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"Saga of a Star World"
Series Battlestar Galactica
Season 1, Episode 3
Battlestar Galactica 1x03 001
Air date September 17th, 1978
Writers Glen A. Larson
Director Richard A. Colla; Alan J. Levi
Producers John Dykstra; Winrich Kolbe; Glen A. Larson; Leslie Stevens
Starring Richard Hatch; Dirk Benedict; Lorne Greene; Herbert Jefferson, Jr.; Tony Swartz; Maren Jensen; Noah Hathaway; Terry Carter
Episode guide
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"Saga of a Star World (Part 2)"
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"The Lost Planet of the Gods (Part 1)"

"Saga of a Star World (Part 3)" is the third episode of the science fiction/adventure series Battlestar Galactica. It is the final chapter in the "Saga of a Star World" pilot movie. The episode was directed by Richard A. Colla and Alan J. Levi with a script written by series creator Glen A. Larson. It first aired on ABC on September 17th, 1978.

Synopsis[]

On Carillon, everything seems perfect and the Colonials get a chance to relax. Tension mounts however as Sire Uri suggests a full military disarmament. Adama doesn't trust him and conspires with Colonel Tigh to make sure that all of the Colonial Warriors are on standby while service personnel impersonate them at the party on Carillon. Starbuck and Apollo take the elevator into the lower levels of the mining colony and discover the dark and horrifying truth about the Ovions. Meanwhile, the Cylons plans to wipe out the Colonial Fleet once and for all.

Cast[]

The following cast list is broken down by main stars, guest stars and supporting cast as presented in the episodes themselves. This cast list applies to all three chapters of "Saga of a Star World". Not all actors listed necessarily appear in all three installments.

Principal Cast[]

Actor Role
Richard Hatch Captain Apollo
Dirk Benedict Lieutenant Starbuck
Lorne Greene Commander Adama

Also Starring[]

Actor Role
Herbert Jefferson, Jr. Lieutenant Boomer
Maren Jensen Athena
Tony Swartz Flight Sgt. Jolly
Noah Hathaway Boxey
Terry Carter Colonel Tigh

Guest Stars[]

Actor Role
Lew Ayres President Adar
Wilfred Hyde-White Anton
John Colicos Baltar
Laurette Spang Cassiopeia
John Fink Doctor Payne
Jane Seymour Serina
Ray Milland Sire Uri

Co-Stars[]

Actor Role
Ed Begley, Jr. Ensign Greenbean
Rick Springfield Lieutenant Zac
Randi Oakes Young Taurus woman
Norman Stuart Statesman
David Greenan Bridge officer
Sarah Rush Woman on duty
David Matthau Operative
Chip Johnson First warrior
Geoffrey Binney Second warrior
Paul Coufos Pilot
Bruce Wright Deck hand

Uncredited cast[]

Note: The following is taken from the full credits list for this entry on IMDB. As it is a website with user-submitted information, some of the data listed here, including character names may be inaccurate.

Actor Role
Carol Baxter Woman in elevator
Pattie Brooks Tucana singer
Diane Burgdorf Ovion Queen
Dick Durock Imperious Leader
Sandra Lee Gimpel Seetol
Patrick Macnee Narrator/Imperious Leader
Myrna Matthews Space Angel
Marti McCall Space Angel
Reggie Nalder Bartender
Felix Silla Lucifer
David Tress Sandell
Carolyn Willis Space Angel

Notes & Trivia[]

  • Lorne Greene is credited as "and Lorne Greene as Adama" in the opening title sequence.
  • Terry Carter is credited as "and Terry Carter as Colonel Tigh" in the opening title sequence.
  • Jane Seymour is credited as "and Jane Seymour as Serina" in the opening title sequence.
  • Ray Milland is credited as a special guest star.
  • David Greenan is credited as a bridge officer in this episode. He will later be given the name Omega.
  • Sarah Rush is credited as woman on duty. She will later be given the name Flight Corporal Rigel.
  • Patrick Macnee, who is the opening narrator of the series, also provides the voice for the Cylon Imperious Leader. The role of the Imperious Leader is actually played by Dick Durock, who will go on to play the muck monster known as the Swamp Thing in the Swamp Thing film and television franchise.
  • Music for this series was composed by creator Glen A. Larson, It was scored and conducted by Stu Phillips and the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra.

Allusions[]

  • There are no allusions available for this episode at this time. Be the first to add some! Just click on the edit tab under the section heading and start typing. An allusion is an incidental reference made to a character, person, event or other miscellaneous piece of media that can be found somewhere in the episode itself. In most cases, this refers to characters or events from previous episodes.

Bloopers[]

  • There are no bloopers available for this episode at this time. Be the first to add some! Just click on the edit tab under the section heading and start typing. A blooper is any revealing mistake that can be found within the episode that the production crew may have missed during editing. This can range from inconsistent lines of dialogue to visible production equipment in the shot to mis-spoken lines of dialogue, or... dare we say it? A wardrobe malfunction.

Quotes[]

  • There are no quotes available for this episode at this time. Be the first to add some! Just click on the edit tab under the section heading and start typing. The preferred format for quotes is an asterisk, followed by the character's name (bold and hyper-linked), semi-colon then the quote itself (without quotation marks. Quotes should be separated by four elipses (....) unless multiple quotes are used between characters as part of a conversation.

See also[]

External Links[]




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