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Mitchell "Mitch" Alan Suskin (born 1955; age ~69) is an Emmy Award-winning visual effects (VFX) supervisor who worked on Star Trek: Voyager and Star Trek: Enterprise, having left the franchise upon the conclusion of the latter series' third season. He shared four Emmy Award nominations for his work on Voyager, winning two of them. He also shared a nomination for his work on the Enterprise episode "Dead Stop".

Prior to being hired on Voyager at Paramount Television in July 1996 near the end of that series' second season, Suskin had worked at VFX company Foundation Imaging, and it was Suskin who was instrumental in bringing his former employer to work on the VFX of that series, as he was the one who suggested the company to his superior Dan Curry, when the latter was looking to bring in another VFX company to work on the production. Replacing Michael Backauskas, who opted to leave the franchise, Suskin was paired up with firstly Arthur J. Codron and subsequently with Ron B. Moore to form one of the two alternating VFX teams for the remainder of Voyager. (Star Trek Monthly issue 31, p. 30) The first episode he worked upon independently as supervisor with Codron was Voyager's third season episode "The Chute". (Cinefantastique, Vol 29 #6/7, p. 103)

Suskin shortly returned to the Star Trek live-action franchise, when he joined the pre-production of Star Trek: Discovery in June 2016 as Visual Effects Supervisor, but left in February 2017 after nine months, before the new series premiered in September that year. [1] His position was subsequently filled by former Star Trek colleague David Takemura and newcomer to the franchise, Ante Dekovic.

Career outside Star Trek[]

Before his time on Star Trek and holding a degree as Bachelor of Arts (BA), Fine Arts, Motion Picture & Television from the University of California, Los Angeles, Suskin started out his career in 1977 as an uncredited model maker for Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977) and subsequently as such for Industrial Light & Magic's 1941 (1979). As VFX coordinator he continued to work for them on E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (in which he had a cameo as medical assistant) and Poltergeist (both 1982), and as visual effects supervisor on Cocoon (1985), Joe Versus the Volcano (1990), and the 1984 film Splash. He was a concept artist for the creature effects of the hit 1987 film, Predator.

Suskin was a VFX supervisor on the popular science fiction series Babylon 5 at Foundation Imaging during its first two seasons (1994-1995), and subsequently a digital compositing artist at Flat Earth VFX for another popular contemporary production, Xena: Warrior Princess, before joining the crew of Voyager. After Star Trek, he later became the visual effects supervisor for the ABC series Lost (co-created by J.J. Abrams and Damon Lindelof) and the NBC series Surface. His work on the latter series garnered him an Emmy nomination, while his work on Lost earned him not only two Emmy nominations, one of which he won, but two Visual Effects Society Awards nominations as well, also winning one of them.

More recently, Suskin joined many former Star Trek VFX colleagues at Pixomondo Visual Effects (an international VFX house, founded in 2001) in 2010, continuing to work as a VFX supervisor on television productions such as, Hawaii Five-O (2011, co-produced by Roberto Orci and Alex Kurtzman), BlackBoxTV and Hitting the Cycle (both 2012), as well as on the motion picture Mission: Impossible IV – Ghost Protocol (2011, produced by J.J. Abrams). Suskin left Pixomondo in 2012 to continue his career as a free-lancer.

Star Trek Emmy Awards[]

Suskin received the following Emmy Award win and nominations in the category "Outstanding Special Visual Effects for a Series":

Star Trek interview[]

  • "Computer Graphics", Anna L. Kaplan, Cinefantastique, Vol 29 #6/7, 1997, pp. 103-106

External links[]

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