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

Thompson (disambiguation): Difference between revisions

From the only original and legitimate Battlestar Wiki: the free-as-in-beer, non-corporate, open-content encyclopedia, analytical reference, and episode guide on all things Battlestar Galactica. Accept neither subpar substitutes nor subpar clones.
More languages
DrWho42 (talk | contribs)
+Thomas, a character in "The Oath" listed with the stunt doubles.
Joe Beaudoin Jr. (talk | contribs)
mNo edit summary
 
(4 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Thompson''' is a surname shared by the following:
{{DisambigTab
 
|tab1=Galactica 1980
* [[Bradley Thompson]], writer and producer for the [[Battlestar Galactica (RDM)|Re-imagined Series]]
|subtab1_1=Valerie Thompson
* [[Don Thompson]], actor who portrays [[Anthony Figurski]] in the Re-imagined Series
|tab2=Re-imagined Series
* [[Joel Anderson Thompson]], writer for the Re-imagined Series
|subtab2_1=Bradley Thompson
* [[Thompson]], a character in the Re-imagined Series episode "[[The Oath]]"
|subtab2_2=Don Thompson
 
|subtab2_3=Joel Anderson Thompson
{{disambig}}
|subtab2_4=Richard Thompson
|subtab2_5=Thompson}}

Latest revision as of 19:28, 11 April 2026


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 "Thompson (disambiguation)", click here.


Thompson (disambiguation)
Thompson (disambiguation)
[show/hide spoilers]
Spoilers hidden in infobox by default.
Age {{{age}}}
Colony Earth
Birthplace {{{birthplace}}}
Birth Name {{{birthname}}}
Birth Date {{{birthdate}}}
Callsign {{{callsign}}}
Nickname Val
Introduced The Super Scouts, Part I
Last Appearance [[{{{lastseen}}}]]
Death {{{death}}}
Parents {{{parents}}}
Step-Parents {{{step_parents}}}
Siblings {{{siblings}}}
Children {{{children}}}
Marital Status {{{marital status}}}
Family Tree View
Role Nurse, Paradise Valley Medical Center
Rank {{{rank}}}
Serial Number {{{serial}}}
Portrayed by Carlene Watkins
Thompson (disambiguation) is a Cylon
Thompson (disambiguation) is a Final Five Cylon
Thompson (disambiguation) is a Human/Cylon Hybrid
Thompson (disambiguation) is an Original Series Cylon

Valerie Thompson, R.N. is a nurse at the Paradise Valley Medical Center, overseen by Dr. Spencer.

Thompson is on duty when Troy, Dillon, and Jamie Hamilton bring in three deathly ill Super Scouts. She says she can't help and calls for the doctor. When the situation becomes grim, Troy hooks up Moonstone to an IV. Upon her return, she reacts to the IV and moves to remove it, for fear of losing her job. However, Troy stuns her. Later, she comes out of the stun after Dr. Spencer arrives, the first thing she recites is an audio help message meant to aid people in adjusting the color on their television sets (1980: "The Super Scouts, Part I").

She later warns Spencer via CB radio after Colonel Jack Sydell and Paradise Valley's sheriff arrives at the medical center to intercept the Super Scouts, discovering them to be a fake scout troop (1980: "The Super Scouts, Part I").

Notes

edit
  • While credited only as "Valerie," her last name comes from her shirt's name tag.

Contributors may ask Mr. Thompson (or other cast and crew that take time out of their busy schedules to visit "Battlestar Wiki") a question about the show and its production. Please submit questions ONLY on the special Battlestar Wiki:Official Communiques article. Please keep your question succinct, brief, and remember not to get too carried away--it's a TV show.

Thompson (disambiguation)
Role: Writer / Producer
BSG Universe: Re-imagined Series
Date of Birth: September 02, 1951
Date of Death: Missing required parameter 1=month! ,
Age: 74
Nationality: USA USA
IMDb profile

Warning: Default sort key "Thompson, Bradley" overrides earlier default sort key "Thompson (disambiguation)".

Bradley Thompson (full name Hugh Bradley Thompson, Jr.)[external 1] is an American television writer and producer. Working almost exclusively with his longtime writing partner David Weddle, he is credited on twelve episodes of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine and fifteen episodes of the Re-imagined Series, on which he served as supervising producer during the fourth season. After Battlestar Galactica, Thompson and Weddle continued their collaboration across multiple productions including CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, Falling Skies, The Strain, and For All Mankind.

