Memory Alpha
Advertisement
Memory Alpha

"I have all the specs and diagrams at home…"
– Sergey Rozhenko, 2367 ("Family")

Sergey Rozhenko was a Human male who served as a Starfleet chief petty officer and warp field specialist during the 24th century.

History[]

Rozhenko was married to Helena Rozhenko and had one son, Nikolai Rozhenko. (TNG: "Heart of Glory", "Family", "Homeward")

In 2346, Rozhenko served aboard the USS Intrepid under Captain Drew Dieghan when the ship answered a Klingon distress call following the Romulan attack on the Khitomer outpost. In the wreckage of the outpost, Sergey discovered a young Klingon named Worf. In an act of kindness, Sergey and Helena fostered Worf. (TNG: "Heart of Glory", "Sins of The Father")

In 2347, the Rozhenko family was residing on the farming colony of Gault where Worf and Nikolai grew up. (TNG: "Heart of Glory"; DS9: "Let He Who Is Without Sin...")

After some time, they returned to Earth. Sergey occasionally took his sons camping in the Ural Mountains. (DS9: "Change of Heart") Worf eventually left his family to attend Starfleet Academy. Sergey was extremely proud of Worf when he earned his commission. (TNG: "Family") The Rozhenkos continued to live out their retirement in the same dwelling for a number of years to follow. (TNG: "New Ground")

Sergey had a fascination with starships. His warp field expertise was mainly on the Excelsior-class ships. Later, he collected all the specifications and diagrams of the Galaxy-class ships. (TNG: "Family")

In 2367, the Rozhenkos visited the USS Enterprise-D while it was docked at Earth Station McKinley following its encounter with the Borg. They transported aboard from Earth Station Bobruisk. During their visit, they received a full tour of the Enterprise-D (excluding some areas due to repairs), and later both parents shared their concern and showed their support for Worf's recent discommendation following a conversation with Guinan. (TNG: "Family")

Later that year, Sergey and Helena met the Enterprise-D at Starbase 73 to take their grandson, Alexander, back to Earth. They intended to provide him with a home and a family following the death of his mother, K'Ehleyr, something Worf felt he could not provide on his own as he was both single and a career officer. (TNG: "Reunion")

When Worf learned, in 2372, that Keiko O'Brien was having another child in seven months, and hoping to avoid having to deliver another O'Brien baby, like he did the first, he said that he planned on being very far away from the station at the time, visiting his parents on Earth. (DS9: "Accession")

By 2374, Alexander had decided to join the Klingon Defense Force. Sergey and Helena were not happy about the decision, most likely because of concerns over his safety and perhaps sensing that their grandson's motives had more to do with getting his father's attention then actually serving the empire. But, when they realized Alexander was determined to enlist, they supported him as they always had. (DS9: "Sons and Daughters")

In 2401, Worf introduced himself as "Son of Sergey, House of Rozhenko" to Raffaela Musiker. (PIC: "Seventeen Seconds")

Memorable quotes[]

"Don't call me sir. I used to work for a living."

- Sergey Rozhenko, joking with Miles O'Brien


"So we walked into the school and we don't know what to expect. Is Worf hurt? Is he in some kind of trouble? The door opens and there is our little seven year old sitting on a chair and glaring across the room at five teenage boys, all of them with bloody noses."
"And then the principal looked up and said, please tell me he's an only child."
"We have taken enough of the commander's time."

- Sergey Rozhenko, Helena Rozhenko, and Worf, discussing Worf's childhood with Geordi La Forge


"Mother, father, I wish you would be a little more reserved while you are on board."

- Worf


"I must bear my dishonor alone."
"That is not true."

- Worf and Sergey Rozhenko

Appendices[]

References[]

Rozhenko's only appearance was in the episode "Family", but he was referenced a number of times in subsequent episodes.

Background information[]

Sergey Rozhenko was played by actor Theodore Bikel.

The script for "Family" gave the pronunciation of Rozhenko's name as "sir-GAY rah-ZHEN-koh". It went on to describe the character as being of Russian descent, carrying himself with pride and dignity, "compact, barrel-chested... a retired Starfleet Chief growing old gracefully." [1]

When Costume Designer Robert Blackman designed Sergey Rozhenko's outfit, Blackman was already aware that the character would be played by Theodore Bikel. In order to give the impression that Sergey and his wife Helena could have raised Worf, Blackman wanted the Rozhenkos' clothing to make them look as though they were "sturdy, strong Human beings, both emotionally and physically." He said about Sergey in particular, "If you look at him and see how the outfit was put together, it resonates to a certain degree the Starfleet uniform. There's a kind of yoke and a sleeve of leather, bits that make you think of the uniform subliminally, I think. I hope." (The Official Star Trek: The Next Generation Magazine issue 16, p. 34)

The presence of Sergey and Helena Rozhenko in "Family" was of some concern to the production staff, who felt Worf's parents might come across as comically "Jewish". Michael Piller ultimately felt the finished episode "trod the line" of universal humor. (Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion, 1st ed., p. 143)

Apocrypha[]

Sergey Rozhenko appeared in the Star Trek: The Lost Era novel The Art of the Impossible, which told the story of Worf's rescue and fostered by him and his wife, Helena, following the massacre at Khitomer, in 2346.

In the Day of Honor novel Honor Bound, Sergey was said to be living in Mirnee Doleena, Belarus, in 2373.

External links[]

Advertisement