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Cin Drallig
Biographical information
Homeworld
Died
Physical description
Species
Gender
Height
Hair color
Eye color
Skin color
Chronological and political information
Affiliation(s)
Masters
Apprentices
- Serra Keto[1]
- Zett Jukassa(Informal)[6]
- Bene(Lightsaber combat)[7]
- Obi-Wan Kenobi(Lightsaber combat)[1][5]
- Whie Malreaux(Lightsaber combat)[2]
- Anakin Skywalker(Lightsaber combat)[1]
- 'There is one lesson you've yet to learn. How to become one with the Force!'
- ―Cin Drallig to Darth Vader[src]
Cin Drallig was a legendary[8]HumanmaleJedi Master of the Jedi Order who served as Battlemaster[1] and head of security[3] at the CoruscantJedi Temple during the waning days of the Galactic Republic. He met his end at the hands of Darth Vader during Operation: Knightfall, when the Order 66 go-ahead was given.
BiographyEdit
Early years and riseEdit
Cin Drallig was born on Lavisar.[1][2] Like most Jedi of the era, it can be surmised that Drallig was brought to the Jedi Temple soon after being discovered to be Force-sensitive and sorted into an Initiateclan for group instruction in the Jedi academy. Here, he would have trained until he graduated the academy and was selected by a Jedi Master as a Padawan. Eventually, Drallig passed the Jedi Trials and was made a Jedi Knight by the High Council.
Later on in his career, Drallig began his servitude as a lightsaberinstructor, in keeping with the Jedi custom of passing on their special knowledge to the next generation[3]—especially seeing as Drallig possessed true talent as a swordsman.[9] Over his career, Drallig taught the basics of Forms I through VI to thousands of students, including such stars-to-be as Obi-Wan Kenobi and Anakin Skywalker.[1][5] In 31 BBY, one of Master Drallig’s classes on the seven forms of lightsaber combat was recorded on the Great Holocron.[10]
At some point, Drallig was introduced to the contentious and troublesome Padawan Serra Keto. Serra’s defiant ways had nearly gotten her expelled from the Order on more than one occasion, and her Jedi Masters were exasperated. Envisioning the great Jedi she had the potential to become, Master Drallig took young Serra as his Padawan and helped her find her center. Under Drallig’s guidance, Serra's understanding of the Force and her lightsaber skills blossomed, inspiring a strong bond of devotion between student and Master. Though it never entirely disappeared, Keto's rebelliousness eventually subsided,[8] and she went on to become Master Drallig's most accomplished apprentice.[9]
After many years of service and attaining the rank of Jedi Master[3][8][9] (no earlier than 31 BBY),[10] Drallig was elected Battlemaster[2] (or swordmaster),[4] making him the leading lightsaber combat instructor in the Temple.[2] Though it smacked of disrespect, Drallig earned the unflattering nickname of 'the Troll' among the Order.[1][2][3][5]
Clone WarsEdit
During the time of the galaxy-spanning Clone Wars, Drallig was tasked with protecting the Jedi Temple. As head of security there, he spent most of his time in the Temple, patrolling its corridors and pathways. His position also put him in charge of the Jedi Temple Guard and their assignments.[3][11] As the Clone Wars continued to unfold, Drallig grew particularly concerned with the growing hostility towards the Jedi from Republic citizens.[11]
Stationed on Coruscant,[1] Drallig made his home deep within the Jedi Temple.[8] Despite his diligent watch on security, however, intrusions into the Temple did happen, such as when bounty hunterCad Banestole a Jedi holocron from a restricted vault and got away.[3][12]
Around 20 BBY,[13] two years into the war, the Jedi Temple hangar was the site of a shocking terrorist bombing that cost numerous lives, prompting Cin Drallig to keep an especially close watch on the Temple’s perimeter.[3] A throng of protestors—family and friends of workers killed in the explosion—gathered at the steps of the Temple to criticize the Jedi’s involvement in the war. Flanked by two members of the Jedi Temple Guard, Drallig stood before the masses when Anakin Skywalker showed a hologram of a suspect, Jackar Bowmani, to the Jedi Master, which was seen by Bowmani's wife Letta Turmond.[14] Master Drallig admired young Skywalker's assertiveness in solving the alarming case,[3] but was most concerned at how vulnerable the Order had become, and how the image of the Jedi as benevolent protectors had become much too fragile.
In addition to his responsibilities as head of security, Drallig still found the time to teach lightsaber combat, as indeed the ongoing war placed emphasis on Padawans' combat training in favor of other abilities.[6] After the death of fellow Jedi Mierme Unill, Unill's Padawan, Zett Jukassa was informally assigned to Master Drallig, awaiting reassignment.[6] Under Drallig’s tutelage, Jukassa became capable as a swordsman by the age of 10, in 19 BBY.[1]
Order 66Edit
In 19 BBY, when the Order 66 go-ahead was given and Anakin Skywalker—now the newly christened Darth Vader—led the 501st Legion in a raid against the Jedi Temple, Drallig's skills marked him as a priority target for elimination by the Sith Lord himself.[1] Though Jedi Masters Shaak Ti and Jurokk directed the Temple's defense the night of Order 66,[5] Drallig nonetheless played a major part that fateful night. He was in the process of giving lightsaber lessons to teenage Padawans Bene and Whie Malreaux when the Sith Lord began his murderous rampage.[15] Deep within the Jedi Temple he prepared for Vader's coming,[9] directing such Jedi as Olana Chion in the Temple's defense.[16]
Engaging the clones alongside Serra Keto, Drallig’s efforts proved initially successful, as he managed to penetrate the occupying forces' upper level defenses. As Vader was alerted to this, however, he went on a hunt for his former lightsaber instructor. Entering Drallig’s territory, Vader discovered what carnage had been wrought there, with dead clones and the signs of battle being everywhere. Before Drallig could move against the Dark Lord, however, Serra Keto confronted Vader on her own, and was slain.[9]
As Drallig rushed into the room, he witnessed Keto fall to the Sith Lord.[9] Engaging Vader in the Temple training hall[1][9][17] Ptc creo 4.0 m030 crack file software. along with two of his students, Bene and Whie Malreaux, they were nonetheless unable to defeat the Dark Lord. Vader outclassed both Padawans, choking Bene with one hand while he dueled Drallig with the other.[7][18][19]
Drallig himself ultimately proved unable to defeat a raging Sith Lord in combat.[2] After the demise of the Padawans, the Battlemaster went into a short exchange of lightsaber strikes with Vader before he was hacked down from shoulder to torso. He could only look on in shock and fall to the ground, where he shortly died.[20] The incident was recorded by Temple security camera TR4-121.[1]
Drallig's body was later found by Grand Master Yoda and Master Obi-Wan Kenobi, who had returned to the Temple to reset the emergency beacon to warn all surviving Jedi to flee into exile. The discovery caused Kenobi great grief, having considered the Battlemaster a friend.[5] Kenobi and Yoda also watched the security recording of the Battlemaster's fatal last duel.[18]
With the Order nearly extinct overnight, the newly emerged Galactic Empire needed to cover up the true reasons for the execution of the Republic's peacekeepers. On behest of EmperorPalpatine, Sate Pestage compiled official reasons for each Jedi's death. Incident report #890-I, filed by CommanderCC-1119, contained Master Drallig’s certificate of death, while Pestage reported to the public that the Battlemaster had been 'killed in combat against Imperial agents.'[1]
LegacyEdit
Cin Drallig's legacy was passed down by those Jedi who survived to train others, including Master Kenobi's training of Luke Skywalker.[21]
While still adjusting to his life-supporting armor, Darth Vader often reflected upon the actions that had brought him to such a state. One of his clearer memories was that of crossing blades with Master Drallig, his former lightsaber instructor, the night of Order 66.[22]
How to update a gmod server. Drallig's recorded knowledge of the seven forms, made in 31 BBY, was found in the Great Holocron by the New Jedi Order, along with another of his recordings on the marks of contact.[10]
Personality and traitsEdit
Cin Drallig was an esteemed Jedi Master, possessing both great skill as a swordsman and a calmness of mind and spirit. Described as patient, focused, and directed, and representing the tenets of the Jedi Order in their purest form, he had given himself over completely to the will of the living Force. Despite his great reputation as a warrior, his humbleness of character was such that he dedicated his life to training countless Padawans in the art of the lightsaber, leading by example and instilling in his students a sense of the Order's values and beliefs. Where several other Masters had failed, Drallig was also the only one insightful enough to see the great potential of rebellious Padawan Serra Keto, and reach through to her to make that potential become reality.[8]
In his recording on the Great Holocron, Drallig presented some personal views on the matter of lightsaber combat. In the wake of death caused by Aurra Sing and Darth Maul, and unlike some Jedi Masters, Cin Drallig refused to dismiss the study of Form II as impractical. He remained cautiously neutral regarding Form V, taking the side of neither proponent nor detractor, but emphasizing the need for such an offensive form to be used only with the proper intention of preserving peace. He also conceded that Form VI being the standard form of the Jedi Order did not mark it as the most worthy of study, but in general the most practical. As for cho mok, Master Drallig discouraged its use unless the student possessed enough knowledge of the opponent's physiology, so as to not accidentally kill. Master Drallig further stated that a Jedi should not hesitate to use any combat technique to kill a Sith Lord, not even sai tok. He stressed that the student's mindset must be that of defeating the danger the Sith pose, not to wish utter destruction upon them.[10]
Powers and abilitiesEdit
- 'Who taught you to fight like this? Was it Cin Drallig? He died like a squealing Gosfamling.'
- ―Darth Vader, while luring captured Agricultural Corps members to the dark side[src]
Cin Drallig's lightsaber instructor was none other than Master Yoda himself,[2][5] and known for having outstanding talents as a duelist, Drallig became an incredibly skilled swordsman, gaining the rank of Battlemaster of the Order, due to his exceptional prowess in lightsaber combat.[9]
By the time of the Clone Wars, Master Drallig was old[5] but his age did not hamper his abilities, as he remained one of the Jedi's top swordsmen,[1] his skills described as being 'nearly unparalleled.'[8] Drallig's skill was such that it was the conviction of CountDooku that the renowned combatant GeneralGrievous would be no match for the Battlemaster, should they ever face off against one another.[23]
Drallig had developed his own unique style of lightsaber combat, calling upon the Force to enhance his speed and relying on unconventional and unpredictable movements.
Drallig had mastered all seven forms of lightsaber combat and his understanding and knowledge of each form was outstanding enough that he was considered the most prolific lightsaber instructor in the Temple, second only to Yoda himself. He was able to effectively train thousands of students in the use of the Forms I to VI,[1] displaying consummate knowledge of the theory of each form, making thorough comments on each forms strengths and weaknesses. Drallig was also one of the few Jedi to achieve mastery over the Juyo variant of Form VII but in addition to fully understanding the style's weaknesses and strengths, he was also aware of how dangerous it was due to its aggressiveness and potentially exposing the user to the dark side, hence his caution towards who he would entrust it to. For example, Anakin Skywalker, as a Padawan, lamented the fact that Master Drallig wouldn't let him study Form VII.[24]
Being the Temple’s finest swordmaster at the time of Darth Vader's raid on the Jedi Temple,[4][25] despite being heavily fatigued and elderly, Cin Drallig's swordsmanship proved to be great enough to kill off many of the Clones that attacked him and Darth Vader saw the need for he himself to personally fight him. In his ferociously intense duel, Drallig fought inspirationally well, nearly defeating Vader, and the younger and fully amped Sith Lord had far greater difficulty killing him than he did with the other Jedi he slayed during his purge of the Jedi Temple. By killing Master Drallig and his apprentice, Serra Keto, Vader had successfully removed one of the Temple's last hopes.[9]
Although his nearly unprecedented mastery of lightsaber combat was his strongest trait, Cin Drallig also proved to be very powerful and accomplished in the use of the Force, displaying high levels of mastery over many Force powers when he fought Vader. He was considerably adept in the use of Force speed, capable of moving fast enough to be invisible to human's eye and often applied it to overwhelm his opponents.[9] The Jedi Master was also proficient in the use of the protection bubble, which he used during his battle against Darth Vader, protecting himself while his Padawan fights him and at times manifesting a barrier to protect his student and was also capable of making this an offensive technique as well, encasing Vader within the bubble, and hurting him with its Force energy. His Barriers proved powerful enough that Vader, despite his extreme raw power in the Force, was not able to penerate the shielding and had to wait until the barrier dispersed to continue. Drallig could heal with the Force, as shown by how he would restore his Padawan's stamina upon encasing him inside a Force Barrier and also applied it at times during his duel with Vader to heal himself. He also displayed incredible telekinetic mastery, as shown by how he was able to repel a Force Push from Vader and then blast him through a window with a single Force Push of his own as well as also levitating and hurling large chunks of earth upon Vader.[9]
Drallig was also a highly compotent leader, being the leader of the security guards of the Jedi Temple during the Clone Wars. Drallig's leadership skills was shown by how he led the remaining Jedi when Operation: Knightfall began to battle the Clones, although he was met with defeat.
Behind the scenesEdit
In Star Wars: Episode III Revenge of the Sith, Cin Drallig was played by Nick Gillard, who was the stunt coordinator on all three films of the prequel trilogy. In the Revenge of the Sith video game, the likeness of Nick Gillard is used in the character's appearance while, vocally, Cin Drallig is portrayed by Tom Kane.
The name 'Cin Drallig' comes from reversing Nick Gillard's name, only removing the 'k' in 'Nick'.
In the novels, Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith and Dark Nest II: The Unseen Queen, Cin Drallig’s death is depicted as taking place in the Room of a Thousand Fountains (not the Temple training hall), where a large group of younglings were being protected by several Padawans. When Vader arrived in the greenhouse, he cut down Whie Malreaux and another teenage Padawan before quickly overwhelming Drallig and hacking through his shoulder. With Drallig and the older Padawans dead, the remaining children were quickly cut down by blaster fire. When Yoda and Obi-Wan later find Drallig's body, Yoda comments that Drallig would not abandon his young students.[5]
In the film, he is seen only briefly in a holographic recording, however, he has a larger role in the video game. In the PS2 Version, Cin Drallig managed to knock Vader down but Vader killed him soon after by impaling him via a lightsaber throw, while in the GBA Version, Vader triumphed over Drallig. The duel also takes place in the training room above and on the terrace outside the Room of a Thousand Fountains. According to Keeper of the Holocron Leland Chee, however, Drallig's death as it appears in the game is non-canon. Also, in the film, Drallig has dark blond hair, however, in the video game, he is shown with white hair. He is also wearing a different costume.
In the video game, Cin appears as a dual character. When the players both select Cin, one of them controls a seemingly dark side-version of him: dark robes, darker hair and a red lightsaber.
As Kit Fisto's lightsaber hilt was a personal favorite of Nick Gillard, Cin Drallig's lightsaber hilt bears a resemblance to Fisto's.[source?] Based on behind the scenes materials, the lightsaber blade was originally to be rotoscoped in yellow. However, George Lucas would only allow either blue or green as the color of any regular Jedi's lightsaber blade. With the exception of Samuel L. Jackson's violet lightsaber blade he used as Mace Windu, Lucas would go no further with other colors. With no choice, Nick Gillard chose green instead;[source?] however, in a promotional image, Drallig is shown with a blue lightsaber by mistake.
There is a possible appearance in the Star Wars: the Force Unleashed novel as one of PROXY's training modules, but that has not been confirmed by the LucasArts team.
In the Star Wars Miniatures set Champions of the Force, the Jedi Weapon Master character resembles Cin Drallig.[26]
For the production of the Star Wars: The Clone Wars series fifth season episode Sabotage, a clay maquette of Drallig's head was made by Darren Marshall.[27] In the episode, he was voiced by Robin Atkin Downes.
AppearancesEdit
- The Clone Wars: Decide Your Destiny: The Way of the Jedi(Mentioned only)
- Star Wars: The Clone Wars – 'Sabotage'
- Labyrinth of Evil(First mentioned)
- Republic Commando: Order 66 game(Non-canonical appearance)
- Star Wars: Episode III Revenge of the Sith(Appears in hologram)
- Star Wars: Episode III Revenge of the Sith novelization(Corpse)(Appears in hologram)(First appearance)
- Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith comic(Appears in hologram)
- Dark Lord: The Rise of Darth Vader(Mentioned only)
- Evasive Action: Recruitment(Mentioned only)
- Dark Nest II: The Unseen Queen(Mentioned only)(Appears in hologram)
SourcesEdit
Wookieepedia has 9 images related to Cin Drallig.
- 'The Dark Lord Cometh'--Star Wars Insider 82
- 'Order 66: Destroy All Jedi'--Star Wars Insider 87
- 'Obi-Wan Kenobi: Wizard of the Desert'--Star Wars Insider 112
- Bene in the Databank(content now obsolete; backup link)
- Olana Chion in the Databank(content now obsolete; backup link)
- 'Rogues Gallery: The Last Stand of the Jedi!'--Star Wars Insider 137
- 'Sabotage' - The Clone Wars Episode Guide on StarWars.com
- Cin Drallig in the Encyclopedia(link now obsolete; backup link)
- Jedi Temple Guard in the Encyclopedia(link now obsolete; backup link)
Battlemaster of the Jedi Order | |||
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|
Notes and referencesEdit
- ↑ 1.001.011.021.031.041.051.061.071.081.091.101.111.121.131.141.151.161.171.181.191.201.211.221.23 'Order 66: Destroy All Jedi'--Star Wars Insider 87
- ↑ 2.02.12.22.32.42.52.62.72.8The Complete Star Wars Encyclopedia, Vol. I, p. 205 ('Drallig, Cin')
- ↑ 3.03.13.23.33.43.53.63.73.83.9Cin Drallig in the Databank(content now obsolete; backup link)
- ↑ 4.04.14.2Star Wars Character Encyclopedia
- ↑ 5.05.15.25.35.45.55.65.75.8Star Wars: Episode III Revenge of the Sith novelization
- ↑ 6.06.16.2Zett Jukassa in the Databank(content now obsolete; backup link)
- ↑ 7.07.1The Complete Star Wars Encyclopedia, Vol. I, p. 70 ('Bene')
- ↑ 8.08.18.28.38.48.5Episode III: Revenge of the Sith: Prima Official Game Guide
- ↑ 9.009.019.029.039.049.059.069.079.089.099.10Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith video game
- ↑ 10.010.110.210.3Jedi vs. Sith: The Essential Guide to the Force
- ↑ 11.011.1Jedi Temple Guard in the Databank(content now obsolete; backup link)
- ↑Star Wars: The Clone Wars – 'Holocron Heist'
- ↑Darth Maul—Death Sentence 1
- ↑Star Wars: The Clone Wars – 'Sabotage'
- ↑The Complete Star Wars Encyclopedia, Vol. II, p. 282 ('Malreaux, Whie')
- ↑Olana Chion in the Databank(content now obsolete; backup link)
- ↑Star Wars Chronicles: The Prequels
- ↑ 18.018.118.2Star Wars: Episode III Revenge of the Sith
- ↑Bene in the Databank(content now obsolete; backup link)
- ↑Dark Nest II: The Unseen Queen
- ↑Star Wars: Episode IV A New Hope
- ↑Dark Lord: The Rise of Darth Vader
- ↑Labyrinth of Evil
- ↑ 24.024.124.2The Jedi Path: A Manual for Students of the Force
- ↑Star Wars: Revenge of the Sith: The Visual Dictionary
- ↑[1]
- ↑Sabotage on StarWars.com
External linksEdit
- Training Trio on StarWars.com(content now obsolete; backup link)
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Star Wars logo
This list of characters from the Star Wars franchise contains only those which are considered part of the official Star Wars canon. Some of these characters have additional and alternate plotlines in the Star Wars Legends continuity, and characters found in that body of works are compiled in the list of Star Wars Legends characters.
