Toggle menu
Toggle personal menu
Not logged in
Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits.

Romo Lampkin: Difference between revisions

From Battlestar Wiki, the free, open content Battlestar Galactica encyclopedia and episode guide
Serenity (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
Joe Beaudoin Jr. (talk | contribs)
m + disline
 
(38 intermediate revisions by 16 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Character Data
{{Character Data
     |photo= Romo Lampkin.jpg
     |photo= Romo Lampkin.jpg
     |colony= Indeterminate<ref>Lampkin is known to have resided on [[Caprica (RDM)|Caprica]] due to his association with [[Joseph Adama]]. However, he lived on Gemenon with his [[Faye Lampkin|wife]] and daughters.</ref>
     |colony= Indeterminate<ref>Lampkin is known to have resided on {{RDM|Caprica}} due to his association with [[Joseph Adama]]. However, he later lived on Gemenon with his [[Faye Lampkin|wife]] and daughters.</ref>
     |birthname= Romo Lampkin
     |birthname= Romo Lampkin
     |seen= The Son Also Rises
     |seen= The Son Also Rises
     |death=  
     |death= Unknown causes on new Earth, c. 148,000 BCE
     |parents= Described as "missing"
     |parents= Described as "missing"
     |children= 2 daughters; Jennifer and Kate  
     |children= 2 daughters; Jennifer and Kate  
     |marital status= Widowed, [[Faye Lampkin]] (wife)
     |marital status= Widowered, [[Faye Lampkin]] (wife)
     |role= Public defender
     |role= Defense attorney;<br>Acting President of the [[Twelve Colonies of Kobol]]
     |actor= [[Mark Sheppard]]
     |actor= [[Mark Sheppard]]
     }}
     }}{{Disline|For a character with the same first name depicted in the [[Dynamite Entertainment]] comic books, see: [[Romo (TOS)]].}}


'''Romo Lampkin''' is a highly capable yet ethically questionable lawyer in the [[the Fleet (RDM)|Fleet]]. He is a [[Wikipedia:kleptomania|kleptomaniac]] with penchants for deception and psychological manipulation.
'''Romo Lampkin''' is a highly capable yet ethically questionable lawyer in the [[the Fleet (RDM)|Fleet]]. He is a [[Wikipedia:kleptomania|kleptomaniac]] with penchants for deception and psychological manipulation.


Prior to the [[Fall of the Twelve Colonies]], he worked in the public litigation office on [[Caprica (RDM)|Caprica]], where he likely met and learned from [[Joseph Adama]], a man whom he hated yet respected. His parents were kidnapped, robbed and murdered when he was nine. He was married for 10 years to [[Faye Lampkin]], with whom he had two daughters, Jennifer and Kate, and lived on [[Gemenon (RDM)|Gemenon]]. The only memento of his family is his wife's cat, [[Lance]], that he was picking up from the vet during the Fall; he claims to dislike Lance, but appreciates that at least it does not "scratch or bite like she did" ("[[The Son Also Rises]]", "[[Sine Qua Non]]").
== Life ==


Having survived the attack on the Colonies, he eventually settles on [[New Caprica]] and lives under the [[Cylon Occupation Authority|Cylon occupation]] ([[Crossroads, Part I]]).
=== Pre-[[Fall]] ===


Lampkin is appointed [[Gaius Baltar]]'s defense counsel after his previous lawyer, [[Alan Hughes]], is killed by a bomb planted in [[Margaret Edmondson]]'s [[Raptor]]. He claims to take the case for the fame and glory, and despite questions raised about his previous experience, appears insufferably self-confident and pompous (The Son Also Rises). Further, payment for his services is rendered in the form of a compartment on a ship with a view, which he receives (Sine Qua Non).  
His parents were kidnapped, robbed and murdered when he was nine.  


Lampkin becomes the next assassination target, but is only injured when the door to his room is rigged with an explosive device. Consequently, Lampkin walks with a cane after being saved by [[Colonial Marine Corps|Marine]] [[Cheadle]]. A part he pocketed from Captain [[Aaron Kelly]], identical to one used in an earlier unexploded bomb, reveals Kelly is the assassin (The Son Also Rises).
He was married for ten years to [[Faye Lampkin]], with whom he had two daughters, Jennifer and Kate, and lived on [[Gemenon (RDM)|Gemenon]]. The only memento of his family is his wife's cat, [[Lance]], that he was picking up from the vet during the Fall; he claims to dislike Lance, but appreciates that at least it does not "scratch or bite like she did" ([[TRS]]: "[[The Son Also Rises]]," "[[Sine Qua Non]]").


