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List of Stargate SG-1 characters

Over its decade of existence, science fiction TV series Stargate SG-1 developed an extensive and detailed backdrop of diverse characters. Many of the characters are members of alien species discovered while exploring the galaxy through the Stargate, although there are an equal number of characters from offworld human civilizations. While Stargate SG-1, Stargate Atlantis and Stargate Universe are separate shows, they take part in the same fictional universe, so no character is internally show-specific.

The main characters of Stargate SG-1 (from left): Vala Mal Doran, Janet Fraiser (recurring), Hank Landry, Teal'c, Cameron Mitchell, Jack O'Neill, Samantha Carter, Daniel Jackson, George Hammond; missing: Jonas Quinn

Main characters

Except for the commanders of the top-secret Stargate Command military base (SGC), all main characters of Stargate SG-1 are members of the SG-1 team, the primary unit of the SGC in the show. SG-1's duties include first contact, reconnaissance and combat, diplomacy, initial archaeological surveying, and technological assessment. The composition of SG-1 changes several times during the series run and varies in several alternative universes.[1]

Jack O'Neill

Jack O'Neill is a USAF colonel (later brigadier general, major general and then lieutenant general) who led the original mission through the Stargate in Stargate. He is played by Kurt Russell in the film, and by former MacGyver actor Richard Dean Anderson in a regular role in seasons 1–8, and in a recurring role in seasons 9–10, also Michael Welch played young Colonel O'Neill in episode "Fragile Balance". He also appears in Stargate: Continuum, and in seasons 1 and 3 of Stargate Atlantis. Colonel O'Neill is the leader of the SG-1 team in the first seven seasons, and takes charge of Stargate Command after his promotion to brigadier general at the beginning of season 8. He is promoted to major general at the beginning of season 9, and is reassigned to Washington, D.C., then makes sporadic appearances in the final episodes of season one of Stargate Universe.

Daniel Jackson

Dr. Daniel Jackson is a brilliant archaeologist and linguist, specializing in Egyptology, whose unusual theories concerning the origin of the Egyptian Pyramids led to his participation in the original mission through the stargate in Stargate. He is played by James Spader in the film and by Michael Shanks in a regular role in seasons 1–5 and 7–10, with a recurring role in season 6. He also appears in both direct-to-DVD films and in seasons 1 and 5 of Stargate Atlantis. Daniel joins the SG-1 team in search of his kidnapped wife (Sha're), until she dies in season 3. However, he decides to remain a part of SG-1, and does so until his ascension at the end of season 5. Following his decision to retake human form, he rejoins SG-1 at the beginning of season 7.

As stated in season 2's "1969", Daniel speaks 23 languages, including Russian, German, Spanish, and Egyptian. Throughout the run of the series, he becomes Earth's foremost expert on the Ancients, and also learns many alien languages, such as Goa'uld, Ancient, and Unas.

Samantha Carter

Samantha "Sam" Carter is an astrophysicist and USAF captain (later major, lieutenant colonel, colonel, then brigadier general). She is played by Amanda Tapping in a regular role in seasons 1–10, in both direct-to-DVD films and makes an appearance in all seasons of Stargate Atlantis. Captain Carter joins SG-1 under the command of Col. O'Neill in season 1. Following her promotion to major in season 3, she is promoted to lieutenant colonel in early season 8 and assumes command of SG-1. She assists Lt. Col. Cameron Mitchell in seasons 9 and 10. After her appearance in Stargate: The Ark of Truth, she is promoted to a "full bird" colonel and becomes the new commander of the Atlantis expedition in season 4 of Stargate Atlantis before joining SG-1 again for Stargate: Continuum. She is later made the commander of the USS George Hammond, a Daedalus-class Earth ship named after former SGC commander General Hammond, who died in correlation with the actor who played him, Don S. Davis.

Teal'c

Teal'c /ˈtəlk/ is a Jaffa from the planet Chulak. He is played by Christopher Judge in a regular role in seasons 1–10, in both direct-to-DVD films and in season 4 of Stargate Atlantis. Throughout the entire run of Stargate SG-1, the only episode that the character was absent was Season 8's "Prometheus Unbound". Teal'c states that he is 101 years old in season 4's "The Light", and ages an additional 50 years in season 10's "Unending". His catchphrase is "Indeed". Teal'c's most notable feature is a golden tattoo on his forehead, a sign that he once served the Goa'uld Apophis as First Prime, the highest Jaffa rank. His interaction with Bra'tac (Apophis' former First Prime) and his own personal experiences led him to doubt the divinity of the Goa'uld.

Teal'c defects from Apophis in the pilot episode and joins the SG-1 team, believing this to be an opportunity to eventually defeat the Goa'uld and bring freedom to all Jaffa.[2] He leaves his wife Drey'auc and his son Rya'c behind on Chulak. After succeeding in killing Apophis in season 5's "Enemies", Teal'c and Bra'tac make first progress in uniting a sizable group of Jaffa resistance warriors in season 5's "The Warrior". Teal'c and Bra'tac lose their symbiotes after a sabotaged rebel Jaffa summit in season 6's "The Changeling", but the Tok'ra drug Tretonin can sustain them and eventually becomes instrumental in liberating Jaffa from physiological reliance on Goa'uld symbiotes,. Teal'c and Bra'tac eventually lead the Jaffa to victory over the Goa'uld in season 8's "Reckoning"/"Threads". Teal'c is chosen as a member of the new Jaffa High Council and supports Bra'tac as an interim leader in season 9's "The Fourth Horseman" before a type of government is solidified.

George S. Hammond

George S. Hammond is a USAF Major General (later Lieutenant General) who commands Stargate Command in the first seven seasons. He is played by Don S. Davis in a regular role in seasons 1–7 and in a recurring role afterwards. He also appears in Stargate: Continuum and season 1 of Stargate Atlantis. Hammond took over from Major General West, commander of the Stargate Project in the original Stargate film, and originally intended the Stargate Program to be his last assignment before retirement.[2] In season 2's "1969", General Hammond is shown to have worked at the Cheyenne Mountain complex (the present-day location of Stargate Command) in 1969. Hammond originates from Texas[3] and became a widower when his wife died of cancer.

Hammond briefly retires under duress in season 4's "Chain Reaction", where he spends time with his two grandchildren, Kayla and Tessa. He is promoted to the rank of lieutenant general at the beginning of season 8, being placed in command of the new Homeworld Security command, a department in control of Stargate Command, the Prometheus project, and the Atlantian Antarctica outpost. Hammond recurs in the season 1 of Stargate Atlantis and seasons 8 through 10 of Stargate SG-1. Hammond appears in a civilian suit instead of a military uniform in season 9's "The Fourth Horseman", and Carter confirms his retired status in season 10's "The Road Not Taken". In his last appearance in the alternate timeline film Stargate: Continuum, Hammond acts as a military advisor to President Henry Hayes.

Don S. Davis knew Richard Dean Anderson (O'Neill) from Anderson's starring role in MacGyver, in which Davis was a stand-in for Dana Elcar (playing Pete Thornton, MacGyver's boss) before making several guest appearances. Davis died from a heart attack at the age of 65 on June 29, 2008, shortly before the release of Continuum, making this his final on-screen appearance as General Hammond.[4] For his portrayal of Hammond, Don S. Davis was nominated for a 2004 Leo Award in the category "Dramatic Series: Best Supporting Performance by a Male" for the season 7 episode "Heroes, Part 2".[5]

Jonas Quinn

Jonas Quinn is an alien from the planet Langara. He is played by former Parker Lewis Can't Lose actor Corin Nemec in a regular role in season 6, and in a recurring capacity in seasons 5 and 7. Jonas leaves his home planet Langara the penultimate season 5 episode "Meridian" after witnessing Daniel Jackson's lethal sacrifice and the following gleeful reaction of his planet's leaders. He is a fast learner and fills Daniel's empty spot on SG-1 in season 6. Following Daniel's return at the beginning of season 7, Jonas returns to his planet and last appears in the mid-season 7 episode "Fallout".

Corin Nemec replaced Michael Shanks (Daniel Jackson) during season 6 after Shanks had left the show amid controversy after season 5.[6] The producers based Jonas's motivation to join SG-1 on his momentary reluctance to actively prevent Daniel's death and his feelings of responsibility afterwards.[7] Jonas was slowly integrated into the story in a prolonged transition stage over the first half of season 6.[8][9] Nemec was open to continue playing Jonas Quinn after season 6, but a new contract was reached with Michael Shanks for Daniel to return in season 7.[8] The role of Jonas was reduced to recurring status in season 7.

Cameron Mitchell

Cameron "Cam" Mitchell is a USAF lieutenant colonel. He is played by former Farscape actor Ben Browder in a regular role in seasons 9–10 and in both direct-to-DVD films. Mitchell is introduced in "Avalon" as the leader of a squadron of F-302s against the forces of the arch villain Anubis in season 7's "Lost City". Assigned as the new commanding officer of SG-1 at the beginning of season 9, Mitchell struggles to reunite the team's former members under his command. Assisted by Carter (who is of equal rank), he remains in command of SG-1 throughout the series run and both films. He is promoted to the rank of full-bird Colonel in Stargate: Continuum.

Ben Browder joined the cast after Richard Dean Anderson's departure from Stargate SG-1 in 2005. From the beginning, producer Robert C. Cooper wanted Mitchell to be a "super fan" of SG-1 who is openly enthusiastic about exploring the galaxy.[10][11] Mitchell is often at the center of the action and fight sequences.[12] The producers did not realize the physical resemblance between Browder and Michael Shanks when Browder was cast, and employed make-up and costuming techniques to make the transition easier for the audience.[13] The writers' decision to put Mitchell in command of SG-1 instead of Carter was met with resistance by some critics and audience members.[14][15] For his portrayal of Cameron Mitchell, Ben Browder was nominated for a Saturn Award in the category "Best Supporting Actor on Television" in 2006.[16]

Hank Landry

 
Beau Bridges played Hank Landry

Henry[17] "Hank" Landry is a United States Air Force Major General and the commander of Stargate Command from season 9 onwards. He is played by Beau Bridges in a regular role in seasons 9–10, in both direct-to-DVD films, and in the Stargate Atlantis episodes "The Intruder", "Critical Mass", "No Man's Land", and the two-part episode "The Return" of seasons 2 and 3. General Landry is introduced in SG-1's season 9 premiere, "Avalon", having been hand-picked by Jack O'Neill to succeed him. Landry once served as a pilot in the Vietnam War[18] and met a Vietnamese woman named Kim Lam.[19] They had a child, Carolyn Lam, but Landry became estranged to them and left them due to his involvement in military intelligence.[20] Carolyn Lam grew up to be a doctor and was assigned to Stargate Command as chief medical officer in seasons 9 and 10. Bridges said that "Landry truly loves his work [but] respects and appreciates his daughter. He wants a real relationship with her and hopes that will happen some day. At the start of [season 9], you're not sure what their relationship is."[20] The late season 10 episode "Family Ties" brings some conclusion to the Landry-Lam enstrangement, showing a reunification between Landry, Carolyn and Kim Lam in a restaurant.