#[edit]
Name | Portrayal | Description |
---|---|---|
2-1B | Voice: Randy Thom (The Empire Strikes Back), Denny Delk (Revenge of the Sith) | Medical droid in The Empire Strikes Back that tends to Luke Skywalker in the bacta tank after the Wampa attack on Hoth, and replaces Luke's hand.[1] A 2-1B droid also serves as medical droid to Anakin Skywalker in Revenge of the Sith, and can be seen in the Star Wars Rebels animated series.[2] |
4-LOM | Chris Parsons (The Empire Strikes Back) | Protocol droid with insectoid features, 4-LOM is among the Bounty Hunters who answer Darth Vader's call to capture the Millennium Falcon in The Empire Strikes Back.[3] In the Legends continuity it is Jabba the Hutt that upgrades 4-LOM's programming, turning him into a full-fledged bounty hunter, and partners him with fellow bounty hunter Zuckuss.[4] Teaming up for many years, 4-LOM and Zuckuss join the Rebel Alliance for a time, even having aspirations of mastering the Force.[5] 4-LOM would lose these aspirations and affiliations after being badly damaged by Boba Fett and having his memory erased, restoring him to a cold calculating bounty hunter.[4][6] The first 4-LOM action figure was misidentified as 'Zuckuss' in Kenner's original Star Wars action figure line.[7] |
8D8 | N/A | Torture droid working for Jabba the Hutt in Return of the Jedi.[3][8] A Kenner action figure was created for this droid during their original Return of the Jedi line.[9] |
Clone 99 | Voice: Dee Bradley Baker (The Clone Wars)[10] | Deformed clone trooper who helps the Domino Squad in the Clone Wars. He is killed during one of the Battles of Kamino.[11][12] |
0-0-0 (a.k.a. Triple-Zero) | N/A | Protocol droid designed to specialize in etiquette, customs, translation and torture. Structurally similar to C-3PO. An associate of Doctor Aphra and BT-1, the droid is first featured in the Marvel Comics series Star Wars: Darth Vader and is now heavily featured in the ongoing Doctor Aphra series.[13] |
A[edit]
Name | Portrayal | Description |
---|---|---|
A'Koba | Peter Diamond (A New Hope) | Tusken Raider leader in A New Hope who attacks Luke Skywalker and raises his gaderffii stick in the air repeatedly over his head. Also known as 'URoRRuR'R'R', this sandperson is featured in the short story 'Rites' from the 2017 anthology From a Certain Point of View.[14] |
Admiral Gial Ackbar | Timothy D. Rose (Episodes VI–VIII) Voice: Erik Bauersfeld (Episodes VI–VII), Tom Kane (Episode VIII), Art Butler (The Clone Wars) | Commands the Rebel fleet in their attack against the second Death Star in Return of the Jedi. Ackbar is a Mon Calamari leader and military commander who fought in the Clone Wars. He devotes himself to the cause of galactic freedom and becomes the foremost military commander of the Rebel Alliance, and later the New Republic. He later works alongside General Leia Organa as part of the Resistance in The Force Awakens. He is killed along with many Resistance leaders in The Last Jedi. |
Sim Aloo ('Imperial Dignitary') | Anthony Lang (Return of the Jedi) | Member of the Imperial Ruling Council and one of Emperor Palpatine's advisors, he appears alongside other councilors to the Emperor on the second Death Star, and is killed when it is destroyed over the forest moon of Endor in Return of the Jedi.[15] An action figure of this character, entitled 'Imperial Dignitary', was created in Kenner's 1985 Power of the Force line.[16] |
Almec | Voice: Julian Holloway (The Clone Wars) | Mandalorian politician who serves as Prime Minister of Mandalore during the Clone Wars. A prominent supporter of Satine Kryze and her New Mandalorian government, he is imprisoned for his involvement in an illegal smuggling ring, but is later freed and reinstated as Prime Minister after Darth Maul takes over the New Mandalorian capital city of Sundari. Later when Darth Maul is captured by Darth Sidious, Almec sends two Mandalorian warriors to rescue him. |
Mas Amedda | Jerome Blake (The Phantom Menace and Revenge of the Sith), David Bowers (Attack of the Clones and Revenge of the Sith)[17] Voice: Stephen Stanton (The Clone Wars) | Vice chair of the Galactic Senate.[17] He is Grand Vizier and head of the Imperial Ruling Council in Aftermath: Life Debt, installed by Gallius Rax as the puppet leader of the Empire following Palpatine's death. Amedda formally surrenders the Empire to the New Republic in Aftermath: Empire's End. |
Amee | Katie Lucas (Episode I) | Human friend of Anakin Skywalker in The Phantom Menace. Lucas, the daughter of George Lucas, was credited as Jenna Green. |
Padmé Amidala | Natalie Portman (Episodes I–III) Voice: Catherine Taber (The Clone Wars and Forces of Destiny) | Teenage queen, and later Senator of Naboo, born Padme Naberrie, who marries Anakin Skywalker and dies giving birth to Luke Skywalker and Leia Organa.[18] |
Cassian Andor | Diego Luna (Rogue One and Untitled Cassian Series)[19] | Captain and intelligence officer of the Rebel Alliance who helps steal the plans for the Death Star in Rogue One. |
Fodesinbeed Annodue | Voice: Greg Proops and Scott Capurro (The Phantom Menace) | Two-headed Troig in The Phantom Menace who commentates in both Basic and Huttese for the Boonta Eve Classic pod race.[20] The actor/comedians Greg Proops and Scott Capurro were originally supposed to appear in full prosthetic makeup, but the design was switched to a somewhat unpopular fully CG character.[21] |
Raymus Antilles | Peter Geddis (A New Hope),[22]Rohan Nichol (Revenge of the Sith),[22] Tim Beckmann (Rogue One) | Captain of the Tantive IV. In A New Hope, he is strangled to death by Darth Vader.[1] Antilles is the last master of C-3PO and R2-D2 before they fall under the ownership of Luke Skywalker, and captain of the Sundered Heart in Revenge of the Sith. No relation to any other character named Antilles. |
Wedge Antilles | Denis Lawson (Episodes IV–VI), Voice: David Ankrum (A New Hope and Rogue One),[22]Nathan Kress (Rebels) | A Rebel and New Republic starfighter pilot, who was in the battles of Yavin, Hoth, and Endor and is the only survivor of those battles besides Luke Skywalker.[23] |
AP-5 | Voice: Stephen Stanton (Rebels) | An RA-7 protocol droid from the Clone Wars, serving with the Galactic Republic as a navigator; later tasked with inventory duties by the Empire, before C1-10P/Chopper encounters him in the Rebels episode 'The Forgotten Droid'. Acts as a C-3PO-like counterpart to Chopper in Rebel service, and assists Phoenix Squadron in finding a new base on Atollon, before The Bendu forces both Rebels and Imperials off Atollon in the episode 'Zero Hour'.[24] |
Queen Apailana | Keisha Castle-Hughes (Revenge of the Sith) | Queen of Naboo during the last year of the Clone Wars in Revenge of the Sith. She is assassinated by stormtroopers of the Imperial 501st Legion for harboring fugitive Jedi in Star Wars: Battlefront II. |
Sergeant Appo (CC-1119) | Voice: Temuera Morrison (Revenge of the Sith), Dee Bradley Baker (The Clone Wars) | Clone Sergeant of the 501st Legion in Revenge of the Sith. |
Doctor Chelli Lona Aphra | Voice: January LaVoy (Audiobook of From a Certain Point of View) | A human female archaeologist, recruited by Darth Vader, along with her two assassin droid companions, 0-0-0 (Triple-Zero) and BT-1 (Beetee) for several covert missions outside the knowledge of the Empire. She is first featured in the Marvel comic series Star Wars: Darth Vader, before getting her own ongoing titular comic series.[13] |
Faro Argyus | Voice: James Marsters (The Clone Wars) | Captain of the Senate Commandos who is bribed by Count Dooku to free Viceroy Nute Gunray from Republic captivity. He is later betrayed and killed by Asajj Ventress. |
Aiolin and Morit Astarte | N/A | Specially engineered humans, brother and sister, skilled with lightsabers and working under Dr. Cylo as possible replacements for Darth Vader. They first appear in the Star Wars: Darth Vader Marvel comic book series.[25] |
Ello Asty | Paul Kasey (The Force Awakens) Voice: Matthew Wood (The Force Awakens and Resistance) | Abednedo X-wing pilot for the Resistance that perished during the attack on Starkiller Base in The Force Awakens. Asty's name is a reference by director J.J. Abrams to the album Hello Nasty by the Beastie Boys, and the inscription on Asty's helmet, 'Born to Ill', references the band's debut album Licensed to Ill.[26] |
Attichitcuk | Paul Gale (Star Wars Holiday Special) | A Wookiee and the father of Chewbacca, he was one of Kashyyyk's prominent chieftains during the final years of the Galactic Republic. He appears in the Holiday Special and as a playable character in Galactic Battlegrounds (2001), and was canonized by being mentioned in Solo: A Star Wars Story (2018). |
AZI-3 | Voice: Ben Diskin (The Clone Wars) | Medical droid serving the cloners of Kamino who helps uncover the secret of Order 66 in The Clone Wars.[27] |
B[edit]
Name | Portrayal | Description |
---|---|---|
Ponda Baba ('Walrus Man') | Tommy Isley (A New Hope) | Aqualish mercenary who in A New Hope attacks Luke Skywalker in the Mos Eisley cantina, and then gets his arm cut off by Obi-Wan Kenobi's lightsaber. He is an associate of Dr. Cornelius Evazan who also antagonizes Luke Skywalker in the cantina.[28] When the original Kenner action figure for Baba was released, the then-unnamed alien was called simply 'Walrus Man'.[29] He can also be seen with Dr. Evazan on the streets of Jedha in Rogue One.[30] |
Kitster Banai | Dhruv Chanchani (The Phantom Menace) | Tatooine slave boy and Anakin Skywalker's childhood friend. Banai is supportive to Anakin's pod-racing endeavors, which is in contrast to Anakin's other friends Wald, Amee, Melee and Seek in The Phantom Menace. As the most prominent of Anakin's childhood friends, there has been much speculation as to Banai's fate after The Phantom Menace.[31] |
Cad Bane | Voice: Corey Burton (The Clone Wars) | Ruthless bounty hunter in The Clone Wars who makes many major appearances throughout the series. He also appears in the game Star Wars: The Clone Wars – Republic Heroes.[32] |
Darth Bane | Voice: Mark Hamill (The Clone Wars) | Dark Lord of the Sith who is responsible for the 'Rule of Two' that states there shall only ever be two Sith at a time, a Master and an Apprentice, before the Old Republic. An illusion of him appeared during the final episode of The Clone Wars to confront Yoda on Moraband and offer him the chance to join the dark side of the Force, but is rejected by Yoda. |
Barada | Dirk Yohan Beer (Return of the Jedi) | Klatooinian employed as one of Jabba the Hutt's skiff guards in Return of the Jedi. Released in action figure form as part of Kenner's final Power of the Force line in 1985.[33] |
Jom Barell | N/A | SpecForces officer introduced in Star Wars: Aftermath who becomes part of the main team in Aftermath: Life Debt.[34] |
Moradmin Bast | Leslie Schofield (A New Hope) | Imperial general who serves aboard the first Death Star who warns Grand Moff Tarkin that they should evacuate due to the Rebel threat in A New Hope. |
BB-8 | Dave Chapman and Brian Herring (puppeteers) (The Force Awakens and The Last Jedi) Voice: Bill Hader and Ben Schwartz(consultants) (The Force Awakens and The Last Jedi) | Poe Dameron's astromech droid in The Force Awakens and The Last Jedi. |
BB-9E | N/A | Black plated BB-series astromech droid in the service of the First Order in The Last Jedi. |
Tobias Beckett | Woody Harrelson (Solo: A Star Wars Story) | A criminal and Han Solo's mentor. He enlists Han and Chewbacca to assist with the theft of shipment of coaxium from Vandor; he later betrays and is killed by Han. |
Val Beckett | Thandie Newton (Solo: A Star Wars Story) | A criminal partnered with fellow outlaw Tobias Beckett during at the height of the Galactic Empire. |
The Bendu | Voice: Tom Baker (Rebels) | An ancient Force-wielder whose philosophy predates the Jedi Order; encountered by the main characters of Star Wars Rebels on the planet Atollon, where he describes himself as being 'the middle' between the ashla, light-wielding Jedi and the bogan, dark-wielding Sith. |
Shara Bey | N/A | A-wing pilot for the Rebel Alliance and mother of Poe Dameron, featured in the 2015 Marvel Comics limited series Star Wars: Shattered Empire.[35] |
Sio Bibble | Oliver Ford Davies (Episodes I–III) | Governor of Naboo in the prequel trilogy, who also appears in two episodes of Star Wars: the Clone Wars.[36] |
Depa Billaba | Dipika O'Neill Joti (The Phantom Menace) | Jedi Master on the Jedi High Council who falls into a six-month coma after an encounter with General Grievous on Haruun Kal, but recovers and becomes the master of Padawan Caleb Dume, who is later known as Kanan Jarrus. |
Jar Jar Binks | Ahmed Best (Episodes I–III) Voice: Ahmed Best (The Clone Wars), B.J. Hughes (Three episodes of The Clone Wars) | Hapless but good-natured Gungan who journeys with Qui-Gon Jinn to Coruscant.[37] |
Temiri Blagg | Temirlan Blaev (The Last Jedi) | A young boy and Force-sensitive slave on Cantonica. Temiri and his friends, Oniho Zaya and Arashell Sar, work for Bargwill Tomder in the Fathier stables in Canto Bight. Temiri is given a resistance ring by Rose Tico, and is shown Force-pulling a broom towards himself near the conclusion of The Last Jedi.[38] |
Commander Bly | Voice: Dee Bradley Baker (The Clone Wars) | CC-5052 is a clone commander who leads the 327th Star Corps under Jedi General Aayla Secura in Revenge of the Sith and The Clone Wars. When Order 66 is issued, Bly executes Aayla Secura on Felucia. |
Bobbajo | Aidan Cook (The Force Awakens) | Nu-Cosian storyteller seen carrying his menagerie of caged animals on Jakku in The Force Awakens. Bobbajo, although having a very minor role, was one of the very first new characters from The Force Awakens to have been shown in promotional materials for the film.[39] Bobbajo is also featured in the short story 'All Creatures Great and Small'.[40] |
Dud Bolt | Vulptereen podracer who participates in the Boonta Eve Classic podrace in The Phantom Menace. A puppet of Bolt was one of the few practical effects created for the podrace sequence, rather than solely CG.[41] Bolt is also featured in several non-canon video games such as Star Wars: Episode I Racer.[42] | |
Mister Bones | N/A | Rebuilt B1 battle droid introduced in Aftermath, serves as loyal—if homicidal—bodyguard to Temmin 'Snap' Wexley.[43][44] In the comic Poe Dameron #13, Snap carries Mister Bones' 'personality template' with him for good luck, and temporarily loads it into another droid to protect Poe Dameron.[45] |
Lux Bonteri | Voice: Jason Spisak (The Clone Wars) | Son of Mina Bonteri and freedom fighter in the Clone Wars; love interest of Ahsoka Tano. |
Mina Bonteri | Voice: Kath Soucie (The Clone Wars) | Mother of Lux Bonteri and Separatist senator in the Clone Wars. |
Borvo the Hutt | Voice: Clint Bajakian (The Phantom Menace) | Hutt smuggler on Tatooine in Star Wars Episode I: Battle for Naboo. |
Bossk | Alan Harris (The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi) Voice: Dee Bradley Baker (The Clone Wars) | Trandoshan bounty hunter who is one of the six summoned in The Empire Strikes Back by Darth Vader to find the Millennium Falcon, and who is also seen in Jabba's Palace in Return of the Jedi. Bossk is the son of bounty hunter Cradossk and is known for his hatred and hunting of Wookiees, with a particular vendetta against the Wookiee Chewbacca.[46] Bossk also appears in episodes of The Clone Wars, in which he mentors and serves as a bodyguard to a young Boba Fett, eventually joining his syndicate of bounty hunters. In Rebels, Bossk captains the Hound's Tooth and teams with Ezra Bridger to expose corrupt Imperial officer lieutenant Jenkes.[47] Also appearing in the Darth Vader Marvel comics series, Bossk is hired by Doctor Aphra along with other bounty hunters in an attempted hijack of the Son-Tuul Pride's fortune.[48] In the Legends continuity, Bossk kills his own father to take over the Bounty Hunters Guild, recruiting Boba Fett as a member, before being double-crossed and finally defeating Fett on Tatooine.[46][49] Later in his retirement in the same continuity, Bossk is imprisoned on a space station orbiting Ord Mantell, which is destroyed during the Yuuzhan Vong War, and possibly meets his demise.[50] Bossk's reptilian mask was originally used for a different character in the Mos Eisley cantina from A New Hope, while his yellow and white spacesuit, also seen in the cantina, is a real RAFpressure suit from the 1960s.[51][52] |
Ezra Bridger | Voice: Taylor Gray (Rebels and Forces of Destiny) | Fourteen-year-old con artist, thief, and pickpocket living on the Outer Rim world of Lothal as the Empire strip mines the resources of his homeworld for Sienar's TIE fighter production. He is able to use the Force, and has used it to get out of certain predicaments. Stealing to survive, he had no real loyalty to anyone until he met the crew of the Ghost. His master is Kanan Jarrus.[53] |
BT-1 (a.k.a. Bee-Tee) | N/A | Astromech droid modified to be a homicidal assassin, with a variety of built-in assault weapons. An associate of Doctor Aphra and 0-0-0, the droid is first featured in the Marvel comic series Star Wars: Darth Vader and is now heavily featured in the ongoing Doctor Aphra series.[13] |
Sora Bulq | Weequay Jedi Master and friend of Mace Windu who is turned to the dark side of the Force by Count Dooku. |
C[edit]
Name | Portrayal | Description |
---|---|---|
C1-10P (a.k.a. 'Chopper') | Matt Martin (Rogue One)[citation needed] Voice: Dave Filoni (Rebels and Forces of Destiny) | Obsolete-looking astromech droid with a cantankerous, 'pranking' form of behavior aboard the rebel freighter Ghost in Star Wars Rebels.[3][54] Chopper later reappears in Rogue One out of the Great Temple of Masassi on Yavin 4, like the Ghost itself and Hera Syndulla (who is mentioned only as a General of the Rebellion).[citation needed] |
C-3PO | Anthony Daniels (Episodes I-IX and Rogue One) Voice: Anthony Daniels (The Clone Wars, Rebels, Forces of Destiny and Resistance) | Protocol droid who appears throughout the Star Wars films.[3][55] |
Lando Calrissian | Billy Dee Williams (The Empire Strikes Back, Return of the Jedi and The Rise of Skywalker), Donald Glover (Solo: A Star Wars Story) Voice: Billy Dee Williams (Rebels) | Longtime friend of Han Solo. Businessman and scoundrel who leads the Rebels' space attack against the second Death Star in Return of the Jedi.[56] |
Captain Moden Canady | Mark Lewis Jones (The Last Jedi) | First Order captain of the Mandator IV-class Siege DreadnoughtFulminatrix, destroyed by Paige Tico's Resistance StarFortress bomber during the attack on D'Qar in The Last Jedi. |
Ransolm Casterfo | N/A | Centrist senator from Riosa who opposes, and then befriends, Princess Leia in the novel Star Wars: Bloodline.[57][58][59] |
Chewbacca | Peter Mayhew (Episodes III–VII), Joonas Suotamo (Episodes VII–IX, Solo: A Star Wars Story) Voice: Peter Mayhew (The Clone Wars) | Han Solo's Wookiee partner and co-pilot of the Millennium Falcon.[60] |
Chief Chirpa | Jane Busby (Return of the Jedi) | An Ewok that served as the chief of the Ewok tribe that appears in Return of the Jedi.[61] |
