“Data’s Day” is written by: Harold Apter and Ronald D.
Moore, from a story by: Harold Apter, and is directed by: Robert Wiemer. It was produced under production code 185,
was the 11th episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation Season
4, the 85th episode overall, and was broadcast on January 7, 1991.
“Data’s Day” is an example of what TV Tropes names ‘A
Day in the Limelight’, an episode where a secondary character of an ensemble
will be the focus but in a way that is largely atypical to a story’s established
format. Data has been the focus of several
episodes before, they are often excellent, but they are also structurally standard
episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation. “Data’s Day” is presented as lower stakes
despite the background plot of a secret diplomatic mission inside the Neutral
Zone to rendezvous with the Romulans.
This is just one spear of the plot as there are multiple subplots circling
around the marriage of transporter chief Miles O’Brien, played by Colm Meaney,
and the other interactions through a day in the life of Data. There is the obvious juxtaposition of high
and low stakes being given the same weight in the eyes of Data by several small
scenes where Data interacts with other characters. Brent Spiner narrates the episode with Data’s
personal logs in the always measured tone that sets the tone and atmosphere
more than anything else in the script. This
makes “Data’s Day” such an effective episode, the breaking of the typical
format means that we thoroughly examine who Data is while not tempting a viewer
with a more interesting episode happening just off-screen. The Romulan plot is the closest thing to a
B-plot the episode actually has and Data does become important to discovering
the twist that the Vulcan ambassador was actually a Romulan agent who had infiltrated
the Federation. The tension of faking
her death using the transporter is perhaps a bit too brief, but the plot also
isn’t the point of the episode as the reveal comes about through exploration of
Data’s own love of the works of Arthur Conan Doyle.
Much of the episode is presented as examining Data’s
lack of emotions in situations, however, underneath the text there is the idea that
Data’s emotions are just experienced a different way from the way human beings
experience emotions. There is a scene
early in the episode where he attempts to joke with Geordi La Forge, outright
insulting him, and Geordi immediately recognizes what Data is doing and does
not chastise him for it. The interesting
bit of logic is that Data realizes that he could only attempt what he sees as good-natured
ribbing with someone like Geordi and not, for example, Captain Picard. As much as he would deny it, Data has deep personal
connections. He has friends. The episode posits he is the character on the Enterprise
with the most friends because of how different he processes and displays his emotions. There’s a clear reason why he has earned the
trust of everyone on the ship because of the way he experiences the world, not despite
it. His part in O’Brien’s wedding is to walk
the bride, Keiko played by Rosalind Chao, down the aisle, an honor that would
only be given to someone akin to family.
Ending the episode on the wedding followed by Data taking command of the
Enterprise for a night shift is a particularly beautiful image about
humanity.
Data’s own internal conflict around the wedding is
twofold, the one most important to the episode is his anxieties of ruining
Keiko and Miles’ big day. There is a sequence
in the episode where Data learns to dance from Dr. Crusher, Gates McFadden getting
the chance to show off her skills as a dancer and choreographer. There is a miscommunication, and the initial
dance is not a slow, ballroom, but an energetic Broadway style tap dance. In the hands of a lesser writer or two lesser
performers, this is a scene that should be superfluous and drag the episode
down, but from both McFadden’s choreography and the fact that for his part
Brent Spiner’s history on Broadway means he can keep up. They are both keeping the characters’ deep
trust and friendship present throughout this dance and the explanation as to
why Data cannot easily pick up the simpler steps of ballroom dancing. Data’s literal minded thinking means that he
can easily copy the complicated steps of tap dance, but the spontaneity and
connection inherent in a slow dance is a skillset that Data blocks himself from
having. It’s a skill he has to learn,
paralleled with his own interactions with Chao as Keiko. Harold Apter and Ronald D. Moore introduce
Keiko as a bride having jitters on her wedding day and while they do not give
her as explicit an arc as they could, they do use her to examine how rigid Data
is. Like his emotions, Data experiences
love differently and cannot understand exactly how cancelling the wedding the
day of is something odd. Meany as O’Brien
equally gets time to shine with Chao, both having chemistry in their brief
scenes together. It’s the wedding resolution
that coalesces the thesis statement of “Data’s Day”, despite our differences,
people belong to the world in their own way and nobody deserves to be relegated
as outsider.
Overall, “Data’s Day” works so well because we adhere
to a different storytelling format than the rest of Star Trek: The Next Generation. Even with the sheer amount of Data focused episodes,
this being the third episode this season after “Brothers” and “Legacy” to center
the character, “Data’s Day” finds something new and exclusively humanist to say
about where society needs to be. Much of
it gets away with it by simply showing how these different people exist with
one another and are inarguably drawn closer because of this. It’s a day in the life and that can be the
happiest thing in the universe. 9/10.

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