![]() Like Morn, the Lurian mercenary never uttered a word, which tacitly maintained Deep Space Nine's running joke about their race. In fact, Morn was so important to the bar that when Morn was away on business, the Ferengi proprietor installed a hologram of the Lurian sitting at his favorite stool because it hurt Quark's (Armin Shimerman) business when customers didn't see Morn at his usual spot. Morn was still at Quark's during Star Trek: Deep Space Nine's finale and he presumably remained there long after the series wrapped its seven-season run. Morn was also the subject of one of DS9's best long-running gags: nearly every other character complained that Morn was a raconteur who never stopped talking despite the fact that fans never actually heard Morn utter a single word in the series. Morn's actual job was a courier of sometimes illegal goods, but he spent most of his time, and his Latinum, at Quark's. Incredibly, Morn appeared in 93 episodes - 22 more than Cirroc Lofton, who played Jake Sisko, the son of Captain Benjamin Sisko (Avery Brooks), despite Lofton being a series regular. Morn (who was inspired by and named for Norm Peterson from Cheers) was a popular ancillary character on Star Trek: Deep Space Nine.
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