Rush Clovis | Voice: Robin Atkin Downes (The Clone Wars) | Separatist Senator who represents the planet Scipio in the Galactic Senate, as well as a former love interest of Padmé Amidala. When the Clone Wars break out, he becomes a delegate of the InterGalactic Banking Clan. During the Battle of Scipio he sacrifices himself to save Padmé. |
Commander Cody | Temuera Morrison (Revenge of the Sith) Voice: Dee Bradley Baker (The Clone Wars)[10] | Serves directly under Obi-Wan Kenobi in Revenge of the Sith and during the Clone Wars. He helps Obi-Wan at Utapau against General Grievous and then turns on him when Emperor Palpatine orders him to 'Execute Order 66'.[11] |
Lieutenant Kaydel Ko Connix | Billie Lourd (Episodes VII–IX) | Human female serving as a junior controller in the Resistance during their conflict with the First Order in The Force Awakens.[62] Actress Lourd is the daughter of Carrie Fisher (Princess Leia).[62] Though Lourd is credited as Lieutenant Connix in the film's credits, StarWars.com gives her full name as Kaydel Ko Connix.[63] |
Captain Jeremoch Colton | Jeremy Bulloch (Revenge of the Sith) | Pilot of the Tantive III in Revenge of the Sith. |
Cordé | Veronica Segura (Attack of the Clones) | Padmé Amidala's handmaiden and decoy in Attack of the Clones. She is killed by Zam Wessel in her attempt to assassinate Senator Amidala. |
Salacious B. Crumb | Tim Rose(puppeteer) (Return of the Jedi) Voice: Mark Dodson (Return of the Jedi) | Kowakian monkey-lizard in Jabba the Hutt's court.[64] Rose's antics controlling the Crumb puppet led to an increase in the character's prominence.[64] |
Arvel Crynyd | Hilton McRae (Return of the Jedi) | A-wing pilot who crashes into the Executor-class Star Dreadnought Executor, causing its fall and destruction on the surface of the second Death Star, in Return of the Jedi. |
Dr. Cylo | N/A | Cybernetically enhanced human, able to assume other clones of himself once his current form has died. First appearing in the Star Wars: Darth Vader Marvel comic book series, Cylo is presented as a rival to Darth Vader; pitting Vader against many of his Cybernetically enhanced beings, to gain favour under Emperor Palpatine.[65] |
D[edit]
Name | Portrayal | Description |
---|---|---|
Commander Larma D'Acy | Amanda Lawrence (The Last Jedi) | Human female Resistance commander and advisor to Leia Organa and Amilyn Holdo in The Last Jedi. |
Figrin D'an | Rick Baker (A New Hope) | Leader of the Bith band Figrin D'an and the Modal Nodes, playing in the Mos Eisley cantina in A New Hope.[66] |
Kes Dameron | N/A | Special forces soldier for the Rebel Alliance and father of Poe, featured in the 2015 Marvel Comics limited series Star Wars: Shattered Empire.[35] |
Poe Dameron | Oscar Isaac (Episodes VII–IX) Voice: Oscar Isaac (Resistance) | X-wing fighter pilot introduced in The Force Awakens, called 'the best pilot in the Resistance'.[67][68] |
Vober Dand | Derek Arnold (The Force Awakens and The Last Jedi) | Tarsunt from the planet Suntilla who serves as a logistics controller for the Resistance during the attack on Starkiller Base in The Force Awakens. He also appears at the Resistance base on D'Qar in The Last Jedi.[69] |
Joclad Danva | Kyle Rowling (Attack of the Clones) | Human Jedi Knight from Attack of the Clones who uses a green lightsaber in the Battle of Geonosis, where he is killed. |
Dapp | Voice: Steve Blum (Uprising) | 'Happy' Dapp is a man that an unnamed smuggler and his sister Riley worked for during the Galactic Empire's Iron Blockade. |
Biggs Darklighter | Garrick Hagon (A New Hope) | A friend of Luke Skywalker's from Tatooine and a Rebel Alliance X-wing pilot. As 'Rogue Three', he is a member of Red Squadron, part of the Rebel attack on the Death Star in Star Wars: A New Hope.[70] Luke and Biggs' reunion at the Rebel base on Yavin IV was originally cut from the theatrical release of the film; but was restored for the Special Edition release. Further scenes of Darklighter meeting with Luke, earlier on Tatooine, were also cut; but can be seen in The Star Wars Storybook adaptation of A New Hope, and in the 1998 Star Wars: Behind the Magic interactive CD-ROM by LucasArts.[70][71][72] |
General Oro Dassyne | Voice: Terrence Carson | Separatist General and an agent of the Corporate Alliance who commands the CIS' forces on Bomis Koori IV. |
Gizor Dellso | Geonosian separatist who survives Darth Vader's slaughter of the remaining separatist leaders and creates his own droid army. He has plans to make a new battle droid until Imperial stormtroopers of the 501st Legion raid his factory on Mustafar and destroy his plans. Gizor never makes it off the planet. | |
Dengar | Morris Bush (The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi) Voice: Simon Pegg (The Clone Wars) | Corellian bounty hunter summoned by Darth Vader to hunt for the Millennium Falcon in The Empire Strikes Back and is visible in Jabba's Palace in Return of the Jedi.[73] In The Clone Wars, Dengar is part of a syndicate of bounty hunters betrayed by Asajj Ventress on the planet Quarzite.[74] Soon working for the Hutts, Dengar attempts to capture Han Solo and Chewbacca in the 2015 Star Wars Marvel comics series story-line 'Showdown on the Smuggler's Moon' and makes appearances in the Darth Vader comic series as well.[75] In the Aftermath novels, Dengar both battles and be-friends fellow bounty hunter Mercurial Swift, before joining Jas Emari to rescue Norra Wexley during the Battle of Jakku, and receives a pardon from the New Republic.[76][77] In the Legends continuity, Dengar is portrayed as a successful swoop bike racer and a relatively unsuccessful bounty hunter.[5] He is badly injured in a race by Han Solo on Corellia and is rebuilt by the Empire as a cybernetically enhanced assassin, serving the Empire until he refuses to kill children on the planet Asrat. Falsely joining the Rebellion on Hoth in a ruse to capture Han Solo, Dengar is reprieved of this death warrant by Darth Vader and reunites with his future wife Manaroo on Cloud City.[78] On Tatooine, Dengar and Manaroo nurse Boba Fett back to health after his escape from the Sarlacc, forming a partnership between the two former rivals.[78] Later retreating somewhat into married life, Dengar's activities become more sparing, but he does encounter the offspring of his enemy Han Solo in the Legends novel Young Jedi Knights: Delusions of Grandeur.[79] |
Bren Derlin | John Ratzenberger (The Empire Strikes Back) | Rebel officer in The Empire Strikes Back.[80] |
Ima-Gun Di | Voice: Robin Atkin Downes (The Clone Wars) | Red NiktoJedi Master in The Clone Wars.[81] |
Rinnrivin Di | N/A | Red Nikto crime lord who heads a dangerous cartel based on the planet Bastatha in Star Wars: Bloodline.[82][83] |
DJ | Benicio del Toro (The Last Jedi) | Slicer who assists and then betrays Finn and Rose Tico on their mission aboard the First Order flagship Dreadnought Supremacy in The Last Jedi. His name stands for 'Don't Join'.[84] |
Lott Dod | Silas Carson (The Phantom Menace) Voice: Toby Longworth (The Phantom Menace), Gideon Emery (The Clone Wars) | Neimoidian senator of the Trade Federation, representing the trade conglomerate's interests in the Galactic Senate. |
Jan Dodonna | Alex McCrindle (A New Hope), Ian McElhinney (Rogue One) Voice: Michael Bell (Rebels) | General and leader of the Rebel base on Yavin IV who plans the starfighter attack on the first Death Star in A New Hope.[85] Dondonna also appears in Rogue One, the Rebels animated series, and in several issues of Marvel's comic series Star Wars. He is also the first character to utter the phrase, 'May the Force be with you'.[citation needed] |
Daultay Dofine | Alan Ruscoe (The Phantom Menace) Voice: Chris Sanders (The Phantom Menace) | Neimoidian Commander of the Trade Federation's droid control ship in The Phantom Menace, he is killed when Anakin destroys the ship. |
Dogma | Voice: Dee Bradley Baker (The Clone Wars)[10] | Clone trooper devoted to the Republic in the newest generation of the recruits fighting in the Clone Wars.[86] |
Count Dooku Darth Tyranus | Christopher Lee (Attack of the Clones and Revenge of the Sith) Voice: Christopher Lee (The Clone Wars film), Corey Burton (The Clone Wars TV series) | The leader of the Separatists and secretly the Sith Lord Darth Tyranus.[87] He severs Anakin Skywalker's right forearm in Attack of the Clones, and is decapitated by Anakin in Revenge of the Sith.[87] Dooku also makes several appearances in The Clone Wars. |
Dormé | Rose Byrne (Attack of the Clones) | Handmaiden to Senator Padmé Amidala. |
Cin Drallig | Nick Gillard (Revenge of the Sith) Voice: Robin Atkin Downes (The Clone Wars) | Jedi Master who serves as the battlemaster of and head of security for the Jedi Temple in the final days of the Clone Wars. He is killed by Darth Vader during the siege of the temple in Revenge of the Sith. |
Garven Dreis (a.k.a. Red Leader) | Drewe Henley (A New Hope and Rogue One) | Leader of the Rebel Alliance's Red Squadron during the attack on the first Death Star in the Battle of Yavin in A New Hope. Unused footage of actor Drewe Henley as Garven Dreis from A New Hope was also used during the Battle of Scarif in Rogue One. |
Droidbait (CT-00-2010) | Voice: Dee Bradley Baker (The Clone Wars) | Clone trooper and member of Domino squad, nicknamed because he is always getting shot by training droids. Stationed on a remote listening post on the Rishi moon, he is killed there by confederate commando droids. |
Rio Durant | Voice: Jon Favreau (Solo: A Star Wars Story) | An Ardennian pilot and long-time associate of criminals Tobias Beckett and Val. |
Lok Durd | Voice: George Takei (The Clone Wars) | Neimoidian weapon designer who serves as a Separatist general. |
E[edit]
Name | Portrayal | Description |
---|---|---|
Eirtaé | Friday 'Liz' Wilson (The Phantom Menace) | Handmaiden to Padmé Amidala seen in The Phantom Menace. |
Dineé Ellberger | Celia Imrie (The Phantom Menace) | Human female pilot for the Naboo Royal Space Fighter Corps, flying with Bravo Squadron during the invasion of Naboo in The Phantom Menace.[88] |
Ellé | Chantal Freer (Revenge of the Sith) | Handmaiden to Padmé Amidala in Revenge of the Sith. |
Caluan Ematt | Andrew Jack (The Force Awakens and The Last Jedi) | Elderly General in the Resistance, and former lieutenant in the Rebel Alliance. Ematt appears at the Resistance base during the planning of the attack on Starkiller Base, and later appears atop the trenches in the Battle of Crait. A longtime associate of Leia Organa, Ematt also appears in the 2015 novels Moving Target: A Princess Leia Adventure and Smuggler's Run: A Han Solo & Chewbacca Adventure, as well as the 2016 novel Bloodline. |
Embo | Voice: Dave Filoni (The Clone Wars) | A Clone Wars-era bounty hunter that works for the highest bidder, but has a sense of honor. His weapons include a bowcaster and his hat, which he uses as a boomerang. He is a Kyuzo. |
Emperor's Royal Guard | Elite, red-helmeted and red-cloaked stormtroopers who serve as Emperor Palpatine's personal bodyguards. | |
Jas Emari | N/A | Zabrak bounty hunter introduced in Star Wars: Aftermath.[89][90] |
Ebe E. Endocott | Voice: Roger L. Jackson (The Phantom Menace) | Of Triffian species, Ebe is one of the eighteen podracers seen in The Phantom Menace. |
Galen Erso | Mads Mikkelsen (Rogue One)[19] | Imperial research scientist and the father of Jyn Erso in Rogue One and the prequel novel Catalyst: A Rogue One Novel. As prime designer of the Death Star, Erso supplies information on a critical weakness to the Rebellion, allowing an attack on the seemingly-invulnerable battle station. |
Jyn Erso | Felicity Jones (Rogue One)[19] Age 8: Beau Gadsdon (Rogue One) Age 4: Dolly Gadsdon (Rogue One) Voice: Felicity Jones (Forces of Destiny, season 1), Helen Sadler (Forces of Destiny, season 2) | Former criminal who aids the Rebel Alliance in stealing the plans for the Death Star in Rogue One. |
Lyra Erso | Valene Kane (Rogue One)[19] | Mother of Jyn Erso in Rogue One and the prequel novel Catalyst. |
EV-9D9 | Voice: Richard Marquand (Return of the Jedi) | Torture droid working in Jabba the Hutt's palace in Return of the Jedi, that assigns roles for R2-D2 and C-3PO during their brief tenure under Jabba's ownership.[3] |
Moralo Eval | Voice: Stephen Stanton (The Clone Wars) | Separatist Phindian who comes up with a plan to kidnap Chancellor Palpatine. |
Doctor Cornelius Evazan | Alfie Curtis (A New Hope), Michael Smiley (Rogue One) | Character who antagonizes Luke Skywalker and is subsequently attacked with a lightsaber by Obi-Wan Kenobi in the Mos Eisley cantina in A New Hope. He is a human male with a heavily scarred face, accompanied by his Aqualish associate Ponda Baba. He also claims to be a wanted man who has the death sentence on 12 systems.[91] Evazan also bumps into Jyn Erso and threatens her on the streets of Jedha in Rogue One.[92] |
F[edit]
Name | Portrayal | Description |
---|---|---|
Onaconda Farr | Voice: Dee Bradley Baker (The Clone Wars) | Senator from Rodia initially aligned with the CIS, but later returned to the Republic. |
Boba Fett | Jeremy Bulloch (The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi),[22]Daniel Logan (Attack of the Clones)[22] Voice: Jason Wingreen (The Empire Strikes Back),[22]Temuera Morrison (The Empire Strikes Back [Special Edition]),[22] Daniel Logan (The Clone Wars)[22] | Bounty hunter and nemesis of Han Solo and Mace Windu, he is a clone of Jango Fett raised by Jango on Kamino as his son.[93] He is one of the six bounty hunters hired by Darth Vader to find the Millennium Falcon in The Empire Strikes Back. He finds the ship and brings a bounty of its captain, Han Solo, frozen in carbonite, to Jabba the Hutt. He appears again in Return of the Jedi, at Jabba's palace. When Luke Skywalker and his friends come to rescue Han, Fett falls into the mouth of Jabba's Sarlacc during the fight. |
Jango Fett | Temuera Morrison (Attack of the Clones) | Bounty hunter, template for all the clones who made up the Republic's army. He is the father of Boba Fett.[94] He is killed by Jedi Master Mace Windu in Attack of the Clones. |
Feral | Voice: Dee Bradley Baker (The Clone Wars) | Brother of Savage Opress and Darth Maul, with whom Savage lived on Dathomir into adulthood. He is among the Nightbrothers selected by Asajj Ventress as a potential candidate to assassinate Count Dooku, and survives to the final round with his brother. However, after Savage is chosen and both his mind and body are changed by the Nightsisters' magic, he murders Feral on Asajj's orders. |
Commander Fil | Voice: Dee Bradley Baker (The Clone Wars) | Nahdar Vebb's Clone Commander who dies while trying to kill General Grievous' pet Gor. |
Finn | John Boyega (Episodes VII-IX) Voice: John Boyega (Forces of Destiny) | A redeemed First Order stormtrooper originally designated as FN-2187 before joining the Resistance and being dubbed 'Finn' by Poe Dameron. |
Kit Fisto | Zachariah Jensen and Daniel Zizmor (Attack of the Clones), Ben Cooke (Revenge of the Sith) Voice: Phil LaMarr (The Clone Wars) | Design of Kit Fisto was first developed as a male Sith concept by concept artist Dermot Power. When the alien Sith apprentice idea was abandoned, Power revisited the tentacle-headed alien as a Jedi, with a less malevolent face, yet still with an imposing presence.[95] Fisto appears in Attack of the Clones during the Battle of Geonosis, and is a member of the Jedi High Council in Revenge of the Sith, being one of the four Jedi who die attempting to arrest Palpatine. |
Clone Trooper Fives | Voice: Dee Bradley Baker (The Clone Wars) | Former Arc Trooper and former clone trooper, he is the only survivor of the Domino Squad. He fights alongside Captain Rex in important and clone-based missions. He is the first and only known clone to have discovered Order 66, but he is then killed by Commander Fox, who was sent by Darth Sidious.[11][96] |
FN-1824 | Daniel Craig (The Force Awakens) | First Order stormtrooper assigned to guard Rey, who falls victim to her Jedi mind trick. He is compelled to release her and drop his weapon in The Force Awakens.[97][98] |
FN-2003 (a.k.a. 'Slip') | Pip Andersen (The Force Awakens) | First Order stormtrooper that served along with FN-2187 (Finn), leaving his bloody hand print on Finn's helmet during the assault on Tuanul village on Jakku in The Force Awakens. FN-2003 also appears in the 2015 novel Before the Awakening, serving under Captain Phasma, and often falling behind the rest of his team, which leads to his nickname 'Slip'.[99] |
FN-2199 (a.k.a. 'Nines') | Liang Yang (The Force Awakens) Voice: David Acord (The Force Awakens) | Riot baton-wielding stormtrooper who attacks Finn during the attack on Maz Kanata's castle.[100] He was dubbed 'TR-8R' by fans.[100] |
Bib Fortuna | Michael Carter (Return of the Jedi)[22] Voice: Erik Bauersfeld (Return of the Jedi)[22] | Male Twi'lek from the planet Ryloth who serves as Jabba the Hutt's majordomo in Return of the Jedi and The Phantom Menace. Fortuna interrogates C3-PO and R2-D2 upon their entrance into Jabba's Palace and later falls under the Jedi mind control of Luke Skywalker.[101] |
Commander Fox | Voice: Dee Bradley Baker (The Clone Wars) | Clone commander who was in charge of the Coruscant Guard in Star Wars: The Clone Wars. Fox is killed by Darth Vader in Darth Vader: Dark Lord of the Sith for ordering his men to fire on Vader after mistaking him for a Jedi. |
FX-7 | Medical droid assistant to 2-1B on Hoth.[3] An FX-7 figure was produced for Kenner's Empire Strikes Back action figure line in 1980.[102] |
G[edit]
Name | Portrayal | Description |
---|---|---|
GA-97 | Voice: David Acord (The Force Awakens) | Servant droid at the castle of Maz Kanata, aligned with the Resistance, that informs them of the missing BB-8's presence at the castle, allowing them to mobilize their forces. |
Adi Gallia | Gin Clarke (The Phantom Menace) Voice: Angelique Perrin (The Clone Wars) | Corellian Jedi Master killed by Savage Opress. Has a blue lightsaber in Star Wars: The Clone Wars, and a red or orange lightsaber in media related to The Phantom Menace. |
Gardulla the Hutt | Voice: Nika Futterman (The Clone Wars) | Hutt crime lord who at one point owns Anakin and Shmi Skywalker before losing a podrace bet to Toydarian junk dealer Watto. |
Yarna d'al' Gargan | Claire Davenport (Return of the Jedi) | Askajian dancer from Jabba the Hutt's palace. |
Garindan (a.k.a. Long Snoot) | Sadie Eden (A New Hope) | Kubaz who leads Imperial stormtroopers to the Millennium Falcon.[103] |
Gasgano | Xexto podracer who participates in the Boonta Eve Classic podrace in The Phantom Menace, coming in second place behind Anakin Skywalker.[104] | |
Saw Gerrera | Forest Whitaker (Rogue One)[19] Voice: Andrew Kishino (The Clone Wars), Forest Whitaker (Rebels) | Veteran of the Clone Wars;[105] in later life he leads a band of rebel extremists against the Galactic Empire. |