TV Zone's Steven Eramo described Landry as "fair, intelligent, even-tempered and having a good sense of humour".[21] Bridges thought that "[Landry] likes to empower his team. He realizes how challenged they are. It's a huge burden to protect their country from the entire galaxy, but he also recognizes that, like himself, they are human beings. [...] Sometimes he does that with a bark, and sometimes with a bite, but he also has a sense of humor, this man. And he likes to fool with people."[22] According to Bridges, Landry appreciates Carter's knowledge, and needed some patience with the fast-speaking Daniel Jackson to realize "how important a piece of puzzle" he is. He respects Teal'c as a warrior, and is willing to foster the potential he sees in Vala.[21]

The Stargate producers approached Beau Bridges, a self-claimed fan of science fiction,[22] directly to play the role of Hank Landry.[20] Although the producers had some ideas for the characters, they collaborated with Bridges to develop the character's backstory before the writing of season 9 began.[22] Bridges wanted the character to be three-dimensional by revealing a layered backstory over the course of the show.[23] Bridges researched famous US generals from George Washington to John P. Jumper to get a feeling for the role.[20] He accumulated quotes by generals that Landry would respect, and gave the list to producer Robert C. Cooper, who in turn used it as free research.[23] Bridges made no deliberate effort to distinguish his character from General O'Neill, believing that the character could stand on his own.[22]

Vala Mal Doran

Vala Mal Doran is a con artist from an unnamed planet and a former human host to the Goa'uld Qetesh. She is played by former Farscape actress Claudia Black in a regular role in season 10 after having recurred in seasons 8 and 9 of SG-1. Her first appearance in season 8's "Prometheus Unbound" is followed by a recurring role in season 9, where she and Daniel unintentionally set off the new Ori threat. She joins SG-1 after giving birth to the new leader of the Ori at the beginning of season 10, and appears in both direct-to-DVD films.

Vala was created by Damian Kindler and Robert C. Cooper as a one-time character, but because of the on-screen chemistry between Black's Vala and Shanks' character Daniel Jackson, and the character's popularity with the producers and the audience, Claudia Black became a recurring guest star in season 9 and joined the main cast in season 10. For her portrayal of Vala, Claudia Black was nominated for a 2006 Saturn Award in the category "Best Supporting Actress on Television",[16] and won a Constellation Award in the category "Best Female Performance in a 2006 Science Fiction Television" in 2007.[24]

Recurring Stargate Command personnel

The Stargate Command (SGC) is a fictional military base (and real broom closet[25]) at the Cheyenne Mountain complex near Colorado Springs, Colorado. It is the main setting in Stargate SG-1 and occasionally features on Stargate Atlantis. The base extends many levels beneath the ground and is protected from most forms of attack including indirect nuclear detonations, also serving to contain biological, chemical or alien hazards to the outside world by means of a 'lockdown' status. Stargate Command is typically commanded by a General and is staffed by subject matter experts and military support personnel, several elite special operations teams, and several SG teams, including SG-1. The majority of the teams are United States Air Force with some United States Marine Corps, civilians and United States Army, but other nations have SG teams operating from the SGC as well after the events of season 5.

Janet Fraiser

 
Doctor Janet Fraiser as portrayed by Teryl Rothery in Stargate SG-1

Captain/Major Janet Fraiser, the resident Chief Medical Officer of the SGC (played by Teryl Rothery, seasons 1–7, 9) – She is responsible for maintaining the health of the SG teams, as well as the SGC's support staff and base personnel. On many occasions, she also cares for the health of alien refugees to Earth, including Goa'uld symbiotes. In her first appearance in "The Broca Divide", Dr. Fraiser holds the rank of captain, and is promoted to major in Season 3. In season 1's "Singularity", Fraiser adopts Cassandra, an alien orphan whose people had been exterminated by the Goa'uld System Lord Nirrti. Dr. Fraiser is killed by a staffweapon blast in season 7's "Heroes" during an off-world medical emergency, but she returns in season 9's "Ripple Effect" as a parallel universe version of Dr. Fraiser, in her reality a regular member of SG-1. Before Fraiser returns to her reality, Carter, Jackson and Teal'c are able to give her a final goodbye. Dr. Fraiser is also shown alive in an alternate timeline in the year 2010 in season 4's "2010", but Fraiser and SG-1 alter the timeline to prevent a catastrophe on Earth involving the Aschen race.

Fraiser joined the United States Air Force (USAF) after breaking up with her husband; there she got some training with firearms. Her husband did not want Fraiser to join the US military which is one of the main reasons for their breakup. As a doctor, Fraiser looks for peaceful solutions and is disinclined towards armed solutions. In the episode "Serpent's Song", Fraiser is the only one in Stargate Command (SGC) who is resistant to the idea to give Apophis over to his enemies. She is eventually forced to give up Apophis.[26][27]

Teryl Rothery was asked by then producer and writer (for Stargate) Jonathan Glassner and Brad Wright if she wanted to play the role as Fraiser.[28] In an interview, Rothery was asked what it was like to play a doctor in Stargate SG-1. Rothery replied, "just being true to the character. And as far as the medical stuff, knowing what to do and what to say." She got a lot of help from the medical advisor on the set.

In the first two seasons, Rothery did not have a contract and was booked on every episode in which she appeared. In season three of SG-1, she finally got a contract deal with the producers. She also commented on her acting life once, "The life of an actor is always very up and down. So sometimes you work a lot, but sometimes ... So if you're on a series like Stargate SG-1 you have that work for seven years. So that's a gift."[29]

After her character's death in season 7, there were various rumours which said she would appear in the upcoming Stargate film; this never happened. Rothery said it was unlikely since she had not had any contact with the Stargate producers since her character's death.[29] Rothery has stated many times that she "admires" the character because of her "strength" and "intelligence".[30] Robert C. Cooper, producer for Stargate SG-1, called Rothery about the death of her character. Cooper said, "It is our last year, so we are thinking of killing one of our regulars."[28] Fraiser was killed off in the episode "Heroes" because the producers thought season seven would be the last in the series and felt that a death of the main cast was needed.[30] Rothery also appeared on the Women of Sci-Fi calendar produced by fellow Stargate cast Michael Shanks and Christopher Judge.[28]

Walter Harriman

 
Gary Jones played Walter Harriman, an SGC technician who was also known as "Norman Davies" and "Chevron Guy"

Chief Master Sergeant Walter Harriman (also known as the Chevron Guy among others, portrayed by Gary Jones, seasons 1–10) joined the Stargate Command (SGC) after excelling in navigation and automatic flight control operations during the first Gulf War. General Hammond recruited him as someone with excellent technical ability and a cool head to operate the Stargate under extreme pressure. He specializes in installing, maintaining and repairing bomb navigation, weapons control as well as automatic flight control systems. He is also an expert in radio and navigational equipment, and in maintaining test and precision measurement equipment. He is primarily a Stargate technician, running the dialing computer and other equipment from the Control Room. He also acts as an occasional administrative assistant to the head of Stargate Command, and has manned the flight console on the bridge of the Prometheus.[31] From season 8 to 10, Harriman's role is expanded to advisor to the Head of Command of the SGC.

His name has been a source of confusion for many fans of Stargate SG-1. Originally, he was simply "Technician" or "Sergeant", listed as such in the show credits.[32] At some point, some of the writers gave him the name "Norman Davis", which came with a name tag, but was never used in dialogue. In the episode "2010", Jack O'Neill refers to him as "Walter". Later, in the eighth season of "Stargate SG-1", the character is addressed as "Sergeant Harriman", with "Harriman" actually based on General George Hammond addressing him as "Airman" what was misheard by fans because of Don S. Davis's Texan accent, resulting in the final name of "Walter Harriman". Many fans fondly refer to him as "the Chevron guy" as many of his on-screen appearances, especially earlier on in the show, had him saying "Chevron (insert number here) encoded".[31] On several DVD commentaries after the introduction of the name "Walter", producer-director Peter DeLuise refers to the character as "Walter Norman" and "Walter Norman Davis". The first time he ever says his own name is in the Stargate Atlantis episode "Home".[33]

As the series continued Harriman got a heavier role in the series. According to Jones, his role was expanded since Richard Dean Anderson wanted him as his personal assistant in the show when his character Jack O'Neill was the leader of the SGC. The Stargate producer and writer staff called 2005, The Year of Walter because the staff evolved Harriman's relationship with General Hank Landry.[34] Jones does not have a binding contract with the Stargate producers.[32]

Charles Kawalsky

Charles Kawalsky portrayed by John Diehl (in the film) and Jay Acovone (in the series), is introduced in the 1994 Stargate as lieutenant colonel. He is Jack O'Neill's second in command for the first mission through the Stargate to Abydos and returns to Earth afterwards. When the Goa'uld Apophis attacks the SGC in the pilot episode of Stargate SG-1, Kawalsky is re-introduced as a captain and reunites with his former teammates to bring Daniel Jackson back to Earth. Kawalsky is promoted to major and becomes the leader of the newly formed SG-2 team, accompanying SG-1 on their mission to Chulak to rescue Sha're and Skaara. However, before returning to Earth, Kawalsky is invaded by a Goa'uld parasite from a dead Jaffa warrior. In season 1's "The Enemy Within", the symbiote starts to take control of him back on Earth. A surgical removal of the Goa'uld is initially successful, but the symbiote turns out to be a dead husk whose intelligence has already taken over Kawalsky's mind. Kawalsky is eventually killed when Teal'c forces his head through the event horizon and closes the gate, severing most of Kawalsky's skull including the lobes controlled by the symbiote.

Despite the character's death, Kawalsky appears several more times in the series. In season 2's "The Gamekeeper", O'Neill and Teal'c encounter Kawalsky in a virtual reality simulation. In season 3's "Point of View", Kawalsky and Samantha Carter from an alternate reality arrive through the gate seeking help in contacting the Asgard. His last appearance is in season 8's "Moebius", in which Kawalsky returns in an alternate timeline accidentally created when the destruction of their time machine traps SG-1 in the distant past. Kawalsky accompanies O'Neill, Carter and Daniel to Chulak and again meets his end, although here he is merely shot; it is the alternate Daniel Jackson who is infected with the Goa'uld and killed by Teal'c.

Darren Sumner called Kawalsky "one of the [1994] film's strongest characters". Sumner called the high death numbers of secondary and recurring characters on the show, The Kawalsky Effect.[35] A Kawalsky action figure was created after the release of the 1994 film.[36] He also has a card in the card game, Stargate TCG. In the card game he is listed as a good soldier.[37] While only appearing in six episodes in total, actor Jay Acovone frequently appears at Stargate conventions.[38]

Sylvester "Sly" Siler

Master Sergeant Sylvester "Sly" Siler, (played by Dan Shea, seasons 1–10) – A sergeant at the SGC and one of its primary technicians and engineers. First appearing in season 1's "Solitudes", he remains a background character throughout the run of Stargate SG-1 and also occasionally appears in Earth-based episodes of Stargate Atlantis. Dan Shea is primarily the stunt co-ordinator for Stargate SG-1, responsible for the budgets and locations of stunts, and the hiring of stunt people before co-ordinating all stunt action.[39] Siler is subsequently shown to be involved in many accidents at the SGC, which is parodied in dialogue and action in several SG-1 episodes such as season 4's "Window of Opportunity", season 7's "Heroes" and the milestone episode "200".