When [[Cassidy]], the prosecuting attorney, presents a compelling opening statement highlighting mankind's dwindling numbers, Lampkin changes Baltar's plea to "guilty". In another controversial and unusual move, he calls on Lee Adama, who joined the defense after a falling out with [[William Adama|his father]], to take the stand and testify on Baltar's behalf, gambling that Adama's testimony would be the best chance to sway the admiral's foregone verdict of guilty. Adama delivers an impassioned speech about how the Colonial Fleet and government forgave so many crimes and gave so many second chances, but not for Baltar, who is being offered up as a scapegoat for their own guilt, shame and failures. His testimony tips the tribunal's balance in favor of acquittal.
Prior to the [[Fall of the Twelve Colonies]], he worked in the public litigation office on {{RDM|Caprica}}, where he likely met and learned from [[Joseph Adama]], a man whom he hated yet respected (TRS: "Sine Qua Non").  


Lampkin says his goodbye to Adama after the trial and departs without his cane, walking without a limp, hinting to what extent the perceptions of both Adama and the court might have been manipulated ([[Crossroads, Part I]] & [[Crossroads, Part II|Part II]]).
=== Post-[[Fall]] ===


After his "big win", Lampkin suffers the loss of Lance over a month later by "those debased dregs of humanity" who apparently kill the cat for reasons unknown and is withdrawn until Lee Adama requests Lampkin's help in a search for an interim president. After eliminating a list of [[47]] candidates, including [[Doyle Franks]], Lampkin submits Lee Adama's name to the [[Quorum of Twelve (RDM)|Quorum of Twelve]] who ratify Adama's appointment, but not before testing him at gunpoint ([[Sine Qua Non]]).
Having survived the attack on the Colonies, he eventually settles on [[New Caprica]] and lives under the [[Cylon Occupation Authority|Cylon occupation]] {{TRS|Crossroads, Part I}}.  


== Legal practices and ego ==
Lampkin is appointed [[Gaius Baltar]]'s defense counsel after his previous lawyer, [[Alan Hughes]], is killed by a bomb planted in [[Margaret Edmondson]]'s [[Raptor]]. He claims to take the case for the fame and glory, and despite questions raised about his previous experience, appears insufferably self-confident and pompous (TRS: "[[The Son Also Rises]]"). Further, payment for his services is rendered in the form of a compartment on a ship with a view, which he receives {{TRS|Sine Qua Non}}.


One of the best legal experts in the Fleet, Romo Lampkin is known for his various quirks. Among them, Lampkin claims that interrogation rooms give him "[[w:stage fright|stage fright]]". He also channels his kleptomania to his advantage by stealing objects he believes might give him insight or handicap his opponents. For instance he steals [[Laura Roslin]]'s glasses, figuring that without them the president would appear less serious during the trial; and steals [[Gaius Baltar]]'s pen to raises suspicions that Baltar is being silenced, and to use in a ploy on [[Caprica-Six]].  Romo Lampkin typically wears a pair of sunglasses, letting him observe and read those around him without giving anything away himself ([[The Son Also Rises]]).
Lampkin becomes the next assassination target, but is only injured when the door to his room is rigged with an explosive device. Consequently, Lampkin walks with a cane after being saved by [[Colonial Marine Corps|Marine]] [[Henry Cheadle]]. A part he pocketed from Captain [[Aaron Kelly]], identical to one used in an earlier unexploded bomb, reveals Kelly is the assassin (TRS: "The Son Also Rises").