Gonk droid (a.k.a. GNK power droid) | Rusty Goffe, Latin Lahr, Jack Purvis, Kenny Baker, Kiran Shah, Raymond Griffiths, Arti Shah, Ivan Manzella Voice: Ben Burtt | Boxy, rectangular-shaped droid that walks very slowly. It is literally a bipedal, walking power generator. After appearing in the Jawa's sandcrawler in the original 1977 Star Wars film,[3] a 'Power Droid' figure was produced for Kenner's Star Wars action figure line in 1978.[106] A Gonk droid is also featured in the 'Blood Sisters' episode of Rebels, and Rogue One.[107] |
Commander Gree | Voice: Temuera Morrison (Revenge of the Sith), Dee Bradley Baker (The Clone Wars) | Clone commander who is killed by Yoda in Revenge of the Sith after Emperor Palpatine orders him to 'Execute Order 66'. He serves under Jedi master Luminara Unduli in the Clone Wars. |
Greedo | Paul Blake and Maria de Aragon (A New Hope)[22] Voice: Larry Ward (A New Hope),[22]Tom Kenny (The Clone Wars)[22] | Rodian bounty hunter who serves Jabba the Hutt. Shot and killed by Han Solo at the Mos Eisley cantina in A New Hope.[108] |
Janus Greejatus | Member of the Imperial Ruling Council and one of Emperor Palpatine's advisors, he is with the Emperor on the second Death Star when it is destroyed over the forest moon of Endor in Return of the Jedi.[15] | |
Captain Gregor | Voice: Dee Bradley Baker (The Clone Wars and Rebels) | Republic Commando thought to have died in the Battle of Sarrish. Stricken with amnesia and living on Abafar, he is later told by Colonel Meebur Gascon that he is a clone trooper. Gregor helps the Colonel and his droids to get off Abafar to save many Republic lives, seemingly perishing once more in the process. However, following the Clone Wars he ends up in the Seelos system with fellow retired clones Rex and Wolffe, and is shown to have developed some eccentric tendencies. He aids a group of rebels against Imperial forces in a skirmish at that planet, and later takes part in a battle to free the planet Lothal from Imperial occupation, though he is fatally wounded by an Imperial technician during the battle. |
General Grievous | Voice: Matthew Wood (Revenge of the Sith and The Clone Wars) | Cyborg supreme commander of the Separatist droid armies, killed by Obi-Wan Kenobi in Revenge of the Sith.[109] A Kaleesh by birth, he hunts Jedi and collects their lightsabers as trophies. Grievous makes many major appearances in The Clone Wars. |
Grummgar | Large Dowutin male, seen with mercenary Bazine Netal in the castle of Maz Kanata on Takodana in The Force Awakens. Grummgar's backstory as a big game hunter and mercenary is explored in the Alan Dean Foster short story 'Bait', from Star Wars Insider.[110] | |
Gungi | Wookiee youngling who was among the youngest to pass the Gathering. Gungi uses a wooden lightsaber with a green crystal. | |
Nute Gunray | Silas Carson (Episodes I–III) Voice: Tom Kenny (The Clone Wars) | NeimoidianViceroy of the Trade Federation. After he is captured by Padmé Amidala and her forces in The Phantom Menace, he becomes her enemy. Gunray appears in Attack of the Clones as a high-ranking member of the Separatist Alliance. In Revenge of the Sith, after the death of Count Dooku, Gunray and the other leaders of the Separatist Council are sent to the volcanic planet Mustafar for safety. Later, Darth Vader, the new apprentice of Darth Sidious, arrives and kills the Separatist leaders there, including Gunray.[111] |
Mars Guo | Bardottan podracer whose large racer is sabotaged and destroyed by Sebulba in the Boonta Eve Classic podrace in The Phantom Menace. |
H[edit]
Name | Portrayal | Description |
---|---|---|
Rune Haako | Jerome Blake (The Phantom Menace), Alan Ruscoe (Attack of the Clones), Sandy Thompson (Revenge of the Sith) Voice: James Taylor (The Phantom Menace), Chris Truswell (Attack of the Clones) | Neimoidian second-in-command to Nute Gunray and Settlement Officer of the Trade Federation. He is killed by Darth Vader in Revenge of the Sith. [112] |
Hardcase | Voice: Dee Bradley Baker (The Clone Wars) | Hardcase is a mentally unstable Clone Trooper. Hardcase participated in the search for General Grievous on Saleucami. Hardcase also participated in the Umbara Campaign, sacrificing his life to destroy a droid supply trip. |
Rako Hardeen | Voice: James Arnold Taylor (The Clone Wars) | Bounty hunter hired to kill Obi-Wan Kenobi during the Clone Wars. He is eventually captured by Kenobi, who then assumes his identity in order to uncover a plot to kidnap Chancellor Palpatine. |
Gideon Hask | Voice: Paul Blackthorne (Star Wars Battlefront II) | Second-in-command of Inferno Squad. Also appears in the book Star Wars Battlefront II: Inferno Squad. |
Hevy | Voice: Dee Bradley Baker (The Clone Wars)[10] | Bold clone who sacrifices himself to save a base on Kamino during the Clone Wars and works with Domino Squad. His nickname is acquired by the fact that he is the one in the squad who carries the heavy guns.[11] |
San Hill | Voice: Chris Truswell (Attack of the Clones) | Muun Chairman of the Intergalactic Banking Clan. He is one of the Separatist leaders killed by Darth Vader on Mustafar in Revenge of the Sith.[113] |
Clegg Holdfast | Nosaurian podracer and journalist who participates in the Boonta Eve Classic podrace in The Phantom Menace.[114] | |
Vice Admiral Amilyn Holdo | Laura Dern (The Last Jedi) | Longtime friend and protégée of Leia Organa, and Vice Admiral of Organa's Resistance against the First Order. In The Last Jedi, Holdo takes command of the Resistance after General Organa is incapacitated, and orders the evacuation to the planet Crait. She then sacrifices herself, jumping to light speed in the Resistance Star Cruiser Raddus straight into the First Order's Mega-class Star Dreadnought Supremacy, destroying the former and severely crippling the latter. Holdo's early friendship with a teenage Leia is explored in the 2017 Claudia Gray novel Leia, Princess of Alderaan.[115] |
Tey How | Voice: Amanda Lucas and Marc Silk (The Phantom Menace) | Female Neimoidian that serves as both pilot and communications officer on the Trade Federation ship, Saak'ak, in The Phantom Menace. She is aboard the ship when the young Anakin Skywalker destroys it. |
Huyang | Voice: David Tennant (The Clone Wars) | Architect droid in the service of the Jedi Order. He was stationed on board the Jedi training cruiser Crucible, where he assisted Jedi initiates in constructing their lightsabers. His voice actor, David Tennant, won an Emmy Award for this role. |
Armitage Hux | Domhnall Gleeson (Episodes VII-IX) | General of the First Order who presides over Starkiller Base under Supreme Leader Snoke in The Force Awakens. In The Last Jedi, Hux commands the fleet chasing down the Resistance, first to the irritation and then to the approval of Snoke. |
Brendol Hux | N/A | Commandant of the Galactic Empire and later General in the First Order who institutes the policy of raising stormtroopers from birth, inspired by the clone troopers of the Old Republic and the Jedi. Father of General Armitage Hux. He appears in the 2017 novel Phasma. |
I[edit]
![Starwars cin drallig deleted scene forums Starwars cin drallig deleted scene forums](/uploads/1/2/3/7/123739511/602600934.jpg)
Name | Portrayal | Description |
---|---|---|
IG-88 | Voice: Matthew Wood (Forces of Destiny), Taika Waititi (The Mandalorian) | Bounty hunter and assassin droid introduced in The Empire Strikes Back, summoned aboard the Executor by Darth Vader in his search for the Millennium Falcon.[3] IG-88 also appears in the Forces of Destiny animated series, attempting to capture Leia Organa and Sabine Wren. In the Legends continuity, there are four IG-88 assassin droids created for Project Phlutdroid by Holowan Laboratories, designated A, B, C and D. IG-88B and C are destroyed by Boba Fett shortly after Vader's bounty on the Millennium Falcon, while D was destroyed by Legends character Dash Rendar on Ord Mantell.[116] The last surviving model, IG-88A, uploads his consciousness into the second Death Star in an attempt to take over all droids in the galaxy, just prior to the Battle of Endor.[117]Ralph McQuarrie's production sketches show a sleeker design than the droid that appears in The Empire Strikes Back and were later used as the model for the IG-RM Thug droids in Star Wars Rebels.[118] The term 'IG-88' is not the original name for the character, as the Empire Strikes Back script calls the character a 'chrome war droid', and during production it was called 'Phlutdroid'. The production puppet consisted of recycled props from A New Hope, including the Mos Eisley cantina drink dispenser as IG-88's head.[52] |
Chirrut Îmwe | Donnie Yen (Rogue One)[19] | Blind warrior who believes in the Force and is said to be one of the Guardians of the Whills. He aids the Rebel Alliance in stealing the plans for the Death Star in Rogue One. |
Inquisitors (Inquisitorius) | Various | Organization of Force-sensitives who serve Emperor Palpatine and Darth Vader by hunting down surviving Jedi and others with Force potential. |
Grand Inquisitor | Voice: Jason Isaacs (Rebels) | A Pau'an Force wielder and former Jedi Temple Guard who becomes the highest-ranking Inquisitor, and who is tasked (along with his subordinates) with hunting down Force-sensitive children and preventing them from becoming Jedi. He is later assigned to hunt down Kanan Jarrus and Ezra Bridger, but is eventually defeated by Kanan in combat and chooses to commit suicide rather than face the infamous wrath of Darth Vader for his failure. |
Inquisitor: Fifth Brother | Voice: Philip Anthony-Rodriguez (Rebels) | The second Inquisitor introduced in Rebels and a member of an unknown humanoid species, he is dispatched to hunt down the crew of the Ghost after the death of the Grand Inquisitor. He works closely with the Seventh Sister. He is disarmed by Ahsoka Tano and then dies on Malachor at the hands of Darth Maul. |
Inquisitor: Sixth Brother | N/A | An Inquisitor of an unknown species who appears only in the novel Ahsoka. He was described as tall with unnatural-looking grey skin, piercing ice-blue eyes, broad shoulders, and distinctive scar/tattoo-like markings. He attempts to hunt down and kill Ahsoka Tano, but is defeated when she causes his lightsaber to overload and explode, killing him. |
Inquisitor: Seventh Sister | Voice: Sarah Michelle Gellar (Rebels) | The first introduced female Inquisitor and a Mirialan. She employs mini probe droids in battle and works alongside the Fifth Brother. She is ultimately killed by Darth Maul on Malachor. |
Inquisitor: Eighth Brother | Voice: Robert Daymond Howard (Rebels) | A masked Terellian Jango Jumper Inquisitor who is dispatched to hunt down Maul, eventually tracking him to Malachor. After battling Maul, Kanan Jarrus, Ezra Bridger, and Ahsoka Tano, he falls to his death after attempting to fly with a damaged Inquisitorial lightsaber. |
Sidon Ithano | Cavin Cornwall (The Force Awakens) | Delphidian pirate, with a distinctive red Kaleesh mask. In The Force Awakens, he is seen in Maz Kanata's castle when Finn tries to buy passage to the Outer Rim from Ithano and his cohort Quiggold. Ithano's backstory is expanded upon in the short story 'The Crimson Corsair and the Lost Treasure of Count Dooku'.[40] |
J[edit]
Name | Portrayal | Description |
---|---|---|
Jabba the Hutt | Mike Edmonds, Dave Barclay, Toby Philpott, and John Coppinger (puppeteers) (Return of the Jedi), Voice: Larry Ward (Return of the Jedi), Scott Schumann (The Phantom Menace), Kevin Michael Richardson (The Clone Wars) | Crime boss employing bounty hunters in the A New Hope Special Edition, Return of the Jedi, The Phantom Menace, and The Clone Wars, killed by Princess Leia aboard his sail barge in Return of the Jedi.[119] His full name is Jabba Desilijic Tiure.[120] |
Queen Jamillia | Ayesha Dharker (Attack of the Clones) | Queen of Naboo succeeding Padmé Amidala.[121] |
Wes Janson | Ian Liston (The Empire Strikes Back) | Fighter pilot and founding member of the elite Rogue Squadron, who is featured during one scene in The Empire Strikes Back as the gunner for Wedge Antilles' T-47 airspeeder. |
Kanan Jarrus | Voice: Freddie Prinze Jr. (Rebels) | De facto leader of the Ghost crew, Jedi and master of Ezra Bridger and apprentice to Depa Billaba. He carries a DL-18 blaster and a blue lightsaber that can be detached. He is uncertain of himself in training his padawan Ezra Bridger, as even he still has things to learn. His real name is Caleb Dume. |
Jaxxon | N/A | A green, rabbit-like Lepi smuggler who appeared on a 2015 variant cover for the current Star Wars comic series,[122] and who is also scheduled to appear in the Star Wars Adventures comic series.[123] Jaxxon was previously featured in the 'Star-Hoppers of Aduba 3' storylines in the 1970s Star Wars comics series by Marvel Comics,[124] and is often cited as a controversial and cartoon-like addition to the Star Wars expanded universe.[125] |
Greeata Jendowanian | Celia Fushille (Return of the Jedi) | Rodian backup singer and dancer for the Max Rebo Band in the Special Edition of Return of the Jedi. |
Moff Tiaan Jerjerrod | Michael Pennington (Return of the Jedi) | The commanding officer of the second Death Star and the most prominent Imperial Officer featured in Return of the Jedi, Jerjerrod is tasked by Darth Vader to hurry the completion of the second Death Star and warned that the Emperor is not as forgiving as Vader.[126] |
Commander Jet | Voice: Dee Bradley Baker (The Clone Wars) | Clone Commander of Ki-Adi-Mundi in The Clone Wars. |
Dexter Jettster | Voice: Ronald Falk (Attack of the Clones) | Multi-armed Besalisk owner of Dex's Diner and old friend of Obi-Wan Kenobi, showed wisdom of the planet Kamino and of a poison dart originating from there to Kenobi in Attack of the Clones.[127] Often cited as one of the more unpopular characters from the prequel trilogy, due to the seemingly out-of-universe 50's diner setting that he appears in.[128] |
Qui-Gon Jinn | Liam Neeson (The Phantom Menace) Voice: Liam Neeson (Attack of the Clones and The Clone Wars) | Jedi Master trained by Count Dooku who himself trains Obi-Wan Kenobi. He finds Anakin Skywalker on Tatooine and vows to train him, but is killed by Darth Maul.[129] |
Jira | Margaret Towner (The Phantom Menace) | Elderly human female and friend of Anakin Skywalker in his youth on Tatooine. An additional scene of Jira saying goodbye to Anakin was filmed, but ultimately cut from The Phantom Menace.[130] |
Jubnuk | Simon Williamson (Return of the Jedi) | One of Jabba the Hutt's Gamorrean guards who is eaten alive by the Rancor. |
K[edit]
Name | Portrayal | Description |
---|---|---|
K-2SO | Alan Tudyk (Rogue One)[19] | Imperial security droid stolen and reprogrammed by the Alliance in Rogue One. His appearance makes him useful when infiltrating Imperial installations and outposts, but as a result of his reprogramming, he has a tendency to speak his thoughts bluntly and tactlessly.[3] He is destroyed by stormtroopers protecting Jyn Erso and Cassian Andor during the Rebel Alliance's raid on the Imperial data storage facility at Scarif. |
Tee Watt Kaa | Voice: George Coe (The Clone Wars) | Lurmen elder who leads his people away from their war-torn homeworld, eventually landing on Maridun during the Clone Wars. He is extremely devoted to the traditions of his people and a strict pacifist. Kaa cares greatly for such ideals, and firmly believes the Republic is no better than the Separatists because the two are equally responsible for the war. |
General Kalani | Voice: Gregg Berger (The Clone Wars and Rebels) | A Separatist tactical droid who served in the Clone Wars. He led his forces to take over and occupy the planet Onderon. His forces clashed with a band of rebels trained by some Jedi and led by Saw Gerrera to free the planet from Separatist control. Unable to thwart the uprising, Kalani and the remnants of his forces evacuated to the planet of Agamar. He and his troops managed to survive and hide there, resisting a shutdown order issued to the entire droid army after the Clone Wars ended. Kalani later encountered a few Republic veterans and some members of the Rebel Alliance who visited the planet for battle supplies, and after a fight with them, ultimately chose to help them fend off the oppressive Galactic Empire. However, he declined to join the rebellion because he believes the odds of their cause seemed too great. |
Agent Kallus | Voice: David Oyelowo (Rebels) | Imperial who is a member of the Imperial Security Bureau in Rebels. He initially led efforts to suppress an uprising on the planet Lothal and combat the newly formed Rebel Alliance, but after a chance encounter with Zeb Orrelios, a Lasat who became his nemesis after Kallus used weapons to wipe out much of his kind, leaves both of them stranded on a remote planet, he reconsiders his loyalty to the Empire. Kallus eventually defects to the Rebellion, becoming one of their Fulcrum agents by the time Thrawn was promoted to Grand Admiral. Kallus served the Rebellion and befriended Zeb as he assisted the rebels on Lothal in defeating Thrawn. |
Harter Kalonia | Harriet Walter (The Force Awakens) | Doctor for the New Republic and later the Resistance, Harter can be seen tending to the wounds of Chewbacca after the Battle of Takodana in The Force Awakens. |
Maz Kanata | Lupita Nyong'o (Episodes VII-IX) Voice: Lupita Nyong'o (Forces of Destiny) | Ancient female space pirate introduced in The Force Awakens. The character was created using motion capture and computer-generated imagery. |
Colonel Kaplan | Pip Torrens (The Force Awakens) | Kaplan serves with the First Order on the Resurgent-class Star Destroyer Finalizer, and is alerted to the attempted escape of prisoner Poe Dameron in The Force Awakens. |
Karbin | N/A | Cybernetically enhanced Mon Calamari, given similar abilities to General Grievous, working under Dr. Cylo as a possible replacement for Darth Vader; first appearing in the Star Wars: Darth Vader Marvel comic book series.[65] |
Karina the Great | Voice: Dee Bradley Baker (The Clone Wars) | Queen of Geonosis during the Clone Wars. |
Alton Kastle | Voice: Steve Blum (Rebels) | A journalist and broadcaster on HoloNet News. |
King Katuunko | Voice: Brian George (The Clone Wars) | Toydarian monarch who aids the Republic during the Clone Wars, he is killed by Savage Opress after the Battle of Sullust. |
Coleman Kcaj | Ongree Jedi Master on the Jedi High Council in Revenge of the Sith. | |
Obi-Wan Kenobi | Alec Guinness (Episodes IV–VI),[22]Ewan McGregor (Episodes I–III)[22] Voice: James Arnold Taylor (The Clone Wars and Rebels young),[22]Stephen Stanton (Rebels old) | Wise and skilled Jedi Master who trains Anakin and later Luke Skywalker. A member of the Jedi Council and one of the survivors of the Great Jedi Purge, Obi-Wan is also a Jedi General during the Clone Wars. He kills General Grievous and defeated Darth Maul, and his master is Qui-Gon Jinn, who is killed by Maul. Obi-Wan is slain In A New Hope by his former apprentice Anakin, who had become Darth Vader.[131] Guinness' and McGregor's voices as Obi-Wan can be heard in The Force Awakens during a vision sequence featuring the character Rey.[132] |
