Admiral Ackbar
Admiral Ackbar | |
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Timothy D. Rose as Admiral Ackbar in Return of the Jedi (1983) | |
First appearance | |
Last appearance | Ahsoka (2023) |
Created by | |
Portrayed by |
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Voiced by |
Other:
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In-universe information | |
Species | Mon Calamari |
Gender | Male |
Title | Fleet Admiral |
Occupation | Supreme Commander of the Alliance Fleet |
Affiliation |
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Children | Aftab Ackbar (son) |
Relatives |
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Homeworld | Mon Calamari |
With his distinctive salmon-colored skin, webbed hands, high-domed head, and large fish-like eyes, Ackbar was realized in Return of the Jedi through the use of either a half-body puppet or full-body costume, depending on the camera angle required. In all three films he was portrayed by puppeteer
Ackbar was originally planned to be more conventionally humanoid, but after Star Wars creator George Lucas decided to make him an alien, he allowed Return of the Jedi director Richard Marquand to pick from various designs. Marquand picked a sketch by concept artist Nilo Rodis-Jamero, over the objections of other members of the film crew who thought the character looked too silly or ugly. Ackbar made his first appearance not in the film, but in a Star Wars newspaper comic strip that ran a few months before Return of the Jedi was released. Lucas was not entirely pleased with the final result of the character in the film and felt it was a compromise. Ackbar's first name, Gial, was not established until April 2012.
Ackbar had just 14 lines of dialogue in Return of the Jedi, and his total screen time across all three film appearances totaled only three minutes and 30 seconds. Nevertheless, he is considered a fan favorite among Star Wars characters, and was ranked No. 16 in a 1998 list of the "Top 20 Star Wars Characters" in the magazine Star Wars Insider. His line "It's a trap!" from Return of the Jedi became one of the most famous, quoted and beloved lines from the original Star Wars trilogy, as well as a popular Internet meme.
Character biography
Backstory
Admiral Ackbar was best known for his appearance in the film
Ackbar's backstory was not explained in Return of the Jedi, but has been established in Star Wars books and other media since the film was released. He is from the planet
Ackbar is freed from captivity during a failed attempt by Rebel forces to capture Tarkin. He joins the Rebel Alliance,
Return of the Jedi
Admiral Ackbar was the first character not resemblant of a human shown in a leadership position in the Star Wars films.
The Clone Wars

Ackbar appeared in the first three episodes of the fourth season of the animated series
Dave Filoni, supervising director on The Clone Wars, said he had planned on featuring Ackbar in the series since the second season due to the character's relevance to the original trilogy, and because he was old enough in those films to have been alive when The Clone Wars was set.[35] Keith Kellogg, animation supervisor for the series, said of the character: "To see him as his younger self commanding an army in the field was really fun, and to be able to see him mentor Lee-Char was great."[38]
Sequel trilogy

Admiral Ackbar appeared in the first two films of the
Members of the cast and crew were particularly excited to film a scene with Ackbar. Ben Rosenblatt, a co-producer with The Force Awakens, said having Ackbar on the set was "the moment that meant the most to me, personally",[44] adding: "Security has been so tight, we're not allowed to take pictures or anything, but I had to take a picture of Ackbar on set and show it to my brothers because we loved Ackbar."[44] Actor John Boyega, who portrayed Finn, said of performing with Ackbar: "as a Star Wars fan, it doesn't get any cooler than that."[45] Gary Whitta, a writer who has worked on several Star Wars projects, said: "When I went to the set of The Force Awakens, the first thing I had to do was put on the Admiral Ackbar mask, and I did. It was a big deal, and I've always loved that character."[46]
In the trilogy's second film, Star Wars: The Last Jedi (2017), Ackbar leads the Resistance as they evacuate their base on D'Qar, and orders the ships to jump to hyperspace to escape the First Order. The First Order fleet pursues the Resistance, sending Kylo Ren and other TIE fighters after the MC85 Star Cruiser Raddus, on which Ackbar and other senior Resistance leaders are aboard. First Order TIEs open fire on the main bridge of the Raddus, causing a massive explosion and blowing all occupants into the vacuum of space. Ackbar is killed, along with everyone else on the bridge except for Leia, who is saved by her use of the Force.[31][47] Although Ackbar had no lines of dialogue during his death scene in the film, the comic book adaptation of The Last Jedi revealed that his last words were: "Torpedoes inbound. It's been an honor serving with you all."[48][49] Whitta, who wrote the comic book adaptation, said he was saddened Ackbar died so quickly in the film, so he wanted to give him "a little bit of a moment before he dies".[46]
Ackbar's total screen time across all three of his Star Wars film appearances totaled only three minutes and 30 seconds.
