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'''Felix''' is the first name of the following persons:
{{DisambigTab
|Félix Enríquez Alcalá
* [[Felix Gaeta]], a ''[[Galactica (RDM)|Galactica]]'' officer in the [[Battlestar Galactica (RDM)|Re-imagined Series]].
|Felix Gaeta
* [[Felix Silla]], the actor who portrayed [[Lucifer]] and [[Specter]] in the [[Battlestar Galactica (TOS)Original Series]].
|Felix Mortinson
|Felix Silla
{{disambig}}
}}
Latest revision as of 03:18, 15 June 2023
NOTE: This is a disambiguation page — a navigational aid which lists other pages that might otherwise share the same title If an article link referred you here, you might want to go back and fix it to point directly to the intended page.
This is a disambiguation page — a navigational aid which lists other pages that might otherwise share the same title. If an article link referred you here, you might want to go back and fix it to point directly to the intended page. Also, if you wanted to search for the term "Felix", click here.
Félix Enríquez Alcalá is a television director on the Re-imagined series of Battlestar Galactica.
Alcalá's first major break came in 1991 when he guest directed on an episode of ABC's short lived but popular drama Homefront. Since then he has guest directed on a vast number of series including CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, ER and House.
Furthermore, he was signed on to direct Ron D. Moore's Dragonriders of Pern pilot for the WB, before it was abandoned by Warner Brothers[1] over creative differences between Moore and the WB.
Alcalá also co-produced the 2006 made for television movie Walkout, based upon the true story of Paula Crisostomo, a Mexican-American Student Activist who fights the anti-Mexican bias in the American educational system. This feature was directed by Edward James Olmos.
Lieutenant Felix Gaeta ([ˈgeɪ.ɾə] or "gay-tah") is a young, capable officer in the Colonial military. For the three years prior to the Cylon attack on the Twelve Colonies, he served as William Adama's Senior Officer of the Watch aboard Galactica.
Prior to the attack, he was studying genetics and planned to get a degree through the military extension program (TRS: "Water").
He exhibits a strong attention to detail and is highly efficient. These traits and his overall abilities leads Adama to rely heavily on him as a member of Galactica's senior crew, despite his relative youth and junior rank.
As well as carrying out duties of Tactical Officer, Gaeta performs the navigational functions of calculating and initiating jumps, and manages the ship's FTL drive. Gaeta also manages the various primary computer systems used on the battlestar.
Following the fleet's discovery and abandoning of Earth and the controversial decision to install CylonFTL technology on all ships in the fleet, Gaeta uses his central role in CIC to lead a bloody mutiny aboard Galactica, and in concert with Vice President Tom Zarek stages a coup d'etat against Laura Roslin's presidency. Zarek promotes Gaeta to Commander and commanding officer of Galactica, a position he holds briefly until Adama regains control of the ship.
Gaeta is executed by firing squad for his leading role in the coup.
As a result of his studies in biogenetics, Lt. Gaeta is selected by Adama to assist Dr. Gaius Baltar in the development of the much-needed Cylon detector following the Cylon attack (TRS: "Water"). During his time working with Baltar, Gaeta develops a certain respect and liking for the doctor - despite the latter's apparent eccentricities. When a woman called "Shelly Godfrey" arrives aboard Galactica, Gaeta works hard to prove Baltar's innocence of the charges leveled against him (TRS: "Six Degrees of Separation"). Although he is ultimately successful, Gaeta fails to follow-up on the fact that the photographic evidence supplied by Godfrey looked as if the evidence itself had been faked in a way that ensured it was exposed as a forgery.
Gaeta shows his remarkable brilliance after Galactica mistakenly jumps to a different set of coordinates than the rest of the Fleet to escape a Cylon attack (TRS: "Scattered"). The FTL computers compensate for spatial changes, but due to the chaos after Commander Adama is shot by Boomer, Gaeta forgets to synchronize the spatial positioning with the rest of the Fleet, whose FTL computers had collectively different information. Complicating the issue, if Galactica returns to their original position, the Cylons would destroy the ship before it could recalculate the correct Fleet coordinates using standard procedures.
