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Real world article
(written from a production point of view)

Christopher Haire, CAS (born 23 December 1949; age 76) worked as a sound re-recording mixer on Star Trek: The Next Generation, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, Star Trek: Voyager, and Star Trek: Enterprise, as well as the video games Star Trek: Klingon and Star Trek: Borg. He was credited as Chris Haire for most all of his work aside from that on Enterprise.

For his work on Star Trek, Haire received Emmy Award nominations and wins for Outstanding Sound Mixing for a Drama Series and Cinema Audio Society Award wins and nominations for Outstanding Achievement in Sound Mixing for a Television Series:

Haire also received Emmy Award nominations for his work on the television movie Debby Boone... One Step Closer in 1982, on the Star of the Family pilot episode in 1983, on the Falcon Crest episode "The Avenger" in 1984, shared with Doug Davey, and on the Taken episode "Beyond the Sky" in 2003, shared with Richard L. Morrison and Chris Elam. He won an Emmy Award in 1982 for the television movie Easter in Guadalajara. He also received CAS Award nominations for his work on Taken (2003, shared with Richard L. Morrison and Chris Elam) and Empire (2006, shared with Chris Elam).

In addition to his work on the Star Trek franchise, Haire worked on the television series Night Court (1984), Challenge of the GoBots (1984-1985), The Hitchhiker (1987), I'll Fly Away (1992-1993), Sweet Valley High (1994-1995), Baywatch (1994-1996), Baywatch Nights (1995), Leap of Faith (2002), Carnivàle (2003), In Justice (2006), Windfall (2006), Grey's Anatomy (2006), Raines (2007), In Plain Sight (2008), Psych (2007-2009), Mental (2009), and NCIS: Los Angeles (2009-2011). Film credits include Blood Feud (1983), Lovelines (1984), Night of the Comet (1984, starring Robert Beltran), Special Terminator CIA (1986), The Stepfather (1987, starring Terry O'Quinn), Ski Patrol (1990), Running Delilah (1993, starring Kim Cattrall), the thriller Hostile Intentions (1996), Family Plan (1997), Dangerous Child (2001), The Rats (2002), Totally Awesome (2006), and the documentary Cool It (2010).

Star Trek credits

(This list is currently incomplete.)

External link