A few months later, he was seen in the horror film Frightmare, co-starring Scott Thomson. The U.S.S. He also played the recurring role of Kevin Burkhoff on the science fiction series The 4400 (2005-2007). Guest ActorVideo game voice actor Shran is a fan favorite and hero of the Federation! He is a sci-fi veteran who is most notable for his recurring roles on Star Trek: Deep Space Nine and Enterprise. Other Lovecraftian films starring Combs include From Beyond (1986, with Ted Sorel) and Lurking Fear (1994, with Vincent Schiavelli). In 2005, Combs appeared in two made-for-TV horror movies: Voodoo Moon and Hammerhead: Shark Frenzy. He played "Dinosaur Bob" in the 1994 thriller Love and a .45 and appeared as Gilroy in the 1995 gangster picture Dillinger and Capone. Even though I had big ears, I could not hear. ", "VegasCon09: Braga & Coto Talk Enterprise Season 5 + Star Trek 2009 & more", Startrek.com Deep Space Nine - Far Beyond the Stars, "Exclusive Clip: John Carpenter Joins '80s Horror Documentary 'In Search of Darkness'! The name of Tiron's race was never revealed. For more information about the Star Trek: Enterprise setting, see our Captain Archerprofile. Further television guest work includes episodes of Thundercats (2012, with Kevin Michael Richardson and Corey Burton), Femme Fatales (2012), Criminal Minds (2014), Ben 10: Omniverse (2014, with Bumper Robinson, Dee Bradley Baker, and Michael Dorn), Gotham (2015, with Becky Ann Baker), Hulk and the Agents of S.M.A.S.H. Shran was a Magee-class starship in service until the mid-23rd century. Brunt. Shenzhou. Combs voiced King Abdul in the animated feature Howard Lovecraft & the Undersea Kingdom (2017) and H.P. Outside of Star Trek, Combs has made guest appearances on several other television series. Thy’lek Shran, Star Trek: Enterprise. Star Trek: Deep Space Nine - Dominion Wars, Star Trek's Mr. Everywhere - A Jeffrey Combs interview, Part 2, An Exclusive Interview with Jeffrey Combs, https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Jeffrey_Combs?oldid=2697656. Shran is a Star Trek character. and Honky Tonk Freeway, both released in 1981. He is also known for his role as the Re-Animator in the 1985 film Re-Animator. Shran, which was named for his great-grandfather, Thy’lek Shran. In "The Dogs of War", Combs played both Weyoun and Brunt, becoming one of only three Star Trek actors ever to play two unrelated characters in the same episode (the others being Patrick Stewart in "The Defector", in which he played both Jean-Luc Picard and Michael Williams, and Brian Markinson in VOY: "Faces", in which he played both Pete Durst and Sulan), and the only one credited for playing both characters in that episode. 113 replies (on page 1 of 8) 9 September 1954 Jeffrey Combs as the Andorian Shran autograph card # AA14 Excellent condition Star Trek Enterprise season 1 "Aliens of Enterprise" collector trading card released by Rittenhouse in 2002. Combs has said that Weyoun was his favorite Star Trek role, and he had a great deal of input in developing the character. Commander Shran : I'd rather cohabit with Klingon targs than join forces with Tellarites! Combs was further notable for playing the title role of Doctor Mordrid in 1992, on which he co-starred with Brian Thompson. [1]. The show had its East Coast debut on January 23 and 24, 2010 at Westminster Hall in Baltimore, MD, Poe's final resting place. Combs also voices the character of Romulan Commander Suldok for the Star Trek: Elite Force II video game. But, man, did I have the … Shran: Jeffrey Combs… The species that he played on Star Trek include three Ferengi, a Vorta, a Norcadian, and an Andorian. [7], In July 2009, Combs returned to his stage roots and reprised his role as Edgar Allan Poe in a one-man theatrical show entitled Nevermore...an Evening with Edgar Allan Poe at The Steve Allen Theater in Hollywood, CA. Shran was of the Androian species and was a highly intelligent officer within the Andorian Imperial Guard. All cards come from a pristine near complete collection. Weyoun started off as… [5] He also narrated the 25th Anniversary of Re-Animator at the 2010 FanTasia. Brunt. Happy Birthday Jeffrey Combs known to Trekkies as Weyoun on DS9 and the wonderful Shran on ENT and horror fans will know mr. Combs from his role in the Re-Animator series and he played the wonderful Detective Milton Dammers in the much underappreciated The Frighteners.A Happy 64th birthday Jeffrey ! In 1980, after spending four years performing for regional theater, Combs moved to Los Angeles where he landed roles in the films Whose Life Is It Anyway? The latter one starred Terri Garr. He has also appeared in two Star Trek series finales: "What You Leave Behind" and "These Are the Voyages...". His voiceover roles include the Scarecrow in The New Batman Adventures, the Question in Justice League Unlimited, Ratchet in Transformers: Prime, the Leader in The Avengers: Earth's Mightiest Heroes, the Rat King in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and Brainiac in Injustice 2. Jeffrey Combs Also starring in this movie were Ashley Judd, Steven Culp, David Drew Gallagher, Alex Henteloff, and John Rubinstein. World wide shipping is … Combs has said that out of all the Trek roles he has played, Weyoun is his favorite character. Jeffrey Combs as Shran was probably the best thing about Enterprise. [3][self-published source? This latter film co-starred F. Murray Abraham, Stephen Davies, Catherine Hicks, Clint Howard, Bert Remsen, and Time Winters. Combs then attended Santa Maria's Pacific Conservatory of the Performing Arts, and later developed his acting skills in the Professional Actor's Training Program at the University of Washington. Combs was also seen in the thriller Felony (1996, co-starring Charles Napier and David Warner), the crime drama Caught Up (1998, with Tony Todd), and the thriller Edmond (2005). Combs has since earned himself quite a number of appearances on Star Trek, guest starring in thirty-one episodes of Deep Space Nine, one episode of Star Trek: Voyager, and eleven episodes of Star Trek: Enterprise. Jeffrey Combs is an American actor. Other series on which he has appeared include Freddy's Nightmares (1989), Hunter (1991, in an episode with Kenneth Marshall), Life Goes On (1991, with David Graf and Bill Smitrovich), The Single Guy (1996, starring Olivia d'Abo and Mark Moses), Martial Law (2000, with Neal McDonough and T.J. Storm), CSI: Crime Scene Investigation (2003), and Cold Case (2008). Combs auditioned for the role of William T. Riker on Star Trek: The Next Generation, but lost the part to Jonathan Frakes. Lovecraft adaptations. Date of birth: Outside of the Lovecraftian universe, Combs portrayed a Catholic Cleric in the 1991 film The Pit and the Pendulum, also starring Stephen Lee. [9] A tour of the Saturn Award nominated[10] Nevermore is now in the works, with stops possibly including Chicago, New York, and Seattle, and a confirmed two-date run in San Diego in February. On Star Trek: Enterprise Combs had a very popular recurring role as Shran, an Andorian military officer. He did it a second time while playing Weyoun and an unnamed holosuite guest in "What You Leave Behind", the final episode of Deep Space Nine. in 2018, which features an almost whole Star Trek cast including Chase Masterson, Garrett Wang, Tim Russ, Nichelle Nichols, Robert Picardo, Michael Dorn, Marina Sirtis, Nana Visitor, Walter Koenig, Linda Park, Connor Trinneer, Manu Intiraymi, Dina Meyer, Olivia d'Abo, Julie Warner, Armin Shimerman, John Billingsley, Dominic Keating, Max Grodénchik, Casey Biggs, Brenda Bakke, Patti Yasutake, McKenzie Westmore, Anthony Montgomery, Vaughn Armstrong, Gary Graham, Steve Rankin, Michael Dante, Jack Donner, Michael Forest, Sean Kenney, Gary Lockwood, Barbara Luna, Beverly Washburn, Celeste Yarnall, Bobby Clark, Jasmine Jessica Anthony, Crystal Allen, Menina Fortunato, and Christopher Doohan. He attended the Pacific Conservatory of the Performing Arts in Santa Maria, and the Professional Actor's Training Program at the University of Washington in Seattle. Brunt; Weyoun; Thy'lek Shran; Multiple roles Enterprise producer Manny Coto once mentioned in an interview hoping to make Combs a regular on Enterprise had the series been renewed for a fifth season. [14], On Enterprise, Combs had a recurring role as Shran, an Andorian military officer. Remember, Enterprise episodes were shorter in length then episodes from the earlier series like DS9 and TNG. On Enterprise, Combs had a recurring role as Shran, an Andorian military officer. He also does voice acting including lending his voice to Ratchet in the animated series Transformers Prime. In 1996, Combs had a role in the television movie Norma Jean & Marilyn. [citation needed], Learn how and when to remove this template message, Pacific Conservatory of the Performing Arts, Night of the Living Dead 3D: Re-Animation, Transformers Prime Beast Hunters: Predacons Rising, Howard Lovecraft and the Undersea Kingdom, Scooby-Doo! Combs has played nine different onscreen roles in the Star Trek universe. Combs is also a sought-after voice actor, appearing in numerous animated television shows. Further film work includes the action film Urgency (2010), the fantasy film Dorothy and the Witches of Oz (2012, with Christopher Lloyd), the horror film Night of the Living Dead 3D: Re-Animation (2012, with Rhonda Aldrich), the horror film Would You