Gaeta blames himself (although Saul Tigh does not), but later realizes that by networking four computers of the ship (something Commander Adama may never have approved), he could reduce the coordinate calculation time from hours to minutes. Knowing the Cylons would try to crack his ad hoc network, Gaeta sets up five firewalls in the network to slow their progress while the ship's guns and Vipers buy the time required for the calculations. Unfortunately for Gaeta, the firewalls are not completely effective. Without him realizing it, the Cylons break through the last firewall before he can disconnect the network. As a result, many vital systems are disabled throughout the ship while Centurions board the battlestar (TRS: "Valley of Darkness"). At the end, he manages to purge the systems of any remaining traces of the virus.
Gaeta's calm exterior shows signs of wear when his interview with D'Anna Biers shows him somewhat drunk, smoking, and brandishing a rather garish tattoo of a tiger. Viewers learn from the footage that Gaeta's first name is Felix (TRS: "Final Cut").
The Cylon virus rears its ugly head once more a few weeks later when shipboard malfunctions increase to a point where consoles begin to sputter and short out. Gaeta confirms that the same virus they thought they had removed from the formerly-networked computers had metamorphized into a heuristic program--a logic bomb--that studied and probed flaws in the battlestar's computers and the hardware that each system manages. The logic bomb threatenes to disable the ship's human control on a Cylon fighter's command--and a Cylon attack is imminent.
After Colonel Tigh's command to perform the daunting task of inspecting many lines of computer code for a Cylon virus, the young lieutenant completely loses his cool:
Gaeta: A power surge energized the board. System's been twitchy ever since the Cylons infiltrated our network.
Tigh: Commander's right. I don't care if you have to go through this program line by line; fix it.
Gaeta: Excuse me?
Tigh: You heard me.
Gaeta: Sir, I'm running every diagnostic we've got. Checking each line of code could take days.
Tigh: I am not interested in excuses. Fix it!
Gaeta: It's not an excuse, sir. It's a frakking fact!
Everyone on the bridge, especially Commander Adama, is shocked by Gaeta's highly uncharacteristic outburst, but Adama is not particularly surprised, knowing that everyone on Galactica has low morale after working for months with no relief or change to their routine.
Gaeta has a solution for the logic bomb: Wipe all computer hard drives and restore them from backups made before the Cylon attack. The problem in doing this is that Galactica will be completely vulnerable to attack, save for her Viper fighters, for several minutes as her computers are rebuilt.
Against his instincts and on Laura Roslin's advice, Adama opts to use the unique abilities of the cooperative Caprica copy of Sharon Valerii to aid them. Gaeta gives the humanoid Cylon a fiber-optic data link with access to the battlestar mainframe computer and the ship's communications. After a few tense moments, Valerii asks Gaeta to perform the computer hard drive wipe after taking into her computer/brain a copy of the Cylon virus. She manipulates it and transmits to the massive incoming Cylon fleet, disabling the entire Cylon fleet in the same way that the Colonials suffered in the Fall of the Twelve Colonies. The Colonial forces destroy the entire Cylon force without a single Colonial casualty (TRS: "Flight of the Phoenix").
Gaeta is among the tense officers and crew in CIC that witness a standoff between their battlestar and the heavily-advanced battlestar Pegasus, whose commander, Admiral Helena Cain, has opted to execute two Galactica crew members after she tried them herself and against Adama's requests for the rights of his crew to have a fair, open trial (TRS: "Pegasus").
During the presidential election, Gaeta is assigned to aid and oversee the ballot counting process on Galactica. He also aids in thwarting Roslin's plans to steal the election (though he apparently never knew - or indicates any knowledge of - who exactly is behind it, other than Colonel Saul Tigh) by discovering the illegitimate ballots from the Zephyr. The only reason he realizes that the Zephyr's ballots were tampered with is due to the fact that the Zephyr's original, valid ballots had misspelled Gaius Baltar's name - the fixed ballots did not share this error. (Gaeta had authorized the go-ahead to use the misspelled ballots due to the lack of time to print new ones prior to the opening of the polls.)
Due to this happenstance discovery, Baltar, who had been rightfully elected President, was sworn in as president and ordered the Fleet to colonize New Caprica.