Career

edit

Thompson attended the USC School of Cinema, where he met David Weddle in an acting class. In an August 2005 interview,[commentary 1] Thompson recalled that the class was also attended by Richard Hatch, who was then starring in the Original Series:

I met (my writing partner) David Weddle in an acting class and we discovered we were both at USC School of Cinema. It was the same acting class that Richard Hatch frequented. Richard was doing the original Battlestar Galactica at that time, and everybody in class was in awe—he was a WORKING ACTOR! And all the class ladies would go to parties and watch him when the show came on. Of course, while they were adoring him, they were ignoring me, so I didn't like the show very much. But they would have ignored me anyway, so I guess I wasn't giving the show a fair shake.

After leaving USC, Thompson spent several years designing fiber-optic manufacturing equipment in what he called "a sweatshop in Van Nuys."[commentary 2] He asked Weddle whether he could adapt Weddle's play "Memoirs of an Awkward Lover" into a screenplay; Weddle agreed, and the two ended up collaborating on the project together instead. The adaptation did not sell.

Prior to Battlestar Galactica, Thompson and Weddle also wrote for the short-lived anthology series Ghost Stories (1997) and The Fearing Mind (2000), as well as the 2002–2003 revival of The Twilight Zone.[external 2]

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine

edit

The break into professional television came through Weddle's 1994 biography of director Sam Peckinpah, If They Move... Kill 'Em!. Deep Space Nine executive producer Ira Steven Behr, a Peckinpah devotee, read the book and invited Weddle to lunch at Paramount. Weddle brought Thompson in, and together they pitched story ideas for the show.[commentary 3]

Their first credited story was the fourth-season episode "Rules of Engagement," for which Ronald D. Moore wrote the teleplay. Their first credited teleplay was the fifth-season episode "The Assignment." After their second teleplay, "Business as Usual," Thompson and Weddle joined the writing staff for seasons six and seven, writing two episodes from the final nine-episode arc of the series.[commentary 4] In all, they are credited on twelve DS9 episodes.

Thompson appears in an uncredited background role as a holographic guest at Vic Fontaine's lounge in the series finale "What You Leave Behind."

Thompson was announced as co-author of a DS9 post-series relaunch novel, Walking Wounded, but the project was abandoned in 2005.

Battlestar Galactica (Re-imagined Series)

edit

In 2002, Thompson and Weddle were invited to a private screening of the new Battlestar Galactica miniseries that Moore had written. Thompson later described the experience:

We expected it to be like so many other remakes of failed series—but hey, Ron wrote it, it'll be worth a look. Oh, boy, was it! It blew me away. We told him so. And found ourselves invited to lunch—we thought, to talk about old times—but soon we were talking excitedly about where he was taking the series and where the character relationships could go.

[commentary 5]

When the Re-imagined Series went to series in 2004, Moore brought Thompson and Weddle onto the writing staff. Thompson called Battlestar Galactica his "dream project" and "the best job I ever had," citing both the premise of carrier pilots in space and the collaborative writers' room.[commentary 6] He also credited the series' actors with contributing meaningful insight into their characters:

Actor input is an important part—if it's good and doesn't conflict with some other uberstory, we gleefully steal it, bend it and use it.

[commentary 7]

Thompson and Weddle initially served as story editors on the first season. They became co-producers as of the second season, took on greater producing responsibilities during the third season, and were elevated to supervising producers for the fourth season.[external 3] They wrote fifteen episodes across the run of the series and co-wrote all ten installments of Battlestar Galactica: The Resistance, the webisode series bridging Season 2 and Season 3.[external 4]

Thompson and Weddle were initially slated to write a BSG television movie with Ronald D. Moore, but had to withdraw from the assignment after being hired as writers and supervising producers for CSI: Crime Scene Investigation.[external 5] That television movie was eventually produced as The Plan.