Ki-Adi-Mundi | Silas Carson (Episodes I–III) Voice: Brian George (The Clone Wars) | Cerean Jedi Master and Jedi Council member in the prequel trilogy.[133] He is one of the leaders of the Jedi strike force sent to rescue Obi-Wan Kenobi, Anakin Skywalker, and Padmé Amidala on Geonosis. He is killed on Mygeeto during Order 66 by Commander Bacara and his clone troopers. |
Klaatu | John Simpkin (Return of the Jedi) | Green Nikto employed as one of Jabba the Hutt's skiff guards in Return of the Jedi.[134] Two action figures of Klaatu were released in Kenner's original Star Wars action figure line; one regular version and another in 'Skiff Guard' attire.[135] |
Klik-Klak | Voice: Matthew Wood (Rebels) | The lone surviving male Geonosian of an Imperial genocide of the Geonosians following the completion of the first Death Star, Klik-Klak sets up a defense using old Separatist battle droids and droidekas to defend both himself, and the lone surviving Geonosian queen egg he defended, to ensure his species' survival - his encounter with the Ghost crew and Saw Gerrera (who was already on the planet) within Geonosis' underground tunnels, nearly ends in tragedy but Ezra Bridger manages to befriend Klik-Klak, with the Spectres discovering evidence of the Empire's genocide of the Geonosians, despite the Spectres narrowly escaping capture by the Empire.[136] |
Derek 'Hobbie' Klivian | Richard Oldfield (The Empire Strikes Back) Voice: Trevor Devall (Rebels) | Rogue Squadron pilot in The Empire Strikes Back.[137] |
Agen Kolar | Tux Akindoyeni (Attack of the Clones and Revenge of the Sith) | Zabrak Jedi Master who wields a green lightsaber in Attack of the Clones and a blue one in Revenge of the Sith, where he is on the Jedi High Council until killed by Darth Sidious. Also appears in The Clone Wars. |
Plo Koon | Alan Ruscoe (The Phantom Menace), Matt Sloan (Attack of the Clones and Revenge of the Sith) Voice: James Arnold Taylor (The Clone Wars) | Kel Dor Jedi Master and Jedi Council member in the prequel trilogy. He discovers Togruta padawan Ahsoka Tano and participates in many battles during the Clone Wars. In Revenge of the Sith, his ship is shot down at Cato Neimoidia by his own military escort (a squadron of ARC-170 starfighters led by Captain Jag) immediately after they receive Order 66. |
Eeth Koth | Hassani Shapi (The Phantom Menace) Voice: Chris Edgerly (The Clone Wars) | Zabrak Jedi Council member in The Phantom Menace and Attack of the Clones. Koth also makes several appearances in The Clone Wars series. |
Sergeant Kreel | N/A | Imperial Stormtrooper in the 501st Legion; operated undercover as the 'Gamemaster' on the planet Nar Shaddaa, and then as commander of the SCAR trooper squadron. First appearing in the Star Wars Marvel comic book series.[138] |
Pong Krell | Voice: Dave Fennoy (The Clone Wars) | Besalisk Jedi who serves as a temporary commander of the 501st Legion at the Battle of Umbara during the Clone Wars. He hates clones and has secret aspirations to be Count Dooku's new apprentice, but is killed by Trooper Dogma after his treachery becomes known. |
Orson Krennic | Ben Mendelsohn (Rogue One)[19] | Director of Advanced Weapons Research for the Imperial military in Rogue One. In the novel Catalyst, it is revealed he was a longtime colleague of Galen Erso. |
Black Krrsantan | N/A | A Wookiee bounty hunter first featured in the Marvel comic series Star Wars: Darth Vader and currently featured in the ongoing Doctor Aphra series.[139] |
Bo-Katan Kryze | Voice: Katee Sackhoff (The Clone Wars and Rebels) | Female Mandalorian and member of the Death Watch, second-in-command to Pre Vizsla and sister to the Death Watch's political enemy, Duchess Satine. She opposes Vizsla's alliance with Darth Maul and Savage Opress, and later leads members of the Death Watch loyal to her against those who remain loyal to Maul and his criminal allies. |
Satine Kryze | Voice: Anna Graves (The Clone Wars) | Duchess of Mandalore who wants to keep the planet out of the Clone Wars. She forms and leads the Council of Neutral Systems, much to the disgust of the Mandalorian Death Watch under Pre Vizsla. The Death Watch makes multiple attempts to eliminate Satine and reclaim Mandalore, only to be thwarted by the Jedi, particularly Satine's old friend Obi-Wan Kenobi. Kenobi had previously protected Satine in her youth, and the two had become quite close, with Obi-Wan claiming that he would have left the Jedi Order had Satine asked. Satine later watched her world fall to the Shadow Collective, which includes the Death Watch, under Darth Maul, who later murders her in front of a captured Obi-Wan. |
Conder Kyl | N/A | Chandrilan splicer and love interest of Sinjir Rath Velus in Aftermath: Life Debt and Aftermath: Empire's End. |
Thane Kyrell | N/A | Human male graduate from the Royal Imperial Academy on Coruscant, who later joins the Rebel Alliance in the novel Star Wars: Lost Stars.[140] |
![Figure Figure](/uploads/1/2/3/7/123739511/322944218.jpg)
L[edit]
Name | Portrayal | Description |
---|---|---|
L3-37 | Phoebe Waller-Bridge (Solo: A Star Wars Story) | Trusted right-hand female pilot droid of Lando Calrissian, and the original co-pilot of the Millennium Falcon, L3-37 is a no-nonsense robot revolutionary who frees the droids in the spice mines of Kessel. On one occasion, when Lando asks if she needs anything from outside the cockpit, she quips 'equal rights'.[141] |
L'ulo L'ampar | N/A | Duros pilot for the Rebel Alliance, featured in the Marvel Comics series Shattered Empire and Poe Dameron.[142] |
Beru Whitesun Lars | Shelagh Fraser (A New Hope),[22]Bonnie Piesse (Attack of the Clones and Revenge of the Sith)[22] | Aunt and surrogate parent to Luke Skywalker in A New Hope, she and her husband Owen are killed by stormtroopers at their home on Tatooine. In the prequel films, Beru is Owen's girlfriend in Attack of the Clones then wife in Revenge of the Sith, and the two take custody of the infant Luke at the end of the latter film.[143] |
Cliegg Lars | Jack Thompson (Attack of the Clones) | Moisture farmer who purchases, then frees and marries Shmi Skywalker, becoming the stepfather of Anakin Skywalker, whom he meets only briefly in Attack of the Clones.[144] He loses his leg when pursuing the Sand People who had kidnapped Shmi.[144] The name Cliegg, and variations of it, have been in Star Wars drafts since 1974.[144] |
Owen Lars | Phil Brown (A New Hope),[22]Joel Edgerton (Attack of the Clones and Revenge of the Sith)[22] | Uncle and surrogate parent of Luke Skywalker in A New Hope, Owen and his wife, Beru, are killed by stormtroopers at their home on Tatooine. In the prequel films, Owen is the son of Cliegg Lars and stepbrother of Anakin Skywalker. He and his wife Beru take custody of Luke at the end of Revenge of the Sith.[145] |
Cut Lawquane | Voice: Dee Bradley Baker (The Clone Wars)[10] | Disillusioned clone trooper who deserts the service to live a quiet life as a farmer. He has a wife Suu and children, Jek and Shaeeah, but cannot quite escape the Clone Wars.[11][146] |
Tasu Leech | Yayan Ruhian (The Force Awakens) | The leader of the Kanjiklub. In The Force Awakens, Leech confronts Han Solo aboard his freighter the Eravana, in conjunction with Bala-Tik from the Guavian Death Gang, after both gangs are swindled by Solo. |
Xamuel Lennox | John Dicks (The Empire Strikes Back) | Imperial navy captain who serves in Darth Vader's Death Squadron as captain of the Star Destroyer Tyrant. |
Tallissan 'Tallie' Lintra | Hermione Corfield (The Last Jedi) | Resistance A-wing pilot and leader of Blue Squadron during the Evacuation of D'Qar in The Last Jedi. |
Slowen Lo | Joseph Gordon-Levitt (The Last Jedi) | Male Abednedo residing in Canto Bight in The Last Jedi. Lo warns Rose Tico and Finn that they had illegally parked their ship on Canto Bight beach, and informs the Canto Bight Police of their indiscretion. |
Lobot | John Hollis (The Empire Strikes Back) | Lando Calrissian's cyborg aide in The Empire Strikes Back. He has a cybernetic implant that allows him to interface directly with Cloud City's central computer.[147] |
Logray | Mike Edmonds (Return of the Jedi) | Ewok medicine man in Return of the Jedi.[61] |
Lumat | Ewok in Return of the Jedi, released as an action figure in the original Kenner Star Wars line. Lumat also appears in several, now non-canon, Ewoks cartoon episodes and related media.[148] |
M[edit]
Name | Portrayal | Description |
---|---|---|
General Crix Madine | Dermot Crowley (Return of the Jedi) | Mastermind of the Rebel plan to destroy the shield generator for the second Death Star.[149] |
Shu Mai | Voice: Chris Truswell (Attack of the Clones) | President of the Commerce Guild and member of the Separatist Council. She is killed by Darth Vader on Mustafar along with the rest of the Separatist Council in Revenge of the Sith. |
Malakili ('Rancor Keeper') | Paul Brooke (Return of the Jedi) | Rancor keeper at Jabba the Hutt's palace on Tattooine in Return of the Jedi. He also appears in the novels Aftermath: Life Debt and Aftermath: Empire's End. Malakili was originally dubbed 'Rancor Keeper' in Kenner's Star Wars action figure line in 1984.[150] |
Baze Malbus | Jiang Wen (Rogue One)[151] | A mercenary and friend of Chirrut Îmwe who aids the Rebel Alliance in stealing the plans for the Death Star in Rogue One. |
Mama the Hutt | Voice: Angelique Perrin (The Clone Wars) | Mother of Ziro, Zorba, Ebor, Pazda, and Jiliac, the grandmother of Jabba the Hutt, and great-grandmother of Rotta the Huttlet. She is confronted by Obi-Wan Kenobi when her starship is taken by Ziro and his girlfriend Sy Snootles. |
Ody Mandrell | Voice: Matthew Wood (The Phantom Menace) | Er'Kit podracer who participates in the Boonta Eve Classic podrace in The Phantom Menace. |
Darth Maul | Ray Park (The Phantom Menace and Solo: A Star Wars Story) Voice: Peter Serafinowicz (The Phantom Menace), Sam Witwer (The Clone Wars, Rebels and Solo: A Star Wars Story) | Mother Talzin's son and the apprentice of Darth Sidious in The Phantom Menace who kills Qui-Gon Jinn but is defeated by Obi-Wan Kenobi. He later returns during the Clone Wars with his brother, Savage Opress, to get revenge on Obi-Wan. After losing to a duel with his former master, Darth Sidious (and seeing his brother get killed), Maul is captured, and although he escapes, he soon witnesses the collapse of his group, the Shadow Collective, and the death of his mother. Forced to flee, he is left in exile on the planet Malachor for many years, until he meets the young Jedi, Ezra Bridger, whom he attempts to drift to the dark side. Although he fails, Maul is able to escape aboard a TIE fighter;[152] he later returns in the third season looking to locate the long absent Obi-Wan Kenobi. He is finally killed by his old enemy on Tatooine in the episode 'Twin Suns'. |
Saelt-Marae ('Yak Face') | Sean Crawford (Return of the Jedi) | A Yarkora seen in the background at Jabba's the Hutt's palace in the film Return of the Jedi.[153] Known as 'Yak Face' this character was the final action figure created for Kenner's original Star Wars action figure line, and was never released in the United States.[154] |
Mawhonic | Gran podracer at the Boonta Eve Classic in The Phantom Menace. | |
Droopy McCool | Deep Roy (Return of the Jedi) | Flute playing Kitonak member of the Max Rebo Band, seen in Jabba's Palace in Return of the Jedi.[155] |
Pharl McQuarrie | Ralph McQuarrie (The Empire Strikes Back) | Alliance general that appears in The Empire Strikes Back. |
ME-8D9 | An 'ancient protocol droid of unknown manufacture' that resides and works as a translator at Maz Kanata's castle on Takodana in The Force Awakens (2015).[156] | |
Lyn Me | Dalyn Chew (Return of the Jedi) | Twi'lek backup singer and dancer for the Max Rebo Band in the Special Edition of Return of the Jedi. |
Tion Medon | Bruce Spence (Revenge of the Sith) | Local administrator on Utapau in Revenge of the Sith.[157] |
Del Meeko | Voice: TJ Ramini (Star Wars Battlefront II) | A member of Inferno Squad. Also appears in the book Star Wars Battlefront II: Inferno Squad. |
Aks Moe | Mark Coulier (The Phantom Menace) Voice: Marc Silk (The Phantom Menace) | Gran serving in the Galactic Senate in The Phantom Menace. Aks Moe supports an investigation into the Trade Federation's invasion of Naboo, as claimed by Queen Amidala. |
Sly Moore | Sandi Findlay (Attack of the Clones and Revenge of the Sith) | One of Palpatine's personal aides.[158] |
Morley | Voice: Ben Diskin (The Clone Wars) | Snake-like Anacondan that helps Darth Maul survive on the junk world of Lotho Minor. He leads Savage Opress to his long lost brother. |
Moff Delian Mors | N/A | Imperial officer introduced in Star Wars: Lords of the Sith.[159] She is a lesbian whom New York Daily News noted is the first openly gay character in the new Star Wars canon.[159][160][161] |
Mon Mothma | Caroline Blakiston (Return of the Jedi),[22]Genevieve O'Reilly (Revenge of the Sith and Rogue One)[151] Voice: Kath Soucie (The Clone Wars),[22] Genevieve O'Reilly (Rebels)[162] | Republic senator; later, co-founder and leader of the Rebel Alliance.[163] Later serves as Chancellor of the New Republic and is a major influence in relocating the galactic capital from Coruscant to Hosnian Prime following the defeat of the Empire.[164] |
Admiral Conan Antonio Motti | Richard LeParmentier (A New Hope)[165] | Officer aboard the Death Star so overconfident in its power that he scoffs at Darth Vader's faith in the Force, and is then almost choked to death by Vader.[166] |
N[edit]
Name | Portrayal | Description |
---|---|---|
Jobal Naberrie | Trisha Noble (Attack of the Clones and Revenge of the Sith) | Padmé Amidala's mother. |
Pooja Naberrie | Hayley Mooy (Attack of the Clones and Revenge of the Sith) | Daughter of Sola Naberrie and niece of Padmé Amidala. She replaces Jar Jar Binks as Senator of the Chommell Sector. |
Ruwee Naberrie | Graeme Blundell (Attack of the Clones and Revenge of the Sith) | Padmé Amidala's father. |
Ryoo Naberrie | Keira Wingate (Attack of the Clones and Revenge of the Sith) | Padmé Amidala's niece, the daughter of Sola Naberrie and Pooja's older sister. |
Sola Naberrie | Claudia Karvan (Attack of the Clones and Revenge of the Sith) | Padmé Amidala's older sister, the mother of Ryoo and Pooja Naberrie. |
Momaw Nadon ('Hammerhead') | Jon Berg and Phil Tippett(puppeteers) (A New Hope) | Ithorian seen in the Mos Eisley cantina in A New Hope.[167] Named 'Hammerhead' during the Kenner action figure runs of the 1970s and 1980s.[168] |
Boss Rugor Nass | Voice: Brian Blessed (The Phantom Menace) | Gungan leader in The Phantom Menace who attends Padmé Amidala's funeral in Revenge of the Sith.[169] |
Captain Lorth Needa | Michael Culver (The Empire Strikes Back) | Captain of the Imperial II-class Star DestroyerAvenger, killed by Darth Vader for failing to capture the Millennium Falcon in The Empire Strikes Back.[170] |
Queen Neeyutnee | Voice: Jameelah McMillan (The Clone Wars) | Ruler of Naboo during the Clone Wars, succeeding Queen Jamillia. |
Enfys Nest | Erin Kellyman (Solo: A Star Wars Story) | The leader of a gang of pirates called Cloud Riders, who are revealed to be supporters of the nascent Rebel Alliance. |
Bazine Netal | Anna Brewster (The Force Awakens)[171] | Bounty hunter and First Order spy who reports the arrival of Han Solo at Maz Kanata's castle in The Force Awakens.[172] The character is also the focus of the 2015 short story 'Star Wars: The Perfect Weapon' by Delilah S. Dawson.[173] |
Niima the Hutt | N/A | First appearing in Star Wars: Aftermath: Empire's End (2017), Niima is a Hutt crime lord based on the desert planet Jakku who controls her people by controlling their resources.[174] The Star Wars: The Force Awakens: The Visual Dictionary (2015) and Star Wars: Rey's Survival Guide (2016) note that the Niima Outpost on Jakku is named after her. |
Jocasta Nu | Alethea McGrath (Attack of the Clones) Voice: Flo DiRe (The Clone Wars) | Jedi librarian killed by Darth Vader during Order 66. |
Po Nudo | Paul James Nicholson (Revenge of the Sith) | Aqualish Senator who became a member of the Separatist Council, representing the Hyper-Communications Cartel. He is killed along with the rest of the Separatist Council by Darth Vader on Mustafar in Revenge of the Sith. |
Nien Nunb | Richard Bonehill and Mike Quinn(puppeteer) (Episodes VI-VIII) Voice: Kipsang Rotich (Return of the Jedi and The Force Awakens) | Sullustan smuggler and Lando Calrissian's co-pilot on the Millennium Falcon during the Battle of Endor against the second Death Star in Return of the Jedi.[175] He returns in The Force Awakens as a member of Poe Dameron's X-wing Squadron. Nunb also appears with the Resistance in The Last Jedi, surviving the siege of D'Qar and escaping on the Millennium Falcon after the Battle of Crait. |
O[edit]
Name | Portrayal | Description |
---|---|---|
Has Obbit | N/A | Dressellian smuggler in various associations with Galen and Lyra Erso, Orson Krennic and Moff Tarkin in Catalyst: A Rogue One Novel. Jyn Erso later names her toy doll 'Lucky Hazz Obloobitt' after Has.[176][177] |
Barriss Offee | Nalini Krishan (Attack of the Clones) Voice: Meredith Salenger (The Clone Wars) | Jedi apprentice of Luminara Unduli and a close friend of Ahsoka Tano. She later betrays Ahsoka and orchestrates a terrorist bombing after she becomes disillusioned with the Jedi Order's wartime policies. Offee is eventually caught and imprisoned.[178] |
Hondo Ohnaka | Voice: Jim Cummings (The Clone Wars, Rebels and Forces of Destiny) | Weequay leader of the space pirates known as the Ohnaka Gang which kidnaps, and attempts to ransom, Obi-Wan Kenobi, Anakin Skywalker, Count Dooku—and later Ahsoka Tano—to the highest bidder during the Clone Wars. He follows a code of honor and respects the Jedi, but is not above using sneaky tactics and treachery if it is for 'good business'. Years after the Clone Wars, despite losing his crew to the Galactic Empire, Hondo continues his criminal activities while having dealings with the Rebellion crew of the Ghost.[179] |
Ric Olié | Ralph Brown (The Phantom Menace) | Pilots the queen's ship while escaping Naboo and an N-1 starfighter as leader of Bravo Squadron in The Phantom Menace.[180] |
Omi | N/A | The Dianoga in one of the Death Star's garbage mashers in A New Hope; also referred to as the 'trash monster' by fans.[181][182] The short story 'The Baptist' in the anthology From a Certain Point of View reveals that Dianogas are sentient cephalopods, with Omi in particular being Force sensitive.[183] |
Ketsu Onyo | Voice: Gina Torres (Rebels and Forces of Destiny) | Mandalorian bounty hunter and former estranged friend of Sabine Wren. After she and Sabine reconcile, Ketsu aids the Rebel Alliance. |
Oola | Femi Taylor (Return of the Jedi) | Young Twi'lek dancer enslaved by Jabba the Hutt and chained to his throne; she is killed by Jabba's rancor.[184] The character's appearance features a very brief, and probably accidental, instance of nudity.[185] New scenes featuring the character were filmed for the Special Edition of Return of the Jedi.[186][187] |
OOM-9 | Command battle droid that led the Trade Federation's droid army during the invasion of Naboo in The Phantom Menace. | |