Ahsoka
Ackbar makes a non-speaking appearance at Hera Syndulla's disciplinary hearing on Corusant.[53]
Other Star Wars media
Although his role in the Star Wars films was relatively brief, Admiral Ackbar became a prominent character in the Star Wars Expanded Universe, which encompasses all licensed stories in the Star Wars universe outside of the nine main feature films, such as novels, comic books, video games, and television shows.[8][54][55][56] With the 2012 acquisition of Lucasfilm by The Walt Disney Company, most of the licensed Star Wars novels and comics produced since the originating 1977 film Star Wars were rebranded as Star Wars Legends and declared non-canon to the franchise in April 2014.[54] As a result, Ackbar has two separate storylines and character histories outside of the feature films: one in the Legends canon encompassing all Star Wars media before April 2014, and one in the official Disney canon for all media after April 2014.[57][58][59]
Legends continuity
Ackbar was a central character in
In the Star Wars novels written between
Ackbar appeared in the Heir to the Empire trilogy of books written by Timothy Zahn and published from 1991 to 1993, which were widely credited with rejuvenating interest in Star Wars at the time.[69][70] In those books, which are set five years after Return of the Jedi, Ackbar is instrumental in working with Luke Skywalker, Han Solo, Leia Organa, and Mon Mothma in reestablishing the New Republic and defeating Grand Admiral Thrawn, the new leader of the remaining forces of the Empire.[70] In the second novel of the series, Dark Force Rising, Thrawn attempts to frame Ackbar for treason by placing stolen money into his personal accounts.[1][71] Borsk Fey'lya, a political rival of Ackbar, exploits this and has him arrested and placed on trial,[1][72] but Han Solo and Lando Calrissian obtain evidence that proves his innocence, and he is restored to his military position.[1][71] Ackbar plans a raid against Thrawn on the planet Bilbringi, seeking to severely damage the Grand Admiral's shipbuilding capability and steal Imperial technology. Thrawn learns of the raid and sets a trap for Ackbar and his forces, but the New Republic ultimately win the battle after Thrawn is assassinated by his own bodyguard.[73]
Ackbar played a prominent supporting role in the
Ackbar retires from military service before the beginning of
Ackbar has appeared in several Star Wars video games, starting with the 1993
Official canon
Admiral Ackbar appeared in
Ackbar appeared in Aftermath's two sequel books,
Ackbar has a minor part in the novel Star Wars: Bloodline (2016) by Claudia Gray, which focused largely on Leia Organa prior to the events of The Force Awakens. The novel included the public disclosure that Organa is the daughter of Darth Vader, which nearly destroyed her reputation and led many to condemn her. Ackbar, however, sent her messages of support after the public revelation, an indication of his respect for her.[1] In a storyline that crossed over between the comic book Star Wars: C-3PO and the Disney XD television series Lego Star Wars: The Resistance Rises (both released in 2016), it was established that Ackbar was captured by the First Order some time after his recruitment into the Resistance. In the story, the droid C-3PO obtained information that Ackbar had been imprisoned aboard an Imperial battlecruiser, and the droid worked with fellow Resistance operatives BB-8 and Poe Dameron to infiltrate the ship and rescue him from Captain Phasma.[1]
Ackbar played a supporting role in the "Burning Seas" story arc from the comic book series Darth Vader: Dark Lord of the Sith, which was released in 2018 but was set about one year after the events of Revenge of the Sith, the final movie in the Star Wars prequel trilogy. In the story arc, entitled "Burning Seas", Ackbar was a commander and Chief of Security for Mon Cala King Lee-Char, and Darth Vader and his forces visited the planet to strengthen the Empire's influence there. Ackbar set a trap for the Empire by luring their aerial landing platforms closer to the planet, then firing special undetectable missiles at them once they were in range. The victory proved temporary, however, as Grand Moff Tarkin escalated hostilities as a result and ultimate overtook the planet, resulting in King Lee-Char's capture and eventual death.[30][98]
Ackbar appeared briefly in the 2017
A Mon Calamari named Aftab Ackbar, Admiral Ackbar's son, was created to appear as a minor character in
Characterization
Ackbar is portrayed as a military genius,[8][107] with a masterful grasp of warfare tactics and strategy,[1][8][9][30][108] a forward-thinking vision,[24] and a prowess for organizational, administrative, and technical details that make him a highly effective commander.[108] Across all his appearances in the Star Wars franchise, he possesses tactical intelligence and strong leadership skills,[24][109] and is widely admired and respected by his troops.[9] Ackbar has a methodical style,[110] and tends to be cautious and conservative, as demonstrated by his initial call for a tactical retreat during the Battle of Endor upon learning that it was a trap.[108][111] He prefers to personally lead major assaults, fearlessly flying into the battlefield along with his soldiers.[9][30] Ackbar is resourceful and uses outside-the-box methods to improve himself as an officer. For example, in the novel Aftermath, Ackbar practices with melee weapons against holograms of Imperial stormtroopers. Though he acknowledges that he is unlikely to face melee combat as a high-ranking officer, he engages in the practice because he feels staying proficient in fighting techniques helps him stay sharp, flexible, and ahead of his enemies.[1] Ackbar also studies various forms of weaponry and fighting,[1] and has strong design skills, made evident by his role in designing the B-wing starfighter.[24]
Ackbar is also regularly portrayed as wise,[34] with a noble personality and a quiet but firm temperament.[24] Rising from humble beginnings,[9] he is a peaceful being who is forced to learn war due to tyranny of the Empire, and never stops working for peace despite understanding the necessity of war.[8][24] Despite his success as a warrior, his actions are usually shown to be tempered by justice, honor, and concern.[24] In the Star Wars sequel trilogy and other media set around that time period, Ackbar is portrayed as more gruff in his older age, during which he commands officers many years or even decades younger than him, sometimes referring to them as "fry".[110] His dedication to his career and duty left little time for a personal life or romances, and as a result he does not have a family of his own, with the exception of two nieces.[13]
Concept and creation
Conception
I think he ended up commanding the troops not so much because of my performance, but because of his look. He had a screen presence. He was originally just a background character. They created a whole series of characters, and they had these roles they needed filled. He ended up filling it because he just had the magic. He had the charisma. When you came into the workshop, somehow you looked at him instead of the four other creatures. ... Ackbar became a character in the process of building him.
In the original script for Return of the Jedi, Ackbar's appearance was more conventionally humanoid,[1][13][112] with blue skin and more physically attractive;[13][112] the second draft of the screenplay described him as a "pale blue nonhuman".[113] Star Wars creator George Lucas later decided he should be an alien creature instead, and gave the film's director, Richard Marquand, the option to pick a look for Ackbar from a collection of about 50 alien designs, despite Marquand's initial insistence that Lucas himself make the choice.[4] Marquand picked a painting by concept artist Nilo Rodis-Jamero of an anonymous alien with no established backstory or personality.[114][13][115]
Rodis-Jamero's first Ackbar sketch was created in the fall of 1981, two years before Return of the Jedi was released, and was known at the time simply as a "Calamari man".[115] The original image mostly resembled how Ackbar ended up in the final film, except with a larger chin, slightly more misshapen head, and a hunchback.[114][13][115] The hunch was inspired by Industrial Light & Magic technician Stuart Ziff, who regularly joked about his own slightly hunched posture.[115] Marquand said he "picked the most delicious, wonderful creature out of the whole lot, this big wonderful Calamari man with a red face and eyes on the side".[4] Others working on the film opposed the choice, believing the character looked too silly or ugly and would be mocked, but Marquand insisted upon the choice and their objections were rejected.[1][4][112] Marquand said of those concerns: "I think it's good to tell kids that good people aren't necessarily good-looking people and that bad people aren't necessarily ugly people."[4][112]
Ackbar's first name, Gial, was not established until the April 2012 release of the Star Wars reference book The Essential Guide to Warfare.
Costume and puppet
"Ackbar represented the ingenuity in creature and costume development at the time. Neither the full-body nor close-up version of Ackbar were capable of generating a complete performance on their own, but shot separately and seamlessly edited together, they gave the admiral a realistic feel."
Ackbar's appearance in the film was created using a combination of either a half-body puppet or a full-body costume, depending on the camera angle required for the shot.
For wider shots that showed Ackbar's full body, Rose wore the mask and costume while Quinn operated the mouth via remote.[115][117][120] Though most other Rebel officers in the Return of the Jedi briefing room scene wore earth tones, Rodis-Jamero felt Ackbar's costume should be more crisp and distinctive: "He was an admiral. He was more military. His costume looks hard."[115] Costume designer Aggie Guerard Rodgers helped create the Ackbar costume, for which Rose wore a beanbag-like piece around his belly to create Ackbar's distinctive silhouette. Rose wore a white nylon jumpsuit over it, which had a pattern loosely based on ski jumpsuits used in costuming other background characters, as well as yellow striping down the side of the legs. The artificial fabric used on the jumpsuit made a distinct scratching sound whenever the actor walked, which Rodgers said was a nuisance for the film's sound crew.[115]
Over the jumpsuit, Rose wore a vest made of white felt, along with a white plastic utility belt, a rank badge on the left side of his chest, and a large collar to accommodate the unique profile of Ackbar's head. The white boots Ackbar wears in the film are the same design as those worn by Imperial stormtroopers. A white helmet with an elongated back to accommodate Ackbar's large oval-shaped head was featured in original character sketches and was created for Ackbar. However, it created too many complications with the operation of the puppet head, so it was worn by another Mon Calamari character instead.[115] Edwina Pellikka, a textile artist who handled the breakdown and aging of costumes in the film, said she was unhappy with the final result of Ackbar's costume. She later reflected that the all-white costume could have used more aging, saying: "I had to airbrush it, which was done very fast and it does look kind of like it's outlined. Not enough was done with that."[115]
Filming
Ackbar has 14 lines of dialogue in Return of the Jedi,[122] and the character's scenes took six weeks to shoot.[121] Due to uncertainty whether the mouth about movement Ackbar puppet would look realistic while delivering dialogue, alternative scenes were shot with General Crix Madine, a human character portrayed by Dermot Crowley, delivering Ackbar's most important lines, in case they had to be used instead. None of these shots ultimately had to be used in the final film.[123] Occasionally, members of the film crew jokingly referred to the Ackbar character as "Ernie Ackbar", and his name appeared that way on some of the film's progress reports.[120] When the inside of the costume became hot, visual effects artist Phil Tippett, who designed most of the film's creatures, would use a hair dryer to blow cool air through the mouth of the Ackbar mask to keep Rose comfortable.[124]
Although the character was created with the best available puppetry technology at the time, Lucas was not entirely pleased with the final result and felt it was a compromise.
Portrayals
Timothy Rose

Timothy Rose had been a puppeteer working on several projects for The Jim Henson Company (including The Dark Crystal), when Jim Henson directed him and others from the company to work on Return of the Jedi.[1] He was not originally hired to portray Admiral Ackbar, but instead to help build and operate the Sy Snootles puppet for the Max Rebo Band, which performs at the palace of the alien crime lord Jabba the Hutt. While backstage at the workshop where several alien puppets were stored, Rose saw Ackbar's sculpt on a display stand and asked Phil Tippett if he could play the part.[1][8] Tippett told him it was a background character,[8] and Rose did not know Ackbar would play a major supporting role in the film. He only asked to portray him because he liked the look of the character,[1][8] and said he was "thinking he was going to be in the third row in a new cantina sequence or something".[8] Rose was not required to audition for the part of Ackbar before being given the role.[1]
Rose returned to portray Ackbar in The Force Awakens and The Last Jedi. Each day he was provided with pages from the script only for the specific scenes that were being shot, so he knew little about the final role Ackbar would play in the films until shooting took place.[47][126] Rose was frustrated by the amount of secrecy on the set, which he felt prevented him and the other actors from having everything they needed to do their jobs as well as possible.[55][127] Many of Ackbar's scenes were cut from the first film, which Rose said was a disappointment to him "after waiting 30 years to reprise Ackbar".[47][49] After the character's scenes in The Last Jedi were complete, the crew took footage of Rose in the Ackbar's costume saying "It's a wrap", a reference to the character's death and his famous "It's a trap" line.[47][126] That shot was featured in behind-the-scenes footage shown at the 2017 D23 Expo.[126] Although intended as a joke, Rose found the gesture offensive and said he was "in tears in the suit".[47][126][128]
Erik Bauersfeld

The voice of Admiral Ackbar in Return of the Jedi was performed by Erik Bauersfeld, a radio dramatist who also voiced the alien character Bib Fortuna in the film,[86][87][129] and had unsuccessfully auditioned to voice Yoda in The Empire Strikes Back.[130] He was cast after Star Wars sound designer Ben Burtt approached him in 1983, while Bauersfeld was producing a radio drama with Lucasfilm sound designer Randy Thom and suggested he audition for the part of Ackbar.[86][87][129][131] The recording session took one hour, and Bauersfeld made up the voice on the spot after looking at a photograph of Ackbar, without having any other information about the character.[1][130][131][132] According to Bauersfeld: "I saw the face, and I knew what he must sound like."[130][131][132]
Bauersfeld did not receive an on-screen credit for his roles as Ackbar and Bib Fortuna,[130][131] and his association with the characters was unknown for years after the film was released. In a 1999 interview, Timothy Rose said he did not know who provided the voice, and thought it was possible that it was his own voice modified with a synthesizer.[117] Eventually fans learned Bauersfeld played the parts and he began to receive multiple fan letters every week, which continued for the rest of his life.[130] Bauersfeld said he appreciated the passion of fans and responded to every autograph request, but that he was not particularly knowledgeable about Star Wars himself; in 2011 interview, he said he had not seen Return of the Jedi since it first came out, still had not seen the first Star Wars film, and had trouble imitating Ackbar's voice because he could not remember what it sounded like.[130][132][54]
Bauersfeld reprised the role in the 1993 computer game Star Wars: X-Wing.[86][87] Film director J. J. Abrams requested that Bauersfeld once again play Ackbar in the 2015 film Star Wars: The Force Awakens.[81][86][132] It was Bauersfeld's final role before his death in April 2016.[81][86]
Other performers

Bauersfield was replaced by Tom Kane in The Last Jedi.[41] Kane has portrayed Ackbar in several other works of Star Wars media, including the 2004 and 2015 versions of Star Wars: Battlefront,[133][134] the video game Lego Star Wars: The Force Awakens (2016), and the Disney attraction Star Tours – The Adventures Continue.[135] Voice actor Artt Butler, who was a fan of Ackbar ever since watching the Star Wars films as a child, portrayed the character in the television series The Clone Wars.[35] Dave Filoni, supervising director for the series, said the staff debated whether the younger version of Ackbar would still have the same "iconic voice" as in Return of the Jedi or whether he would sound different on the show, but they ultimately went with a similar-sounding voice.[136]
Breckin Meyer portrayed Ackbar in the Robot Chicken: Star Wars series, a Star Wars-themed version of the stop motion sketch comedy television series Robot Chicken on Adult Swim dedicated entirely to Star Wars parodies. Meyer, who also wrote for the series, called voicing Ackbar "my favorite (experience) in the history of the world".[137] Meyer said he tries to mimic Ackbar's voice from Return of the Jedi as best he can, but that the humor comes through because "the actual voice is just funny".[138] Robot Chicken co-creator Seth Green said of Meyer's performance: "When Breckin does Ackbar, it splits me every time. No matter what he says, it's always funny."[139]
Cultural impact
Critical reception
Despite his small role in Return of the Jedi, Admiral Ackbar is considered a fan favorite among Star Wars characters.[8][35][48][54][126][131] Dave Filoni, a Lucasfilm animation producer who has worked on several Star Wars television shows, said of the character: "Ackbar has a crazy level of fame for the amount of time he's spent onscreen. It's the Boba Fett phenomenon, where you've got a character who doesn't really do a lot, but is so beloved that it eventually spreads outside the realm of fandom."[36] He was ranked No. 16 in a 1998 list of the "Top 20 Star Wars Characters" featured in the magazine Star Wars Insider.[8][122] That same issue included a separate list ranking the characters based on an index that accounted for their popularity ranking in proportion to the number of lines they speak in the films, to "take into consideration the amount of dialogue a character had to make an impression on fans".[122] With only 14 lines in Return of the Jedi, Ackbar ranked third on that list, behind only Boba Fett and Wedge Antilles.[122] Ackbar was also ranked No. 12 in The Daily Telegraph's ranking of 66 characters from the franchise,[112] No. 14 in The Huffington Post's ranking of 93 characters,[81][140] and No. 21 on IGN's list of the Top 25 Star Wars Heroes.[19]
Scott Chernoff, a writer for Star Wars Insider, called Ackbar's character "one of the most visually striking and memorable characters introduced in the final installment of the saga".
"It's a trap!"
Admiral Ackbar's line, "It's a trap!", which he says during the Battle of Endor in Return of the Jedi, became one of the most famous and beloved lines from the original Star Wars trilogy.[12][126][131][145] The line has become a popular Internet meme,[35][47][54][129][131] with The Independent calling him "perhaps the franchise's most memed character".[127] More than 1,000 fan videos have been created on the video-sharing website YouTube featuring or parodying Ackbar and that line of dialogue,[145] including trap music and techno remixes built around it.[1][54] The line did not appear in the original script for Return of the Jedi, and instead was first written as "It's a trick!", but it was changed in post-production after the filmmakers decided it was not as effective a line as they had originally hoped.[13]
Erik Bauersfeld said of the line: "The fans who write say they'll never forget 'It's a trap!' I don't even remember how I said it."[129][130] International Business Times writer Amy West said the line has "become somewhat cult-like in the eyes of the Star Wars fanbase".[146] Ben Sherlock of Screen Rant called the line "one of the most memorable quotes in the saga's history, for reasons that are unknown yet somehow obvious, and it immortalized what could've been a forgettable character".[147] Renaldo Matadeen of Comic Book Resources called the line "a pop culture touchstone".[30]
Footage of Ackbar reciting the line was featured on both
In 2018, the comic strip story in which Ackbar made his debut in 1982 was retroactively titled after the character's famous line.[3]
Response to Ackbar's death
Several fans expressed disappointment with Ackbar's sudden death in The Last Jedi, calling it abrupt and unceremonious.[48][81][126] Fans particularly criticized that Ackbar was only featured in the background of the shot where he dies, with the camera focused primarily on Leia Organa, and that his death is mentioned only in passing by other characters later.[41][48][81] Screen Rant writer Ben Sherlock wrote of Ackbar's death: "It was such a fleeting moment that many fans didn't even realize it had happened. They looked down for one second to get a handful of popcorn, and when they looked back up, Ackbar was gone".[147] Nate Jones of New York magazine's website Vulture, called the death scene "disrespectful" and "unfathomably rude", and that Ackbar "deserved better than to go out in a throwaway moment".[84]
Ackbar actors Tim Rose and Tom Kane also said they were disappointed with how the character's death was handled.
Others defended the way Ackbar's character was killed. Alex Leadbeater, features editor of the website Screen Rant, felt the scene was widely misunderstood by fans and served to advance the storyline, particularly to establish the ensuing conflict between Holdo and Resistance pilot Poe Dameron. Leadbeater wrote: "Ackbar had no place in The Last Jedi's narrative. ... You can argue he should have had a greater send off (but) it must be said that to do so would undercut the entire set piece."[153] In The Last Jedi episode of the comedic animated webseries How It Should Have Ended, which parodies and reimagines aspects of popular films, Ackbar's character survives the bridge attack after claiming he has to go to the bathroom at the time the bridge is shot, and he assumes control of the Resistance afterward.[48][154]
Cultural references
The first Admiral Ackbar action figure was released in 1983, the same year as Return of the Jedi.
