Season 1 (2004-05)
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Summary
- After the Cylons genocidal attack on the 12 Colonies, a rag-tag fugitive fleet under the aegis of the Battlestar Galactica tackles the problems inherent of their evasive flight from their murderers.
Pivotal Plot Points
- Please feel free to add any plot points at your discretion.
- There are Cylon infiltrators in the Fleet.
- Laura Roslin is treating her cancer using Kamala Extract, the result of which are hallucinations that seem to fit with the writings of Pythia.
Cast
Stars
- Edward James Olmos as Commander William Adama
- Mary McDonnell as President Laura Roslin
- Katee Sackhoff as Lieutenant Kara "Starbuck" Thrace
- Jamie Bamber as Captain Lee "Apollo" Adama
- Jame Callis as Doctor Gaius Baltar
- Tricia Helfer as Number Six
- Grace Park as Sharon Valerii
Co-stars
Production Crew
Producers
- Ronald D. Moore - Developer / Executive Producer / Writer
- David Eick - Executive Producer
- Toni Graphia - Co-Executive Producer / Writer
- Harvey Frand - Producer
- Glen A. Larson - Consulting Producer
Directors
- Michael Angeli
- Marita Grabiak
- Rod Hardy
- Alan Kroeker
- Edward James Olmos
- Jonas Pate
- Michael Rymer
- Jeff Woolnough
Writing Staff
- Sergio Mimica-Gezzan
- Carla Robinson
- Bradley Thompson
- Brad Turner
- Jeff Vlaming
- David Weddle
- Robert Young
Episodes
- Mini-Series (2003, backdoor pilot)
Season 1 (2004-05)
- 1.01 33
- 1.02 Water
- 1.03 Bastille Day
- 1.04 Act of Contrition
- 1.05 You Can't Go Home Again
- 1.06 Litmus
- 1.07 Six Degrees of Separation
- 1.08 Flesh and Bone
- 1.09 Secrets and Lies (aka: Tigh Me Up, Tigh Me Down)
- 1.10 The Hand of God
- 1.11 Colonial Day
- 1.12 Kobol's Last Gleaming, Part I
- 1.13 Kobol's Last Gleaming, Part II
Official Statements
- "I've noticed in the new scripts that Ron Moore will write to the rythms of the actors now. Which isn't always a good thing, you know, actors can get into certain tricks and bad habits, but you know everyone has their own personality, their own way of speaking." -- Michael Rymer, [1]
- "And the writers have started to write characters in our speech patterns, like the way that we talk, which is really interesting. So they're picking up on us and adding that into the character. It's nice. It makes it easier to memorize lines, because it's the way that you talk." -- Katee Sackhoff, [2]