Savage Opress | Voice: Clancy Brown (The Clone Wars) | Zabrak warrior of the Nightbrother clan on the planet Dathomir. He is hand picked by Asajj Ventress as part of her scheme to kill Count Dooku for the attempt on her life and is altered by the Nightsisters, becoming more of a berserker on Ventress' call to the point of killing Feral without remorse, Opress manages to become Dooku's new apprentice and learns only a bit in the ways of the Sith before Ventress has him help her fight Dooku, due to his actions under him getting unwanted attention from the Jedi. However, in the heat of the moment and provoked by both of them, Opress tries to kill both Dooku and Ventress before escaping the Jedi and instructed by Mother Talzin to find Maul so he can complete his training to defend himself against the numerous enemies he has made. Finding Maul a shell of his former self on a junk planet, Opress manages to stir up his fellow nightbrother's grudge with Obi-Wan to aid him in his revenge against the Jedi. Later killed by Darth Sidious on Mandalore. |
Bail Prestor Organa | Jimmy Smits (Attack of the Clones, Revenge of the Sith and Rogue One)[151] Voice: Phil LaMarr (The Clone Wars and Rebels) | Leia Organa's father, the Senator of Alderaan and one of the Rebel Alliance's founding members. He adopts Leia after her birth mother, Padmé, dies and her birth father, Anakin Skywalker, turns to the dark side. Bail is killed in the destruction of Alderaan by the Death Star.[188]Adrian Dunbar portrayed Organa in scenes cut from The Phantom Menace.[188] |
Queen Breha Organa | Rebecca Jackson Mendoza (Revenge of the Sith) | Ruler of Alderaan, wife of Bail Organa, and mother of Leia Organa. She is killed in the destruction of Alderaan. Breha is also featured in the short story 'Eclipse' and in the 2017 novel Leia, Princess of Alderaan.[189][190] |
Leia Organa | Carrie Fisher (Episodes IV–IX), Aidan Barton (Revenge of the Sith), Ingvild Deila (Rogue One) Voice: Julie Dolan (Rebels), Shelby Young (Forces of Destiny) | Leader in the Rebel Alliance, the New Republic, and the Resistance. She is the biological daughter of Anakin Skywalker and Padmé Amidala, as well as Luke Skywalker's twin sister, Han Solo's wife and Kylo Ren's mother.[191] |
Garazeb 'Zeb' Orrelios | Voice: Steve Blum (Rebels) | Former Captain of the Lasat high honor guard who rose up against the Empire which led to the near-extinction of his people. He is the muscle of the Ghost crew on Star Wars Rebels as well as a member of the Rebel Alliance along with the rest of the Ghost crew. |
Orrimaarko ('Prune Face') | Colin Hunt | Dressellian member of the Rebel Alliance. He appears in Return of the Jedi attending the meeting on board the Home One star cruiser, just prior to the Battle of Endor. He is also seen boarding the stolen Imperial shuttle Tydirium en route to the Moon of Endor, where he later participates in the Ewok village celebration after the destruction of the second Death Star. Orrimaarko was originally dubbed 'Prune Face' in Kenner's Star Wars action figure line in 1984.[192] 'Prune Face' was also featured in a stop-motion sketch comedy segment on the Robot Chicken: Star Wars Episode III special in 2010. |
Admiral Kendal Ozzel | Michael Sheard (The Empire Strikes Back) | Initial commander of Darth Vader's Super Star Destroyer Executor in The Empire Strikes Back.[193] Vader kills Ozzel for his incompetence. George Lucas remarked that Sheard produced 'the best screen death' he had ever seen.[194] |
Odd Ball | Temuera Morrison (Revenge of the Sith) Voice: Dee Bradley Baker (The Clone Wars) | CC-2237, known as Odd Ball is a clone trooper commander and pilot during the Clone Wars who participates in campaigns such as the Battle of Teth, the Battle of Umbara, the Battle of Coruscant, and the Battle of Utapau. A skilled pilot, Odd Ball flies an assortment of starfighters, including the V-19 Torrent and the ARC-170. During the Clone Wars, Odd Ball sometimes serves under the command of Jedi General Obi-Wan Kenobi. |
P[edit]
Name | Portrayal | Description |
---|---|---|
Pablo-Jill | Unknown (Attack of the Clones) | Ongree Jedi Knight from Attack of the Clones, present at the Battle of Geonosis, where he wields a blue lightsaber.[195] |
Teemto Pagalies | Veknoid podracer competing in the Boonta Eve Classic podrace in The Phantom Menace, whose podracer is shot down by Tusken Raiders.[196] | |
Jessika 'Jess' Testor Pava | Jessica Henwick (The Force Awakens) | A Resistance X-wing pilot introduced in The Force Awakens. She is shown to idolize Luke Skywalker in the spin-off novel The Weapon of a Jedi: A Luke Skywalker Adventure.[197][198] The character also appears in the comic series Star Wars: Poe Dameron.[142] |
Sheev Palpatine Darth Sidious | Ian McDiarmid (Episodes I–III, V–VI, IX)[22] Voice: Clive Revill (Before The Empire Strikes Back was remastered in 2004),[22]Ian Abercrombie and Tim Curry (The Clone Wars),[22]Sam Witwer (Rebels season 2), Ian McDiarmid (Rebels season 4) | Naboo senator and later Supreme Chancellor of the Republic, later revealed to be Darth Sidious, a Dark Lord of the Sith. He was trained by Darth Plagueis, and the full story of the two can be explained in the 2012 novel of the same name. His machinations turn the Galactic Republic into the Galactic Empire, with himself as its emperor. He lures Anakin Skywalker to the dark side of the Force and renames him Darth Vader. He is eventually killed by a redeemed Anakin.[199] Despite his death, Palpatine returns in some form during the events of The Rise of Skywalker, set during the conflict between the Resistance and the First Order.[200][201][202] |
Captain Quarsh Panaka | Hugh Quarshie (The Phantom Menace) | Captain of the Queen Amidala's guard in The Phantom Menace.[203] In Leia, Princess of Alderaan, he meets a young Leia Organa, but is subsequently assassinated by Saw Gerrera and his Partisans. |
Casca Panzoro | N/A | Senior member of Bravo Rising group fighting the First Order on Atterra Bravo. Grandmother of Reeve Panzoro, she befriends Leia Organa in an attempt to foster Resistance support to her cause in the 2017 novel Star Wars: The Last Jedi: Cobalt Squadron.[204] |
Reeve Panzoro | N/A | Youthful member of Bravo Rising Resistance group holding out on the planet Atterra Bravo against the First Order. Reeve assists Paige and Rose Tico on their first mission to the Atterra system in the 2017 novel Star Wars The Last Jedi: Cobalt Squadron.[204] |
Baron Papanoida | George Lucas (Revenge of the Sith) Voice: Corey Burton (The Clone Wars) | Pantoran Senator and Chairman of the Pantoran Assembly. |
Che Amanwe Papanoida | Meredith Salenger (The Clone Wars) | One of Baron Papaoida's two daughters who serves as a representative for her home world of Pantora. She and her sister, Chi, are kidnapped by the Trade Federation following a trade blockade of Pantora. |
Chi Eekway Papanoida | Katie Lucas (Revenge of the Sith) Voice: Nika Futterman (The Clone Wars) | Daughter of Baron Papanoida who represents the planet Wroona in the Galactic Senate. She appears in scenes deleted from Revenge of the Sith as one of the senators of the Delegation of 2000. |
Paploo | Kenny Baker (Return of the Jedi) | One of the more visible Ewoks in Return of the Jedi, who steals a speeder bike from the Imperial scout troopers to distract them from the Rebel mission on Endor.[61] |
Captain Phasma | Gwendoline Christie (The Force Awakens and The Last Jedi) Voice: Gwendoline Christie (Resistance) | Officer who commands the First Order's legions of stormtroopers in The Force Awakens. |
Even Piell | Michaela Cottrel (The Phantom Menace) Voice: Bair Bless (The Clone Wars) | Lannik Jedi Master and Jedi Council member in The Phantom Menace, Attack of the Clones, and The Clone Wars.[205] |
Admiral Firmus Piett | Kenneth Colley (The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi) | Imperial officer, initially a captain, who is promoted to replace Admiral Ozzel as commanding officer of the Super Star Destroyer, Executor, after Vader executes Ozzel for incompetence. As the only Imperial officer to appear in more than one original trilogy film, Piett also appears in Return of the Jedi meeting his demise, when the Executor crashes into the Death Star during the Battle of Endor.[206] |
Darth Plagueis | N/A | Sith Lord mentioned in Revenge of the Sith. Palpatine tells Anakin Skywalker that Darth Plagueis became so powerful that he was able to create life by influencing the midi-chlorians, and had the power to save people from dying. Plagueis was killed in his sleep by his apprentice.[207] |
Sarco Plank | Melitto scavenger, arms dealer, and bounty hunter seen at Niima Outpost on Jakku in The Force Awakens. Plank's backstory is significantly expanded upon in the 2015 junior novel The Weapon of a Jedi: A Luke Skywalker Adventure, in which Plank leads a young Luke Skywalker to the Temple of Eedit, and betrays him.[208] | |
Unkar Plutt | Simon Pegg (The Force Awakens) Voice: Dee Bradley Baker (Forces of Destiny) | Crolute junkboss on the planet Jakku who pays out portions of food in exchange for pieces of salvage. He attempts to bargain the droid BB-8 from Rey and then tries to steal it when she refuses, but Rey ends up fleeing the planet by stealing the Millennium Falcon from him.[3] |
Poggle the Lesser | Voice: Marton Csokas (Attack of the Clones), Matthew Wood (The Clone Wars) | Archduke of Geonosis, part of the Techno Union and one of the Separatist leaders killed by Darth Vader on Mustafar in Revenge of the Sith.[209] Poggle controls the Geonosian battle droid factories and commands the droid army that fought in the two battles of Geonosis in Attack of the Clones and The Clone Wars.[210] He also assists in the early planning and construction of the first Death Star, as revealed in Catalyst: A Rogue One Novel.[211] |
Yarael Poof | Michelle Taylor (The Phantom Menace) | Long-necked Quermian Jedi Master on the Jedi High Council in The Phantom Menace.[212] |
Jek Tono Porkins | William Hootkins (A New Hope) | Portly X-wing pilot codenamed 'Red Six' who is killed in A New Hope in the attack on the first Death Star. Porkins has gained some comedic notoriety due to his size, manner and untimely death, which was spoofed in the Family Guy episode Blue Harvest.[213] |
Nahdonnis Praji | George Roubicek (A New Hope) | Imperial Navy officer who serves as Darth Vader's aide aboard the Star Destroyer Devastator in A New Hope. He reports to Vader regarding the status of the stolen Death Star plans. |
Governor Arihnda Pryce | Mary Elizabeth McGlynn (Rebels) | Imperial Governor of Lothal who appears in Rebels. Her backstory is explored in the novel Star Wars: Thrawn. |
PZ-4CO | N/A | Droid introduced in the 2015 young adult novel Moving Target: A Princess Leia Adventure by Cecil Castellucci and Jason Fry to whom Leia Organa dictates her memoirs.[214][215] PZ-4CO also appears in The Force Awakens.[216] |
Q[edit]
Name | Portrayal | Description |
---|---|---|
Ben Quadinaros | One of the pod-racers in The Phantom Menace. He and Anakin Skywalker's pod-racers are the only ones that do not take off. Ben's pod explodes after having trouble with its power couplings.[217] | |
Qi'ra | Emilia Clarke (Solo: A Star Wars Story) Voice: Olivia Hack (Forces of Destiny) | Corellian thief and Han Solo's first love. When they reunite years later, she is Dryden Vos' lieutenant in the Crimson Dawn crime syndicate.[218] |
Quarrie | Corey Burton (Rebels) | Mon Calamari starship engineer who created the Blade Wing, a prototype of the B-wing fighter. Living in isolation on Shantipole, he is later brought into the Rebel Alliance by Hera Syndulla to oversee development of more B-wings.[219] |
Quiggold | Scott Richardson (The Force Awakens) Voice: Chris Clarke (The Force Awakens) | Gabdorian pirate seen in The Force Awakens in Maz Kanata's castle when Finn tries to buy passage to the Outer Rim from Quiggold and his captain Sidon Ithano. Quiggold is also featured in the short story 'The Crimson Corsair and the Lost Treasure of Count Dooku'.[40] |
R[edit]
Name | Portrayal | Description |
---|---|---|
R2-D2 | Kenny Baker (Episodes I–VI, VII; consultant) Jimmy Vee (Episodes VII–IX and Rogue One) | Astromech droid built on Naboo that appears in all eight Star Wars films and in Rogue One: A Star Wars Story.[3] |
R2-KT | Pink R2 astromech droid (identical to a R2-D2 but with pink accents instead of blue) that first appears in The Clone Wars and then briefly in scenes at the Resistance base in The Force Awakens. The droid is also a playable character in the video game Lego Star Wars: The Force Awakens. R2-KT was named in honor of seven year old Star Wars fan and cancer patient Katie Johnston.[220] | |
R3-S6 | Replacement astromech droid for Anakin when R2 is lost in The Clone Wars. He is later revealed to be working as a spy for General Grievous, and subsequently destroyed by R2-D2 himself. | |
R4-P17 | Nicknamed 'Arfour', this astromech droid accompanies Obi-Wan Kenobi on his mission to Kamino in Attack of the Clones, and is assigned to Kenobi throughout much of the Clone Wars (appearing in several episodes of The Clone Wars series). R4 is decapitated by Buzz Droids in Revenge of the Sith, and is replaced by R4-G9. | |
R5-D4 | Astromech droid originally sold to Owen Lars on Tatooine in A New Hope which immediately malfunctions and is replaced by R2-D2.[3][221] This droid also received an action figure release during the second wave of Kenner's original Star Wars action figure line. | |
RA-7 ('Death Star droid') | Originally appearing in the 1977 film Star Wars, these protocol droids are primarily used by Imperial officers as servants. They are also known as 'Insect droids' or 'Death Star droids', due to the large numbers used aboard the Death Star. An RA-7 droid dubbed 'Death Star Droid', was produced for Kenner's Star Wars action figure line in 1978.[222] The RA-7 type droid named AP-5[24] has a recurring role in Star Wars Rebels, assisting Hera Syndulla's Phoenix Squadron. | |
Rabé | Cristina da Silva (The Phantom Menace) | Handmaiden to Queen Amidala seen in The Phantom Menace. |
Admiral Raddus | Paul Kasey (Rogue One) Voice: Stephen Stanton (Rogue One) | Green-skinned Mon Calamari Admiral of the Rebel Alliance that perishes during the Battle of Scarif in Rogue One. He serves as the namesake of the Resistance MC85 Star Cruiser known as the Raddus in The Last Jedi. |
Dak Ralter | John Morton (The Empire Strikes Back) | Luke Skywalker's snowspeeder gunner in The Empire Strikes Back. Ralter dies in the ensuing Battle of Hoth when their snowspeeder is damaged by an Imperial Walker. Dak also makes an appearance conversing before the aforementioned battle with Thane Tyrell, in the novel Lost Stars.[223][224] |
Oppo Rancisis | Jerome Blake (The Phantom Menace) | Thisspiasian Jedi Master and Jedi Council member in the prequel trilogy, master of Battle Meditation.[225] |
Admiral Dodd Rancit | N/A | Admiral and traitor to the Galactic Empire; rival of Moff Tarkin in the 2014 novel Tarkin.[226] |
Rappertunie | Shawda Ubb Growdi player for the Max Rebo Band in the Special Edition of Return of the Jedi. | |
Sinjir Rath Velus | N/A | Imperial turncoat introduced in Aftermath. Anthony Breznican of Entertainment Weekly called him 'the first major gay hero' in the franchise.[161] |
Gallius Rax (a.k.a. 'The Operator') | N/A | Mysterious Imperial admiral and manipulator from the Aftermath novel trilogy.[227] Trusted by Palpatine to destroy the Empire in the event of his death and reform it, Rax is responsible for the rise of the First Order though he himself does not live to see it founded. |
Eneb Ray | N/A | Spy for the Rebel Alliance who went rogue after being physically and mentally disfigured; later attacking Sunspot Prison in a plot against Leia Organa. First introduced in Marvel Comics' Star Wars Annual#1.[228] |
Max Rebo | Simon Williamson (Return of the Jedi) | Ortolan keyboard player and leader of the Max Rebo Band in Return of the Jedi.[229] |
Ciena Ree | N/A | Human female Imperial Officer, associate of Thane Kyrell, who in the novel Star Wars: Lost Stars commands the Imperial II-class Star Destroyer Inflictor, purposefully crashing it during the Battle of Jakku.[224] |
Ree-Yees | Mike Quinn and Richard Bonehill (Return of the Jedi) | Three-eyed alien, known as a Gran, prominently seen in the background cheering at Jabba the Hutt's palace in Return of the Jedi.[230] |
Kylo Ren | Adam Driver (Episodes VII–IX) | Alter-ego of Ben Solo after his fall to the dark side. He is a leader in the First Order and a Master of the Knights of Ren. |
Captain Rex | Voice: Dee Bradley Baker (The Clone Wars and Rebels)[10] | Anakin Skywalker's second-in-command and captain of 501st in The Clone Wars;[11] as a retired clone trooper he joins the Rebellion in Star Wars Rebels. |
Rey | Daisy Ridley (Episodes VII–IX) Voice: Daisy Ridley (Forces of Destiny) | Scavenger who lives on the desert planet Jakku. She and Finn seek to return BB-8 to the Resistance, but she is captured by Kylo Ren. His interrogation unlocks her ability to use the Force. |
General Carlist Rieekan | Bruce Boa (The Empire Strikes Back) | Rebel commanding officer on Hoth in The Empire Strikes Back.[231] |
Riley | Voice: Catherine Taber (Uprising) | Riley is the sister of an unnamed smuggler. They both worked for 'Happy' Dapp during the Galactic Empire's Iron Blockade. |
Rogue Squadron | Various | Rebel Alliance and New Republic starfighter pilots featured in the original trilogy. |
Romba | Mike Cottrell (Return of the Jedi) | Ewok in Return of the Jedi seen mourning over the death of his fellow Ewok during the Battle of Endor; he was released in action figure form during Kenner's final Power of the Force line in 1985.[232] |
Bodhi Rook | Riz Ahmed (Rogue One)[19] | Imperial cargo pilot who, encouraged by Galen Erso, defects to the Rebel Alliance and helps steal the plans to the Death Star in Rogue One. |
Pagetti Rook ('Weequay') | Julius LeFlore (Return of the Jedi) | Weequay guard on Jabba the Hutt's skiff that held a vibro-axe to the back of Luke Skywalker as he stood on the plank above the Sarlacc Pit in Return of the Jedi.[233] Called 'Weequay' during the original Kenner action figure line in the 1980s, the name would eventually become the name of the character's species as a whole.[234] |
Rotta the Hutt | Voice: David Acord (The Clone Wars) | Jabba the Hutt's son, kidnapped by Count Dooku in The Clone Wars animated film. |
Rukh | Voice: Warwick Davis (Rebels) | A Noghri, introduced in the fourth season of Rebels, who serves Grand Admiral Thrawn.[235] The character originally appeared in the Star Wars Legends series the Thrawn trilogy, in which he assassinates Thrawn. |
S[edit]
Name | Portrayal | Description |
---|---|---|
Sabé | Keira Knightley (The Phantom Menace) | One of Padmé Amidala's handmaidens in The Phantom Menace. Sabé is the queen's decoy; for parts of the movie, the Sabé character is addressed as Amidala.[236] Knightley was cast as Sabé due to her striking resemblance to Natalie Portman, who portrayed Amidala. |