Post-Battlestar Galactica

edit

In 2008, Thompson and Weddle joined the writing staff of CSI: Crime Scene Investigation mid-way through Season 9 as writers and supervising producers. They were promoted to co-executive producers for Season 10, and wrote nine episodes across three seasons. An episode they wrote for Season 11, "Fracked," won the Environmental Media Association's 21st Annual Environmental Media Award for Television Episodic Drama.[external 6]

In 2011, Thompson and Weddle joined the writing staff of the second season of Falling Skies on TNT as co-executive producers, continuing in that role through the third season.[external 7]

In 2012, they acted as co-executive producers on the BSG prequel television movie Battlestar Galactica: Blood & Chrome and on the pilot for the Syfy series Defiance. Their work on Defiance reunited them with former Deep Space Nine and Battlestar Galactica production personnel Gary Hutzel and Doug Drexler.[external 8]

From 2013 through 2017, Thompson served as one of eight executive producers across all four seasons of The Strain, the FX adaptation of the horror novel series by Guillermo del Toro and Chuck Hogan. He and Weddle co-wrote nine episodes of the series.[external 9]

In 2018, Thompson and Weddle re-teamed with Ronald D. Moore on the Apple TV+ alternate-history drama For All Mankind. Thompson served as co-executive producer on the first season and executive producer on subsequent seasons.[external 10][external 11] He is also announced as executive producer on the planned spinoff series Star City.

Writer credits for Battlestar Galactica

edit

Season 1

edit

Season 2

edit

A series of webisodes bridging the gap between Season 2 and Season 3.

Season 3

edit

Season 4

edit

See also: Episodes written by Bradley Thompson

edit


References

edit

Commentary and Interviews

edit
  1. Larocque, John (3 August 2005). Interview with Bradley Thompson (content archived on Archive.org) (in English). Retrieved on 16 May 2026.
  2. Larocque, John (3 August 2005). Interview with Bradley Thompson (content archived on Archive.org) (in English). Retrieved on 16 May 2026.
  3. Larocque, John (3 August 2005). Interview with Bradley Thompson (content archived on Archive.org) (in English). Retrieved on 16 May 2026.
  4. Larocque, John (3 August 2005). Interview with Bradley Thompson (content archived on Archive.org) (in English). Retrieved on 16 May 2026.
  5. Larocque, John (3 August 2005). Interview with Bradley Thompson (content archived on Archive.org) (in English). Retrieved on 16 May 2026.
  6. Larocque, John (3 August 2005). Interview with Bradley Thompson (content archived on Archive.org) (in English). Retrieved on 16 May 2026.
  7. Larocque, John (3 August 2005). Interview with Bradley Thompson (content archived on Archive.org) (in English). Retrieved on 16 May 2026.

External Sources

edit
  1. Bradley Thompson (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). IMDb. Retrieved on 16 May 2026.
  2. Bradley Thompson – Filmography (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). IMDb. Retrieved on 16 May 2026.
  3. Bradley Thompson – Filmography (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). IMDb. Retrieved on 16 May 2026.
  4. Battlestar Galactica: The Resistance (2006) – Full cast & crew (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). IMDb. Retrieved on 16 May 2026.
  5. Hinman, Michael (4 July 2008). Writing Duo Finds 'CSI' After 'Battlestar' (content archived on Archive.org) (in English). SyFy Portal. Retrieved on 6 July 2008.
  6. 21st Annual Environmental Media Awards (content archived on Archive.org) (in English). Environmental Media Association (15 October 2011). Retrieved on 16 May 2026.
  7. Bradley Thompson – Filmography (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). IMDb. Retrieved on 16 May 2026.
  8. Bradley Thompson – Filmography (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). IMDb. Retrieved on 16 May 2026.
  9. Bradley Thompson – Filmography (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). IMDb. Retrieved on 16 May 2026.
  10. For All Mankind – Cast & Crew (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Apple TV Press. Retrieved on 16 May 2026.
  11. For All Mankind (TV Series 2019–) – Full cast & crew (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). IMDb. Retrieved on 16 May 2026.

Thompson (disambiguation)
[[File:|200px]]
Role: Writer
BSG Universe: Re-imagined Series
Date of Birth:
Date of Death: Missing required parameter 1=month! ,


IMDb profile

Warning: Default sort key "Thompson, Joel Anderson" overrides earlier default sort key "Thompson, Bradley".

Joel Anderson Thompson is a TV story editor and writer who wrote the Re-imagined Series episode "Epiphanies". He also served as executive story editor throughout the second season.

Additionally, Thompson has worked on House and Boomtown. [1]

While working as story editor on the first season of House, M.D., Thompson wrote an episode called "Histories," about a sick homeless woman, which has the distinction of being one of the very few episodes of the series in which Dr. Gregory House does not cure the patient and she dies.