A year later on New Caprica, Gaeta seems to be an adviser to President Gaius Baltar. His previous post on Galactica is assumed by Karl Agathon. While Gaeta is pleased that there had been no Cylon attacks during Baltar's presidency, he disapproves of Baltar's womanizing and is secretly infuriated at Baltar's devil-may-care attitude towards the New Caprica City Worker's Union and the Quorum of Twelve. Gaeta later brings news of the Cylon invasion to the president and is present when Baltar surrenders New Caprica to Caprica-Six and Number Five(TRS: "Lay Down Your Burdens, Part II").
Gaeta is also the New Caprica Resistance inside source into the inner workings of the Cylons. He seems to favor an assassination of President Baltar as he provides the group with information that he is going to attend the New Caprica Police force graduation, which is disrupted by Duck's suicide bombing. However, upon learning that Baltar would not attend, he rushes to contact the group to warn them Baltar that is not going to be there (TRS: "Occupation").
Being the "inside man" allows him to help the New Caprica Resistance understand the inner Cylon related activities and security procedures on New Caprica. For him to contact the group, he flips Jake's yellow bowl upside down and leaves a note or information packet in a nearby tool bin for the resistance to find. Galen Tyrol does not know that he is the "inside man" and when they talk, Tyrol accuses him of being a collaborator (TRS: "Precipice").
Around the same time, Gaeta is seduced by a Number Eight. Believing that he can trust her, he gives her lists with names of human prisoners. The Eight promises to do what she can to save them, but only has a few token humans freed and the rest executed for being valuable to the humans. Gaeta only learns of her betrayal much later (The Face of the Enemy).
As the Cylons are preparing to evacuate during the Battle of New Caprica, Gaeta pulls a gun on a distraught President Baltar, clearly intending to kill him. Caprica-Six attempts to dissuade Gaeta from this course of action. In contrast to his companion's feelings, Baltar seems fully willing to die; but he tells Gaeta that he is the only one who could stop a Number Three-model Cylon from detonating a nuclear weapon hidden somewhere in the city of New Caprica. This convinces the reluctant Gaeta to let Baltar go, giving the disgraced leader a chance to redeem himself. Gaeta emerges from the same ship behind Colonel Tigh when Tigh asks Admiral Adama for permission to come aboard Galactica during the post-battle celebration (TRS: "Exodus, Part II").
Gaeta is initially isolated from Galactica's crew and those who were on New Caprica. Because of his high position in the collaborationist government, they believe he carried out the will of the Cylons. When he arrives in CIC to help with repairs on the communication systems damaged during the recent battle, former resistance leader Colonel Tigh is openly hostile towards him. Gaeta attempts to defend his actions in a tense conversation with Kara Thrace by revealing himself as Tyrol's mysterious informant. Starbuck doesn't know about the informant, since she was a captive of Leoben Conoy during the four-month Cylon occupation. She mocks her crewmate and dismisses his revelation as a poorly fabricated lie.
When Gaeta's name comes up for review in the the Circle, he is convicted of collaborating with the enemy and sentenced to death, despite the lack of evidence against him. The six-person tribunal takes him to a Viper launch tube to face his sentence. When asked to defend himself, Gaeta says that he already had and refuses to beg for his life. This infuriates Kara Thrace, who lashes out at him in a physical attack and resumes the mocking she started in the mess hall. Upon hearing Thrace repeat information about the dog bowl, Galen Tyrol realizes that Gaeta was indeed the informant from inside the Baltar administration. Gaeta is released and allowed to go. He resumes his duties as a lieutenant, still shunned by most of his crewmates except Tyrol (TRS: "Collaborators").
After his recommissioning, he takes over Baltar's scientific duties, concentrating on deciphering his notes and determining the course to Earth. Gaeta appears to have a grudge against Tigh for his part in the Circle that nearly ended in Gaeta's death, as he wears a scowl while everyone else celebrates Tigh's return from his self-exile.
Baltar is aware of Gaeta's relationship with the Eight on New Caprica. During an interrogation, he whispers to Gaeta, "I know what your Eight did". Baltar's knowledge leads Gaeta to try to kill him by stabbing him in the neck. However, he is stopped and knocked out by Admiral Adama ("Taking a Break from All Your Worries," The Face of the Enemy) [2].