Saché | Sofia Coppola (The Phantom Menace) | One of the youngest of the five handmaidens of Queen Padmé Amidala of Naboo in The Phantom Menace.[237] |
Admiral U.O. Statura | Ken Leung (The Force Awakens) | Resistance Admiral that helps plan the assault on Starkiller Base, correctly suggesting that they cripple its thermal oscillator. Statura also appears in the Poe Dameron comic. |
Joph Seastriker | N/A | Associate of Leia Organa and Resistance pilot in the novel Star Wars: Bloodline.[238] |
Queen Miraj Scintel | Voice: Rajia Baroudi (The Clone Wars) | Queen of Zygerria and member of the Separatist Council. She captures Anakin, Obi-Wan, and Ahsoka and attempts to auction them off as slaves; however, they are rescued by clone troopers, and Miraj is Force-choked to death by Count Dooku for her failure. |
Admiral Terrinald Screed | N/A | Imperial admiral with a cybernetic eye from the 2014 novel Tarkin and the 2016 novel Aftermath: Life Debt.[226] Screed had a more prominent role in the non-canon Legends continuity, first created for the 1985 Droids animated series.[239] |
Sebulba | Voice: Lewis MacLeod (The Phantom Menace) | Podracer who competes against Anakin Skywalker in The Phantom Menace. Once a slave, Sebulba's podracing skills bought his freedom.[240] |
Aayla Secura | Amy Allen (Attack of the Clones and Revenge of the Sith)[241] Voice: Jennifer Hale (The Clone Wars)[242] | Twi'lek Jedi who appears in Attack of the Clones, Revenge of the Sith, and The Clone Wars.[243][244] |
Korr Sella | Maisie Richardson-Sellers (The Force Awakens)[245] | Human female military officer who serves under the command of General Leia Organa in The Force Awakens. She is sent to Hosnian Prime with a message for the Senate, and is present when the planet is destroyed by the First Order's superweapon, Starkiller Base. The character appears briefly in the completed film but has an increased role in the novelization.[245][246] Korr's earlier time in Leia's service is touched upon in the novel Star Wars: Bloodline.[57][58][59] |
Zev Senesca | Christopher Malcolm (The Empire Strikes Back) | Member of the Rebel Alliance and Rogue Squadron pilot in The Empire Strikes Back; designated as 'Rogue Two', Senesca pilots a snowspeeder and dies during the Battle of Hoth in combat against the Imperial AT-AT walkers.[247] He is also the pilot who locates Han Solo and Luke Skywalker, who are stranded in the snow away from the Rebel base on Hoth. |
Echuu Shen-Jon | Former Padawan to Mace Windu who serves as a Jedi General during the Clone Wars. He goes into hiding after Order 66 is given, and re-emerges during the Galactic Civil War to fight for the Rebel Alliance. | |
Sifo-Dyas | Voice: Paul Nakauchi (The Clone Wars) | Jedi master who is impersonated by Count Dooku to order the creation of the clone trooper army in the prequel trilogy. |
Aurra Sing | Michonne Bourriague (The Phantom Menace) Voice: Jaime King (The Clone Wars) | Bounty hunter in The Phantom Menace and The Clone Wars.[248] Her appearance in the Phantom Menace was brief. Sing can be seen viewing the Podrace atop a balcony. She once had a romantic relationship with Hondo Ohnaka and became a mother figure to a young Boba Fett, before she was later murdered by Tobias Beckett.[249] |
Anakin Skywalker Darth Vader | Anakin: Jake Lloyd (The Phantom Menace),[22]Hayden Christensen (Attack of the Clones, Revenge of the Sith and Return of the Jedi [Special Edition]),[22]Sebastian Shaw (Return of the Jedi),[22] Voice: Matt Lanter (The Clone Wars, Rebels and Forces of Destiny)[22] Vader: David Prowse (Episodes IV–VI),[22]Hayden Christensen (Revenge of the Sith),[22]Spencer Wilding and Daniel Naprous (Rogue One) Voice: James Earl Jones (Episodes III–VI, Rebels and Rogue One)[22] | Jedi whose fall and redemption are portrayed in the Star Wars films. His master was Obi-Wan Kenobi. He was married to Padmé Amidala; father of Luke and Leia. He is an excellent podracer and he is 'the Chosen One'.[250] Known as 'Darth Vader' after his fall to the dark side. |
Luke Skywalker | Mark Hamill (Episodes IV–IX), Aidan Barton (Revenge of the Sith) Voice: Mark Hamill (Forces of Destiny) | Jedi whose coming of age and rise as a Jedi are portrayed in the original Star Wars trilogy. Son of Anakin Skywalker and Padmé Amidala, and Leia Organa's twin brother.[251] |
Shmi Skywalker | Pernilla August (The Phantom Menace and Attack of the Clones) Voice: Pernilla August (The Clone Wars) | Anakin Skywalker's mother. Qui-Gon Jinn attempts to bargain for her freedom from slavery but fails. Shmi encourages Anakin to leave Tatooine with Qui-Gon to seek his destiny, but Anakin finds it hard to leave without her. A widowed moisture farmer named Cliegg Lars later falls in love with Shmi, and after he purchases her freedom from Watto, they marry. Shmi dies in Anakin's arms after being kidnapped and tortured by Tusken Raiders in Attack of the Clones.[252] |
Rae Sloane | N/A | Imperial captain introduced in Star Wars: A New Dawn, later an admiral in Star Wars: Aftermath.[253][254] |
The Smuggler | N/A | 'The Smuggler' is an unnamed man who worked for 'Happy' Dapp, along with his sister Riley, during the Galactic Empire's Iron Blockade. |
Snaggletooth | Arthur Rowton | Short humanoid with protruding jaws and short fangs, based on a Snivvian character seen in the Mos Eisley cantina in A New Hope. Two versions of Snaggletooth were produced for Kenner's Star Wars action figure line in 1978; a tall blue version and later a small red version more accurate to the character seen in the film.[255] |
Supreme Leader Snoke | Andy Serkis (The Force Awakens and The Last Jedi) | Political leader of the First Order. He is Kylo Ren's master and is very powerful in the dark side of the Force.[256] |
Sy Snootles | Timothy M. Rose and Mike Quinn(puppeteer) (Return of the Jedi) Voice: Annie Arbogast (Return of the Jedi), Nika Futterman (The Clone Wars) | Female Pa'lowick and lead vocalist of the Max Rebo Band in Return of the Jedi.[257] |
Osi Sobeck | Voice: James Arnold Taylor (The Clone Wars) | Phidian CIS commander who serves as the warden of the prison known as 'The Citadel' on the planet Lola Sayu. |
Han Solo | Harrison Ford (Episodes IV–VII), Alden Ehrenreich (Solo: A Star Wars Story)[258][259] Voice: A. J. Locascio (Forces of Destiny young), Kiff VandenHeuvel (Forces of Destiny old) | Captain of the Millennium Falcon who joins the Rebellion and marries Leia Organa. He is murdered by his son, Kylo Ren, after a failed attempt to turn his son from the dark side. |
Greer Sonnel | N/A | Assistant and pilot of Leia Organa in the novel Star Wars: Bloodline.[57][58][59] Originally from the oceanic planet Pamarthe, she is also the focus of the 2016 short story 'Scorched' by Delilah S. Dawson, published in Star Wars Insider #165.[260][261] |
Sana Starros | N/A | Associate of Han Solo who is dramatically introduced as Han Solo's wife but later confesses to have only posed as his spouse during a previous scam. She first appears in issue #6 of the Star Wars comic series.[262][263] |
Lama Su | Voice: Anthony Phelan (Attack of the Clones), Bob Bergen (The Clone Wars) | Prime Minister of Kamino in Attack of the Clones.[264] In The Clone Wars he is revealed to be in the employ of Darth Tyranus as part of the scheme to have the clones eliminate the Jedi. |
Shriv Suurgav | Voice: Dan Donohue (Star Wars Battlefront II) | A male Duros who is an officer and pilot of the Alliance to restore the Republic and the Resistance, using the call sign Danger Leader. A member of Inferno Squad, Suurgav is the longtime friend of smuggler and ex-General Lando Calrissian, and is present at the Battle of Sullust and the Battle of Jakku. He hijacks the Mandator IV-class Siege Dreadnought, the Retribution, at the time of the assault on Starkiller Base. |
Mercurial Swift | N/A | Bounty hunter and assassin introduced in Star Wars: Aftermath, known for his electrified batons. |
Gavyn Sykes | Christian Simpson (The Phantom Menace) | Lieutenant in the Royal Naboo Security Force during the invasion of Naboo. He partners with R2-C4 to knock out the droid control ship's shield generator in The Phantom Menace, allowing young Anakin Skywalker to destroy the ship from within.[265] |
Cham Syndulla | Voice: Robin Atkin Downes (The Clone Wars and Rebels) | Twi'lek freedom fighter who opposes the Separatists independently before allying with the Republic Army when the Clone Wars come to Ryloth. In the aftermath of the Clone Wars, Cham opposes the newly established Galactic Empire's occupation of his world and becomes distanced from his daughter Hera after the death of her mother due to his single-minded determination to liberate Ryloth at any cost. The pair are later reconciled after Cham and his warriors Gobi and Numa team up with Hera's crew to steal an Imperial carrier and shoot down an Imperial cruiser over Ryloth.[266] |
Hera Syndulla | Voice: Vanessa Marshall (Rebels and Forces of Destiny) | Twi'lek female, and the daughter of Cham Syndulla, who leaves her homeworld to fight the Empire as a member of the rebel crew of the Ghost. She is the mother-figure of the Ghost crew, and holds the group together when they would otherwise fall apart.[267] |
Jacen Syndulla | Son of human Jedi Knight Kanan Jarrus and Twi'lek General Hera Syndulla introduced in the 2018 Rebels series finale, 'Family Reunion and Farewell'. Born during Galactic Civil War after the death of his father, Jacen is a member of the Spectres, codename Spectre-7. |
T[edit]
Name | Portrayal | Description |
---|---|---|
Orn Free Taa | Jerome Blake (The Phantom Menace), Matt Rowan (Attack of the Clones and Revenge of the Sith) Voice: Phil LaMarr (The Clone Wars) | Overweight Twi'lek who represents Ryloth in the Galactic Senate during the prequel trilogy. |
General Cassio Tagge | Don Henderson (A New Hope) | Imperial officer aboard the Death Star in A New Hope; Tagge expressed concern over the vulnerability of the Death Star due to the missing plans being in the hands of the Rebel Alliance.[268] Tagge is revealed in Marvel's Darth Vader comic book series as surviving the Death Star explosion during the Battle of Yavin, and is promoted by Emperor Palpatine to Grand General of the Empire.[269] |
Mother Talzin | Voice: Barbara Goodson (The Clone Wars) | Dathomirian leader of the Nightsister clans of witches before and during the Clone Wars. She possesses great magical powers, ranging from mind control, manipulating matter, and turning into mist. Following General Grievous' attack on Dathomir, she is the only Nightsister left, aside from Asajj Ventress. In The Lost Missions, Talzin manipulates a cult into stealing the living Force within other beings and collect it in an orb for her. When enough is collected, Talzin intends to absorb the Force and gain great strength beyond any other Jedi or Sith. However, she is defeated by the combined efforts of Mace Windu and Jar Jar Binks. In Darth Maul: Son of Dathomir, she ultimately dies at the hands of General Grievous on Dathomir in order to allow Maul, her son, to escape. |
Wat Tambor | Voice: Chris Truswell (Attack of the Clones), Matthew Wood (The Clone Wars) | Skakoan Foreman of the Techno Union and Executive of Baktoid Armor Workshop before and during the Clone Wars. He serves on the Separatist Council during the Clone Wars and helps fund and supply the Confederacy of Independent Systems. He is one of the Separatist leaders killed by Darth Vader on Mustafar in Revenge of the Sith.[270] |
Riff Tamson | Voice: Gary Anthony Williams (The Clone Wars) | Shark-like Separatist leader, known for his ferocity and brilliant mind. He leads the forces at one of the Battles of Mon Calamari, and is killed by a bomb. |
Ahsoka Tano | Voice: Ashley Eckstein (The Clone Wars, Rebels and Forces of Destiny) | Anakin Skywalker's Togruta Jedi Padawan. Over time she develops greater skills and techniques, and becomes a trusted leader. Near the end of season 5 of The Clone Wars, Ahsoka is framed by her friend and fellow Padawan Barriss Offee for bombing the Jedi Temple. She is subsequently expelled from the Jedi Order and turned over to the Republic for trial, but her innocence is proven when Anakin exposes Barriss. Afterwards, Ahsoka is invited to rejoin the Jedi, but she refuses and leaves because she no longer trusts them. She is later revealed to be the mysterious 'Fulcrum' in Star Wars Rebels, and is hunted by Darth Vader and the Inquisitors. Ahsoka's fate is left ambiguous after a duel with Vader, until Ezra Bridger rescues her from Vader by taking her into The World Between Worlds 'environment' accessible, for a time, from within Lothal's Jedi Temple. |
Tarfful | Michael Kingma (Revenge of the Sith) | Wookiee chieftain who, along with Chewbacca, commands the Wookiee warriors during the Battle of Kashyyyk, and later helps Yoda escape the clone troopers after Order 66 is given in Revenge of the Sith. |
Jova Tarkin | N/A | Paternal great-uncle to Grand Moff Tarkin, acting as a permanent guide and mentor for future Tarkin family initiates on the Carrion Plateau on their homeworld of Eriadu.[226] |
Grand Moff Wilhuff Tarkin | Peter Cushing (A New Hope),[22]Wayne Pygram (Revenge of the Sith),[22]Guy Henry (Rogue One) Voice: Stephen Stanton (The Clone Wars and Rebels)[22] | The Imperial governor of the Outer Rim territories, and the commanding officer of the Death Star in A New Hope. He oversees the construction and operation of the Death Star in Revenge of the Sith and A New Hope respectively, and dies on the Death Star in A New Hope when Luke Skywalker destroys it.[271] |
Captain Roos Tarpals | Steven Spiers (The Phantom Menace) Voice: Fred Tatasciore (The Clone Wars) | Gungan captain in The Phantom Menace.[272] He later becomes a general by the time of the Clone Wars and dies trying to capture General Grievous. |
TC-14 | John Fensom (The Phantom Menace) Voice: Lindsay Duncan (The Phantom Menace) | Protocol droid who appears in the beginning of The Phantom Menace, serving drinks to Obi-Wan Kenobi and Qui-Gon Jinn aboard the Trade Federation's flagship Saak'ak.[273] |
Berch Teller | N/A | Former Intelligence officer in the Republic, turning against the Empire and later hijacking Moff Tarkin's personal ship, the Carrion Spike, in the 2014 novel Tarkin.[226] |
Teebo | Jack Purvis (Return of the Jedi) | Leader of the group of Ewoks that captures Luke Skywalker, Han Solo, Chewbacca and the droids; later the one whom R2-D2 electrocutes upon being freed. Has a more prominent role in the novelization.[61] |
Teedo | Kiran Shah (The Force Awakens) Voice: David Acord (The Force Awakens and Forces of Destiny) | Scavenger native to Jakku, one of several of his species, known as Teedos.[274] This particular Teedo was trying to capture BB-8, before the droid was freed by Rey in The Force Awakens. |
Mod Terrik | Unknown actor (A New Hope) | Captain of the Imperial stormtrooper Zeta Squadron, encharged of finding the Death Star plans and, later, of stopping the departing Millennium Falcon. He is killed by his fellow stormtrooper 1023, Davin Felth, during the attack to Han Solo's ship. |
Tessek ('Squid Head') | Gerald Home (Return of the Jedi) | Jabba the Hutt's squid-like Quarren accountant in Return of the Jedi.[275] An action figure of this character was released as 'Squid Head' in the Return of the Jedi line of Kenner's 1980's Star Wars action figures.[276] |
Lor San Tekka | Max von Sydow (The Force Awakens) | Former explorer and a devout follower of the Church of the Force, as well as an old ally of Luke Skywalker, living on the planet Jakku. He gives Poe Dameron a fragment of the map needed to find Luke in The Force Awakens, and is subsequently executed by Kylo Ren. |
Petty Officer Thanisson | Thomas Brodie-Sangster (The Force Awakens) | First Order officer aboard the Resurgent-class Star Destroyer Finalizer. Thanisson reports the theft of the TIE fighter stolen by Poe Dameron and FN-2187 in The Force Awakens. |
Inspector Thanoth | N/A | Inspector for the Galactic Empire; assigned to assist Darth Vader and investigate his actions during the events of the Star Wars: Darth Vader comic book series.[277] |
Lieutenant Thire | Voice: Temuera Morrison (Revenge of the Sith) | Commander of the Clone Shock Troopers in Revenge of the Sith who tells Palpatine that they did not find Yoda's body on the Senate chamber's floor. |
Grand Admiral Thrawn | Voice: Lars Mikkelsen (Rebels) | Chiss Grand Admiral of the Imperial Navy, known as a brilliant strategist.[278] He appears in the third season of Rebels, and the novel Thrawn.[279] |
C'ai Threnalli | Paul Kasey (The Force Awakens and The Last Jedi) | Abednedo Resistance pilot that flies as Poe Dameron's wingman during the evacuation of D'Qar. Threnalli is also among the survivors escaping on the Millennium Falcon after the Battle of Crait in The Last Jedi. |
Shaak Ti | Orli Shoshan (Attack of the Clones and Revenge of the Sith) Voice: Tasia Valenza (The Clone Wars) | Togruta Jedi Master and member of the Jedi Council in Attack of the Clones and Revenge of the Sith who escapes The Great Jedi Purge. In a deleted scene from Revenge of the Sith, she is killed by General Grievous on the Invisible Hand. |
Paige Tico | Veronica Ngo (The Last Jedi) | Older sister of Rose Tico, gunner and pilot on the StarFortress Bomber Hammer of Cobalt Squadron.[204] Paige is killed during the Battle of D'Qar after releasing the bomber's payload, destroying the Mandator IV-class Siege Dreadnaught Fulminatrix. |
Rose Tico | Kelly Marie Tran (The Last Jedi and The Rise of Skywalker) Voice: Kelly Marie Tran (Forces of Destiny) | Resistance maintenance worker, younger sister of Paige Tico, and former crew member of Cobalt Squadron on the StarFortress Bomber Hammer.[204] She accompanies Finn in The Last Jedi to the casino city Canto Bight, infiltrates the Mega-class Star Dreadnought Supremacy, and is rendered unconscious during the Battle of Crait. She also appears in the animated Disney micro-series Star Wars Forces of Destiny episode 'Shuttle Shock',[280] and the 2017 novel Star Wars: The Last Jedi: Cobalt Squadron by Elizabeth Wein,[281] which takes place shortly before The Last Jedi (partially during the events of The Force Awakens) and provides details on the Tico sisters' backgrounds. Rose is a character in the Star Wars: Force Arenamobile game,[282] and a playable character in Star Wars: Galaxy of Heroes.[283] |
Saesee Tiin | Khan Bonfils (The Phantom Menace), Jesse Jensen (Attack of the Clones), Kenji Oates (Revenge of the Sith) Voice: Dee Bradley Baker (The Clone Wars) | Jedi Master and member of the Jedi High Council in the prequel trilogy and The Clone Wars. He is one of the four Jedi Masters who die trying to arrest Palpatine. He uses a green lightsaber. |
Bala-Tik | Brian Vernel (The Force Awakens) | Negotiator for the Guavian Death Gang, who confront Han Solo for swindling them aboard his freighter the Eravana in The Force Awakens. Bala-Tik informs the First Order that Solo is in possession of the missing BB-8 unit they are seeking. |