Shea first auditioned for the role as Siler with executive producer Brad Wright and director Martin Wood. Shea commented on his first audition that he tried to be "Funny", thinking he could get the role easier that way. Executive producer Michael Greenberg said that Shea "Blew it". Shea then went for a second audition acting more serious, since according to Greenberg the role was "Serious" and he needed to act that way.[40] Siler also frequently appears in the background of scenes carrying an oversized wrench,[39] which he sometimes hands to director Martin Wood as a gag prop in the series. Siler's first name is never mentioned in dialogue in the series, although his uniform patch and magazines give his first name as "Sly" several times,[39][41] and his uniform patch in "Entity" reads "Dan". According to producer and writer Peter DeLuise, Siler's name and dialog deliberately contain the letter "S" because Dan Shea lisps.[42]

Shea had previous worked with both Richard Dean Anderson (who portrayed Jack O'Neill) and Greenberg before on the American television series MacGyver in the 80s and early 90s as Anderson's stand-in in stunt scenes,[40] he continued this role in Stargate SG-1. Anderson's partner Greenberg gave the job as stunt coordinator and stand-in to Shea in Stargate SG-1. The first time Shea was officially double for Anderson was in Toronto when they did a MacGyver movie; Anderson had broken his foot so Shea was forced to do a stand-in.[40]

Minor characters

  • Major Louis Ferretti, (played by French Stewart in the film as Lieutenant Louis Ferretti and Brent Stait in season 1) – A member of the United States Air Force and one of the four survivors of the first expedition through the Stargate in Stargate. Ferretti joins O'Neill's team on another mission to Abydos in "Children of the Gods", and is put in charge of the SG-2 team after the death of Charles Kawalsky in "The Enemy Within". Ferretti makes his last appearance in season 1's "Within the Serpent's Grasp" to follow SG-1 through the Stargate, and is mentioned in season 3's "Shades of Grey" as a possible new leader of SG-1.
  • Colonel Robert Makepeace (played by Steve Makaj, seasons 1–3) was a former member of the United States Marine Corps and of Stargate Command (SGC). Originally, Makepeace was the commander of SG-3. His first on-screen appearance is in "The Broca Divide" as ranking officer and team leader of SG-3. He reappears in the two episodes, two-parters in Stargate SG-1 season 2. In the two-parters of season 2, Makepeace leads a rescue mission to save SG-1 (without Teal'c) from the grasp of Hathor in "Into the Fire".[43][44] In season 3's "Shades of Grey", Makepeace is discovered to be a spy for the rogue N.I.D. group under the command of Colonel Harry Maybourne, who is covertly reverse-engineering stolen alien technologies. Smaller items stolen by the rogue group would be left on a designated world for Makepeace to covertly pick up and pack back to Earth in his gear during routine missions. O'Neill had Makepeace arrested and charged with high treason against the United States and its allies.[45] While it is unknown who immediately replaced Makepeace as the commander of SG-3, eventually this position was assigned to Colonel Reynolds.[46]
  • Colonel Albert Reynolds, (played by Eric Breker, seasons 2, 5, 7–10) – Introduced in "Touchstone" as a Major stationed at Area 51 and a member of the National Intelligence Department (NID). In early 2001, He is promoted to lieutenant colonel and was given command of SG-16 on a mission to Velona.[citation needed] By early 2003, Reynolds had received command of SG-3, succeeding Robert Makepeace who was charged for high treason against the United States and its allies.[46] He was also one of the few airman who helped Jack O'Neill defend Stargate Command against the Replicator army that Replicator Carter had sent through the Stargate to attack Earth while she focused on conquering the Milky Way galaxy. Reynolds was the leader of the SGC during Hank Landry's vacation to Jack O'Neill's cabin, Samantha Carter assumed his post until he returned from his mission to P9J-333.
  • Doctor Robert Rothman, (played by Jason Schombing, seasons 3–4) – A scientist who prior to joining Stargate Command was Daniel's research assistant. He first appears in season 3's "Forever In A Day" in a Hand device-induced delusion of Daniel Jackson, where he is placed on SG-1. His first non-fantasy appearance is in "Crystal Skull", where Rothman is tasked with researching a crystal skull. Rothman becomes a host to a Goa'uld larva and during a rescue mission on an offworld archaeological dig site in "The First Ones" and is shot dead by Colonel Jack O'Neill.
  • Major Michael Griff, (played by Russell Ferrier, season 4) – Was a member of SG-2 as a captain. He accompanied SG-1 in its search to recover SG-11 and Dr. Daniel Jackson on P3X-888; during the course of the mission he was wounded by a staff weapon blast, but recovered. As commander of SG-2, Griff led a search for SG-1 after that team went missing on P3R-118. After braving a glacier that Administrator Calder had insisted SG-1 had set out to investigate, he became convinced that Colonel O'Neill would never have authorized such a mission. At General Hammond's instruction, Griff drew up plans for a covert search and rescue mission, which ultimately proved unnecessary. Later that year, Griff and SG-2 were assigned to "babysit" a team of scientists on M4C-862, a mission he sarcastically described as "non-stop excitement". When O'Neill and Teal'c arrived to relieve him, he was visibly pleased not to be responsible for dealing with the scientists anymore.
  • Doctor Bill Lee, (played by Bill Dow, seasons 4, 6–10) – A civilian scientist and engineer who works at Stargate Command and is often called upon to work with alien technology. He first appears in "Prodigy" but does not step in the foreground until "Evolution" where he and Daniel go on a mission to Honduras to locate the Ancients' healing device but are captured and tortured by local terrorists. As seen in "Heroes", Dr. Lee is responsible for creating a staff weapon-resistant armor. He is also a recurring character on Stargate Atlantis. He devises a way to relay a warning to Atlantis in "Critical Mass" and gates to the Pegasus Galaxy from the Midway Station in "Adrift" when Atlantis goes missing. Dr. Lee remains stationed at Midway, training Kavanagh as his replacement, until the midway station is destroyed in "Midway". Dr. Lee is seen in Stargate Universe's pilot "Air" as Dr. Nicholas Rush (Robert Carlyle) uses the Ancient Communication stones (see Ancient technology in Stargate) to trade places with him. In "Twin Destinies," Eli Wallace switches bodies with Lee to present his plan for dialing the Stargate from within a star to Homeworld Command while Lee is presented the plan on Destiny.
  • Major Evan Lorne, (played by Kavan Smith, seasons 7 and 10) – A member of SG-11, Lorne first appears in Stargate SG-1 episode "Enemy Mine". Lorne appears as the team leader of the SG-1 unit in an alternate universe in the SG-1 season 10 episode "The Road Not Taken". Lorne reappears as a part of the new personnel sent after the Wraith siege by the Daedalus in the Stargate Atlantis episode "Runner". A natural carrier of the Ancient gene, Lorne becomes a major recurring character in Stargate Atlantis, often acting as backup for John Sheppard and his team and seemingly Sheppard's second-in-command. Lorne's final appearance is in "Enemy at the Gate" where he joins Sheppard's team in boarding a hive ship orbiting the Earth in an attempt to destroy it from the inside.
  • Doctor Carolyn Lam, (played by Lexa Doig, seasons 9–10) – Stargate Command's chief medical officer in seasons 9 and 10. She first appears in "Avalon Part 2" and is seemingly the first permanent one since the death of Dr. Janet Fraiser in season 7. Prior to joining Stargate Command, Dr. Lam worked with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; her specialty is infectious diseases. Dr. Lam has a strained relationship with her father, General Hank Landry. In "The Fourth Horseman", General Landry apologizes for not having been with her when she needed him as a child. Carolyn, her father and her mother Kim Lam, have dinner in the episode "Family Ties". Actress Lexa Doig is the real life spouse of Michael Shanks, who plays Daniel.

Recurring oversight agency characters

The NID is a shadowy intelligence agency that appears throughout the run of Stargate SG-1 and occasionally on Stargate Atlantis. The official mandate of the NID is to provide vital civilian oversight of top secret military operations, but one of their unofficial primary goals is to procure alien technologies. A set of well-resourced illegal cells named the Rogue NID uses unscrupulous methods to achieve the goals of the official NID and is later replaced by The Trust, a shady interplanetary terrorist group. The International Oversight Advisory (IOA) is a civilian oversight committee created after the United States and Russia revealed the existence of the Stargate Program to the other permanent members of the UN Security Council in season 6.

The producers initially wanted to call the NID "NRD" for "No Real Department", but went for "NID" because it sounded better.[47] Although the acronym still stands for nothing in particular,[48] the Stargate SG-1 Roleplaying Game says it stands for National Intelligence Department.[49] When the producers came up with story ideas for the Trust, they found that Alias had used all the names they could think of. It was not until several weeks after they had decided on the name "Trust" that they found out that Alias had used that name as well. Faced with the choice to either go with the Trust or with what producer Joseph Mallozzi called "The Former Rogue Elements of the N.I.D. Now Working for Private Interests Bent on Global Domination", they chose the first option.[50] The IOA has also been referred to as the "International Oversight Committee" on the show, until producer Joseph Mallozzi realized during the writing of "The Ties That Bind" that the acronym IOC is already used by the International Olympic Committee.[51] The writers originally wanted to set up an IOA watchdog character on SG-1 and possibly have Richard Woolsey on the base all the time, but season 9 already had so many new characters that the writers did not develop this idea.[51]

Malcolm Barrett

Special agent Malcolm Barrett, (played by Peter Flemming, seasons 5–7, 9–10) – An NID agent introduced in season 5's "Wormhole X-Treme!". His first significant appearance follows in "Smoke & Mirrors", where he helps uncovering a shadow group behind the NID who tried to attribute Senator Kinsey's apparent assassination to O'Neill. After collaborating with SG-1 in season 7's "Heroes, Part 2" and "Resurrection", Barrett expresses a personal romantic interest in Samantha Carter in season 9's "Ex Deus Machina" and season 10's "Uninvited", but she rejects his advances. His last SG-1 appearance is in season 10's "Dominion". Agent Barrett also recurs in Stargate Atlantis. He warns General Landry in that show's season 2 episode "Critical Mass" of the Trust's plan to destroy Atlantis with a bomb, and aids several Expedition team members to track down Rodney McKay's sister Jeannie Miller on Earth in season 4's "Miller's Crossing".

Peter Flemming had a two-line audition for "Wormhole X-Treme" for a "Man in Black" character in a possible recurring role. Every NID character introduced before Agent Barrett "had been very shady, always had an agenda", and Barrett was "the first mainstay in NID who is actually law-abiding[...], honest, [and] a good person".[52]

Harry Maybourne

Colonel Harry Maybourne, (played by Tom McBeath, seasons 1–6, 8) – A USAF Colonel introduced in season 1's "Enigma" as an NID member with ambiguous morals and loyalties. In season 2's "Bane", Maybourne leads an NID attempt to claim Teal'c for study after alien insect infected Teal'c. After further antagonizing SG-1 through rogue NID operations in "Touchstone" and "Shades of Grey", and helping SG-1 in "Foothold", Maybourne flees to Russia and aids in establishing the Russian Stargate Program. He is caught in season 4's "Watergate", convicted of treason, and placed on death row. O'Neill contacts Maybourne in season 4's "Chain Reaction" to help reinstate General Hammond, who was blackmailed into resigning from his position. Maybourne escapes after the mission's success and covertly helps O'Neill in season 5's "Desperate Measures" and "48 Hours" in the Adrian Conrad case. Maybourne tricks SG-1 into taking him off-world in season 6's "Paradise Lost", and is eventually exiled to a far-off planet. When SG-1 meets him again in season 8's "It's Good To Be King", Maybourne leads a life of leisure as the seemingly clairvoyant ruler of the local peoples, King Arkhan I. Although the people later discover the deception, they welcome him to stay as his technological expertise has improved their standard of life, and SG-1 returns to Earth without him. He had ascended to power using an Ancient time-travelers log of his journeys into the future of the planet and ended up facing a Goa'uld invasion, but the soldiers were repelled by Jackson and Teal'c with help from one of the villagers, and O'Neill destroyed in the ship in orbit, killing the System Lord behind the attack. When the team leave, O'Neill and Maybourne part amicably with Maybourne having finally accepted responsibility towards the people he was ruling.