During Baltar's trial for which he faces the death penalty, Gaeta commits perjury, claiming that he was there when Baltar signed the death lists and that Baltar offered no resistance in approving them (TRS: "Crossroads, Part II").
Later, Gaeta becomes part of the Demetrius's crew on its mission to find Earth (TRS: "The Ties That Bind"). After Kara Thrace orders Karl Agathon to jump to a Cylon baseship to retrieve information regarding Earth, Agathon refuses the order believing it to be too risky. When he is relieved by Thrace, she appoints Gaeta as her new XO and gives him the same order. Like Agathon, Gaeta refuses to comply with the order, creating a standoff between the ship's officers which leads Agathon to relieve Thrace of command (TRS: "The Road Less Traveled"). During this standoff Anders shoots Gaeta in the leg before he can initiate a jump back to Galactica. Having to wait 15 hours for a Raptor to return, Gaeta is worried that he will lose his leg because of the lack of proper medical treatement (TRS: "Faith").
Returned to Galactica, Gaeta does lose his leg. In recovery, he deals with the stress and phantom pain by singing a mournful ballad over and over (TRS: "Guess What's Coming to Dinner?"). Shortly later, he returns to duty, still in pain from his ordeal, but refusing to be relieved (TRS: "Revelations").
After the formation of the Cylon-Human alliance, Gaeta entices Vice President Zarek to stage a coup d'état and leads a rebellion against Admiral Adama and President Roslin. Gaeta seizes control of the ship, and is appointed commander by Zarek, becoming the de facto commanding officer of Galactica though fighting continues throughout the ship.
Adama and Tigh are ultimately arrested after helping Roslin and Baltar escape the ship. Gaeta orders Tigh jailed, and attempts to force Adama to reason with President Roslin. Adama refuses and instead tells Gaeta contemptuously that he is now the 'admiral'.
Gaeta is horrified to see the bodies of the Quorum members after Zarek ordered their mass assassination, but continues his allegiance. Despite Zarek's preference for quick and brutal removal of opponents, Gaeta insisted that Admiral Adama be tried for treason, et al., with Zarek as the entire tribunal, and Romo Lampkin serving as Adama's lawyer. Zarek summarily finds Adama guilty, and Gaeta orders the creation of a firing squad.
Having previously ordered her Raptor to be shot down, Gaeta is forced into a defensive position when Roslin takes command of the rebel Cylon Basestar. Zarek attempts to break Roslin's resolve by lying to her that Tigh died in an escape attempt and erroneously reporting that Adama was executed. The plan backfires; it steels Roslin's resolve, and she swears to destroy them at all costs. Zarek urges Gaeta to fight. Gaeta, feeling that enough blood had been shed, instead attempts to escape by jumping away with those ships who have obeyed his order to spin up their FTL drives. Galen Tyrol manages to manually disable Galactica's FTL drive, preventing a jump.
As the rest of his crew prepares to fire, Gaeta remembers what he had said to Thrace about there being a reckoning and that people would have to answer for their actions. Realizing that he, too, would soon face his own reckoning, Gaeta orders weapons hold. Seconds later, CIC is stormed by Adama and a large contingent of loyal officers and marines.
Gaeta gives up without a fight, and he and Zarek are led away, their rebellion ended. Gaeta later discusses things with Baltar, admitting that he doesn't mind that he lost but making an unclear statement (one that Baltar claims to have understood) about hoping people would understand who he is.
Gaeta and Zarek are executed by firing squad for mutiny and treason. Just prior to his death, Gaeta realizes in shock that his amputated leg no longer itches. His last words are, "It stopped!" (TRS: "Blood on the Scales")
Gaeta does not wear any junior pilot wings on his duty uniform during the Miniseries, but has flight wings in nearly every appearance since the Miniseries.
While Gaeta is described as the "Tactical Officer," his role is closer to that of the US Navy's CIC Watch Officer (CICWO), combining it with elements of the Tactical Watch Officer (TAO), a role also partially fulfilled by Colonel Tigh, both under the command of William Adama. According to the official SciFi.com character data file, Gaeta's title is "Senior Officer of the Watch," although the title of Tactical Officer may have a better "ring" to the ears of most viewers.
The name "Felix" - first revealed in the episode "Final Cut" - means "happy" in Latin; the connotations of the Latin word imply being fortunate, lucky, prosperous.
