Megan
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- For other subjects with the same name, see: Megan (disambiguation).
Megan | ||
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Name |
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Age | ||
Colony | ||
Birth place | {{{birthplace}}} | |
Birth Name | ||
Birth Date | {{{birthdate}}} | |
Callsign | ||
Nickname | ||
Introduced | The Young Lords | |
Death | ||
Parents | ||
Siblings | ||
Children | Kyle, Miri, Ariadne, Robus, and Nilz | |
Marital Status | Widowed | |
Family Tree | View | |
Role | Homesteader | |
Rank | ||
Serial Number | {{{serial}}} | |
Portrayed by | Bruce Glover | |
Megan is a Cylon | ||
Megan is a Final Five Cylon | ||
Megan is a Human/Cylon Hybrid | ||
Megan is an Original Series Cylon | ||
Related Media | ||
@ BW Media | ||
Additional Information | ||
[[Image:|200px|Megan]] |
Megan is the only surviving parent of Kyle, Miri, Ariadne, Robus, and Nilz; their mother died in the Cylon attack of Attila. He was obviously a wealthy landowner and moral man, defying the Cylons through guerrilla attacks.
He isn't too pleased to hear that his egotistical son, Kyle, is going to trade another human for him when Specter brings him the news. Specter manages to trick Megan into believing that he would be traded, even going as so far as extracting a promise to stop his children from attacking his garrison.
When the trade occurs, Specter allows a short, terse statement from Megan, then has a Centurion temporarily silence him. In a duplicitous fashion, Specter sends over a fabricated human-shaped duplicate made out of textile materials.
Megan is quite pleased to see that his children had done the same, meaning they had learned that the Cylons could never be trusted. Megan is freed by Starbuck and Miri, who sneak themselves into the castle via a secret entrance.
After Boomer and Apollo land on the planet, Megan and his family elect to stay on Attila. After all, they had fought for it, and now it was theirs (The Young Lords).
Notes
- In the novelization, Megan was the mother of the children, not the father as depicted in the episode. Given that character's name is commonly used for females in the United States, this would actually make sense. It is more likely that the novelization writer Robert Thurston assumed that the character is feminine.