Further, Lampkin is not above court room theatrics, which includes faking a limp during Baltar's trial and putting [[Lee Adama]] on the stand to sway the vote of [[William Adama]] ([[Crossroads, Part I]] & [[Crossroads, Part II|Part II]]).
When [[Didi Cassidy]], the prosecuting attorney, presents a compelling opening statement highlighting mankind's dwindling numbers, Lampkin changes Baltar's plea to "guilty." In another controversial and unusual move, he calls on Lee Adama, who joined the defense after a falling out with [[William Adama|his father]], to take the stand and testify on Baltar's behalf, gambling that Adama's testimony would be the best chance to sway the admiral's foregone verdict of guilty. Adama delivers an impassioned speech about how the Colonial Fleet and government forgave so many crimes and gave so many second chances, but not for Baltar, who is being offered up as a scapegoat for their own guilt, shame and failures. His testimony tips the tribunal's balance in favor of acquittal.


Lampkin also codifies a set of "Lampkin's Legal Dynamics", the first of which he reveals to [[Lee Adama]]:
Lampkin says his goodbye to Adama after the trial and departs without his cane, walking without a limp, hinting to what extent the perceptions of both Adama and the court might have been manipulated ([[TRS]]: "[[Crossroads, Part I]]" & "[[Crossroads, Part II|Part II]]").
 
After his "big win," Lampkin suffers the loss of Lance over a month later by "those debased dregs of humanity" who apparently kill the cat and is withdrawn until Lee Adama requests Lampkin's help in a search for an interim president. After eliminating a list of [[47]] candidates, including [[Doyle Franks]], Lampkin submits Lee Adama's name to the [[Quorum of Twelve (RDM)|Quorum of Twelve]] who ratify Adama's appointment, but not before testing him at gunpoint.  He is given [[Jake (New Caprica)|Jake]], the dog that helped the Resistance on New Caprica, as a reward and as a new pet for him to loath as Lee Adama puts it.  Lampkin says dogs are the only thing he hates more than cats, but he seems to accept Jake {{TRS|Sine Qua Non}}.
 
After [[William Adama|Admiral Adama]] is taken prisoner during [[Felix Gaeta]] and [[Tom Zarek]]'s [[Gaeta's Mutiny|coup d'etat]], Lampkin is called aboard ''Galactica'' by Zarek to serve as his legal council for a [[w:drumhead court-martial|drumhead court-martial]].  Lampkin tries to get Adama to submit a testimony and stall for time while the military loyalists work to retake the ship and rescue the mutineers' hostages, but Adama refues. He convinces Lampkin instead that Zarek only brought him in to lend legitimacy to the process and intends to execute them both once Gaeta has been placated.  When Adama is found "guilty" of his crimes, Zarek has marine [[Parr]] escort Lampkin away, presumably to his death, but along the way they happen upon the aftermath of [[Lee Adama]] and [[Kara Thrace]]'s rescue of the Cylon hostages.  Using Thrace as a distraction, Lampkin kills Parr by repeatedly stabbing him with a fountain pen and breaks free of his bonds.  He ponders fleeing for a moment, but instead helps Thrace then carry a critically wounded [[Samuel Anders]] to [[Cottle|Doc Cottle]] for medical treatment {{TRS|Blood on the Scales}}.
 
In what he calls "poetic justice," he is appointed President of the Colonies before ''Galactica'' embarks on its rescue of [[Hera]]. He departs on the last Raptor off the ship to the salutes of Adama and the crew {{TRS|Daybreak, Part I}}.
 
He, along with the last remnants of Colonial civilization, rejoins ''Galactica'' over the second, new-found [[Earth (TRS)|Earth]] to settle and begin a life. He appears to be surprised that people of the Fleet agreed to destroy their advanced technology and become primitive {{TRS|Daybreak, Part II}}.
 
As the Colonial government is dissolved following the settlement of Earth, Lampkin served as the final President of the Twelve Colonies, and went on to lead one group of settlers on the planet {{TRS|Daybreak, Part III}}.
 
== Legal Practices and Ego ==
 
One of the best (not to mention only) legal experts in the Fleet, Romo Lampkin is known for his various quirks. Among them, Lampkin claims that interrogation rooms give him "[[w:stage fright|stage fright]]". He also channels his kleptomania to his advantage by stealing objects he believes might give him insight or handicap his opponents. For instance he steals [[Laura Roslin]]'s glasses, figuring that without them the president would appear less serious during the trial; and steals [[Gaius Baltar]]'s pen to raises suspicions that Baltar is being silenced, and to use in a ploy on [[Caprica-Six]].  Romo Lampkin typically wears a pair of sunglasses, letting him observe and read those around him without giving anything away himself {{TRS|The Son Also Rises}}.
 