After auditioning for the part as Harry Maybourne, the producers revealed that he "maybe" could get a spot as a recurring character in the show. McBeath called his role as Maybourne at the start of the series "boring", but was glad for the new change in the character's direction in the series after he was convicted for treason. McBeath also commented that the writers and the producers for the show had more "fun" when his character started to "loosen" up.[53] When the portraying actor Tom McBeath was asked about the O'Neill–Maybourne relationship, he explained their rapport as "I can't stand you, but at some level I have a lot of respect for you. And I do actually, grudgingly have a good time when you're around, and things seem to work out."[53] McBeath once stated that the character of Maybourne diminished after Richard Dean Anderson's departure from the show in season 8.[54]

Robert Kinsey

 
Ronny Cox plays Robert Kinsey

Senator Robert Kinsey, (played by Ronny Cox, seasons 1, 4–8) – A US senator who first appears in season 1's "Politics". In "Politics", Kinsey ignores warnings of an imminent Goa'uld invasion and instead manages to briefly shut down Stargate Command for budget reasons, only for SG-1 to prove the program's worth and save Earth through defying orders. In season 4's "Chain Reaction", Kinsey and the NID temporarily succeed in controlling the Stargate by blackmailing General Hammond into retirement and appointing a new general to his position, but O'Neill is able to find evidence of the blackmail and get Hammond reinstated. In season 5's "2001", Kinsey aims to gain prestige through an alliance with the Aschen, but the alliance fails (However, the alliance went ahead in the alternate but unfulfilled future reality witnessed in season 4's "2010", in which Kinsey also achieved his goal of the presidency; only a warning from that future helped the SGC prevent it). In season 6's "Smoke and Mirrors", a group controlling the rogue NID, known as "the Committee", tries to assassinate Kinsey and frame Col. O'Neill for his murder, but NID agent Malcolm Barret and SG-1 foil this attempt. Kinsey becomes Vice-President in season 7's "Inauguration" and tries again to take control of the Stargate Program in "Lost City". Shortly after NID Agent Richard Woolsey presents incriminating evidence against Kinsey to President Henry Hayes in the same episode, Hayes "accepts" Kinsey's resignation. Kinsey makes his last appearance in season 8's "Full Alert", where the SGC convinces Kinsey to go undercover to undermine the hierarchy of the Trust. However, the Goa'uld have completely infiltrated the Trust through their operatives working outside of the solar system, and have already implanted a symbiote within Kinsey to aid in their plans of starting a nuclear war between the US and Russia. After the SGC foil the attempt, Kinsey flees aboard an Al'kesh, but Kinsey's future remains uncertain as the Al'Kesh is destroyed while he operated a transport device, leaving it open-ended if he was able to escape or the ship was destroyed before he could transport away. Kinsey is briefly mentioned as a President in the alternative timeline (with Hayes as Secretary of Defense) in season 8 finale "Moebius".

The producers of Stargate SG-1 asked Ronny Cox if he would be interested in a role in one episode, but according to Cox it was "so much fun that they and I decided we would like to do more together". According to executive producer Brad Wright, every time they got a script from an outside editor, Kinsey was included. Cox has been noted for saying that the character has become a "Malevolent force on the show". Because of the collaboration between the producers and himself, Cox described him as a "self-aggrandizing senator who like[s] to throw his weight around", and as "Kinsey feels that the Stargate [is] being used in completely the wrong way and one that is endangering American ideals and a way of life that he believes in" and a "Born-again, right-wing, Christian fundamentalist"; Cox played him as a heroic antagonist rather than villainous. Cox was approached by the producers to play Kinsey instead of auditioning himself. Kinsey holds the position of chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee until season 7 and oversees the national defense budget of secret projects such as the Stargate Program.[55][56]

Richard Woolsey

 
Picardo at ComicCon, 2008.

Richard Woolsey (played by Robert Picardo, seasons 7, 9–10) – Woolsey's first appearance is following the death of Dr. Janet Fraiser late in season 7 of Stargate SG-1, Woolsey is brought into Stargate Command in the episode "Heroes" to examine the command decisions and threatens SGC personnel with court-martial if they do not cooperate. When Woolsey brings his report to President Hayes in "Inauguration", he comes to realize Senator Kinsey's ambitions and presents incriminating evidence against him,[57] indirectly forcing Kinsey into resigning. Woolsey returns in the season 9 episode "Prototype" and encourages the SGC to take great risks with the captured Goa'uld-human-Ancient hybrid Khalek to learn more about the Ascension process. When the studies cause injury and death among SGC personnel, Woolsey acknowledges his own error and pleads for forgiveness from the SG-1 team.[58] Being the US's representative on the newly formed International Oversight Advisory Committee (IOA), Woolsey and some colleagues are rescued by SG-1 and the crew of the Odyssey after a catastrophe at the Gamma Site in "The Scourge", which he later considers an "eye-opening experience".[59] Woolsey makes two more appearances in "Flesh and Blood" and "Morpheus" and last appears on SG-1 in season 10's "The Shroud". Woolsey remembers the Khalek incident and decides that Daniel, who transformed into a Prior, is too dangerous and must be placed indefinitely into stasis. However, Daniel frees himself before Woolsey's plans can be enacted.[60]

Robert Picardo was in the main cast of Star Trek: Voyager from 1995 to 2001. He was familiar with Stargate SG-1 from his time as a Showtime subscriber. He was offered a one-day guest star as Richard Woolsey for the SG-1 episode "Heroes" in season seven (2004) while he was working on The Outer Limits in Vancouver (where Stargate SG-1 is filmed). He was then brought back for the follow-up episode "Inauguration", which began the rehabilitation of the Woolsey character. With the story introduction of the IOA, the Woolsey character made more regular appearances to "annoy people". Eventually, humor was added to the role, and the character was spun over to Atlantis as a recurring guest character. Picardo later became a main character in Stargate Atlantis.[61][62] Producer Joseph Mallozzi said that "whenever I do interviews, I often draw parallels between [Amanda Tapping and Robert Picardo]. They are both incredibly kind, professional, delightful to work with, and gifted actors who always elevate the performances of anyone they share a scene with."[62]

Frank Simmons

Colonel Frank Simmons, (played by John de Lancie, seasons 5–6) – The NID liaison to Stargate Command after Col. Harry Maybourne's arrest for treason. Simmons is introduced in season 5's "Ascension" and is notorious for claiming to have the best interest of the nation at heart, while really he has his own political agenda. In "Desperate Measures", Simmons shoots O'Neill in the back while O'Neill was attempting to capture a Goa'uld who has taken Adrian Conrad as host. "48 Hours" Simmons' involvement in the disappearance of the Adrian Conrad Goa'uld, whom he now holds captive, is revealed and General Hammond has him arrested. In season 6's "Prometheus", rogue NID agents hijack the unfinished starship Prometheus and demand that Simmons, along with Adrian Conrad's Goa'uld, be released. It later turns out that Simmons had orchestrated the entire affair. When Conrad is killed, the Goa'uld infects Simmons. O'Neill is able to open an emergency airlock and releases Simmons into hard vacuum, killing both him and the Goa'uld.

Other recurring characters

Chekov

Colonel Chekov, (played by Garry Chalk, seasons 5–6, 8–10) – Russia's liaison to Stargate Command following the early season 4 events of the short-lived Russian Stargate program. He first appears in season 5's "The Tomb", blaming SG-1 for the death of several Russian SG team members.[63] Chekov collaborates with the SGC several episodes later in "48 Hours", giving them a DHD from Russian possession and allowing the SGC to use the Russian Stargate.[64] Colonel Chekov is appointed as the Russian envoy to the SGC around season 6's "Redemption" and agrees to give the Russian Stargate to the US in exchange for money, X-302 technology, and a Russian SG team.[65] In season 6's "Disclosure", Colonel Chekov supports the US's presentation for the disclosure of the Stargate Program to the other three permanent members of the UN Security Council.[66] In season 8's "Full Alert", Colonel Chekov helps General O'Neill deal with the possible Goa'uld compromise of the US government and establishes a direct line between O'Neill and the Russian President to avert a nuclear war.[67] Chekov appears in season 9's "The Fourth Horseman" and "Crusade", where he has become a Russian representative of the IOA. He makes his last appearance in "Camelot" as the commander of the Earth ship Korolev to stop the Ori fleet from invading the Milky Way, but is killed when his ship was obliterated by the Ori Fleet, though six other crew members were transported from the ship before its destruction.[68]

Garry Chalk was assigned to the role as Chekov by executive producer Michael Greenberg and N. John Smith. They asked him if he could speak Russian, Chalk replied "No." Greenberg then replied "No matter!" And gave him his own Russian coach named Alexander Kalugin, who made an appearance in the Stargate SG-1 episode "Watergate" as one of the Russian soldiers. Portraying actor Chalk had previously worked with Richard Dean Anderson, Don S. Davis and Greenberg in 1986 on MacGyver and Smith in The Beachcombers. Greenberg had said to Chalk that they were going to bring him into the show, at first there was no audition or a single phone call, until season 5 of the series. During the shows history, Chalk "Begged" the producers for his character to go through the "Stargate", but they said no, but, eventually they came up with the idea of giving him his own starship. Chalk was the only non-Russian actor assigned in "Flesh and Blood".[69]

Catherine Langford

Catherine Langford, played by Kelly Vint (girl in the film), Viveca Lindfors (elderly lady in the film), Elizabeth Hoffman (elderly lady in season 1), Nancy McClure (young woman in season 1) and Glynis Davies (middle-aged woman in season 2), Ellie Gall (Stargate Origins) – Daughter of archeologist Prof. Paul Langford, who discovered the Stargate, as a girl she acquired an amulet depicting the Eye of Ra during the excavation of the Stargate in Giza in 1928.[70] In present-day of Stargate, she gives the amulet to Daniel before his first mission through the Stargate to Abydos. Her fiancé, a scientist named Ernest Littlefield (played by Keene Curtis and Paul McGillion), is the first human to have travelled through the Stargate since the ancient Egyptians buried it. Catherine and Ernest were separated by a gate incident in 1945 and were re-united in the mid-season 1 episode "The Torment of Tantalus", but Ernest is never seen again in the series (although he is mentioned in season 1's "There But For the Grace of God" and season 2's "The Fifth Race"). Catherine Langford appears again in alternate universes and times in "There But For the Grace of God" and "1969". Her death is announced in season 8's "Moebius, Part 1"; she leaves her personal collection of documents and artifacts, including the golden medallion of Ra, to Daniel Jackson.

Earth ship crew characters

In the show, Earth's efforts to construct starships of its own using reverse-engineered alien technology begin in the season 4 episode "Tangent", with the less-than-successful X-301. The first spaceworthy Earth fighter, the X-302 (later F-302), is introduced in season 6's "Redemption", and a few episodes later in "Prometheus", Earth's first space battlecruiser, the Prometheus. Squadrons of F-302s are eventually stationed on Earth, Atlantis, the SGC's alternative sites, and its battlecruisers. In season 2 of Stargate Atlantis, the Daedalus-class battlecruiser is introduced, incorporating advancements that were tested on the Prometheus. Six Daedalus-class battlecruisers appeared in the franchise: the Daedalus,[71] the Odyssey,[72] the Korolev,[73] the Apollo,[74] the Sun Tzu, and the George Hammond (named the Phoenix in an alternate timeline).[75] Except for the Korolev and the Sun Tzu, which are operated by the Russians and Chinese respectively, all Earth combat spacecraft are operated by the United States Air Force.

