Ellen TighFrom Battlestar Wiki, the free, open content Battlestar Galactica encyclopedia and episode guide(Redirected from Virtual Ellen)
BackgroundColonel Tigh, estranged from his wife and realizing her tendencies, finds himself burning a cigar hole in a photo of Ellen Tigh, just as action station klaxons ring throughout the decommissioned battlestar as the start of the Cylon attack. With the Colonies destroyed, billions of people are dead and Ellen Tigh is presumed to be one of the many (Miniseries). Character History at a Glance
New CapricaOne year after New Caprica is colonized, Ellen Tigh settles on the planet. Her husband joins her later, after Admiral Adama's insistence. Interestingly, they seem to fully reconcile during this time. Shortly thereafter the Cylon fleet discovers the planet, the Colonial Fleet in orbit jumps away, and the Cylon occupation of New Caprica begins (Lay Down Your Burdens, Part II). Four months after the occupation, Tigh's husband is imprisoned in the New Caprica Detention Center, resulting in the loss of his right eye. In order to secure his release, Tigh enters into a deal with a Cavil model. After her sexual encounter with Cavil, her husband is released (Occupation). However, as she later finds out from this same Cavil, Tigh's husband is released in order to further the Cylons' plans to tighten their grip on the civilian population. Despite the release, Tigh reports back to Cavil to further fornicate with him, suggesting some sort of long term sexual agreement. In the aftermath of a session, Cavil demands that she must find out when the next high-level meeting of the resistance is to convene; failure to do so will result in Tigh being recaptured and imprisoned again. Tigh steals a map of Breeders Canyon, created by Samuel Anders, which Saul Tigh gave to her to destroy in a nearby tent fire (Precipice). The map is later found on a dead humanoid Cylon by Anders's team after he and Fleet liaison Sharon Agathon eliminate the Centurion attack. Tigh is soon found and forced into the underground hideout, where Colonel Tigh is told of his wife's deception and confronts his wife (Exodus, Part I). The resistance leaders compel Saul Tigh to execute his wife for collaboration with the Cylons. Her husband carries out the execution by poisoning Tigh's drink prior to the Battle of New Caprica (Exodus, Part II). Saul's "Virtual Ellen"When Saul Tigh visits Caprica Six in the brig, to inform her her request to see Hera Agathon has been denied, he begins to see his dead wife in her place. The woman he sees still has the clothes and hair of Number Six, but the face and body of Ellen Tigh. She speaks the same words as Six, but in Ellen's voice. After seeing her, Tigh continues to return to the cell where Caprica Six is held. Wanting to find out how Cylons deal with pain and guilt, Tigh questions Six to learn that the Cylons have modeled their brains around the human brain and have found a "human" way to shut off pain by accepting it. During this conversation, the "Virtual Ellen" appears and removes his eye patch in an act of tenderness, which Tigh rebukes (Escape Velocity). Unanswered Questions
Cinematic TriviaJennifer Birchfield-Eick as Ellen Tigh in the Miniseries. In the DVD commentary for the Miniseries, it is revealed that Tigh was originally portrayed in picture form only by executive producer David Eick's wife, Jennifer. The picture was later replicated for the series with Kate Vernon taking the place of Mrs. Eick and the scene reshot, so Saul Tigh is seen burning a picture of Vernon in the "flashback" sequence at the beginning of "Tigh Me Up, Tigh Me Down." The Macbeth ConnectionMrs. Tigh can be profitably compared with one of Shakespeare's most memorable women. Like Lady Macbeth, Tigh is married to a man who is in the line of command, but who doesn't want the top job. She uses a combination of insult, flattery, and sexual temptation to get her husband in the game, arranges the murder of others, and even makes alcohol one of her most potent weapons (in the play, Lady Macbeth gets the castle guards drunk so that she and her husband can kill the king and princes). In the words of Lady M herself, to her husband, "Hie thee hither, that I may pour my spirits in thine ear, and chastise with the valour of my tongue all that impedes thee from the golden round." In fact, of all Shakespeare's plays, Macbeth is a particularly appropriate one for a series about evil robots who seem human on the outside ("fair is foul and foul is fair"), who are experts at lying and manipulation ("And oftentimes, to win us to our harm, the instruments of darkness tell us truths, win us with honest trifles, to betray us'n deepest consequence"), and who chase our heroes through the gulf of space (at least one scholar has noted that all of the play's most memorable scenes "take place either at night or in some dark spot"). Like Macbeth himself, Saul Tigh is famous for a bout of vicious hand to hand fighting in the recent war ("For brave Macbeth ... disdaining Fortune, with his brandish'd steel which smok'd with bloody execution ... carv'd out that passage"). References
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