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Crell Moset

...as Crell Moset/Medical Consultant Program Beta one(1998)

David Clennon (born 10 May 1943; age 80) is an American actor from Waukegan, Illinois. In 1998, he played Doctor Crell Moset as the Medical Consultant Program Beta one in the Star Trek: Voyager episode "Nothing Human". A die-hard political activist, Clennon is almost as well known for his "hands-on" approach in politics as he is for his acting roles.

Clennon is best known for his Emmy-nominated role as Miles Drentell on the television series thirtysomething, a role which he reprised on Once and Again. Clennon was later nominated for and won an Emmy for his performance in an episode of Dream On entitled "For Peter's Sake", playing the title character. Fellow Voyager guest actor Michael McKean also guest-starred in this episode, while fellow Cardassian performer Paul Dooley and TNG guest star Chris Demetral were regulars on the series.

He made his Hollywood acting debut in the acclaimed 1973 film The Paper Chase. He then began appearing in made-for-TV movies, including the 1976 Charles Manson drama Helter Skelter, which co-starred fellow Star Trek alumni Marc Alaimo, Phillip R. Allen, Bruce French, Skip Homeier, Robert Ito, Roy Jenson, Paul Kent, Jonathan Lippe, and Alan Oppenheimer. His next feature film appearance was in 1976's Bound for Glory, which starred Ronny Cox and Gail Strickland.

He went on to co-star in such acclaimed films as Coming Home (1978), Go Tell the Spartans (1978, co-starring Craig Wasson and Clyde Kusatsu), Being There (1979), Missing (1982, also featuring Keith Szarabajka), The Thing (1982), The Right Stuff (1983), Sweet Dreams (1985), and Light Sleeper (1992). In 1981, he had a role in the musical comedy Ladies and Gentlemen, the Fabulous Stains, as did Brent Spiner. He also appeared in two films featuring his Voyager co-star Robert Picardo: Star 80 in 1983 and Matinee ten years later. The latter also featured Dick Miller and William Schallert.

Other notable TV movie credits include Gideon's Trumpet (1980, with Richard Lineback), Special Bulletin (1983, with Kenneth Tigar), and 1993's And the Band Played On, the latter of which also featured Reg E. Cathey, Christopher Carroll, Thomas Kopache, Clyde Kusatsu, Dakin Matthews, Lawrence Monoson, Jeffrey Nordling, Sierra Pecheur, and Saul Rubinek. Clennon was also a part of the acclaimed TV mini-series From Earth to the Moon in 1998, as were Sam Anderson, David Andrews, Ronny Cox, Brett Cullen, Robert Curtis-Brown, Ann Cusack, David Drew Gallagher, Clint Howard, Daniel Hugh Kelly, John Carroll Lynch, Dakin Matthews, Deborah May, Andy Milder, Kieran Mulroney, Holmes Osborne, Ethan Phillips, Harve Presnell, Mark Rolston, Stephen Root, and Alan Ruck.

Clennon was more recently a part of the ensemble cast of the 2004 political comedy Silver City; also among this film's co-stars was Miguel Ferrer. The following year, Clennon appeared as the assistant Attorney General in the policital drama Syriana. Also starring in this film were Star Trek: Deep Space Nine star Alexander Siddig, Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country actor Christopher Plummer, and DS9 and Enterprise guest actor Robert Foxworth.

One of Clennon's earliest TV guest appearances was a 1977 episode of Kojak with Rosalind Chao. Clennon would work with Chao again in 2005 for the film Life of the Party. Clennon's other TV appearances range from Barney Miller (starring Ron Glass and James Gregory), Murder, She Wrote (with Katherine Moffat and William Windom) and Beauty and the Beast (starring Ron Perlman) to Boston Legal (starring William Shatner and Rene Auberjonois and guest-starring Michael Ensign and Jack Shearer) and The West Wing (with Van Epperson and Stephen Root). He was also a regular on the drama series The Agency, along with Ronny Cox and Daniel Benzali, from 2001 through 2003.

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