Further, Lampkin is not above court room theatrics, which includes faking a limp during Baltar's trial and putting [[Lee Adama]] on the stand to sway the vote of [[William Adama]] ([[TRS]]: "[[Crossroads, Part I]]" & "[[Crossroads, Part II|Part II]]").
 
Lampkin also codifies a set of "Lampkin's Legal Dynamics," the first of which he reveals to [[Lee Adama]]:


:''Lampkin's First Rule of Legal Dynamics: When an irresistible force meets a movable object, stand aside and wait for the class action suit.''
:''Lampkin's First Rule of Legal Dynamics: When an irresistible force meets a movable object, stand aside and wait for the class action suit.''


Further, he is not above testing people, as he does to Lee Adama, whom he threatens at gunpoint in an attempt to determine Adama's readiness for his role as interim president ([[Sine Qua Non]]).
Further, he is not above testing people, as he does to Lee Adama, whom he threatens at gunpoint in an attempt to determine Adama's readiness for his role as interim president {{TRS|Sine Qua Non}}.


== Notes ==
== Notes ==
Line 44: Line 62:
* The name "Romo" comes from the first two letters of [[Ronald D. Moore]]'s first and last names, although [[David Eick]] believes that the name is a nod to [[w:Dallas Cowboys|Dallas Cowboys]] starting quarterback [[w:Tony Romo|Tony Romo]].<ref>{{cite_rdm_podcast|episode=The Son Also Rises Bonus|act=|id=|timestamp=~00:01:05|totalrunning=~00:47:39}}</ref>
* The name "Romo" comes from the first two letters of [[Ronald D. Moore]]'s first and last names, although [[David Eick]] believes that the name is a nod to [[w:Dallas Cowboys|Dallas Cowboys]] starting quarterback [[w:Tony Romo|Tony Romo]].<ref>{{cite_rdm_podcast|episode=The Son Also Rises Bonus|act=|id=|timestamp=~00:01:05|totalrunning=~00:47:39}}</ref>
* Romo Lampkin was originally envisioned as a "55-year old [[w:Alan Dershowitz|Alan Dershowitz]] character".<ref>{{cite_rdm_podcast|episode=The Son Also Rises Bonus|act=|id=|timestamp=~00:11:42|totalrunning=~00:47:39}}</ref>
* Romo Lampkin was originally envisioned as a "55-year old [[w:Alan Dershowitz|Alan Dershowitz]] character".<ref>{{cite_rdm_podcast|episode=The Son Also Rises Bonus|act=|id=|timestamp=~00:11:42|totalrunning=~00:47:39}}</ref>
*Lampkin has had two pets: [[Lance]], his late wife's cat, and [[Jake (New Caprica)|Jake]], a dog whose dish was used as a signal by the resistance on New Caprica.  Despite his professed hate of cats, and of dogs even more, he nevertheless took on the guardianship and care of both.
* At the North Hollywood screening of the series finale of ''Battlestar Galactica'' for cast and crew, their families, and some Sci Fi Channel executives, Mark Sheppard quipped "I'm still the f--king president."<ref>{{cite_news|first=|last=|url=http://www.thrfeed.com/2009/03/the-battlestar-screening-finale.html|title="Tearful goodbyes at final 'Battlestar' screening"|publisher=|page=|date=|accessdate=|language=}}</ref>


== References ==
== References ==


<div style="font-size:85%"><references/></div>
{{reflist}}
{{start box}}
{{succession box|before=[[Laura Roslin]]|title=[[Government|President of the Twelve Colonies of Kobol]]|after=''None<br><small>Colonial government dissolved</small>''}}
{{end box}}


{{WikiFrakr|Bono Napkin}}
{{characters}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Lampkin, Romo}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Lampkin, Romo}}
Line 60: Line 83:


[[de:Romo Lampkin]]
[[de:Romo Lampkin]]
[[fr:Romo Lampkin]]

