "fictional murderers". —Preceding unsigned comment added by Slaw0710 (talkcontribs) 23:55, 28 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]

I would disagree. Though Garak is something of an unreliable narrator, it's strongly suggested that he was responsible for the deaths of civilians during the war. "Following orders" is not an excuse for murder. Additionally, assassination is in fact murder regardless of semantics, and so I think the tag applies. Fictional murderers vs Fictional mass murderers might be an interesting discussion. Stile4aly (talk) 16:28, 5 December 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I also disagree. For definite / indisputable proof, all you need to do is watch "In the Pale Moonlight", only one of the best (or most highly rated) episodes in the entire series. In that episode, Garak murders a Romulan senator (which is the first thing you addressed on your list), AND he also murdered the criminal who forged the data recording (which definitely cannot be called an assassination). I do agree with some of the things on your list; but to the overall point: we do have proof that Garak murdered someone. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 71.99.89.192 (talk) 01:34, 19 November 2011 (UTC)[reply]

Wrong picture?

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That picture looks like Dukat. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 66.188.126.180 (talk) 03:19, 17 October 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Uh, you don't know what you're talking about. That's Garak.

151.152.101.44 (talk) 00:25, 24 February 2009 (UTC)[reply]

We may need another picture though, it barely looks like him. A picture of his characteristic face with his eyes wide open would fit better. After all, Garak eyes is what define him the most according to his "dad" and many others during the show. Elronir (talk) 15:37, 9 March 2010 (UTC)[reply]
It definitely is Garak. The screenshot in question is from the DS9 episode In the Pale Moonlight, about 7 and a half minutes into the episode, where Garak is first talking to Sisko about bringing the Romulans into the Dominion war on their side. The Thing // Talk // Contribs 21:59, 5 September 2010 (UTC)[reply]

I do not recognize Garak in this picture Safaribar (talk) 22:16, 11 May 2011 (UTC)[reply]

I did not recognize the picture either at first, but it is indeed Elim Garak from 'In the Pale Moonlight'. A different picture might be better given the angle of this particular one makes it difficult to recognize immediately.

Garak's Speech to Cardassia

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Garak addressed Cardassia at the end, but no mention is made in the article? Hackwrench (talk) 03:37, 22 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Baited description

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First of- Garak is my favorite character in the series- if not in all of Star Trek. He exudes the look of someone who is so traumatized from his work as a spy that he cannot switch it off. He's always aware of his surroundings to the point of obvious. His rapport with Bashir, the way he kept Odo entertained with tales of spy stories when he was sick, how he and Ducat could drive each other nuts, and how he and Ziyal found each other- all great moments.

After reading the article and reading the talk, it looks like the description of his character is based on someone asking the actor if he played the character as a gay person. That's just dumb. I see it more as he played someone who was once a real spy and was tortured by the covert and sometimes lethal things he had to do in the name of protecting his world and not having any emotional support or coping mechanisms. He's just always on the lookout.

Someone who feels like they're constantly struggling with keeping something a secret (or enjoying the attention) might behave similarly. Stressed, neck and shoulders tensed, eyes darting, speaking in innuendo... might relate. But homosexuals can't take credit for those traits. Jawz101 (talk) 16:12, 28 April 2019 (UTC)[reply]