Set designer Peter Bodnarus based the design of the F-302 on the F-117A U.S. Air Force stealth fighter and the HL-10 aircraft from the 1970s, while still leaving the Goa'uld glider origins of the design recognizable. He and his team focused on creating a realistic-looking cockpit interior for the X-302 in terms of the headrest with overhead ejection handles and emergency systems.[76] The original concepts for the look of the Prometheus as well as the X-303's interior were aircraft carriers.[76][77] For the Prometheus, the producers wanted to build something that was exactly the opposite of Goa'uld ships, which, according to Paul Mullie, are basically big empty rooms with nowhere to sit, no screens and no buttons to press. Andy Mikita thought the Prometheus was a fun set to shoot in because "there's lots of layers and textures and flashing lights".[77]

  • Catherine Womack, played by Chelah Horsdal (seasons 8–9) – A US Airforce officer of unknown rank. She takes over from Major Erin Gant as the helmsman of the Prometheus in season 8's in "New Order, Part 2" and is last seen in "Full Alert".
  • Paul Emerson, played by Matthew Glave (seasons 9–10) – Introduced as the commander of the Odyssey in season 9's "Off the Grid", rescuing SG-1 and aiding in their mission to take back all stolen Stargates from Ba'al's ship. In the next episode, "The Scourge", he again rescues SG-1 and a team of the IOA from the Gamma Site. In the season 9 finale, "Camelot", Emerson teams up the Odyssey with many other ships of the Jaffa, the Asgard and the Lucian Alliance to battle the Ori battlecruisers which come through an open Supergate, and the Odyssey takes much damage. Emerson continues serving as the commander of the Odyssey in season 10 but is killed by a member of the Lucian Alliance in "Company of Thieves".
  • Erin Gant, played by Ingrid Kavelaars (seasons 6–7) A US airforce Major and the first known helmsman of the Prometheus under Colonels Ronson and Kirkland as well as General George Hammond. She is first seen in "Memento" and last seen in "Lost City".
  • Kevin Marks, played by Martin Christopher (seasons 9–10) – A USAF officer aboard the Prometheus introduced in "Avalon Part 1", helping Mitchell and SG-1 locate and gain access to the Ancient stronghold at Avalon. Marks is also present during the Kalana mission in "Beachhead" and the subsequent search for Gerak's hidden mothership in orbit of Earth's moon in "Ex Deus Machina", after which he is promoted to captain. Following the destruction of the Prometheus in "Ethon", Marks is promoted to major and becomes a bridge officer on board the Odyssey, where he participates in various operations in "Camelot", "The Scourge, "Flesh and Blood", "Talion", and "Unending". Marks' last apparent SG-1 mission on board the Odyssey is the retrieval of the Ark of Truth from the Ori Home Galaxy in Stargate: The Ark of Truth. He takes a similar bridge position on board the Apollo in Atlantis's "Be All My Sins Remember'd" and transfers to Daedalus in "Search and Rescue". In "The Daedalus Variations," Teyla mentions that Marks gave her preliminary training on the battlecruiser's systems, an offer that Ronon Dex had declined. He is last seen on board the George Hammond under the command of Samantha Carter in Stargate: Universe's "Air." Aside from the commanders of each ship, Marks is the most recurring crewmember to appear and the only character shown to serve on each of Stargate's major space vessels.
  • Lionel Pendergast, played by Barclay Hope (seasons 8–9) – Replaces Colonel William Ronson as commander of the Prometheus and is first seen in "New Order Part 2" patrolling Earth. Pendergast intercepts Thor's Asgard mothership Daniel Jackson after its arrival in Earth's solar system and destroys a Trust-controlled Al'kesh in "Full Alert". He is leading the search of Osiris's cloaked Al'kesh in Earth's orbit in "Endgame" and transports the Stargate and SG-1 aboard before the enemy vessel enters hyperspace. In season 9's "Beachhead", Pendergast delivers a Mark IX warhead to an Ori beachhead and maintains the ship's position during the mission despite Jaffa and Ori interruption. Pendergast dies during the destruction of the Prometheus by an Ori satellite weapon in "Ethon"; he remained aboard to beam his crew off the ship, thus saving 76 lives.
  • William Ronson, played by John Novak (seasons 6–7) – A USAF Colonel and Commander of the Prometheus during seasons 6 and 7.
  • Ian Davidson played by Fulvio Cecere (season 10) A USAF Colonel who takes command of the Odyssey in the Season 10 episodes, "Family Ties" and "Dominion" following the death of his predecessor, Colonel Paul Emerson.

Minor characters

  • Adrian Conrad, played by Bill Marchant (seasons 5–6) – A wealthy business man suffering from an incurable terminal illness and desperate to uncover the regenerative biological secrets of Goa'uld symbiotes. He hopes to learn the effects a blending had on a human by abducting Carter in "Desperate Measures", but her resistance forces him to be blended with the symbiote himself. Conrad, incarcerated under the control of Frank Simmons of the NID, unknowingly assists in freeing Teal'c from the inner workings of the Stargate in "48 Hours". Rogue NID agents are eventually able to release Conrad and Simmons from custody and escape with them aboard the hijacked and unfinished starship Prometheus. The Goa'uld desires to gain control of the Prometheus and finds its way into Col. Simmons after Simmons killed Conrad. O'Neill releases the infected Simmons into the vacuum of space through an airlock during a fight.
  •  
    Colin Cunningham played Major Paul Davis.
    Paul Davis, played by Colin Cunningham (seasons 2–6, 8) – A United States Air Force Major stationed at the Pentagon. He is introduced in season 2's "A Matter of Time" and recurs in fifteen Stargate SG-1 episodes, usually aiding Stargate Command during conflicts with other nations on Earth and other portions of the United States government. He last appears in an alternate timeline in season 8's "Moebius", and makes a cameo appearance at the beginning of Stargate: Continuum. He also appeared in the Stargate Atlantis series finale, "Enemy at the Gate". Despite the number of years the character was on the series, he always remained a major and was never seen to be promoted.
  • Julia Donovan, played by Kendall Cross (seasons 6, 8–10) – A TV reporter who learns of the Prometheus program in season 6's "Prometheus" and intends to do a story on it. When she gets caught up in a rogue NID operation during her tour of the ship, she changes her mind in promised to be the first one to publish the story if and when the Stargate Program goes public. She helps cover up Stargate-related issues in season 8's "Covenant" and season 9's "Ex Deus Machina", and appears in an alternate universe in season 10's "The Road Not Taken".
  • Henry Hayes, played by William Devane (season 7) – The President of the United States from season 7 onwards, introduced in season 7's "Inauguration". After Vice President Robert Kinsey and NID-agent Richard Woolsey inform him about the Stargate Program and several problems at Stargate Command, Hayes replaces General Hammond with civilian Dr. Elizabeth Weir as the new commander of Stargate Command in "Lost City". Hayes then appoints Hammond to command of the Prometheus during Anubis's actual invasion on Earth and forces Kinsey into resigning. After Anubis's defeat, Hayes puts O'Neill in command of the SGC and Hammonds in command of the Homeworld Command and selects Dr. Elizabeth Weir as the leader of the Atlantis expedition. His first official visit to the SGC is alluded to in season 8's "Zero Hour", and he is mentioned again in season 10's "Bad Guys". President Hayes returns in an alternate timeline in Stargate: Continuum.
  • Rodney McKay, played by David Hewlett (seasons 5–6, 8–10) – A brilliant scientist who works with Samantha Carter in "48 Hours", "Redemption" (two-parter), "Moebius" (two-parter), "The Pegasus Project", "The Road Not Taken". Rodney McKay went on to become a main character on the spinoff series, Stargate Atlantis.
  • Robert Samuels, played by Robert Wisden (seasons 1–2, 8) – A USAF Lieutenant Colonel who re-introduces O'Neill to the Stargate Program in "Children of the Gods". He repeatedly raises his concerns over the SGC's and Hammond's incompetence in "Politics" and "The Serpent's Lair". Samuels last appears in an alternate universe in season 8's "Moebius (Part 1)".
  • Pete Shanahan, played by David DeLuise (seasons 7–8) – A police detective working in Denver, Colorado. He meets Carter and develops a romantic relationship with her in the late-season-7 episode "Chimera" after Carter's brother set them up. He is divorced since his previous wife could not quite cope with his work. Curious about Carter's work, he finds out about Carter's involvement with a top-secret project through an FBI acquaintance. After witnessing a fight between SG-1 and Osiris, he is given security clearance and learns the true nature of the Stargate program. Carter and Shanahan continue to see each other throughout season 7 and 8 until Shanahan proposes to marry Carter in "Affinity". She agrees, but she cancels the wedding and breaks up with him in "Threads" after he had already made wedding arrangements and was ready to buy a house.
  • General Maurice Vidrine, played by Steven Williams (seasons 4, 7) A USAF General who oversaw the development and operations of Earth's fleet of spacecraft built using alien technology, including the X-301 and BC-303.

Abydonians

The Abydonians are the people whom Colonel O'Neill's team encounters on another planet in the Stargate film. They are the slaves of the alien Ra and are descendants from ancient Egyptians brought through the Stargate to mine the fictional mineral naqahdah. The film gives the location of their homeworld—named Abydos in SG-1's pilot episode "Children of the Gods"—as the Kaliem galaxy "on the far side of the known universe" in the film; and as the closest planets to Earth in the Stargate network in "Children of the Gods". In the film, O'Neill and Daniel Jackson inspire the Abydonians and their leader, Kasuf, to rise up against Ra. The military personnel return to Earth, while Daniel falls in love with Kasuf's daughter Sha're and remains behind. In "Children of the Gods", set a year after the film, the Goa'uld Apophis attacks Abydos, abducting Sha're and her brother Skaara to serve as hosts for his queen Amonet and son Klorel. In season 6's "Full Circle", the Goa'uld Anubis destroys Abydos, but Oma Desala helps its entire population Ascend.

  •  
    Erick Avari played Kasuf in the film and the television series.
    Kasuf (Hebrew for 'silver-colored')[citation needed], played by Erick Avari (film, seasons 2–4) and Daniel Rashid (Origins) – The leader of the Abydonians in the film, and the father of Sha're and Skaara. In season 2's "Secrets", one year after Apophis's kidnapping of Kasuf's children in "Children of Gods", Daniel returns to Abydos and learns that Sha're has become pregnant by Apophis. Kasuf helps Daniel to hide the newborn child from Heru-ur. Kasuf returns in season 3's "Forever in a Day" when his daughter Sha're dies. Kasuf last appears in season 4's "Absolute Power", introducing SG-1 to his rapidly aged grandchild, Shifu. In the prequel web series Origins, it is shown that Kasuf served Aset in Abydos and met Catherine Langford and her group when a German officer named Brucke first activated the Stargate in a warehouse near Giza on Earth. Upon Ra's return to Abydos, Aset made Kasuf the leader of the village of Nagada.
  • Sha're (Sha'uri in the film), played by Mili Avital (film) and Vaitiare Bandera (seasons 1–3) – Kasuf's daughter who becomes Daniel Jackson's wife and the host of the Goa'uld Amonet (also spelled Amaunet). In the film, her father Kasuf offers Sha're to Daniel Jackson as a gift, and although he initially refuses to take her as his wife, they eventually fall in love with each other. After one year of marriage in "Children of the Gods", Apophis takes Sha're hostage and makes her a host for his symbiote queen Amonet against her will. Daniel meets a now vastly-pregnant Sha're on a visit to Abydos in season 2's "Secrets". She hides her child, a Harcesis fathered by Apophis, from Heru-ur as Amonet is dormant during the pregnancy. When Sha're gives birth to a boy, Shifu, Amonet takes control of Sha're but keeps information about the child to herself. Amonet returns for the child one year later in season 3's "Forever in a Day", sending him to the planet Kheb with one of her handmaidens. During a battle at Abydos in "Forever in a Day", Amonet attacks Daniel with her hand device in a tent, and Teal'c kills Sha're with his staff weapon to prevent Daniel's death.
  • Skaara, played by Alexis Cruz (film, seasons 1–3, 6) – The son of Kasuf and brother to Sha're. In the film, Skaara and his friends aid O'Neil and his soldiers to beat Ra. In "Children of the Gods", Skaara is taken hostage by Apophis and is made the host for his symbiote son Klorel against his will. SG-1 invades Klorel's ship in the season 1 finale, "Within the Serpent's Grasp", but Skaara is only able to emerge shortly. After O'Neill shoots Klorel to prevent him from killing Dr. Jackson, Bra'tac revives him in a Sarcophagus. Skaara and Apophis flee before their ships are destroyed in the season 2 opener, "The Serpent's Lair". In season 3's "Pretense", Klorel's ship crashes on the Tollan homeworld while fleeing from Heru-ur's forces. With help from the Tollan technology, Skaara regains control and participates in a Tollan trial to get the symbiote separated from his body. Skaara wins the trial and eventually returns to Abydos, where he meets SG-1 one last time in the season 6 finale, "Full Circle". Skaara helps SG-1 in the search for the Eye of Ra before Anubis can find it on Abydos. Skaara is mortally wounded during the firefight with Anubis' Jaffa, but ascends with the help of Oma Desala.

Ancients

The Ancients are the original builders of the Stargate network, who by the time of Stargate SG-1 have ascended beyond corporeal form into a higher plane of existence. The humans of Earth are the "second evolution" of the Ancients. The Ancients (originally known as the Alterans) colonized the Milky Way galaxy millions of years ago and built a great empire. They also colonized the Pegasus galaxy and seeded human life there before being driven out by the Wraith. The civilization of the Ancients in the Milky Way was decimated millions of years ago by a plague and those who did not learn to ascend travelled to the Pegasus galaxy on board Atlantis. With few exceptions, the ascended Ancients respect free will and refuse to interfere in the affairs of the material galaxy. However their legacy is felt profoundly throughout the Stargate universe, from their technologies such as Stargates and Atlantis to the Ancient Technology Activation gene that they introduced into the human genome through interbreeding.

Oma Desala

Oma Desala ("Mother Nature"), played by Carla Boudreau (season 3) and Mel Harris (seasons 5, 8) – An Ascended being who goes against the ways of the Ancients. It is unclear if she is an Ancient herself, as the Ancients Orlin and Merlin give different accounts of knowing Oma.[78][79] Oma is responsible for once helping the fallen System Lord Anubis, the main SG-1 antagonist between seasons 5 through 8, ascend.[80] Although the Ancients banished her for her actions, Oma remains convinced of her responsibility to guide those beneath to the "Great Path" of enlightenment, even if this interferes in the lower planes of existence.[78] Oma therefore only guides individuals, leaving the final decision to travel the great path to them.[81] SG-1 first encounters Oma Desala on their search for Shifu in season 3's "Maternal Instinct". Oma eventually guides Shifu to ascension in season 4's "Absolute Power". Oma is involved in Daniel Jackson's ascension in "Meridian" and forceful de-ascension in "Fallen", and also helps the entire Abydonian population ascend after Anubis's attack in season 6's "Full Circle". Oma Desala last appears in season 8's "Threads", sacrificing herself to enter an eternal battle with Anubis to prevent him from wreaking further havoc on the galaxy.

Note: Mel Harris's teenage son was a Stargate SG-1 fan and introduced her to the series. The Stargate producers offered her the part when she was visiting the set while in Vancouver for another job. The best direction she got for playing this almost "omniscient" character was that she was not like others and was a "being" of her own.[82]

Minor characters

  • Ganos Lal or Morgan le Fay, played by Sarah Strange (season 10) – An ascended Ancient who would give rise to the Arthurian legend of Morgan le Fay. Her fictional backstory closely links her to her fellow ascended Ancient Myrddin (Merlin), who aimed to construct a weapon to fight the Ori that also posed a danger to the Ancients. Morgan le Fay is first referenced in season 10's "Morpheus" and first appears in person in "The Pegasus Project" where she poses as a hologram in Atlantis. She gives SG-1 information about the location of Merlin's weapon, the Sangraal, but the Others banish her for this action. Morgan le Fay is mentioned again in "The Quest" and returns in Stargate: The Ark of Truth to help SG-1 in their fight against Adria in the Ori galaxy. She is last seen engaging Adria in an eternal battle.
  • Moros, also known as Myrddin or Merlin, played by Matthew Walker (season 9–10) – The High Councilor of Atlantis during the days of the first siege of the city, and is one of the most influential Ancients in the series. Moros is named after Moros from Greek legend, the personification of impending doom and destruction, while his name Merlin refers to the Arthurian legend. Merlin is introduced in the Stargate Atlantis season 1 episode "Before I Sleep", where an alternate Elizabeth Weir travels through time and meets him as Moros during his days on Atlantis. A tablet Merlin created thousands of years ago is found in season 9's "Avalon" and sets the Ori arc of SG-1 in motion. Merlin appears as a hologram in "Avalon", season 9's "Camelot" and season 10's "The Pegasus Project", providing information about his background and his motivations. As revealed in season 10's "The Pegasus Project", SG-1 must find a weapon that Merlin sought to construct to defeat the Ori, the Sangraal. On this quest, SG-1 finally find Merlin in stasis in season 10's "The Quest" and awaken him. His body dies shortly afterwards, but his transferred consciousness remains in Daniel Jackson until "The Shroud" to complete the building of the Sangraal. After the Ori are destroyed, Daniel's body returns to normal due to a time limit Merlin had placed upon the transfer and he confirms that Merlin is gone for good, having sacrificed himself to ensure the destruction of the Ori.
Note: Matthew Walker was nominated for a Leo Award in 2007 for "Best Supporting Performance by a Male in a Dramatic Series" for this role.[83]
  • Orlin, played by Sean Patrick Flanery (season 5) and Cameron Bright (season 9, child) – An outcast Ancient whom SG-1 encounters on the dead planet Velona in season 5's "Ascension". He once broke the rules of the Ancients by giving advanced technology to the planet's people, who immediately abused it. After his staying on Earth and developing feelings for Carter, he tries to stop the Earth research of the same weapon and is redeemed and re-ascended by the Ancients. Orlin returns in the form of a human child to retain his Ancient knowledge longer in season 9's "The Fourth Horseman" and informs Stargate Command of the feud between Ancients and Ori, and false promises of ascension and religion. He suffers significant brain damage and is eventually interned in a mental institution on Earth.

Asgard

The Asgard are a benevolent race that, according to the mythology of Stargate, gave rise to Norse mythology on Earth and inspired accounts of the Roswell grey aliens. The Asgard can no longer reproduce and perpetuate themselves by transferring their minds into new clone bodies as necessary. Extremely advanced technologically, the threat of their intervention shields many planets in the Milky Way from Goa'uld attack, including Earth.[84] They also provide much assistance to Earth in the way of technology, equipment, and expertise. Their main adversary in Stargate SG-1 are the mechanical Replicators, against which they enlist the aid of SG-1 on several occasions. The entire Asgard civilization chooses to self-destruct in "Unending" due to the degenerative effects of repeated cloning. A small colony of Asgard still exist in the Pegasus galaxy that were able to stop cloning's diminishing returns.

Most Asgard characters on the show are directly named after Norse gods. Prominent one-time characters include Aegir (voiced by Michael Shanks in "New Order", named after Aegir), Heimdall (voiced by Teryl Rothery in "Revelations", named after Heimdallr) and Loki (voiced by Peter DeLuise in "Fragile Balance", named after and based on Loki). Stargate SG-1 had several Asgard puppets, and six puppeteers are necessary to make the different parts of the main Asgard puppet work.[85] On set, Teryl Rothery (Dr. Frasier) wearing CGI reference gear was the "stand-in" for Thor ("Small Victories" episode 4.1) and Heimdall ("Revelations" episode 5.22) when full motion is required and puppets could not be used.

Thor

Thor, voiced by Michael Shanks (seasons 1–8, 10) – The Supreme Commander of the Asgard Fleet. SG-1 first encounter him as a Viking holographic recording (played by Mark Gibbon) on the planet Cimmeria in "Thor's Hammer".[86] They meet the real Thor one season later when they enlist him to save Cimmeria from Heru-ur's invasion.[87] After O'Neill manages to make friendly contact with the Asgard in their galaxy,[88] Thor includes Earth in the Protected Planets Treaty to safeguard it from a direct Goa'uld attack.[84] Late in season 3, SG-1 helps to destroy Thor's ship, the Beliskner, which has been overtaken by the Replicators, in "Nemesis".[89] Impressed by SG-1's primitive but effective tactics, Thor requests SG-1 to help fight the Replicators in his Asgard homeworld soon after, in "Small Victories"[90] Anubis captures Thor and probes his mind for Asgard technology, and Thor's body lapses into a coma in "Revelations".[91] SG-1 retrieve Thor's consciousness from the ship's database a while later, and transfer it into a new body.[92]

Thor asks for SG-1's assistance after his people's plan to trap the Replicators inside a time-dilation field on the planet Halla backfired.[93] Thor personally makes an appearance at a secret meeting between the permanent members of Earth's UN Security Council taking place in the Pentagon, to ensure the SGC retains control over the Earth Stargate.[94] As the time-dilation device on Halla cannot keep the Replicators bottled up forever, Thor collapses Halla's sun into a black hole, but some Replicators escape.[95] Some weeks later, Thor and Carter modify their Replicator Disruptor, but as the Replicators quickly adapt, they use the Dakara superweapon to destroy all Replicators in one strike. Thor gets a new clone body soon after.[96] Thor summons the Odyssey to the Asgard homeworld Orilla and installs the entire knowledge base of the Asgard race on the ship. As attempts to save the Asgard civilization from their genetic difficulties have failed, he informs Lt. Col. Carter that the Asgard consider people of Earth the fifth race, heirs first to the Ancients and now the Asgard, and that it is their turn to safeguard the future. Thor perishes along with the rest of the Asgard race when their planet self-destructs before the Ori can attack. Carter later programs the Asgard data core's interface to look and behave like Thor, but admits that it isn't the same as talking to the god that became her friend.[97]

Thor originally speaks slower in the first season, but Michael Shanks, who voiced him since the beginning, joked that he is not getting paid by the hour but by the amount of dialog, when commenting on the increased dialog speed in later episodes.[98] As the Thor puppet is able neither to walk nor stand, the puppet is often put in a chair.[99]

Minor characters

  • Freyr, voiced by Brian Jensen (season 5) – A member of the Asgard High Council, named after Freyr, the Norse fertility god and god of love. SG-1 first encounters Freyr as a Viking hologram on the Asgard-protected planet K'Tau in season 5's "Red Sky", but Freyr refuses to help SG-1 to avoid a violation of the Protected Planets Treaty. SG-1 meets Freyr and the Asgard High Council again in "Fail Safe" to save Earth from an approaching asteroid, and again receive no help. Freyr eventually requests SG-1 to rescue one of their scientists in "Revelations" and protects SG-1, the Asgard scientist Heimdall and his studies with a fleet of three O'Neill class battleships.
  • Kvasir, voiced by Trevor Devall and Morris Chapdelaine (seasons 9–10) – An Asgard scientist and expert in time-dilation technology. He is named after Kvasir, a Norse god and wisest of the Vanir. As Thor is busy in the Asgard home galaxy in season 9's "Ripple Effect", Kvasir visits Earth in Thor's stead to help Earth fix a problem with alternate realities. Kvasir also assists SG-1 in battling the Ori in season 9's "Camelot" and helps to repair the transporters of the Odyssey in season 10's "Flesh and Blood".

Goa'uld

The Goa'uld are the dominant race in the Milky Way and the primary adversaries from seasons 1 to 8 of Stargate SG-1. The most powerful Goa'uld in the galaxy are collectively known as the System-Lords. The Goa'uld are a parasitic species that resemble finned snakes, which can burrow themselves into a humanoid's neck and wrap around the spinal column. The Goa'uld symbiote then takes control of its host's body and mind, while providing longevity and perfect health. In their fictional backstory, the Goa'uld invaded and ruled over Earth thousands of years ago, masquerading as gods from ancient mythologies. The Goa'uld transplanted humans throughout the galaxy to serve as slaves and hosts, and they created the Jaffa to serve as incubators for their larvae.

Most of the appearing and mentioned Goa'uld characters are named after and based on Egyptian mythology (Amunet, Atum,[100] Bastet,[101][102] Hathor, Horus, Imhotep,[103] Khonsu,[104] Isis,[105] Montu,[106] Nefertum,[107] Sekhmet,[108] Set,[105][109] Sobek,[101] Thoth[110]), but also Celtic mythology (Camulus, Grannus,[111]Morrigan[101][102]), Greek mythology (Ares,[102] Athena,[112][113] Nereus,[114][72] Pelops[115]), Japanese mythology (Amaterasu), Mesopotamian mythology (Ishkur,[116] Marduk[117]), Hindu mythology (Kali),[101] Canaanite mythology (Moloch,[118][119] Mot,[120] Qetesh[121]), Yoruba mythology (Olokun), Slavic mythology (Svarog),[101][122] Babylonian mythology (Tiamat),[123][117] and Maya mythology (Zipacna).

