Editing Baltar (TOS)
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{{Character Data | {{Character Data | ||
|title= Baltar | |title= Baltar | ||
|photo= Baltar.jpg | |photo= Baltar.jpg | ||
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In the original theatrical version of "Saga of a Star World," Baltar is executed by the Cylons. However, when the pilot was adapted for television, producers decided they needed a recurring human villain with more dramatic potential than the Cylons.<ref>{{cite book/sswa|165}}</ref> Creator Glen A. Larson, who appreciated the character and the performance of actor John Colicos, spared Baltar, believing that strong villains were necessary to validate the show's heroes.<ref>{{cite book/sswa|125}}</ref> | In the original theatrical version of "Saga of a Star World," Baltar is executed by the Cylons. However, when the pilot was adapted for television, producers decided they needed a recurring human villain with more dramatic potential than the Cylons.<ref>{{cite book/sswa|165}}</ref> Creator Glen A. Larson, who appreciated the character and the performance of actor John Colicos, spared Baltar, believing that strong villains were necessary to validate the show's heroes.<ref>{{cite book/sswa|125}}</ref> | ||
John Colicos portrayed Baltar as a "dastardly, mustache-twirling villain that you love to hate," known for "chewing the scenery" in a performance that became iconic for the character.<ref>{{cite book/sswa|126}}</ref> Colicos himself viewed Baltar as a "galactic | John Colicos portrayed Baltar as a "dastardly, mustache-twirling villain that you love to hate," known for "chewing the scenery" in a performance that became iconic for the character.<ref>{{cite book/sswa|126}}</ref> Colicos himself viewed Baltar as a "galactic Judas" and a "fallen angel," a man fighting for his own "warped, integrity."<ref>{{cite book/sswa|125}}</ref> This decision provided the series with its primary antagonist, a human who would hunt his own kind across the galaxy. | ||
=== Additional Notes === | === Additional Notes === | ||
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* Watchers of the series can also note the intended-to-be-subtle changes in the scenes concerning Baltar's talk with the new Imperious Leader. In "[[Saga of a Star World]]," the Imperious Leader states that Baltar will vie for peace on the behest of the Cylons, as they are powerful enough to be "tolerant" of the humans. However, in the beginning scenes of "[[Lost Planet of the Gods]]," this part is conspicuously absent. This led fans to believe that: (1) The "olive branch" mandate was not part of the series [[canon]] to make the series more interesting; or (2) Baltar attacked the Fleet on his (and Lucifer's) own prerogative, in which Baltar (could have) made it appear that the surviving humans were intolerant to the peace offering, which would likely be to convince the Leader that his position was the wrong one to take. | * Watchers of the series can also note the intended-to-be-subtle changes in the scenes concerning Baltar's talk with the new Imperious Leader. In "[[Saga of a Star World]]," the Imperious Leader states that Baltar will vie for peace on the behest of the Cylons, as they are powerful enough to be "tolerant" of the humans. However, in the beginning scenes of "[[Lost Planet of the Gods]]," this part is conspicuously absent. This led fans to believe that: (1) The "olive branch" mandate was not part of the series [[canon]] to make the series more interesting; or (2) Baltar attacked the Fleet on his (and Lucifer's) own prerogative, in which Baltar (could have) made it appear that the surviving humans were intolerant to the peace offering, which would likely be to convince the Leader that his position was the wrong one to take. | ||
* Re-imagined series creator [[Ronald D. Moore]] found the original Baltar's motivation for betraying his entire race to be nonsensical. | * Re-imagined series creator [[Ronald D. Moore]] found the original Baltar's motivation for betraying his entire race to be nonsensical. Moore stated, "I never understood why the hell he did what he did... All they really say is they promised him some kind of dictatorship over a planet or something. But they were going to wipe out all the humans, so who is he going to be dictator over? And why does he think that’s attractive? 'What’s in this for Baltar?' was always such a tough nut to crack." This critique led Moore to develop the [[Gaius Baltar|re-imagined version]] of the character as someone who betrays humanity unintentionally, driven by his own ego and weaknesses.<ref>{{cite book/sswa|503-504}}</ref> | ||
}} | |||
* ''According to ''[[Encyclopedia Galactica]]'', a non-canonical piece of merchandise published in 1979:'' | * ''According to ''[[Encyclopedia Galactica]]'', a non-canonical piece of merchandise published in 1979:'' | ||
: Baltar's colony is given as {{TOS|Picon|Picon}}, growing up on the asteroid [[Cygnus]] where his family owned a {{TOS|tylium|tylium}} mine. At 17, Cygnus was taken by the {{TOS|Cylons}} and he lived as a prisoner for 5 yahren, all the while blaming the {{TOS|Caprica|Caprica}}ns and [[Aeries|Aerians]] for this as they had failed to adhere to their mutual protection treaty with Picon. After being liberated, he studied "political economy" at the [[University of Picon]], later returning to turn the small mine his family had owned into "the largest intercolonial Tylium trading firm in the Galaxy (sic)" in a span of a decade. | |||
He became bored with business and entered politics, honing his public speaking skills and offering people "what they most wanted to hear: that the Cylons could be reasonable, and that peace was at hand". His persuasive words lead to his selection to be a member of the {{TOS|Quorum of Twelve|Quorum of Twelve}} ten yahren prior to the end of the [[Thousand-Yahren War]], where he began working on the armistice proposal that brought the destruction of man. At the time of the [[Battle of Cimtar|fall of the Colonies]], he was 117 [[yahren]].<ref>{{cite_book|last=Kraus|first=Bruce|authorlink=|authorlinkurl=|coauthors=|year=1979|title=[[Encyclopedia Galactica]]|publisher=|location=|id=|pages=16-17}}</ref> | : He became bored with business and entered politics, honing his public speaking skills and offering people "what they most wanted to hear: that the Cylons could be reasonable, and that peace was at hand". His persuasive words lead to his selection to be a member of the {{TOS|Quorum of Twelve|Quorum of Twelve}} ten yahren prior to the end of the [[Thousand-Yahren War]], where he began working on the armistice proposal that brought the destruction of man. At the time of the [[Battle of Cimtar|fall of the Colonies]], he was 117 [[yahren]].<ref>{{cite_book|last=Kraus|first=Bruce|authorlink=|authorlinkurl=|coauthors=|year=1979|title=[[Encyclopedia Galactica]]|publisher=|location=|id=|pages=16-17}}</ref> | ||
== Related Media == | == Related Media == | ||
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{{reflist}} | {{reflist}} | ||
{{ | {{Characters (TOS)}} | ||
}} | |||
{{#related:Baltar (TOS alternate)}} | {{#related:Baltar (TOS alternate)}} | ||
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[[Category:Characters (TOS)]] | [[Category:Characters (TOS)]] | ||
[[Category:Main Characters (TOS)]] | [[Category:Main Characters (TOS)]] | ||
[[Category:TOS]] | |||
[[de:Baltar (TOS)]] | [[de:Baltar (TOS)]] | ||
[[fr:Baltar (LSO)]] | [[fr:Baltar (LSO)]] | ||