Latest revision as of 23:54, 28 October 2023

Romo Lampkin
Romo Lampkin

Name

{{{name}}}
Age {{{age}}}
Colony Indeterminate[1]
Birth place {{{birthplace}}}
Birth Name Romo Lampkin
Birth Date {{{birthdate}}}
Callsign {{{callsign}}}
Nickname {{{nickname}}}
Introduced The Son Also Rises
Death Unknown causes on new Earth, c. 148,000 BCE
Parents Described as "missing"
Siblings {{{siblings}}}
Children 2 daughters; Jennifer and Kate
Marital Status Widowered, Faye Lampkin (wife)
Family Tree View
Role Defense attorney;
Acting President of the Twelve Colonies of Kobol
Rank {{{rank}}}
Serial Number {{{serial}}}
Portrayed by Mark Sheppard
Romo Lampkin is a Cylon
Romo Lampkin is a Final Five Cylon
Romo Lampkin is a Human/Cylon Hybrid
Romo Lampkin is an Original Series Cylon
Related Media
@ BW Media
Additional Information
[[Image:|200px|Romo Lampkin]]


Romo Lampkin is a highly capable yet ethically questionable lawyer in the Fleet. He is a kleptomaniac with penchants for deception and psychological manipulation.

Life

Pre-Fall

His parents were kidnapped, robbed and murdered when he was nine.

He was married for ten years to Faye Lampkin, with whom he had two daughters, Jennifer and Kate, and lived on Gemenon. The only memento of his family is his wife's cat, Lance, that he was picking up from the vet during the Fall; he claims to dislike Lance, but appreciates that at least it does not "scratch or bite like she did" (TRS: "The Son Also Rises," "Sine Qua Non").

Prior to the Fall of the Twelve Colonies, he worked in the public litigation office on Caprica, where he likely met and learned from Joseph Adama, a man whom he hated yet respected (TRS: "Sine Qua Non").

Post-Fall

Having survived the attack on the Colonies, he eventually settles on New Caprica and lives under the Cylon occupation (TRS: "Crossroads, Part I").

Lampkin is appointed Gaius Baltar's defense counsel after his previous lawyer, Alan Hughes, is killed by a bomb planted in Margaret Edmondson's Raptor. He claims to take the case for the fame and glory, and despite questions raised about his previous experience, appears insufferably self-confident and pompous (TRS: "The Son Also Rises"). Further, payment for his services is rendered in the form of a compartment on a ship with a view, which he receives (TRS: "Sine Qua Non").

Lampkin becomes the next assassination target, but is only injured when the door to his room is rigged with an explosive device. Consequently, Lampkin walks with a cane after being saved by Marine Henry Cheadle. A part he pocketed from Captain Aaron Kelly, identical to one used in an earlier unexploded bomb, reveals Kelly is the assassin (TRS: "The Son Also Rises").

When Didi Cassidy, the prosecuting attorney, presents a compelling opening statement highlighting mankind's dwindling numbers, Lampkin changes Baltar's plea to "guilty." In another controversial and unusual move, he calls on Lee Adama, who joined the defense after a falling out with his father, to take the stand and testify on Baltar's behalf, gambling that Adama's testimony would be the best chance to sway the admiral's foregone verdict of guilty. Adama delivers an impassioned speech about how the Colonial Fleet and government forgave so many crimes and gave so many second chances, but not for Baltar, who is being offered up as a scapegoat for their own guilt, shame and failures. His testimony tips the tribunal's balance in favor of acquittal.

Lampkin says his goodbye to Adama after the trial and departs without his cane, walking without a limp, hinting to what extent the perceptions of both Adama and the court might have been manipulated (TRS: "Crossroads, Part I" & "Part II").

After his "big win," Lampkin suffers the loss of Lance over a month later by "those debased dregs of humanity" who apparently kill the cat and is withdrawn until Lee Adama requests Lampkin's help in a search for an interim president. After eliminating a list of 47 candidates, including Doyle Franks, Lampkin submits Lee Adama's name to the Quorum of Twelve who ratify Adama's appointment, but not before testing him at gunpoint. He is given Jake, the dog that helped the Resistance on New Caprica, as a reward and as a new pet for him to loath as Lee Adama puts it. Lampkin says dogs are the only thing he hates more than cats, but he seems to accept Jake (TRS: "Sine Qua Non").