Rather (2012, with Larry Cedar and Bobby C. King), the family comedy Elf-Man (2012), the thriller Favor (2013), the horror film The Penny Dreadful Picture Show (2013, with Sid Haig and Brandon Stacy), the horror comedy Suburban Gothic (2014, with Ray Wise), the family movie Beethoven's Treasure (2014, with Brian George and Patrick Kwok-Choon), the horror comedy Art School of Horrors (2015), the fantasy film Age of Stone and Sky: The Sorcerer Beast (2018), and the horror film Holiday Hell (2018). Jeffrey Combs was born on September 9th, 1954 in Oxnard, California. [5], On television, Combs enjoyed popular success playing a number of alien characters on the various modern Star Trek incarnations, beginning with Star Trek: Deep Space Nine in 1994, and continuing to Star Trek: Voyager in 2000 and Star Trek: Enterprise in 2001. He grew up in Lompoc, California with a plethora of siblings both older and younger. ("Behind the Masks" panel at Destination Star Trek Birmingham, 21 October 2018). In 2012, he also played the sadistic Dr. Lambrick in another horror-thriller, Would You Rather. Jeffrey Alan Combs Shran. Brunt? After his appearance on the series, he went on to star in a number of films and television shows, most notably Night of the Living Dead 3D: Re-Animation. His largest science-fiction role to date was his regular guest role on Deep Space Nine as the Vorta clone Weyoun. [2], In 1980, after spending several years performing in playhouses on the West Coast, Combs moved to Los Angeles. Further expanding his science fiction credits, Combs has worked on The Flash (1991, with Dick Miller), Babylon 5 (1994, with Andreas Katsulas, Bill Mumy and David L. Crowley), Perversions of Science (1997, with Jeff Corey, Ron Perlman, and David Warner), and the remake of The Twilight Zone (2003). His most well-known Lovecraftian role (and, indeed, his most famous film role in general) is that of Dr. Herbert West in the 1985 classic Re-Animator. Jeffrey Combs, who plays mysterious Andorian Shran on Enterprise, returns to the series this week as another character, Krem -- one of the first group of Ferengi ever encountered by humans. CBS As much as Averbach-Katz was inspired by Combs portrayal of Shran, the Discovery star says Ryn is … Everywhere - A Jeffrey Combs interview, Part 1, Star Trek's Mr. Commander Shran – Jeffrey Combs Shran was played by Star Trek veteran Jeffrey Combs.The first name \"Thy'lek\" and Shran's rank as general in 2164 were mentioned in Jonathan Archer's biography, seen in \"In a Mirror, Darkly, Part II\".In the script for \"The Andorian Incident\", Shran was introduced with the description, \"His white hair and blue skin make his teeth appear sickly gray by contrast.\"Without auditioning for the part, Jeffrey Combs was offered the role of Shran by Executive Producers Rick Berman and Brannon Braga. Weyoun is Combs’ own pick for his favorite performance in all of Trek, and it’s easy to see why! But Combs played a bunch of other incredible aliens on Star Trek, including a Ferengi, Brunt, and an Andorian, Shran. Battle at the Binary Stars: The ship is part of the NPC force led by the U.S.S. Nevermore as it is now simply known, closed its run in Los Angeles on December 19, 2009. Specifically he was featured in the EnterpriseTV series that ran from 2001 to 2005. Cmdr. Jeffrey Combs was a favorite of the Star Trek production crew. Combs: That headpiece. Showing all 15 items Jump to: Photos (5) Quotes (10) Photos . Birth name: He also played an imaginary Human in "Far Beyond the Stars". [8] Although only supposed to run for a month, the show enjoyed much success and sold-out crowds, and was extended four times. Jeffrey Alan Combs (born 9 September 1954; age 66) is an actor who has the distinction of portraying eight different characters on three Star Trek television series, most notably those of Brunt and the various Weyouns on Star Trek: Deep Space Nine and the Andorian Thy'lek Shran on Star Trek: Enterprise. ("Hidden File 10", DS9 Season 5 DVD special feature). This auction is for the Jeffrey Combs as Shran AA14 autograph card from the 2003 release Star Trek Enterprise - season 2 by Rittenhouse Archives. The actor appeared as nine characters in Star Trek across three series — Deep … Frakes remembered Combs and cast him as Tiron while directing the Star Trek: Deep Space Nine third season episode "Meridian". As much as I love Jeffrey Combs and Shran, and as much as I wanted to see him as a regular, I don't want him to take valuable screentime from the underused characters from the show: Hoshi, Malcolm, Travis, and Phlox. Because it doesn't seem likely that the franchise circles back around to the 22nd century in the near future. In 2001, he