Writer credits for "Battlestar Galactica"

edit

References

edit

Thompson (disambiguation)
Thompson (disambiguation)
{{{credit}}}
Portrays: Ditko
Date of Birth:
Date of Death: Missing required parameter 1=month!
Nationality: CAN CAN
Related Media
@ BW Media

Warning: Default sort key "Thompson, Richard" overrides earlier default sort key "Thompson, Joel Anderson".


Richard Thompson is a Canadian actor and stunt performer. He is best known within the Battlestar Galactica universe for portraying Ditko, a Colonial Marine serving aboard Galactica, in the Re-imagined Series. He is formally credited in Re-imagined Series' "The Eye of Jupiter", though facial recognition has identified him in uncredited appearances across multiple episodes spanning Seasons 2 through 4.[external 1]

Thompson is a member of the Union of BC Performers (UBCP),[external 1] the primary union for film and television performers working in British Columbia, Canada, consistent with his career being based entirely in the Vancouver production community.

Career

edit

Thompson's screen career spans the mid-2000s through approximately 2020, concentrated in the Vancouver-based genre film and television industry. His work divides between credited acting roles and stunt performance, a dual track common among Vancouver-based performers working in the city's busy production scene.

His stunt credits include Slipstream (2005), the fantasy epic In the Name of the King: A Dungeon Siege Tale (2007) — starring Jason Statham and directed by Uwe Boll — and the Roland Emmerich prehistory film 10,000 BC (2008).[external 1]

On the acting side, he appeared as a CIA Agent in Consequence (2003) and as Samir Thug #3 in the television film The Librarian: Return to King Solomon's Mines (2006).[external 1] He appeared multiple times in the long-running Vancouver-produced science-fiction series Stargate SG-1, including in the episode "Beachhead" (2005), where he is credited as SF Guard.[external 2] He also appeared in Stargate Atlantis and the Stargate direct-to-video productions Stargate: Continuum and Stargate: The Ark of Truth (both 2008).

Battlestar Galactica

edit

Thompson portrayed Ditko, a Colonial Marine aboard Galactica, across multiple episodes of the Re-imagined Series. He is formally credited as Ditko only in Re-imagined Series' "The Eye of Jupiter" (Season 3),[external 3] where the character is part of the Marine ground team guarding food-harvesting operations on the algae planet and participates in defending the human position against a Cylon attack. Computer-aided facial recognition has identified Thompson in uncredited appearances as Ditko in several additional episodes:

References

edit

External Sources

edit
  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Richard Thompson (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). IMDb. Retrieved on 11 April 2026.
  2. "Stargate SG-1" Beachhead (TV Episode 2005) – Richard Thompson as SF Guard (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). IMDb. Retrieved on 11 April 2026.
  3. "Battlestar Galactica" The Eye of Jupiter (TV Episode 2006) – Full cast & crew (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). IMDb. Retrieved on 11 April 2026.

For other uses of the last name Thompson, see Thompson (disambiguation).

Thompson
Thompson
[show/hide spoilers]
Spoilers hidden in infobox by default.
Age {{{age}}}
Colony
Birthplace {{{birthplace}}}
Birth Name
Birth Date {{{birthdate}}}
Callsign {{{callsign}}}
Nickname {{{nickname}}}
Introduced The Oath
Last Appearance [[{{{lastseen}}}]]
Death Shot in the head by Kara "Starbuck" Thrace c. 4 ACH (2003BYR) (TRS: "The Oath")
Parents {{{parents}}}
Step-Parents {{{step_parents}}}
Siblings {{{siblings}}}
Children {{{children}}}
Marital Status {{{marital status}}}
Family Tree View
Role Marine
Rank {{{rank}}}
Serial Number {{{serial}}}
Portrayed by Darryl Scheelar
Thompson is a Cylon
Thompson is a Final Five Cylon
Thompson is a Human/Cylon Hybrid
Thompson is an Original Series Cylon

Thompson is a Galactica marine circa 4 ACH (2003BYR).

He is one of two marines who accost Lee "Apollo" Adama after he disembarks from Margaret "Racetrack" Edmondson's Raptor. After being ordered by Charlie Connor to execute Adama, Thompson aims his pistol at Adama's head, before having his own blown off by Kara "Starbuck" Thrace, thus rescuing Adama from the mutineers (TRS: "The Oath").

For direct navigation sans the tabbed navigational aid above, please select one of the following article links: