Princess Leia Organa
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| Star Wars character | |
| Leia Organa Leia Amidala Skywalker (birth name) |
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|---|---|
| Position | Princess of Alderaan (Adopted), Imperial senator of Alderaan, New Republic diplomat, Chief of State of the New Republic |
| Homeworld | Alderaan (born on Polis Massa) |
| Species | Human |
| Gender | Female |
| Affiliation | Imperial Senate, Rebel Alliance, New Republic/Galactic Alliance |
| Portrayed by | Aidan Barton (Episode III) Carrie Fisher (Episodes IV-VI) Ann Sachs(Radio drama) Lisa Fuson (various video games) |
Princess Leia Organa Solo of Alderaan (born Leia Amidala Skywalker) is a fictional character in the Star Wars universe. She was portrayed by actress Carrie Fisher[1] in A New Hope[2], The Empire Strikes Back[3], and Return of the Jedi[4], as well as The Star Wars Holiday Special. Aiden Barton appeared as an infant Leia in Revenge of the Sith. Ann Sachs provided the voice of Leia in the 1980s radio dramas of the original trilogy.
She is one of the main protagonists of the original Star Wars trilogy. In Return of the Jedi, it is revealed that she is the twin sister of Luke Skywalker, and thus the daughter of Darth Vader. In the Star Wars prequel films, her mother is identified as Padmé Amidala.
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By the fictional chronology, Leia first appears in Revenge of the Sith, when Padmé gives birth to her and Luke at Polis Massa. (In an apparent plothole, Leia is able to recall in Return of the Jedi- set 23 years later- that her mother was "beautiful, kind, but sad", despite the fact that Padmé dies immediately after Leia is born. The official Star Wars website clearly states in its "Q & A" section that Leia was, in fact, remembering Padmé.[5] )
After Padmé's death, Jedi Masters Obi-Wan Kenobi and Yoda decide that they must hide the Skywalker children from their father, former Jedi Knight Anakin Skywalker, who had recently turned to the dark side and become the Sith Lord Darth Vader. Leia is sent to Alderaan with the droids R2-D2 and C-3PO with her adoptive parents, Bail and Breha Organa, so she would not be found by the Empire.
According to the Expanded Universe, Leia is raised with Winter, who becomes her handmaiden later on in life, as well as her children's nanny.
At the age of 18, Leia becomes the youngest member of the Imperial Senate and becomes good friends with Senator Pooja Naberrie of Naboo, her maternal cousin. She also becomes one of the driving forces behind the Rebel Alliance, the New Republic and even later, the Galactic Alliance. She serves the Senate until Emperor Palpatine dissolves it.
In Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope, Darth Vader captures her onboard the ship Tantive IV, where she is acting as a spy for the Rebellion. He accuses her of being a traitor and demands to know the location of the secret technical plans of the Death Star, the Empire's newest and most powerful weapon. Unknown to him, the young senator has hidden the plans inside an Astromech droid, R2-D2, and has sent it to find Obi-Wan Kenobi on the nearby planet of Tatooine. Later, Vader has her tortured, but she resists telling him anything. Still believing she could be useful, the Death Star's Commander, Grand Moff Tarkin, threatens to destroy Alderaan with the superweapon unless she reveals the location of the hidden Rebel base. She still does not give in and lies to them, as Tarkin orders Alderaan to be destroyed anyway. She is finally rescued by unlikely heroes: Luke Skywalker, an elderly Obi-Wan Kenobi, the cocky smuggler Han Solo, the Wookiee Chewbacca, and the two droids, R2-D2 and C-3PO. When they finally escape, at the expense of Obi-Wan's life (lost in a duel with Vader), they take part in the Battle of Yavin. Luke, in his one-man X-wing fighter, destroys the Death Star. In the Massassi Temple at the hidden Rebel base on Yavin 4, the radiant Princess Leia Organa presents the Alderaanian Medal of Honor to her rescuers and the heroes of the battle.[2]
Three years later, in Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back, Princess Leia helps with the evacuation of the Rebel base on Hoth. Despite the ongoing battle, she remains vigilant and issues commands from the crumbling base. She flees with C-3PO, Han, and Chewbacca on Han's ship, the Millennium Falcon. Although they are pursued by Imperial TIE fighters, they dodge their fire by flying into an asteroid field when the Falcon's hyperdrive breaks down. Although Leia is constantly at odds with Han, romance blossoms; while hiding in the mouth of a space slug, she shares her first kiss with the scruffy-looking Corellian smuggler. Later, when they stop at Bespin for repairs, Han's friend Lando Calrissian turns them over to Vader, who uses them as bait for Luke. Han is also used as a test subject for the carbon freezing chamber meant for Luke, and it is there that Leia finally confesses her love for Han. Vader then gives the frozen Han to bounty hunter Boba Fett to give to Jabba the Hutt, to whom Han owes a very large debt. Later, Lando helps Leia, Chewbacca, and the two droids escape. While escaping, she senses that Luke is in trouble and makes them go back for him. They save Luke, who is badly hurt after a near-fatal duel against Vader, who has revealed that he is Luke's father.[3]
In Return of the Jedi, Leia, Chewbacca, Lando, Luke (now nearly a Jedi Knight), and the droids go to Tatooine to try to rescue him from Jabba the Hutt. Leia's part of the plan consists of posing as the Ubese bounty hunter Boushh, who will turn Chewbacca over to Jabba. Her ruthless bargaining as Boushh, negotiating the price for Chewbacca at the end of a thermal detonator, impresses Jabba and Boba Fett enough to allow her quarters in the palace for the night. The Huttese gangster eventually discovers her real identity, captures her, and makes her his new slave girl after she frees Han from the carbonite.[4]
After Luke kills the Rancor, Jabba sentences Luke and Han to be fed to the Sarlacc. Just as all seems lost, Lando, disguised as a guard, helps Luke and Han overpower their captors. Leia seizes the moment to kill Jabba by strangling him with the very chain that bound her. R2-D2 cuts her loose, and after Luke boards the sailbarge, he rescues Leia. With Leia's help, Luke uses a deck cannon to blow up his barge as they swing to safety.[4]
While preparing for a last battle with the Empire on Endor, Luke reveals to a stunned Leia that she is, in fact, his twin sister, and that Vader is their father. Initially reluctant to believe him, Leia realizes that Luke speaks the truth and joins Han Solo in leading the Rebels in battle on Endor as the Rebel Fleet battle the second Death Star. Leia is injured in the battle, but the Rebels, allied with the Ewoks, are victorious over the Empire.[4]
After the Rebellion's victory on Endor, Leia establishes New Alderaan, a sanctuary for the destroyed planet's surviving inhabitants. The Royal House of Alderaan, in the person of Leia Organa Solo and her children, continues to hold sovereignty over both New Alderaan and the old Alderaan system. Her title is largely ceremonial, however, as the government on New Alderaan actually administers the Alderaan system and New Alderaan in her name. Alderaan thus has been ruled under what seems to be a constitutional monarchy.
Leia briefly appears in the 1978 TV movie The Star Wars Holiday Special, where she is once again portrayed by Fisher. In the show, Leia is a leader and administrator of the new Rebel Alliance base. She is accompanied by C-3PO when contacting Chewbacca's wife, Mallatobuck, for assistance in finding Chewbacca and Han. She also appears in the cartoon segment at a different Rebel Base, located in an asteroid field, and at the Life Day ceremony at the end of the film.
Leia also appeared in and hosted the November 18, 1978 episode of Saturday Night Live that aired one day after the holiday special.[7] The Summer 1983 issue of Rolling Stone magazine poked fun at this appearance.[8]
As depicted in the 1994 novel The Truce at Bakura, immediately after the Battle of Endor, the Rebel Alliance receives a long-range messenger droid from Bakura, which is under invasion by the Ssi-ruuk. As Bakura is a well-armed system, the battered Alliance decides to dispatch a task force to aid the Bakurans; Leia and Luke are both assigned for their diplomatic and martial skills. The remaining Imperial forces gather at Bakura gratefully receive the aid once the Rebels' victory at Endor were made known to them, and a truce between the Imperials and the Rebels is signed. Meanwhile, the spirit of Anakin Skywalker appears to Leia to beg for her forgiveness, which she cannot grant at that time.
Princess Organa is a founding member of the New Republic. Although most of her life is devoted to such matters of state, she engages in limited study of the Jedi arts, with Luke as her teacher. Notably, she wields a blue lightsaber that she built herself. In the book Heir to the Empire by Timothy Zahn, Luke builds her a green lightsaber which she uses to help free the Noghri from their perceived debt to the Empire. Luke then gives her a red one to complement the weapon she had constructed earlier.
After a near-disastrous courtship in which Prince Isolder vies for Leia's affections, she marries Han. As described in The Courtship of Princess Leia, Han kidnaps Leia and takes her to a planet he had won in a game of sabacc named Dathomir. There they encounter the Nightsisters, whose attempt to escape eventually leads to the demise of the Warlord Zsinj and his empire, equal rival at this time to both the Imperial Remnant and the New Republic.
At first, Leia does not want to have children, fearing they would succumb to the dark side as her father had done. In the novel Tatooine Ghost, however, she begins to understand what happened to her father to bring him to the dark side. When she and Han go on a mission to Tatooine to retrieve the Alderaanian moss-painting Killik Twilight and the Rebel code hidden within it, Leia discovers her grandmother Shmi Skywalker's diary and, with the help of her father's childhood friends Kitster and Wald, discovers her father wasn't the evil man she thought he was. By the end of the book, she learns to forgive him.
A year later during the Thrawn Crisis, Grand Admiral Thrawn, who had formed an alliance with Joruus C'Baoth, orders Noghri commandos to kidnap Leia, who is pregnant. C'Baoth intends to warp Leia and Luke to the dark side, and plans to corrupt also the two unborn twins. To avoid capture, she hides on the planet Kashyyyk, but her would-be kidnappers track her down. She later learns that Vader once landed on the Noghri home-planet Honoghr and tricked the Noghri into serving the Empire by promising to help their planet recover from the ecological disaster that it suffered during the Clone Wars. Because of this, they are fiercely loyal to Vader. Leia is able to leverage her biological relationship to Vader to persuade a Noghri assassin to travel with her to Honoghr and help convince the Noghri of the Empire's deception. Leia shows an assembly of Noghri matriarchs that the droids which the Empire demanded are actively poisoning the land and slowing down the reconstruction. They leave the service of the Empire after one of their assassins (and Thrawn's personal bodyguard), Rukh, kills Thrawn during the Battle of Bilbringi and becomes allies of New Republic. For her efforts, Leia is known as "Lady Vader" among the Noghri, and she and her family become revered figures in their society.
During the Thrawn Crisis, Leia gives birth to the twins Jaina and Jacen on Coruscant during Thrawn's siege.
During the events of Dark Empire, the New Republic suffers severe setbacks, losing most of its worlds, as well as Luke Skywalker to the dark side. After her brother's capture on Coruscant, subsequent transport to Byss, and temptation by the cloned Emperor, a pregnant Leia along with her husband, Han Solo, reach the Emperor's new stronghold of Byss where she confronts the reincarnated Palpatine. At first Leia is unsuccessful in turning Luke away from the dark side, but does manage to take a Jedi Holocron away from the Emperor's chambers. Leia boards the Emperor's Eclipse-class Super Star Destroyer during its assault on the Pinnacle Moon of Da Soocha. She appeals to the goodness inside Luke, redeeming him, and assaults Palpatine with the light side of the Force, cutting him off from the dark side and control of the titanic Force-storm he had exerted himself to the utmost to conjure, intending to obliterate the Rebel Alliance fleet. The Eclipse I and Palpatine are both destroyed.
In Empire's End, Leia gives birth to a second son, whom she names Anakin in honor of her father's redemption (See Solo family.) Along with a Jedi named Jen, she defeats Palpatine's second-in-command, a Dark Jedi assassin. Palpatine is soon reborn in his last remaining clone body, which is quickly deteriorating, due to sabotage by Carnor Jax and one of the Emperor's Hands. Leia is forced to flee to Onderon to hide Anakin from Palpatine, who intends to transfer his spirit into the young infant. The Emperor did eventually find her, but Han accidentally shoots him in the back just as he is about to possess the baby. A sacrifice by a dying Jedi named Empatojayos Brand saves them both from Palpatine's wrath, and incapacitates Palpatine's malignant spirit forever.
After serving a second term, Leia resigns as Chief of State, and is replaced by Borsk Fey'lya. After the Yuuzhan Vong attack on Sernpidal in 25 ABY, Leia goes before the Senate to bring attention to the threat posed by the approaching Yuuzhan Vong. Her pleas go unheeded, and the Vong legions swarm into the galaxy, destroying system after system and defeating the Jedi and the New Republic army in countless battles. Leia contributes to the war effort by joining SELCORE, a movement that aided refugees.
In Vector Prime, Chewbacca's death sends Han into a deep depression, causing a large rift between him and Leia, culminating in his walking out of the marriage after an argument. They patch things up after Leia is gravely wounded by Tsavong Lah at the Battle of Duro. Their troubles are not yet over, however; When the Vong unleash the deadly voxyn, Leia is targeted by a Voxyn master slayer who had already killed many Jedi. With the help of her Noghri bodyguards, she eliminates the assassin with her lightsaber.
In Star By Star, Leia and Han lose their youngest son, Anakin, during the Myrkr mission and the fall of Coruscant.
After Coruscant's fall, Han and Leia go to Hapes for Anakin's funeral, then on several missions to restore HoloNet communications to the Unknown Regions, including foiling a second attempt of the Ssi-ruuk to invade Bakura in the process. Leia helps the Pwecks to rebel on their masters during her confrontation face to face with the Imperium; her stand allowing several traitors to ambush the Imperium.
Near the end of the Yuuzhan Vong war, she and Han rescue Thorsh, a prisoner from the internment camps of planet Selvaris. Later, they enter with Jedi Master Kyp Durron, a Bothan secret agent named Wraw, and a few more allies on the planet Callulla. They finds that Alpha Red is released on this world. During the battle with the Yuuzhan Vong warriors, she destroys a few Slayers and a Commander before being captured. The commando is eventually rescued by Lando Calrissian, Talon Karrde and Tendra, Lando's wife.
When Zonama Sekot makes its existence known near Coruscant in The Final Prophecy, Han and Leia travel there to be reunited with the rest of their family. While there, they meet Harrar, a Yuuzhan Vong priest. Leia, Han, and a few companions work with Harrar and a group of heretics to get inside the Well of the World Brain on Coruscant.
After the destruction of Shimrra and Supreme Overlord Onimi, Nom Anor travels with the Solo family across the labyrinth to espace the mighty war vessel of the Master Shaper. However, the executor turns on them and shoots his venom towards Han, but Jacen catches the poison, saving his father from certain death. Leia engages the Prefect before he can eliminate her husband and her elder son. She proves victorious and cuts off the rogue Nom Anor's arm. The princess and the former smuggler allow the executor to die on the mighty war vessel but do not witness his certain death.
Leia then gives up politics and becomes Han's copilot, a position she holds for the next five years.
In The Joiner King series, Han and Leia follow various Jedi who had disappeared into the Unknown Regions, and discover Raynar Thul is alive and had been taken in by a nest of Killiks. To avoid a war with the Chiss, Leia suggests to "UnuThul" (as Raynar was now known) that the Killik nest be moved to a new planet, but makes him think it is his idea. At this time, Leia comes to terms with her heritage and asks Saba Sebatyne to train her as a Jedi Knight, as per a promise Luke had made to her during the Thrawn crisis.
Around this time, R2-D2 suffers some severe malfunctions and shows Luke a holoclip of his father and a pregnant woman, whom Luke learns is his and Leia's real mother. In the holoclips, Anakin and Padmé are discussing a dream of Anakin's in which Padmé dies in childbirth. Before Luke can get more info out of R2, the droid has a meltdown, claiming he is protecting information. Frustrated, Luke contacts master slicer Ghent, who manages to recover one other holoclip from R2, this time featuring a scene in which Padmé is talking to Obi-Wan Kenobi about Anakin, which is displayed to both Luke and Leia. In the Swarm War, Luke and Leia finally see their mother's death. Also, Sebatyne tells Leia to constuct a new lightsaber to show she is a true Jedi Knight.
During the Swarm war, she defeats the evil Joiner Alemar Rar, a former Jedi champion. She defeats her and assumes that she is dead, although Alema was in fact still alive, but severely injured.
Leia and Han become grandparents to Allana, Jacen's daughter, but remain unaware of it as of Exile.
During the Second Corellian Insurrection, Leia is secretly aiding the Corellians while she is still a member of the Galactic Alliance and the New Jedi Order. As time passes, tensions in her own family and her extended one worsen as both are on opposing sides of the war. Her own son is slowly falling to the dark side, training to be the next of the new Dark Lord of the Sith under the tutelage of Lumiya.
The term "Metal Bikini" refers to the iconic slave girl costume worn by Princess Leia when she was held captive in crimelord Jabba the Hutt's palace, at the beginning of Return of the Jedi.[4] The skimpy costume consisted of a brass brassiere fastened over the neck and behind the back with string, and a brass thong g-string panty [10] [11] with red silk loincloth. Leia was also wearing leather high-heeled boots. There were other various adornments as well, including a hair fastener, a snake arm-wrap and two bracelets. Finally, there was the chain, with which she was attached to Jabba and, ironically, which she uses to strangle him in the film.[12] Close examination of the film and its novelization reveals that Jabba sexually assaults her while she is wearing the outfit.[13] Despite this, she decided to keep the outfit, believing it symbolized her inner strength, independence, and love for Han Solo[14]; it has even been reported that she slept with Solo at least once while she was wearing the outfit.[15]
The costume has an extremely large fanbase, most of which has emerged in recent years. After her appearance wearing the "golden metal bikini," Carrie Fisher (and thus Leia herself) almost immediately became a sex symbol.[16] Leia's metallic bikini scenes were voted by Empire magazine as among the most memorable in movie history.[17] This phenomenon is noted in an episode of the sitcom Friends ("The One with the Princess Leia Fantasy") in which Ross tells Rachel about his interest in the "golden bikini."[18]
According to the Internet Movie Database, Fisher had said that her costumes in the previous two films had been so long that viewers could not tell "she was a woman," resulting in the skimpy outfit for Jedi. Costume Designer Aggie Guerard Rodgers noted that the inspiration for Leia's slave outfit came from the artwork of famed fantasy and science fiction illustrator Frank Frazetta. Rodgers had a "no lingerie in space" policy which prevented Fisher from wearing a brassiere; adhesive tape was used in its place. As the metal framework of the top did not fit to Fisher's skin especially well, before each take someone made sure the actress' breasts were properly covered. Several scenes had to be re-shot when "wardrobe malfunctions" occurred. An alternate, rubber version of the costume was created and used for stunts.[17]
Despite the immortal status the skimpy costume has given her, Fisher has publicly admitted she was initially disturbed by it, objecting to how it made her alter ego seem subordinate to the male characters: "When they took my clothes off, put me in a bikini and shut me up, I thought it was a strong indication of what the third film was."[19] One Wired magazine editor concurs, stating the only reason for the outfit's fame is "no doubt that the sight of Carrie Fisher in the gold sci-fi swimsuit was burned into the sweaty subconscious of a generation of fanboys hitting puberty in the spring of 1983."[16]
Leia's well-known hairdo in A New Hope[2] has been affectionately dubbed the "doughnut hairstyle", or "cinnamon buns", by many science fiction fans. Fisher herself has never commented directly on her character's hairstyle. Miss Piggy of Jim Henson's Muppet Babies once copied said hairdo using doughnuts in a Star Wars-centric episode of the series. Also, in one scene from Mel Brooks' Spaceballs, Princess Vespa also appears to have the hairstyle, but reveals that she is actually merely wearing a large pair of headphones. In addition, in the parody film Thumb Wars, the role of Leia was filled by a character named Princess Bunhead, who, as the name implies, had two cinnamon rolls for hair.
In reality, however, Leia's hairdo may not be as unique as it first appears. Young marriageable Hopi Indian women wear a very elaborate "Squash Blossom" hairdo that superficially resembles Princess Leia's.[20] It takes a hairdresser nearly one hour to create.[21] [22] George Lucas has even admitted as such, saying: "In the 1977 film, I was working very hard to create something different that wasn't fashion, so I went with a kind of Southwestern Pancho Villa woman revolutionary look, which is what that is. The buns are basically from turn-of-the-century Mexico."[23]
- Skywalker family
- Organa family
- Solo family
- Princess Leia's Theme
- List of women warriors in folklore, literature, and popular culture
- ^ StarWars.com lists Leia Organa's actual height as 1.5 meters, which is less than that of her portrayer Carrie Fisher, who is 1.55 m (5 ft 1 in) tall.
- ^ a b c Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope (DVD, 20th Century Fox, 2005), disc 1.
- ^ a b Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back (DVD, 20th Century Fox, 2005), disc 1.
- ^ a b c d e Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi (DVD, 20th Century Fox, 2005), disc 1.
- ^ Star Wars official website, "Q & A" section..
- ^ In a 2005 interview with MTV News, Lucas confirmed: "Han and Leia did get married. They settled down. She became a senator, and they got a nice little house with a white picket fence. Han Solo is out there cooking burgers on the grill. Is that a movie? I don't think so."
- ^ Star Wars Insider 97
- ^ Checklist: 10 Strange Star Wars Magazine Covers - StarWars.com
- ^ "Slave Leia Makes It on E! TV Countdown"
- ^ Illustration of costume front - Leia's Metal Bikini fanbase
- ^ Image of costume back - Leia's Metal Bikini fanbase
- ^ Slave Leia Costume- Starwars.wikia.com
- ^ Episode VI: Return of the Jedi novelization
- ^ A Study of the Hormonal Side Effects of the Gold Bikini.
- ^ "Fate of a Gold Bikini" – Fanfiction.net
- ^ a b "The Cult of Leia's Bikini" - Wired.com
- ^ a b Return of the Jedi trivia at the Internet Movie Database
- ^ Friends: "The One with the Princess Leia Fantasy" at the Internet Movie Database
- ^ "Carrie Fisher and bikini-clad Leia"
- ^ The "Squash Blossom" hairstyle
- ^ More on the Hopi Indian "Squash Blossom" hairstyle.
- ^ Waukegan Historical Society.org - "The Hopi"
- ^ "So, What's the Deal with Leia's Hair?" - TIME magazine
- Episode III: Revenge of the Sith - Novelization, 1st edition hardcover, 2005. Matthew Woodring Stover, George Lucas, ISBN 0-7126-8427-1
- The Annotated Screenplays, softcover, 1997. George Lucas, Leigh Brackett, Lawrence Kasdan, Laurent Bouzereau, ISBN 0-345-40981-7
- The Truce at Bakura, 1st paperback printing, 1994. Kathy Tyers, ISBN 0-553-56872-8
- The Courtship of Princess Leia, 1995. Dave Wolverton, ISBN 0-553-56937-6
- Heir to the Empire, 1st paperback edition, 1992. Timothy Zahn, ISBN 0-553-40471-7
- Dark Force Rising, 1st edition, 1992. Timothy Zahn, ISBN 0-553-08574-3
- The Last Command, 1st paperback edition, 1994. Timothy Zahn, ISBN 0-553-56492-7
- The New Rebellion, 1st printing paperback, 1996. Kristine Kathryn Rusch, ISBN 0-553-57414-0
- Dark Empire, trade paperback, 1993. Tom Veitch, ISBN 1-56971-073-2
- Dark Empire II, trade paperback, 1st edition, 1995. Tom Veitch, ISBN 1-56971-119-4
- Empire's End, trade paperback, 1997. Tom Vietch, ISBN 1-56971-306-5
- Heirs of the Force, Kevin J. Anderson and Rebecca Moesta. Berkley, 1995. (ISBN 0-425-16949-9)
- Princess Leia in the Star Wars Databank
- Leia Organa Solo on Wookieepedia, a Star Wars wiki
- Princess Leia at The World of Star Wars
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| Characters | Wedge Antilles • C-3PO • Chewbacca • General Jan Dodonna • Greedo • Jabba the Hutt • Jawa • Obi-Wan Kenobi • Beru Lars • Owen Lars • Princess Leia Organa • R2-D2 • Sandpeople • Han Solo • Luke Skywalker • Stormtrooper • Grand Moff Wilhuff Tarkin • Darth Vader |
| Events | Destruction of Alderaan • Battle of Yavin |
| Planets | Tatooine • Alderaan • Yavin IV |
| Cities | Mos Eisley • Death Star I |
| Starships | Escape Pod • Imperial Landing Craft • Imperial Star Destroyer • Millennium Falcon • Outrider • Rebel Medium Transport • Tantive IV • TIE Advanced x1 • TIE Fighter • X-Wing • Y-Wing |
| Vehicles | Flare-S Swoop • Sandcrawler • T-16 Skyhopper • V-35 Landspeeder • X-34 Landspeeder |
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| Characters | 2-1B • 4-LOM • Wedge Antilles • Bossk • C-3PO • Lando Calrissian • Chewbacca • Dengar • Boba Fett • IG-88 • Obi-Wan Kenobi • Lobot • Princess Leia Organa • The Emperor • Admiral Firmus Piett • R2-D2 • General Carlist Rieekan • Han Solo • Luke Skywalker • Stormtrooper • Darth Vader • Wampa • Yoda • Zuckuss |
| Events | Battle of Hoth • Luke Skywalker's Jedi Training • Capture of Han Solo • Luke Skywalker v. Darth Vader I |
| Planets | Hoth • Dagobah • Bespin |
| Cities | Cloud City |
| Starships | Escort Frigate • Imperial Lambda-class Shuttle • Imperial Star Destroyer • Millennium Falcon • Rebel Medium Transport • Slave I • Super Star Destroyer • TIE Bomber • TIE Fighter • TIE Shuttle • X-Wing • Y-Wing |
| Vehicles | AT-AT • AT-ST • Snowspeeder • Twin-Pod Cloud Car |
Categories: Articles lacking reliable references from September 2007 | All articles lacking sources | Jedi | Rebel Alliance and New Republic characters | Fictional adoptees | Fictional diplomats | Fictional orphans | Fictional politicians | Fictional princesses | Fictional royalty | Fictional senators | Fictional slaves | Fictional twins | Fictional women in war