played the sinister Dr. Ek in The Attic Expeditions. In 1987, he appeared on an episode of Beauty and the Beast, starring Ron Perlman. [11], Combs starred with Andrew Divoff in the 2012 Screen Media Films release Night of the Living Dead 3D: Re-Animation, a prequel to the 2006 film Night of the Living Dead 3D directed by Jeff Broadstreet. A desire for vengeance interferes with Archer's attempts to ally Shran and the Tellarites as Trip and Reed probe the inner workings of an unmanned warship. Quotes . He has most prominently worked as a voice actor for animation set in the DC Animated Universe, specifically as The Scarecrow in The New Batman Adventures (1997, working on the same episode as Charles Rocket) and The Question in several episodes of Justice League (2004-2006, alongside Clancy Brown, Robert Foxworth, Virginia Madsen, and Charles Napier). Take your favorite fandoms with you and never miss a beat. Jeffrey Combs was born on September 9th, 1954 in Oxnard, California. His first horror film role came two years later in Frightmare (1983). He reprised this role in two more films, Bride of Re-Animator in 1990 and Beyond Re-Animator in 2003. Jeffrey Combs as Shran, the Andorian, on 'Star Trek: Enterprise.' Jeffrey Combs. Character(s): [1], Combs was born in Oxnard, California, to Jean Owens (formerly Sullins, 1921–1986) and Eugene "Gene" Combs (1922–1999), and raised in Lompoc. Shran / Shran / Krem (11 episodes, 2001-2005) All Souls Day: Dia de los Muertos (2005) Thomas White CSI: Crime Scene Investigation ... Chaz (as Jeffrey Combs, Jeffery Combs) Cellar Dweller (1988) Colin Childress Jake and the Fatman (TV Series 1988) Alan Shuba (1 episode, 1988) Houston Knights Combs voiced the Autobot Ratchet in Roberto Orci and Alex Kurtzman's Transformers: Prime (2010-2013), Viceroy in Chadam (2010), The Leader in Avengers: World's Mightiest Heroes (2010-2012), Rat King in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2012-2016), and Ratchet in Transformers: Robots in Disguise (2016-2017). He also voiced the Scarecrow for the video game Batman: Rise of Sin Tzu (2003), which also featured Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa, Loren Lester, and Ron Perlman. Jeffrey Alan Combs (born September 9, 1954) is an American character actor known for starring in horror films, such as Re-Animator, and appearances playing a number of characters in the Star Trek and the DC animated universe television franchises. He featured in a number of cult horror films including Re-Animator (1985), From Beyond (1986), Re-Animator 2 (1989), Pit and the Pendulum, The Frighteners (1996), I Still Know What You Did … Place of birth: (The others being Patrick Stewart[citation needed] and Brian Markinson[13]) Combs wanted the characters to appear in the same scene together, but the logistics and expense worked against it. It's no surprise that with all that make-up, it's easy to forget or not even notice when an actor … Following Shran through Season 4's Andorian-Romulan trilogy. The latter one starred Teri Garr.Combs is widely recognized as an actor of science fiction and horror movies. Combs has of course ventured in other genres besides horror or sci-fi. It was one of the ships destroyed during the Battle at the Binary Stars in 2256. He starred as the telepath Harriman Gray in first-season episode "Eyes" (1994) of Babylon 5. In early 2007, he played a highly fictionalized Edgar Allan Poe in "The Black Cat" episode of Masters of Horror. Manny Coto has also said, had Star Trek: Enterprise been given a fifth season, the recurring character of Shran may have joined Enterprise as an "auxiliary or an advisor". Shran represents a dramatic shift in character type for Combs, as his three previous Star Trek incarnations, Weyoun, Brunt and Penk, had all been somewhat passive officials, whereas Shran is a more heatedly aggressive leader. Combs is widely recognized as an actor of science fiction and horror movies. Biography: Jeffrey Alan Combs (born September 9, 1954) is an American actor known for his horror film roles and his appearances playing a number of characters in the Star Trek franchise. He landed his first role in the film Honky Tonk Freeway (1981), in which he played an unnamed drive-in teller. In August 2005, he appeared for the first time on the science fiction series The 4400 as Dr. Kevin Burkhoff which had become a recurring role by 2006. ], Combs's best-known horror role is Herbert West, the main character in the film Re-Animator (1985),[4] and its two sequels. Combs has since starred in many movies in the horror and science fiction genres, specifically those based on the works of writer H. P. Lovecraft.
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