Ackbar has repeatedly appeared in the Robot Chicken: Star Wars series,[137] most prominently featured in a sketch portraying a commercial for "Admiral Ackbar Cereal", with Ackbar presenting the breakfast cereal to two children and declaring, "Your tongues can't repel flavor of that magnitude!", a spoof of his line from Return of the Jedi.[1][148][152][163] Several additional Ackbar skits were conceived but never completed, including one in which he is a Costco greeter, and another in which he contracts gonorrhea from a stripper and is told by a doctor "It's the clap!", in reference to Ackbar's famous line "It's a trap!"[138] The "It's a trap!" line was also referenced on the television comedy show The Big Bang Theory.[1][35] Ackbar was featured in a 2009 CollegeHumor video called "Ackbar! The Star Wars Talk Show", where he played the host of a talk show similar to The Jerry Springer Show.[1][145][164] Morgan Phillips, an independent hip hop musician and disc jockey, included a song about the character called "Admiral Ackbar Please" on his album Star Wars Breakbeats.[165]
In 2010, when the University of Mississippi began a process to find a new mascot to replace Colonel Reb,[13][166][167] students Matthew Henry, Tyler Craft, Joseph Katool, and Ben McMurtray started a campaign to have Admiral Ackbar selected. Although their efforts started out as a joke, some students began to seriously push for the idea,[168][169] while others strongly opposed it and felt it was an embarrassment for the university.[1][167][170] Some students went so far as threatening to transfer out of the school if he was chosen, and some prospective parents said they would not let their children attend there.[167] The campaign quickly went viral and received national news media attention.[148][170] Lucasfilm ultimately declined to give the school the rights to use the character,[166] and issued a tongue-in-cheek statement about the matter which read: "The last time we checked in with Admiral Ackbar he was leading the Rebel Alliance Fleet on a critical mission so it will be difficult for him to show up for the games."[1][13][148] A black bear was instead chosen as the new mascot.[1][13]
References
Citations
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- ^ a b c d e f "Databank: Ackbar, Admiral". Lucasfilm. Archived from the original on August 5, 2011. Retrieved August 28, 2011.
- ^ OCLC 1121655512.
- ^ a b c d e f g Rinzler 2013, p. 59
- ^ O'Neill, Patrick Daniel (July 1987). "A Daily Dose of "Star Wars"". Starlog. No. 120. pp. 36–37.
- ^ a b c d e f g Windham et al. 2015, p. 104
- ^ Lewis 2011, p. 80
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Chernoff 1999, p. 62
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x Sansweet & Hidalgo 2008a, p. 9
- ^ Dave Filoni (actor) (June 9, 2014). Questions Answered: Mon Cala, Tills and Sharks - The Clone Wars (Video). StarWars.com (Official). Event occurs at 0:30 to 1:20. Archived from the original on July 8, 2014. Retrieved June 2, 2019.
- ^ The planet has previously been called the names Mon Calamari and Dac, but the official planet name was established as Mon Cala in the "Water War", the fourth season premiere of the Star Wars: The Clone Wars television series, which first aired on September 16, 2011. During the writing process, George Lucas himself asserted that the species is called Mon Calamari, but the planet is called Mon Cala, thus resolving the issue of multiple conflicting names for the planet.[10]
- ^ a b c d e f Martinelli, Marissa (December 26, 2016). "Why Are There So Many Mon Calamari Admirals in Star Wars?". Slate. Archived from the original on June 3, 2019. Retrieved June 2, 2019.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Hawkes, Rebecca (April 5, 2016). "Five things you didn't know about Admiral Ackbar". The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on June 3, 2019. Retrieved June 2, 2019.
- ^ a b Mangels 1995, p. 1
- The People. p. 19.
- ^ ISBN 0-87431-065-2
- ^ a b c d e Cerasi 2008, p. 115
- ^ a b c Blauvelt, Christian (September 24, 2011). "Star Wars: The Clone Wars recap: "Prisoners" Recap--Showdown on Mon Calamari". Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on June 3, 2019. Retrieved June 3, 2019.
- ^ a b c Schedeen, Jesse (August 11, 2008). "Top 25 Star Wars Heroes: Day 1". IGN. Archived from the original on December 21, 2017. Retrieved June 13, 2019.
- ^ a b Mangels 1995, p. 2
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- ^ a b c Wilken, Kai (May 15, 1999). "Star Wars Q&A". Omaha World-Herald. p. 69.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Rolston & Gilbert 1988, pp. 3–4
- ^ a b Rolston & Gilbert 1988, p. 10
- ^ Sansweet & Hidalgo 2008a, p. 98
- ^ Anderson & Wallace 2005, p. 111
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External links
- Admiral Ackbar in the StarWars.com Databank
- Gial Ackbar on Wookieepedia, a Star Wars wiki