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Television

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine 'Nog' Actor Aron Eisenberg Has Died at 50 (cnet.com) 63

An anonymous reader quotes CNET: Actor Aron Eisenberg, who played Nog on Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, died Saturday at age 50, his wife Malíssa Longo posted on Facebook. "He was an intelligent, humble, funny, emphatic soul," Longo wrote. "He sought to live his life with integrity and truth. He was so driven to put the best he had into whatever work was put before him." The actor's cause of death wasn't released, but he underwent his second kidney transplant in 2015, StarTrek.com notes in an obituary.

Eisenberg played Nog, the first Ferengi to join Starfleet, and appeared in 40 episodes from across all seven seasons. The show ran from 1993 to 1999. His character was the son of Rom, the nephew of Quark, and the best friend of Jake Sisko, who was the son of commanding officer Benjamin Sisko.

Eisenberg was told nothing about his character when he was cast and had no idea that the part would last, Star Trek reports "I thought every episode I was doing might be my last episode," he told StarTrek.com in 2012. The site also notes that Eisenberg also played Kar, the young Kazon-Ogla, in a 1995 Star Trek: Voyager episode.

This year Aron had become the host and producer of a Star Trek-themed podcast called "The 7th Rule." And Deep Space Nine (and the other early Star Trek series) are all available through Amazon Prime.

CNET remembered the actor by sharing the Deep Space Nine scene where Nog makes a passionate speech about why he wants to join Starfleet Academy. ("My father is a mechanical genius. He could've been chief engineer of a starship if he'd had the opportunity. But he went into business like a good Ferengi...")

On Twitter 79-year-old René Auberjonois (who played Odo on Deep Space Nine) called Aron "such a pure, sweet soul and gifted artist. He was a dedicated collaborator and friend. My condolences and love to his wife and family."

Armin Shimerman, who had played Nog's bartender uncle Quark, tweeted Sunday "I have lost a great friend and the world has lost a great heart... He was a man of conviction and enormous sensitivity and the best of humanity... Flights of angels my friend... you will be missed."

And Next Generation actor Jonathan Frakes tweeted "bless his sweet soul."
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Star Trek: Deep Space Nine 'Nog' Actor Aron Eisenberg Has Died at 50

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  • by voxnulla ( 6239882 ) on Sunday September 22, 2019 @06:42PM (#59225044)
    In fact I am in the middle of a Nog episode when I saw this. S03E25. Bit weird and sad.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 22, 2019 @09:34PM (#59225330)

      Yes, that fucking sucks. He seemed like a pretty cool guy in interviews and behind the scenes.

      I recommend any DS9 fans to play Star Trek Online, where Aron reprised his role as Nog numerous times. The Gamma Quadrant story arc in particular has some great moments with Nog, with the episode "Quark's Lucky Seven" being reminiscent of the DS9 episode "The Magnificent Ferengi".

      • Thanks for this. I'd always bypassed STO but now that I know actual good characters are in it, I'll have to take a look.
        • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

          by Anonymous Coward

          Many other Star Trek actors did voice work for STO too, including:

          Leonard Nimoy
          Walter Koenig
          Michael Dorn
          LeVar Burton
          Rene Auberjonois
          Nana Visitor
          Armin Shimerman
          Alexander Siddig
          Max Grodénchik
          Andrew Robinson
          Jeffrey Combs
          Salome Jens
          Chase Masterson
          J.G. Hertzler
          Tony Todd
          Denise Crosby
          Bumper Robinson
          Tim Russ
          Robert Picardo
          Jeri Ryan
          Robert Duncan McNeill
          Garrett Wang
          Ethan Phillips
          Kim Rhodes
          Lisa LoCicero

      • Yes, that fucking sucks. He seemed like a pretty cool guy in interviews and behind the scenes.

        I had a chance to meet him in person a few years ago at a convention and got a few minutes to talk to him as I got lucky that there was nobody else waiting behind me at that moment. He was a really nice guy and happy to talk about his work on Deep Space Nine. I started following him on Facebook after that because I had a very positive experience with meeting him. He was one of the good guys.

    • Me too. Right now I'm in the middle of a DS9 marathon.
    • As luck would have it DS9 is loaded. A ferengi evening today. Jusr started with the siege of AR558 and of course it's only a paper moon after that.
      Will finish on a lighter note with treachery, faith and the great river....
      Still, in ar558 there's Quark's excellent speech about 'the hoomans'
      https://youtu.be/-D2SHNqkjbY [youtu.be]

  • Oh man (Score:5, Insightful)

    by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Sunday September 22, 2019 @07:00PM (#59225074)

    Right now I feel really old. I realize actors tend to play under their ages for roles like that, but I remember Nog as a kid on that show (while I was already an adult at that point).

    Plus 50 is too young to die for anyone. Rest well, Aron. Peace to your family.

    • Re:Oh man (Score:5, Informative)

      by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Sunday September 22, 2019 @07:22PM (#59225122)

      Just a random follow-up: Aron Eisenberg was 24 at the start of Deep Space Nine. Cirroc Lofton (Jake Cisco) was 15. But Aron was, to my eyes, completely believable as Jake's young friend.

    • Re:Oh man (Score:5, Informative)

      by damnbunni ( 1215350 ) on Sunday September 22, 2019 @07:36PM (#59225150) Journal

      For playing young roles believably, it helped that he was quite short - five foot nothing, apparently.

      • by Kjella ( 173770 )

        For playing young roles believably, it helped that he was quite short - five foot nothing, apparently.