Gaeta is the name of a small seaport and resort in southern Italy.
In the Miniseries, Gaeta's name is usually pronounced [ˈgaɪ.ɾə], while Colonel Tigh seems to vacillates between [ˈgeɪ.ɾə] and [ˈgaɪ.ɾə] - this may also be atributed to the varying severity of Michael Hogan's Canadian accent. However, in all subsequent episodes, everyone pronounces it as [ˈgeɪ.ɾə].
Unlike most of the series' officers, Gaeta is usually addressed as "Mr. Gaeta," rather than by his rank. This appears to mirror real-world naval tradition, in which male officers with the rank of lieutenant or below are referred to and addressed as 'Mister.'
↑This number comes from the serial number on the dogtags auctioned by the studios at the end of filming the series. These screen-used tags also read "L. Gaeta" vice "F. Gaeta".
↑In "Taking a Break From All Your Worries," Baltar's words can't be heard. This was originally the remnant of a subplot that was cut from the storyline and later retconned in order to provide an explanation for Gaeta's reaction. See Taking a Break From All Your Worries#From the podcast for the original idea.
↑Writer's commentary to webisode 10; Gaeta ends the relationship in order to protect Hoshi from the fallout of what Gaeta is about to do.
Doctor Felix Mortinson, Ph. D. is an Earth scientist who believes in the "alien astronaut" theory and, as such, was the subject of ridicule from members of the scientific community since November of 1971 C.E. (Galactica 1980 1).
When the Colonials make contact with Earth in 1980 C.E., Mortinson is working at the Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico where he intercepts and is able to identify the Colonial language as having strong similarities to ancient Aramaic, a language that is over three thousand years old (Galactica 1980 2).
Mortinson later headed toward Washington, D.C. in the hope of establishing contact with the Colonials, who he correctly surmised to be brothers from the stars. He encounters Troy Adama and Troykus Adama, is able to communicate with them relatively effectively and leads them to Mount Weather, the United States' continuity bunker. By doing so, he allows Commander Adama to convince President Jimmy Carter that the Colonials were no threat, despite his ill-thought out action and Doctor Gaius Zee's invasion of Earth, and to direct their energies to the Cylons threat (Galactica 1980 3—4).
Felix Silla (born January 11, 1937 near Rome, Italy, died April 16, 2021 in Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S.A.[1]) is an Italian-American television and movie actor and former circus performer. Silla is one a rare group of actors who have had roles in each of the largest science fiction sagas: the original 1966 Star Trek, the original Battlestar Galactica, and the final movie of the Star Wars original trilogy, Return of the Jedi.
Silla was born with dwarfism, measuring at 3 feet and 11 inches in height[1].
Training as a circus performer, Silla came to the United States in 1955. Once in America, he toured with the famed Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus. His talents with horses and as an acrobat brought him to the attention of Hollywood where he relocated to work as a stuntman.
His first role in that capacity was with motion picture A Ticklish Affair. He worked as a stunt double in such hits as The Towering Inferno, and The Hindenberg.
Expanding into acting, his best known roles include the insane small Hitler from The Black Bird and Cousin Itt on the classic television series, The Addams Family.
Silla also had a large number of science fiction genre appearances, including portraying Twiki in Buck Rogers in the Twenty-Fifth Century, the child gorilla in the original Planet of the Apes, an Ewok in Return of the Jedi, and a Talosian in the original pilot for Star Trek.
He frequently appears in Las Vegas with his musical group, "The Original Harmonica Band."
He has been married to his wife Susan since 1965. They have two children, Bonnie and Michael.
He died on April 16, 2021, and the news was first broken by friend and fellow actor Gil Gerard (star of Buck Rogers in the 25th Century) in a posting on Twitter[2]. Earlier that day, Gerard updated fans that Silla's family had been moving Silla to hospice care, after speaking to them the night before. According to Gerard, Silla had been diagnosed with terminal pancreatic cancer[3].
Re-imagined Series definition: the process of using the FTL engines to make an near-instantaneous apparent faster-than-light transport of a ship from one point in space to another
Re-imagined Series definition: a nickname used as a substitute for an aviator's given name in wireless communications and in conversation