Anubis

Anubis, played by David Palffy (seasons 5–7, hooded), Dean Aylesworth and Rik Kiviaho (season 8's "Reckoning"), and George Dzundza (season 8 as "Jim") – A half-ascended Goa'uld System Lord who replaces Apophis as the main enemy in season 5. Based on the god Anubis of Egyptian mythology, the character is first mentioned in season 5's "Between Two Fires" and makes his first appearance in "Revelations". It is revealed that like all the other Egyptian "gods", he is in fact a Goa'uld—one so vicious and cruel that he was banished by the other Goa'uld. Earth is eventually able to annihilate Anubis's fleet above Antarctica in "Lost City", but Anubis survives in energy form ("Lockdown"). Anubis regains his power throughout season 8 and develops a plan to destroy all life in the galaxy and then repopulate it to his own designs ("Reckoning"). Just as he prepares to use the weapon in "Threads", Oma Desala, who aided in his ascension thousands of years ago, engages him in an eternal battle.

David Palffy was cast to play Sokar before he got the part of Anubis.[124] Since Anubis is cloaked all the time, Palffy had to express the character's weight through the voice and movements. Mainly because of the severe time-restraints of filming television, the producers gave Palffy no background on the character and encouraged Palffy to experiment and find the character's tone himself.[125] What was under Anubis' cloak became a main question among fandom.[124] Anubis was received as an over-the-top-character,[125][126] but Palffy pointed to what the character represents, saying "Anubis is a god – he's not fully ascended, he's basically an outcast. And as I say, this resulting displacement of energy that's evil, that has been temporarily harnessed under a hood to give him physical form. He's the image of death, the figure of death incarnate, and he's surrounded by a black robe. That symbol in itself has been around since the dawn of time. That in itself is over the top. [...] His whole existence is basically predicated on living up to that theme, and that's a theme that's time immemorial. And of course, as an actor, you've got to work with that. To do otherwise, to underplay that, will work against the idea of what he represents."[126] Palffy was open to continue playing Anubis beyond season 7, but other actors played the character in season 8.[126]

Apophis

 
Apophis' symbol

Apophis, played by Peter Williams (seasons 1–6, 8) – A System Lord and the main villain for most of the first four seasons of Stargate SG-1. Based on the god Apep of Egyptian mythology, the character gained power after Ra's death in the film and commands a raid on Earth and Abydos in "Children of the Gods", leading to the restart of the Stargate Program. His then-First Prime, Teal'c, defects from his army afterwards. Apophis's standing amongst the System Lords is severely diminished after a failed full-scale assault on Earth in season 2's "The Serpent's Lair". Apophis is killed and eventually revived by the Goa'uld Sokar in season 3. After defeating Sokar's massive fleet and army in season 3's "The Devil You Know", Apophis becomes the most powerful Goa'uld in the galaxy. Despite his death aboard his Replicator-infested ship in season 5's "Enemies", Apophis appears in visions and alternate timelines in season 6's "The Changeling", season 8's "Moebius" and Stargate: Continuum. In the latter, he is the last System Lord to resist the rule of Ba'al who kills Apophis shortly before his attempted takeover of Earth.

The astronomers David J. Tholen and Roy A. Tucker enjoyed the character so much that they named a near-Earth asteroid that they co-discovered in 2004, 99942 Apophis.[127]

Ba'al

 
Ba'al's symbol

Ba'al, played by Cliff Simon (seasons 5–10) – A System Lord based on the Baal of Canaanite religion. Introduced in season 5's "Summit" and recurring until the end of the show, he is the longest-running villain in Stargate history. After Anubis' fleet is destroyed in season 7's "Lost City", Ba'al gains substantial power and wages a war against all other System Lords, driving them to the brink of defeat in early and mid-season 8. Anubis' return in "Reckoning"/"Threads" forces Ba'al back into his service. Ba'al secretly collaborates with SG-1 and Jacob/Selmak to thwart Anubis' plan of overtaking the galaxy with the Dakara Superweapon, but flees when the Jaffa storm his mothership. With his traditional power base gone, Ba'al exiles to Earth and takes over the Trust, posing as a wealthy businessman in season 9's "Ex Deus Machina". Having made multiple clones of himself, Ba'al begins a campaign to battle the invading Ori for control of the galaxy in "Stronghold" and tries to gain power through various means in "Off the Grid", and season 10's "Insiders" and "The Quest". Ba'al captures Adria in "Dominion" and implants one of his cloned symbiotes within her, massacring most of his other clones with symbiote poison. The symbiote is extracted and killed, but he fatally poisons Adria first, forcing her Ascension to survive. The Tok'ra extract the symbiote from the last Ba'al clone in Stargate: Continuum. However, the real Ba'al travels back in time to 1939 and alters history by intercepting the Stargate as it is transported by the ocean freighter Achilles, creating a timeline in which Ba'al gains dominion over the System Lords and lays siege to Earth with Teal'c as his First Prime and Qetesh, the Goa'uld who used Vala as a host, as his queen. Cameron Mitchell manages to travel back in time to 1929 and set an ambush for Ba'al when he boards the Achilles. The real Ba'al is shot and killed by Mitchell, restoring the original timeline. With Ba'al gone, the extraction of the last Ba'al clone proceeds as planned and the symbiote dies, ending the reign of the System Lord forever. Ba'al's host survives the extraction and Vala plans to help him adjust to life after over two thousand years under Ba'al's control.

Cliff Simon met with executive producers Robert C. Cooper and Brad Wright and auditioned eight months before the character Ba'al was created for the series. Simon, Cooper and Wright came to an agreement to wait until they found the right character for Simon in the show. Simon said "I was very lucky," when talking about his character in an interview with The Sci Fi World.[128] According to portraying actor Simon, Ba'al was his most "interesting" he's done because of Ba'al's character development and diversity among others. Simon felt that he needed to diversify the character to make it more exciting, as he put it, "if you're always bad, it gets pretty boring." He wanted to change the development of the character, the writing staff eventually agreed with him and started fleshing out his character.[129]

Minor characters

  • Amaterasu (played by Kira Clavell) – A System Lord named for the sun goddess Amaterasu in Japanese mythology. She visits the SGC after Anubis' defeat to negotiate a new arrangement against Ba'al.[95] The war against Ba'al goes poorly, and she and Yu rally their armies for a last stand.[102] Her motherships are amongst the first to be infested by Replicators.[96] Kira Clavell originally auditioned for the role of Teyla Emmagan for Stargate Atlantis, but although she caught the eye of the producers, she was not "quite right for Teyla" and was given the role of Amaterasu instead.[130]
  • Amonet (also spelled Amaunet), played by Vaitiare Bandera (seasons 1–3) – See Sha're.
  • Bastet, played by Natasha Kadhr – A minor character within Stargate, who appears in (and is peridocally mentioned in) multiple episodes as a System Lord. She was killed when Ba'al gained control of the Kull warrior army in season 8's "It's Good To Be King".
  • Camulus, played by Steve Bacic (season 8) – A System Lord who visits the SGC in season 8's "New Order" to first negotiate a new arrangement against Ba'al only to later request asylum on Earth to hide from Ba'al. Camulus leaves Earth in "Zero Hour" with a ZPM, in an alleged attempt to assassinate Ba'al. However, Jack O'Neill gives him a dead ZPM and Daniel later states that Ba'al killed Camulus. Camulus appears briefly in the alternate timeline of Stargate: Continuum as one of Ba'al's lieutenants.
  •  
    Cronus' symbol
    Cronus, played by Ron Halder (seasons 3–4) – A System Lord, named for Cronus in Greek mythology. He was the one who banished Sokar. After Cronus punished Teal'c's father (Cronus's First Prime) with a painful death for losing an unwinnable battle, Teal'c became the First Prime of Apophis, mortal enemy of Cronus, to avenge his father's death.[84][131] Cronus first appears in season 3's "Fair Game" alongside Nirrti and Yu to negotiate Earth's entry into the Protected Planets Treaty. Cronus is shot dead by an android Teal'c in season 4's "Double Jeopardy". Cronus appears briefly in the alternate timeline of Stargate: Continuum as one of Ba'al's allies.
  • Hathor, played by Suanne Braun (seasons 1–3) – The Queen of Ra and mother of Heru-ur, whom archaeologists find imprisoned in a sarcophagus in Mexico in season 1's "Hathor". Her breath contains a brainwashing drug that enables her to influence males. After temporarily taking over the male population of the SGC in "Hathor", she creates an elaborate replica of the SGC in "Out of Mind"/"Into the Fire" to trick SG-1 into giving her much-sought information. O'Neill throws her unprotected into a cryogenic chamber, thus killing her.
  •  
    Heru-ur's symbol
    Heru-ur, played by Douglas H. Arthurs (seasons 2, 4) – A System Lord, named for Horus in Egyptian mythology. He is the son of Ra and Hathor,[87] and is a sworn enemy of Apophis. Heru-ur is introduced in season 2's "Thor's Chariot" as an invader of the planet Cimmeria, but an arriving Asgard mothership forces Heru-ur to retreat. In "Secrets", Heru-ur unsuccessfully tries to seize Amonet and her Harcesis child to fight Apophis. In season 4's "The Serpent's Venom", Heru-ur eventually plans an alliance with Apophis, but after the Tok'ra and SG-1 sabotage their meeting, Apophis destroys Heru-ur's ship and absorbs his forces.
  • Klorel, played by Alexis Cruz (seasons 1–3) – See Skaara.
  • Marduk (played by Alexander Kalugin), named for Marduk of Mesopotamian mythology. A Goa'uld so evil that his own priests rose up against him and imprisoned him in a sarcophagus with a flesh-eating creature that would prolong his suffering. However, Marduk survived by possessing the creature and is released by a Russian SG team. He possesses Major Vallarin and tries to escape, but is buried when Jack O'Neill sets off C-4 explosives inside his ziggurat. Marduk possessed the Eye of Tiamat, a powerful weapon.[117]
 