Tikkes | Separatist Council member and Senator of the CIS-allied Quarren Isolation League on Mon Calamari. He leads one of the Separatist assaults on Mon Calamari but is killed by Darth Vader on Mustafar. | |
Meena Tills | Voice: Anna Graves (The Clone Wars) | Senator of Calamari Sector in Revenge of the Sith and The Clone Wars. |
Quay Tolsite | Dee Tails (Solo: A Star Wars Story) | The Pike Syndicate's administrator, who controls the operations on Kessel. |
Bargwill Tomder | Cloddogran Fathier stable master in Canto Bight on Cantonica in The Last Jedi. Tomder first appears in the short story 'Hear Nothing, See Nothing, Say Nothing' in the anthology book Canto Bight.[284] | |
Wag Too | Voice: Alec Medlock (The Clone Wars) | Lurmen healer and the son of village leader Tee Watt Kaa. He is more grateful than his father when Ahsoka Tano, Aayla Secura, and Anakin Skywalker return to protect their village from the Separatists. |
Coleman Trebor | Vurk Jedi Master who participates in the Battle of Geonosis and is killed by Jango Fett while attempting to kill Count Dooku. | |
Admiral Trench | Voice: Dee Bradley Baker (The Clone Wars) | Harch Admiral of the Separatist Navy who commands the blockade of the planet Christophsis. He is one of the most skilled military tacticians at the time and supposedly has a history of being able to track cloaked ships. He seemingly dies in the episode 'Cat and Mouse' of The Clone Wars, but reappears with cybernetics covering nearly half of his body in the first episode of season 6. He also appears in a 4-episode arc referred as 'Bad Batch' in which he dies at the hands of Anakin Skywalker after his ship is infiltrated by the Republic. |
Strono Tuggs | Aidan Cook (The Force Awakens) | Deformed Artiodac cook at the castle of Maz Kanata in The Force Awakens. Tuggs' backstory is explored in the short story 'A Recipie for Death'.[40] |
Clone Trooper Tup | Voice: Dee Bradley Baker (The Clone Wars)[10] | Rookie clone trooper who has a teardrop tattoo on his face, and matching designs on his helmet.[285] During his time in the campaign on Ringo Vinda, Tup’s biochip malfunctions, leading him to carry out Order 66 earlier than intended. Tup is captured, and dies on Kamino during the ensuing investigation. |
Letta Turmond | Voice: Kari Wahlgren (The Clone Wars) | Radical activist against Jedi involvement in the Clone Wars, incited by the Jedi Order's use of her technician husband Jackar Bowmani to arm Republic gunships.[286] |
Longo Two-Guns | Voice: Tom Kane | Crime lord and rival to Jabba the Hutt, recognized as the 'fastest blaster on Tatooine'. |
Captain Gregar Typho | Jay Laga'aia (Attack of the Clones and Revenge of the Sith) Voice: James Mathis III (The Clone Wars) | Amidala's bodyguard in Attack of the Clones and Revenge of the Sith.[287] |
Ratts Tyerell | Aleena podracer who fatally participates in the Boonta Eve Classic podrace in The Phantom Menace.[288] |
U[edit]
Name | Portrayal | Description |
---|---|---|
U9-C4 | Timid astromech droid sent on a mission with D-Squad, an all-droid special unit in The Clone Wars.[289] | |
Luminara Unduli | Mary Oyaya (Attack of the Clones), Fay David (Revenge of the Sith) Voice: Olivia d'Abo (The Clone Wars) | Mirialan Jedi Master in Attack of the Clones and Revenge of the Sith, having Barriss Offee as a padawan. She is killed as a result of Order 66.[290] Luminara is a playable character in Lego Star Wars: The Video Game and the video game version of The Clone Wars. In Star Wars Rebels, the rebels are told Luminara is alive as a means to lure them into a trap. |
V[edit]
Name | Portrayal | Description |
---|---|---|
Finis Valorum | Terence Stamp (The Phantom Menace) Voice: Ian Ruskin (The Clone Wars) | The final legitimate Supreme Chancellor of the Galactic Republic, who is ousted from office in The Phantom Menace, allowing Palpatine to rise to power.[291]Finis valorum is Late Latin for 'the end of values'. According to performer Terence Stamp, the character was intended by George Lucas to be based on then-President of the United StatesBill Clinton as a 'good but beleaguered man,' although Stamp noted that this had been before the Clinton impeachment trial.[292] Valorum's name stems from the original drafts of The Star Wars, in which it belonged to a character combined with Vader, then Vader's master, before being phased out of the original trilogy.[293] |
Eli Vanto | N/A | Trusted aide to Grand Admiral Thrawn in the novel Thrawn.[294] |
Nahdar Vebb | Voice: Tom Kenny (The Clone Wars) | Male Mon Calamari who serves as the padawan of Jedi Master Kit Fisto in The Clone Wars. He is killed by the General Grievous. |
General Maximilian Veers | Julian Glover (The Empire Strikes Back) | Commander of the 501st who leads the Empire's attack on Hoth commanding the lead AT-AT Imperial Walker in The Empire Strikes Back.[295] Veers was released in action figure form during Kenner's original line, dubbed as 'AT-AT Commander'.[296] |
Asajj Ventress | Voice: Nika Futterman (The Clone Wars) | Sith apprentice in The Clone Wars who returns to a cult called the Nightsisters (of which she was formerly a member) after being abandoned by her master, Count Dooku. She abandons the dark side and her Sith ways, and Count Dooku sends a squad to wipe out the rest of her 'sisters' via a droid company led by General Grievous. Asajj then resorts to bounty hunting, but still retains her two red lightsabers as weapons. She hunts Savage Opress and in the process ends up helping Obi-Wan Kenobi escape from him. Bariss Offee later steals Asajj's lightsabers and mask, using them to pose as Asajj while framing Ahsoka for the bombing of the Jedi Temple.[297] Asajj later appears in the novel Star Wars: Dark Disciple, which was intended for a story arc in the TV series. In the novel, she teams up with Jedi Quinlan Vos to assassinate Count Dooku. Along the way, the two fall in love. However, their attempt to kill Dooku fails, and Dooku captures Vos, who turns to the dark side. Asajj successfully turns Vos back, but dies saving him from an angered Dooku. She is later buried on Dathomir, amongst her fallen sisters. |
Evaan Verlaine | N/A | Rebel pilot who assists Leia in Star Wars: Princess Leia with attempting to rescue survivors of Alderaan's destruction. |
Garrick Versio | Voice: Anthony Skordi (Star Wars Battlefront II) | A commanding officer of Inferno Squad. Also appears in the book Star Wars Battlefront II: Inferno Squad. |
Iden Versio | Voice: Janina Gavankar (Star Wars Battlefront II) | A commanding officer of Inferno Squad. Also appears in the book Star Wars Battlefront II: Inferno Squad. |
Chancellor Lanever Villecham | Derek Arnold (The Force Awakens) | Tarsunt politician that serves as Chancellor of the New Republic, and perishes on Hosnian Prime when it is destroyed by the First Order's Starkiller Base. |
Dr. Nuvo Vindi | Voice: Michael York (The Clone Wars) | Faust scientist who worked with the CIS during the Clone Wars. He rediscovers the Blue Shadow Virus and attempts to weaponize it for Separatist use. |
Pre Vizsla | Voice: Jon Favreau (The Clone Wars) | Human male from Mandalore and the leader of the Mandalorian Death Watch faction during the Clone Wars. |
Tulon Voidgazer | N/A | Cybernetically enhanced human scientist, working under Dr. Cylo as a possible replacement for Darth Vader; she first appeared in the Star Wars: Darth Vader Marvel comic book series.[65] |
Dryden Vos | Paul Bettany (Solo: A Star Wars Story) | A ruthless high-ranking crime lord in the Crimson Dawn syndicate who has a history with Beckett. |
Quinlan Vos | Voice: Al Rodrigo (The Clone Wars) | Jedi Master in The Clone Wars, and the master of Jedi Aayla Secura. In the novel Star Wars: Dark Disciple, he teams up with (and later falls in love with) Asajj Ventress in an attempt to assassinate Count Dooku. This fails, and Vos falls to the dark side. He is brought back to the light side by Asajj, but is heartbroken when she dies to save him. He buries her on her homeworld, Dathomir, and is reinstated into the Jedi Council. |
W[edit]
Name | Portrayal | Description |
---|---|---|
WAC-47 | Voice: Ben Diskin (The Clone Wars) | Over-excitable pit droid that is assigned to a special Republic group of droids to steal an encryption module from the Separatists in The Clone Wars.[298] |
Wald | Warwick Davis (The Phantom Menace) | Rodian slave boy under the ownership of Watto, and friends with Anakin Skywalker in The Phantom Menace. |
Warok | Ewok in Return of the Jedi, released in action figure form during Kenner's final Power of the Force line in 1985.[299] | |
Wicket W. Warrick | Warwick Davis (Return of the Jedi) | Ewok who helps Princess Leia and the other Rebels in Return of the Jedi. |
Watto | Voice: Andy Secombe (The Phantom Menace and Attack of the Clones) | Toydarian junk store owner and slaveholder of Anakin and Shmi Skywalker in The Phantom Menace. |
Taun We | Voice: Rena Owen (Attack of the Clones) | Kaminoan administrator who guides Obi-Wan Kenobi during his visit to the cloning facility in Attack of the Clones. During filming, Owen wore a maquette of the alien's head atop a hardhat, providing her co-stars with the proper eye-line for talking with the character.[300] |
Zam Wesell | Leeanna Walsman (Attack of the Clones) | Shape-shifting bounty hunter who fails in her mission to kill Padmé Amidala and is killed by Jango Fett.[301] |
Norra Wexley | N/A | Rebel pilot introduced in Star Wars: Aftermath, wayward mother of Snap.[89] |
Temmin 'Snap' Wexley | Greg Grunberg (The Force Awakens and The Rise of Skywalker) | Resourceful teenager introduced in the Aftermath trilogy, in which he has adventures with his mother Norra. He is a Resistance X-wing fighter pilot in The Force Awakens.[89][302][303] |
General Vanden Willard | Eddie Byrne (A New Hope) Voice: Michael Bell (A New Hope) | Rebel Alliance General that greets Leia Organa as she returns to the Rebel base on Yavin 4 in A New Hope. |
Mace Windu | Samuel L. Jackson (Episodes I–III) Voice: Samuel L. Jackson (The Clone Wars film), Terrence Carson (The Clone Wars TV series) | Master who sits on the Jedi Council in the prequel trilogy, regarded as one of the best swordsmen in Jedi history. He serves as Master of the Jedi Order in the years leading up to the Clone Wars and is a renowned Jedi General. He is thrown out of a window, apparently to his death, during an attempt to arrest Palpatine in Revenge of the Sith.[304] |
Commander Wolffe | Voice: Dee Bradley Baker (The Clone Wars and Rebels) | Clone commander who leads the 104th Battalion's Wolfpack under Jedi General Plo Koon in The Clone Wars. He ends up in the Seelos system with fellow clones Rex and Gregor following the Clone Wars. |
Wollivan | Warwick Davis (The Force Awakens) | Tavern-dweller in Maz Kanata's castle in The Force Awakens. |
Sabine Wren | Voice: Tiya Sircar (Rebels and Forces of Destiny) | Sixteen-year-old Mandalorian graffiti artist, Imperial Academy dropout, former bounty hunter and the Ghost crew's weapons expert. |
Wuher | Ted Burnett (A New Hope) | Bartender at the Mos Eisley cantina in A New Hope.[305] |
X[edit]
Name | Portrayal | Description |
---|---|---|
Kazuda Xiono | Voice: Christopher Sean (Star Wars Resistance) | A young human X-Wing fighter pilot for the New Republic tasked by Poe Dameron to spy on the pelagic planet Castilon's Colossus Station refueling facility in the Outer Rim to uncover any First Order activity there. His cover of being a starship mechanic working under Jarek Yeager proves to be a tenuous one at best, partly due to his own occasional clumsiness. Poe's droid BB-8, and later the similar droid CB-23, accompanies Kazuda in his mission on the Colossus station.[306] |
Y[edit]
Name | Portrayal | Description |
---|---|---|
Yaddle | Phil Eason (The Phantom Menace) | Female member of Yoda's species, and a member of the Jedi Council in The Phantom Menace. Iain McCaig's concept art for a young Yoda was instead used to create Yaddle.[307] |
Yoda | Frank Oz(puppeteer) (Episodes I, V–VI, VIII) Voice: Frank Oz (Episodes I–III, V–VIII and Rebels), Tom Kane (The Clone Wars and Forces of Destiny) | Jedi master who trains Count Dooku and Luke Skywalker. He goes into exile on Dagobah after the fall of the Republic in Revenge of the Sith.[308] |
Joh Yowza | Yuzzum only seen in the Special Edition of Return of the Jedi as a member and singer in the Max Rebo Band. | |
Wullf Yularen | Robert Clarke (A New Hope) Voice: Tom Kane (The Clone Wars and Rebels) | Imperial officer on the first Death Star in A New Hope. The Clone Wars establishes that he was previously an admiral in the Republic Navy who serves during the Clone Wars as the leader of Anakin Skywalker's fleet. He usually speaks the second half of his sentences before the first half; however, if his sentence is short enough, he does not.[309] |
Z[edit]
Name | Portrayal | Description |
---|---|---|
Ziro the Hutt | Voice: Corey Burton (The Clone Wars) | Jabba the Hutt's flamboyant uncle, and Mama the Hutt's son. |
Zuckuss | Cathy Munroe (The Empire Strikes Back) | Gand bounty hunter among those who answer Darth Vader's call to capture the Millennium Falcon in The Empire Strikes Back. In the Legends continuity, Zuckuss is a famous Force-sensitive 'findsman', who leaves his home planet of Gand to join the Bounty Hunter's Guild.[4][310] Zuckuss is often partnered with fellow bounty hunter and long time associate 4-LOM, but also teams with his bounty hunter rival Bossk on rare occasions.[311][312] After his ammonia breathing lungs are badly damaged, Zuckuss' life is saved by the Rebel Alliance and he joins them for a time, before finally being incarcerated due to schizophrenia.[5][313] The action figure was misidentified as '4-LOM' in Kenner's original Star Wars action figure line.[234] |
Constable Zuvio | Kyuzo constable of Niima Outpost on Jakku. Although featured in early promotional material for The Force Awakens, Zuvio was largely cut from the film, with his backstory instead being told in the short story 'High Noon on Jakku'.[40] |
See also[edit]
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Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List_of_Star_Wars_characters&oldid=903612050#D'
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- 'Safety is a flexible concept.'
- ―Cin Drallig, to Sammo Quid[src]
Cin Drallig was a humanmaleJedi Master who served the Jedi Order during the Clone Wars. He was the head of the Jedi Temple Guard and a lightsaber instructor who was nicknamed 'the Troll' by fellow Jedi. Drallig was killed by Darth Vader during the attack on the Jedi Temple.
BiographyEdit
Early lifeEdit
Early in his life, Cin Drallig, a humanmale, was personally trained by the Jedi High Council's Grand MasterYoda. Drallig eventually became the Jedi Order's finest master swordsman.[3] Drallig rose to the rank of Jedi Master and led the Jedi Temple Guard during the Clone Wars. As a Master, he was a teacher of lightsaber combat who passed his skills onto new generations of Jedi,[4] such as Obi-Wan Kenobi and Anakin Skywalker.[3] He earned the nickname 'the Troll' from other members of the Jedi Order.[4]
The Clone WarsEdit
Guarding the TempleEdit
- 'Stay with them. Keep an eye out for those mini-drone explosives.'
'Yes, Master Drallig.' - ―Cin Drallig orders Jedi Temple Guards to stay with a group of younglings[src]
During the Clone Wars, the Jedi Temple was bombed by PadawanBarriss Offee. Before the perpetrator had been caught, the Jedi led an investigation to determine who was behind the attack. Skywalker approached Drallig, who was standing guard with the Temple Guard at the gates of the Jedi Temple, where protesters were demonstrating against the war and the Jedi Order's involvement in it. Skywalker showed Drallig a holographic image of their then-suspect, Jackar Bowmani, and asked the Jedi Master to be on alert for him. This led to the suspect's wife, Letta Turmond, being taken into custody after spotting the holographic image,[5] and the Jedi ultimately learned that Turmond was part of the plot to attack the Jedi Temple.[6]
The Temple was later attacked by CaptainRackham Sear of the Confederacy of Independent Systems. During the attack, Drallig led two Temple Guards in securing the quarters of the Jedi younglings. He arrived just in time to cut a small explosive drone in half before it detonated in a room with several younglings. He ordered the guards to stay with the younglings and destroy any more explosives that entered the area. Drallig then joined Masters Mace Windu and Kenobi, reporting to them that the younglings were safe, but that there were explosions throughout the Temple and that the source was unknown. Master Depa Billaba and InitiateCaleb Dume ended the attack by confronting Sear on the roof of the Temple, where he committed suicide by leaping off the building.[7]
Fall of the Jedi TempleEdit
At the end of the war, Skywalker turned to the dark side of the Force and became Darth Vader, apprentice to Supreme ChancellorSheev Palpatine—secretly Darth Sidious, the Dark Lord of the Sith. Vader attacked the Jedi Temple with the 501st Legion of clone troopers, while Palpatine issued Order 66 to force the clones to turn against the Jedi Order. Drallig fought to defend the Jedi Temple[8] alongside Padawans Whie Malreaux and Bene. The three Jedi were eventually confronted and slain in lightsaber combat by Darth Vader.[2]
LegacyEdit
Sometime after his death, a holocron belonging to Drallig was sold in an auction on Denon to the nobleRin Praji, who had the holocron safekeeped at his estate on Kaikielius.[9]
Powers and abilitiesEdit
Drallig, the wielder of a greenlightsaber, was a skilled swordsman who used his knowledge of lightsaber combat to train other Jedi.[2] He was nonetheless killed in lightsaber combat by Darth Vader[2] during the attack on the Jedi Temple.[8]
Behind the scenesEdit
For his brief appearance in Star Wars: Episode III Revenge of the Sith, Cin Drallig was portrayed by prequel trilogy stunt coordinator Nick Gillard, whose name was used as the basis for the character's name.[8] Drallig was later voiced by Robin Atkin Downes in 'Sabotage,' the seventeenth episode of the fifth season of the animated television series Star Wars: The Clone Wars.[5]
AppearancesEdit
- Star Wars: The Clone Wars – 'Sabotage'
- Star Wars: Episode III Revenge of the Sith(First appearance)(Appears in hologram)
SourcesEdit
- 'Sabotage' - The Clone Wars Episode Guide on StarWars.com (backup link)
- Cin Drallig in the Encyclopedia(link now obsolete; backup link)
- Jedi Temple Guard in the Encyclopedia(link now obsolete; backup link)
- Cin Drallig in the Databank(backup link)
- Jedi Temple Guard in the Databank(backup link)
Notes and referencesEdit
- ↑Star Wars: Galactic Atlas
- ↑ 2.002.012.022.032.042.052.062.072.082.092.10Cin Drallig in the Encyclopedia(link now obsolete; backup link)
- ↑ 3.03.13.2Star Wars: The Complete Visual Dictionary, New Edition
- ↑ 4.04.1Cin Drallig in the Databank(backup link)
- ↑ 5.05.1Star Wars: The Clone Wars – 'Sabotage'
- ↑Star Wars: The Clone Wars – 'The Jedi Who Knew Too Much'
- ↑Kanan 8: First Blood, Part II: The Towers of the Temple
- ↑ 8.08.18.2Star Wars: Episode III Revenge of the Sith
- ↑Knights of Fate