Data questions his emotional performance
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Picard observes Data enacting Ebenezer Scrooge in a holodeck simulation and halts the program, offering Data a compliment on his performance.
Data expresses dissatisfaction with his performance, explaining that he used his own interpretation to convey fear, drawing on the teachings of acting masters to inform his approach.
Picard questions Data's acting mentors, leading Data to list Stanislavsky, Adler, and Garnav, referencing 'The Method' as Data and Picard exit the holodeck.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Genuinely supportive, with underlying concern for Data’s unspoken yearning for humanity—masked by professional detachment.
Picard stands as an attentive observer in the holodeck, his posture relaxed yet authoritative, as Data performs the scene from A Christmas Carol. When Data collapses in feigned terror, Picard freezes the program with a command, then offers measured praise for Data’s ‘improving performance skills.’ His dialogue reveals a blend of mentorship and curiosity, probing Data’s dissatisfaction with his own interpretation. Picard’s encouragement is laced with subtle acknowledgment of Data’s limitations—his inability to experience fear—while his questions about Data’s ‘mentors’ (Stanislavsky, Adler, Garnav) signal his investment in Data’s emotional evolution. The exchange is abruptly terminated by Riker’s off-screen summons, pulling Picard away mid-conversation.
- • To validate Data’s efforts while gently challenging his self-criticism.
- • To understand the depth of Data’s pursuit of human emotion, particularly fear.
- • Data’s intellectual rigor can bridge the gap between logic and emotion, given time.
- • Fear is a fundamental human experience that Data, as an android, can only approximate through study and observation.
Intellectually satisfied with his methodological approach but emotionally frustrated by the performance’s hollow ring—caught between pride in his process and despair over its limitations.
Data, clad in Scrooge’s nightshirt, performs a physically convincing portrayal of terror as the ghost of Marley looms over him, chains rattling. When Picard freezes the program, Data rises and immediately contradicts Picard’s praise, insisting his performance lacks authentic fear. He reveals his study of Method acting, naming Stanislavsky, Adler, and Garnav as his mentors, and expresses frustration that imitation—even of human behavior—falls short of true emotional experience. His dialogue is precise, his posture rigid with dissatisfaction, betraying his internal conflict: the gap between his synthetic nature and his desire to feel. The scene ends with Data’s quest unresolved, his emotional state lingering in the holodeck’s sterile glow.
- • To convey the *essence* of fear, not just its physical manifestations, through Method acting techniques.
- • To bridge the divide between his synthetic logic and human emotion, even if only temporarily.
- • Authentic emotion cannot be achieved through observation or imitation alone—it requires a deeper, inexplicable human experience.
- • The Method acting techniques of Stanislavsky and Adler offer the closest path to understanding human fear, even for an android.
None (as a hologram), but intended to evoke fear in the audience (Data/Scrooge).
The Ghost of Marley, a holographic projection bound in heavy chains, materializes in the holodeck to terrorize Data/Scrooge. It raises a ‘frightful cry,’ shakes its chains with a ‘clanking noise,’ and looms over Data, who collapses in feigned fear. The ghost’s performance is a functional prop, designed to elicit a specific emotional response from Data. When Picard freezes the program, the ghost is abruptly suspended mid-action, its chains still rattling in the frozen frame. Its role is purely atmospheric, serving Data’s experiment in studying human fear.
- • To serve as a catalyst for Data’s performance of fear.
- • To embody the supernatural terror described in *A Christmas Carol*.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The ghost of Marley’s chains are a critical atmospheric prop, designed to amplify the scene’s terror. They rattle violently as the ghost wails, creating a ‘clanking noise’ that fills the holodeck and reinforces the supernatural dread of the moment. When Picard freezes the program, the chains are caught mid-rattle, their frozen clatter symbolizing the abrupt halt of Data’s emotional experiment. The chains function as both a sound effect and a visual metaphor for the inescapable weight of fear—both in the Dickensian tale and in Data’s struggle to comprehend it.
The holodeck program recreates the iconic A Christmas Carol scene where Ebenezer Scrooge confronts the ghost of Marley. Data, as Scrooge, reacts to the ghost’s rattling chains and wailing cries with a physically convincing collapse, while Picard observes the performance. The program is paused mid-scene by Picard’s command, freezing Data and the ghost in a tableau of terror. This program serves as both a performance space for Data’s Method acting experiment and a narrative device to explore the limits of synthetic emotion. Its abrupt halt underscores the unresolved tension in Data’s quest.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The holodeck, in this moment, is a performance space where Data attempts to replicate human fear through a staged recreation of A Christmas Carol. The Victorian bedchamber setting—dimly lit by gaslight, foggy and oppressive—mirrors the gothic atmosphere of Dickens’ tale, reinforcing the scene’s themes of guilt and terror. Picard’s presence as an observer adds a layer of mentorship to the space, while the abrupt freeze of the program underscores the holodeck’s dual role as both a creative laboratory and a sterile simulation. The location’s mood shifts from eerie dread (during the performance) to sterile stillness (when frozen), reflecting Data’s unresolved emotional state.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Data, still in his Scrooge attire, continues his discussion with Picard about method acting, reflecting his ongoing quest to understand human emotion that began in the holodeck."
"The opening scene's discussion of Scrooge and fear as a motivator sets the stage for Picard's later reflection on fear and manipulation, where Picard again references Scrooge, using the story to exemplify Ardra's deception."
"The opening scene's discussion of Scrooge and fear as a motivator sets the stage for Picard's later reflection on fear and manipulation, where Picard again references Scrooge, using the story to exemplify Ardra's deception."
"The opening scene's discussion of Scrooge and fear as a motivator sets the stage for Picard's later reflection on fear and manipulation, where Picard again references Scrooge, using the story to exemplify Ardra's deception."
Part of Larger Arcs
Key Dialogue
"PICARD: Freeze program. PICARD: Very nicely done, Data... your performance skills really are improving... DATA: I have taken your advice, Captain. This time I have not imitated another actor's rendition. It was my own interpretation... PICARD: And a very interesting one... you should be congratulated... DATA: Your courtesy is appreciated. But I am aware that I do not effectively convey the fear called for in this scene."
"PICARD: Well, you've never known fear. But as an acute observer of behavior, you certainly should be able to approximate... DATA: ((interrupting)) Sir... That would not be an appropriate basis for an effective performance. Not by the standards set by my mentors. PICARD: Your mentors... ? DATA: Yessir. I have studied the philosophies of virtually every known acting master, but I find myself particularly attracted to Stanislavsky, Adler, Garnav... proponents of a performance technique known as 'The Method.'"
"DATA: I have taken your advice, Captain. This time I have not imitated another actor's rendition. It was my own interpretation..."