        I think almost any age-uncharacteristic traits on DS9 would have been mentally filed away as being because he's Ferengi. Like if a human teen doesn't walk or talk like that, well maybe a Ferengi teen does. He's in pretty heavy makeup too and TV in the 90s didn't exactly have razor sharp footage. Don't get me wrong he was a great actor, but the height and voice pitch is probably all you need to pass as Jake's age.

  • by JoshuaZ ( 1134087 ) on Sunday September 22, 2019 @07:16PM (#59225108) Homepage
    Nog was over the course of the show someone who started off as essentially a joke character, emphasizing the Ferengi cultural norms for laughs, but turned into a serious character with nuance.. Possibly the absolute height of his character was in "It's Only a Paper Moon" which deals with serious mental health issues, PTSD especially, to an extent that one rarely sees in TV shows, and which at the time was even rarer. If an actor other than Aron Eisenberg had the part, the episode might not have the same emotional impact it has.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Since he was a progressive Atheist, he didn't believe in God or Angels.

    • by Anonymous Coward
      I don't believe in God or angels either, but I can still respect the sentiment. And assuming that Aron Eisenberg was a decent human being, I'm sure he would have as well.
      • I don't believe in God or angels either, but I can still respect the sentiment. And assuming that Aron Eisenberg was a decent human being, I'm sure he would have as well.

        Indeed. Most respectful atheists just ignore religion because pouncing on things and screaming you don't believe will just lead to an argument. Leave people alone and let them believe what they want.

        Hell for some religion is absolutely necessary. People of sufficient mental capacity are perfectly capable of acting ethically without religion, but there are many in society who without the threat of punishment in the afterlife would simply run wild.

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          Allowing delusional people to believe whatever they want causes problems, including war, which affects all of us. Delusion and ignorance should be actively fought.

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by nitehawk214 ( 222219 )

          I think Hitchens said something to the effect of if religion is the only thing that keeps you from raping and murdering, then I hope you say religious.

          • by Kjella ( 173770 )

            Except that religion is also often the source of a world view that divides the world into the believers and the heretics, the pious and the sinners, the righteous and the wicked. If you're looking for a bunch of assholes to judge rape victims by their sexual promiscuity the deeply religious are a good bet. No doubt that also feeds into potential rapists that they're nothing but sluts and whores. And the grudges, oh my... like I feel most have forgiven the Germans for WWII by now, at least nobody cares about

  • Wait: are you saying DS9 is an "early" Star Trek series?
    • by Anonymous Coward
      Star Trek, The Next Generation, Deep Space Nine, Voyager, Enterprise, Discovery, and Picard. Looks like it.
    • Original series - Classic Trek, corny and experimenting to find its way.
      TNG-DP9 - Early Trek/Golden Age of Trek. The best, most iconic, must pure trek.
      Voyager-Enterprise - New Trek. Shiny action heavy trek. In many ways a step back to the TOS space cowboy style, but with a big budget and serious writing.

  • We don't know exactly what it was, yet, but you figure it was kidney-related. I liked that he was part of the Resistance, both in fiction and real life. I think he liked one or two of my tweets, probably a DS9 reference. I wish I could've met him at a con, but stopped going years ago.
    • There are a lot of ways for kidneys to fail. Diabetes and high blood pressure are two of the big ones.

  • Nog was not only the only Ferengi to join Starfleet during the era of DS9, but he was the only depiction of a young Ferengi, and that's a further distiction. I was never bored by his character, he always played it with enthusiasm and sincerity, and I always thought he added positively to the overall ensemble in any episode he was part of. As with all the players of the Star Trek universe, he will always be remembered, and he will be missed. :-(
  • RIP Aron. I will miss you and the DS9 Universe.
  • What was the 7th rule of acquisition? (I assume that's the reference)

    I liked the rules Quark and Jadzia once bantered about (don't remember which episode):

    "Peace is good for business" and "War is good for business. It's easy to confuse them..."

    I liked Nog, being a fellow engineer. I, like him, probably don't have the "lobes for business."

  • by Mal-2 ( 675116 ) on Sunday September 22, 2019 @10:20PM (#59225396) Homepage Journal

    I never did care much for the whole "play baseball against the Vulcans" episode, coming as it did in the middle of the closing story arc and totally not fitting in with it, but it apparently required a LOT of acting on his part because while the DS9 crew was incompetent at baseball, Eisenberg was actually quite an enthusiastic and skilled baseball player. They had to send him out with the glove on the wrong hand to make him look suitably incompetent, and even then he was too good.

    • I thought Max Grodénchik who played Rom who had to have his glove on the wrong hand. As Rom was the one who hit the ball with an accidental bunt.
    • by Jaegs ( 645749 )

      The best part of this? Check out the name of his favorite baseball coach:

      https://twitter.com/AronEisenb... [twitter.com]

      "When I was 11-12, I played on a baseball team that won the championship. I had the best coach I ever had that season who taught me more about the game than anyone prior & utilized my perceived weaknesses as strengths. His name? Coach Cisco!"

  • I never liked that guy Nog
  • I don't know about the first three seasons, but seasons 4-7 are exceptionally good and make a single multi-season arc with multiple characters growing and changing between the seasons and a lot of character development.

    A thoroughly enjoyable show that I didn't like at first because watching a season over the course of a year didn't give the episodes as much of a punch as binge watching it later on.

    I just rewatched it a year ago and it's one of the few shows I would happily rewatch again in a few years.

  • I had a few political bouts with Aron on Twitter, he being liberal and me being conservative. But there were occasions where we agreed politically, and I appreciated his passion for what he believed in.

    Godspeed, Aron.

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