After Admiral Adama is taken prisoner during Felix Gaeta and Tom Zarek's coup d'etat, Lampkin is called aboard Galactica by Zarek to serve as his legal council for a drumhead court-martial. Lampkin tries to get Adama to submit a testimony and stall for time while the military loyalists work to retake the ship and rescue the mutineers' hostages, but Adama refues. He convinces Lampkin instead that Zarek only brought him in to lend legitimacy to the process and intends to execute them both once Gaeta has been placated. When Adama is found "guilty" of his crimes, Zarek has marine Parr escort Lampkin away, presumably to his death, but along the way they happen upon the aftermath of Lee Adama and Kara Thrace's rescue of the Cylon hostages. Using Thrace as a distraction, Lampkin kills Parr by repeatedly stabbing him with a fountain pen and breaks free of his bonds. He ponders fleeing for a moment, but instead helps Thrace then carry a critically wounded Samuel Anders to Doc Cottle for medical treatment (TRS: "Blood on the Scales").

In what he calls "poetic justice," he is appointed President of the Colonies before Galactica embarks on its rescue of Hera. He departs on the last Raptor off the ship to the salutes of Adama and the crew (TRS: "Daybreak, Part I").

He, along with the last remnants of Colonial civilization, rejoins Galactica over the second, new-found Earth to settle and begin a life. He appears to be surprised that people of the Fleet agreed to destroy their advanced technology and become primitive (TRS: "Daybreak, Part II").

As the Colonial government is dissolved following the settlement of Earth, Lampkin served as the final President of the Twelve Colonies, and went on to lead one group of settlers on the planet (TRS: "Daybreak, Part III").

Legal Practices and Ego

One of the best (not to mention only) legal experts in the Fleet, Romo Lampkin is known for his various quirks. Among them, Lampkin claims that interrogation rooms give him "stage fright". He also channels his kleptomania to his advantage by stealing objects he believes might give him insight or handicap his opponents. For instance he steals Laura Roslin's glasses, figuring that without them the president would appear less serious during the trial; and steals Gaius Baltar's pen to raises suspicions that Baltar is being silenced, and to use in a ploy on Caprica-Six. Romo Lampkin typically wears a pair of sunglasses, letting him observe and read those around him without giving anything away himself (TRS: "The Son Also Rises").

Further, Lampkin is not above court room theatrics, which includes faking a limp during Baltar's trial and putting Lee Adama on the stand to sway the vote of William Adama (TRS: "Crossroads, Part I" & "Part II").

Lampkin also codifies a set of "Lampkin's Legal Dynamics," the first of which he reveals to Lee Adama:

Lampkin's First Rule of Legal Dynamics: When an irresistible force meets a movable object, stand aside and wait for the class action suit.

Further, he is not above testing people, as he does to Lee Adama, whom he threatens at gunpoint in an attempt to determine Adama's readiness for his role as interim president (TRS: "Sine Qua Non").

Notes

  • The name "Romo" comes from the first two letters of Ronald D. Moore's first and last names, although David Eick believes that the name is a nod to Dallas Cowboys starting quarterback Tony Romo.[2]
  • Romo Lampkin was originally envisioned as a "55-year old Alan Dershowitz character".[3]
  • Lampkin has had two pets: Lance, his late wife's cat, and Jake, a dog whose dish was used as a signal by the resistance on New Caprica. Despite his professed hate of cats, and of dogs even more, he nevertheless took on the guardianship and care of both.
  • At the North Hollywood screening of the series finale of Battlestar Galactica for cast and crew, their families, and some Sci Fi Channel executives, Mark Sheppard quipped "I'm still the f--king president."[4]

References

  1. Lampkin is known to have resided on Caprica due to his association with Joseph Adama. However, he later lived on Gemenon with his wife and daughters.
  2. Podcast: The Son Also Rises Bonus Seek to: ~00:01:05. Total running time: ~00:47:39.
  3. Podcast: The Son Also Rises Bonus Seek to: ~00:11:42. Total running time: ~00:47:39.
  4. ""Tearful goodbyes at final 'Battlestar' screening"".


Preceded by:
Laura Roslin
President of the Twelve Colonies of Kobol Succeeded by:
None
Colonial government dissolved