Symbol of Moloc.
  • Moloc (played by Royston Innes) A powerful Goa'uld named for Moloch of Canaanite mythology. In order to strengthen his armies, Moloc ordered that all female children born to his Jaffa be sacrificed in the Ceremony of Fire. Appalled by this, his High Priestess Ishta began to secretly take those children to another planet. These female Jaffa become the Hak'tyl resistance, a substantial force that launches regular raids against Moloc's forces and eventually ally themselves with the SGC.[118] Moloc eventually discovers Hak'tyl, forcing Ishta's group to evacuate, and attacks a meeting of rebel Jaffa who are planning an insurrection against him. He then prepares his Ha'taks to crush a rebel army marching on his temple, but before he can give the order he is struck by two missiles fired by the SGC through the Stargate, and laser-guided to him by Aron, ending Moloc's territory. However, the death of Moloc allowed Ba'al to take control of his territory and gain even more power.[119]
  • Montu A minor Goa'uld named after Montu of Egyptian Mythology who served Ra, and later Ba'al. His First Prime was Gerak.[106]
  • Morrigan (played by Bonnie Kilroe) A System Lord named for Morrigan of Irish mythology known for using her lo'taur to draw out strategic information from the servants of her enemies. She votes to readmit Anubis as a System Lord.[101] She is eventually forced to capitulate to Ba'al.[102]
  • Mot (played by Victor Talmadge) A minor Goa'uld in service of Ba'al and named for Mot of Canaanite mythology. He controlled a naqahdah mining operation on P4S-237, hoarding the naqahdah for himself in the hopes of one day rising up against his master. He is killed in an SG-1-supported uprising on the planet.[120]
  •  
    Nirrti's symbol
    Nirrti, played by Jacqueline Samuda (seasons 3, 5–6) – A System Lord interested in engineering an advanced human host (a hok'taur) for herself. Named for Nirṛti in Hindu mythology, she is first mentioned in season 1's "Singularity", where she wiped out a planet's entire population except for one girl she experimented on, Cassandra. Nirrti first appears in person in season 3's "Fair Game" alongside Cronus and Yu to negotiate Earth's entry into the Protected Planets Treaty, and she is handed over to Cronus after attempting to murder him. After Cronus' death in season 4's "Double Jeopardy", Nirrti appears in season 5's "Rite of Passage" when Cassandra's modified DNA causes life-threatening physiological changes. In season 6's "Metamorphosis", Nirrti conducts experiments on the local population (and later SG-1) using an Ancient DNA resequencer. A local eventually rises up and kills her by telekinetically breaking her neck. Nirrti appears briefly in the alternate timeline of Stargate: Continuum as one of Ba'al's lieutenants.
Jacqueline Samuda played the part as if "Nirrti always has a secret, something up her sleeve that no one else knows, and that's always playing in the subtext. That way she always has the upper hand and is really enjoying it". She thought of "Nirrti as a scientist and an explorer in a way" who "obviously has an end in mind that is nefarious". She found Nirrti's subtle sense of humor the most appealing. Samuda pitched the concept of the DNA machine for "Metamorphosis", its purpose and potential dangers, to the producers, but she did not pitch Nirrti as the Goa'uld who possessed it (co-writer and visual effects producer James Tichenor did).[132]
  • Olokun (played by Kwesi Ameyaw) A System Lord, named for Olokun of Yoruba mythology. In season 5's two-parter "Summit"/"Last Stand", he attends a meeting of the System Lords to discuss a new enemy, and votes to readmit Anubis into their collective. Anubis later sends his Kull Warriors against Olokun, slaughtering thousands of his Jaffa and capturing many of his commanders. At the time, the rebel Jaffa are attempting to recruit from Olokun's ranks and ask the Tok'ra to assassinate Olokun. In season 8's "It's Good To Be King", Olokun is killed by Ba'al's forces.
  • Osiris, played by Anna-Louise Plowman (seasons 4–5, 7) – A Goa'uld based on the Osiris of Egyptian mythology. Season 4's "The Curse" explains that Osiris was banished by his brother Seth thousands of years ago, who had him enclosed in a stasis jar, along with his queen, Isis. Osiris escapes when Daniel's former archaeologist colleague, Sarah Gardner, opens the jar and is possessed by him. Osiris then escapes Earth and is recruited to represent Anubis at a summit of the System Lords in season 5's "Summit"/"Last Stand". In season 5's "Revelations", Osiris locates the base of the Asgard Heimdall and is able to defeat and capture Thor, but is forced to retreat with the arrival of Asgard reinforcements. Osiris last appears in season 7's "Chimera", where she uses a Goa'uld memory device on Daniel to find the location of the Lost City of the Ancients in his mind. She is discovered and captured, and the symbiote is extracted from Sarah's body. Osiris's later fate is unclear, but the implication is that he was killed after being extracted.
  • Qetesh, played by Claudia Black (seasons 8–10, Continuum) – See Vala Mal Doran.
  •  
    Ra's symbol
    Ra, played by Jaye Davidson (Stargate), Jay Williams (season 8) – The alien villain in the film, based on the Ra of Egyptian mythology. The outline of Ra's original humanoid form in some scenes of the movie contradicts Stargate SG-1's definition of a Goa'uld, and was later retconned as being Ra's previous host, an Asgard named Famrir. The series describes him as the most powerful and cunning of the Goa'uld, holding the title of Supreme System Lord.[133] Ra's Queen was Hathor,[134] his son was Heru-ur,[87] and his brother (and enemy) was Apophis.[2] As explained in the film and the series, Ra voyaged across the galaxy 10,000 years ago in search of a new host, discovered that the primitive humans of Earth were ideal hosts and eventually he seeded humans throughout the galaxy to serve as Goa'uld slaves (see Mythology of Stargate). A nuclear weapon kills Ra aboard his mothership in Abydos' orbit in the Stargate film, creating a power vacuum in the galaxy and drawing the attention of the other Goa'uld to Earth as the premise of Stargate SG-1. Ra appears in masked form in SG-1's season 8 time-travel episode "Moebius", and also briefly appears unmasked in the alternate timeline of Stargate: Continuum as one of Ba'al's lieutenants.
  •  
    Sokar's symbol
    Sokar, played by David Palffy (seasons 2–3) – A System Lord who replaces Apophis as the principal enemy of SG-1 for the first half of season 3. He is named for the Seker of Egyptian mythology. Sokar's backstory is mostly revealed in dialog, and he only appears in person in the season 3 two-parter "Jolinar's Memories"/"The Devil You Know" (although his magnified voice is heard in season 2's "Serpent's Song"): Sokar once ruled the System Lords until an alliance including Ra, Apophis, and Cronus defeated him.[84][135] Sokar was then forced to use an Unas as host body, and posed as the god of death on many different worlds,[135] with Satan as one of his guises ("Demons"). Sokar slowly gains power in the Goa'uld domain in season 2, and to prevent Sokar from becoming unstoppable, the Tok'ra enact a plan in "Jolinar's Memories"/"The Devil You Know" to assassinate him. By blowing up Sokar's prison moon of Netu, the Tok'ra are able to destroy Sokar's mothership in orbit, killing him. However, a disguised Apophis (who became Sokar's prisoner in "Serpent's Song") takes advantage of the situation and takes control of Sokar's massive army.
David Palffy became involved with Stargate through the regular audition process. He remembers doing automated dialogue replacement in post production for Stargate, but is not entirely sure if he provided Sokar's voice in "Serpent's Song" before being cast as Sokar in season 3. He was later cast to play Anubis.[124]
  • Tanith, played by Peter Wingfield (seasons 4–5) – A Goa'uld symbiote incubated by the Jaffa priestess Shan'auc. In season 4's "Crossroads", the nearly matured symbiote convinces Shan'auc to defect to Stargate Command and eventually to the Tok'ra, where he blends with the willing host Hebron. After the symbiote murders Shan'auc for betraying her true god, Shan'auc's lover Teal'c swears revenge. The Tok'ra use Tanith to feed misinformation to the System Lords until "Exodus", where Tanith escapes and brings Teal'c to Apophis. Season 5's "Between Two Fires" reveals that Tanith has switched masters to Anubis, and Tanith commands an assault that annihilates the Tollan. In Tanith's final appearance in "48 Hours", Teal'c kills him by firing directly into the bomber's cockpit of Tanith's Al'kesh.
  •  
    Yu's symbol
    Yu, played by Vince Crestejo (seasons 3, 5–8) – The eldest of the System Lords, introduced as Yu the Great in season 3's "Fair Game" when he visits Stargate Command along with Cronus and Nirrti to negotiate Earth's entry into the Protected Planets Treaty. He is re-imagined in season 5's "Summit" as the Jade Emperor, the exalted Yu Huang Shang Ti, a separate figure in Chinese mythology. Yu is the only System Lord in season 5's "Last Stand" who opposes re-admitting Anubis into their ranks, and his forces manage to hold their own in the lone ensuing battle in season 5 and 6 despite facing superior numbers and technology. In season 6's "Full Circle", Yu convinces the other System Lords to join him in opposing Anubis, but Anubis decimates their collected fleet. Yu's First Prime, Oshu, reveals in season 7's "Fallen" that Yu's mind is failing due to old age and he is no longer able to take a new host. During negotiations on Earth against the threat of Ba'al in season 8's "New Order", Oshu must speak for Yu to hide Yu's further deteriorated mind from the other present System Lords. Yu is killed by Replicator Carter in season 8's "Reckoning" as the first act of her invasion of the Milky Way. Yu appears briefly in the alternate timeline of Stargate: Continuum as one of Ba'al's lieutenants.
  • Zipacna, played by Kevin Durand (seasons 3, 5) – A Goa'uld who once served Apophis. He is named for the Zipacna of Mayan mythology. He is introduced in season 3's "Pretense" as Klorel's defender at a Tollan trial, while he secretly plots to destroy the Tollan ion cannon network. After this failed attack, Zipacna reappears in season 5's "Summit"/"Last Stand" and pledges allegiance to Anubis. He recruits Osiris into his service and commands an attack on the main Tok'ra base at Revanna, killing almost all the Tok'ra there. Zipacna and his armies are mentioned again in season 5's "The Warrior", in season 6's "Abyss" and in an alternate timeline in Stargate: Continuum.

Jaffa

The Jaffa are an offshoot of humanity, genetically engineered by the Goa'uld. They have an abdominal pouch which serves to incubate larval Goa'uld. The infant Goa'uld provides strength, longevity, and good health, at the cost of supplanting the Jaffa's natural immune system, making them dependent on the Goa'uld for more symbiotes. The Jaffa have a warrior culture and form the armies of the Goa'uld. In season 8 of Stargate SG-1, the Jaffa Resistance wins their race's freedom from Goa'uld oppression, resulting in the Free Jaffa Nation.

Bra'tac

 
Tony Amendola played Bra'tac from season 1 through 10 of Stargate SG-1

Bra'tac, played by Tony Amendola (seasons 1–3, 5–10) – A Jaffa warrior, former First Prime of the Goa'uld System Lord Apophis, and Teal'c's former teacher and closest friend. His surviving to an age of retirement as First Prime is a noted rarity, and affords him a significant amount of respect among Jaffa. Bra'tac is over 133 years of age at the beginning of the series, a fact he reminds SG-1 of on multiple occasions.[136] He is introduced in season 1's "Bloodlines" and is one of the most frequently recurring characters on Stargate SG-1. Bra'tac, having been one of the first Jaffa to doubt the Goa'uld as gods, has been an outcast among the Jaffa since at least season 1. Bra'tac was also the one who initially influenced Teal'c to doubt the Goa'uld as well. Bra'tac helps Teal'c and SG-1 on many missions. He is initially suspicious of the humans, particularly O'Neill. This dynamic is played out somewhat comically, but Bra'tac slowly learns to trust and respect humans.[137] In seasons 1 and 2, Bra'tac helps to save Teal'c's son, Rya'c from several threats and becomes a guardian to him. During a mission to find the Harcesis child (Shifu) on Kheb in season 3's "Maternal Instinct", Bra'tac is presented with the idea of Ascension but in the end decides against this possibility for himself. At the end of season 6, Bra'tac and Teal'c are both badly wounded during a Jaffa meeting and lose their symbiotes, surviving only by taking the new drug Tretonin. Bra'tac is the primary instigator of the Jaffa Resistance, a rebellion aimed at overthrowing the Goa'uld and establishing the freedom of all Jaffa. At the end of season 8, Bra'tac and Teal'c convince the other members of the Jaffa Rebellion to attack Dakara in an ultimately successful mission. The Jaffa obtain freedom, and Bra'tac receives a position of honor. Bra'tac becomes a member of the High Council, the governing body of the new Free Jaffa Nation but still stays loyal to Stargate Command. Some time after the destruction of Dakara by the Ori, leaders of the Free Jaffa Nation meet to consider the future, but Bra'tac and Teal'c are badly injured during an ambush by a former enemy of Teal'c. When they get nursed back at the SGC, Bra'tac tells Teal'c that he is like a son to him.

Minor characters

  • Drey'auc, played by Salli Richardson (season 1) and Brook Parker (seasons 2, 5) – Introduced in "Bloodlines" as Teal'c's wife and mother to Rya'c. Drey'auc remains a loyal follower of Apophis even after Teal'c had defected to Earth. She works diligently to restore Apophis's faith in her and her son so that Rya'c can reach puberty. Unable to support herself and her son by season 2's "Family", Drey'auc is forced to marry the Jaffa Fro'tak for financial and political security, but Fro'tak betrays them to Apophis when he deduces that she had never stopped loving Teal'c. After Fro'tak's death, she and Rya'c take refuge in the Land of Light and eventually move to a Jaffa rebel camp. Drey'auc's unwillingness to obtain a new symbiote to replace her matured one leads to her death in season 6's "Redemption", where Teal'c cremates her.
  •  
    Louis Gossett Jr. played Gerak.
    Gerak, played by Louis Gossett Jr. (season 9) – The former First Prime of Montu. He is first mentioned in season 9's "Avalon, Part 2", and appears one episode later in "Origin" as the first leader of the Free Jaffa Nation and the first head of the Jaffa High Council. As the leader of the traditionalist faction, he is the political rival of Teal'c. When Gerak helps SG-1 in thwarting a plan of the Ori to construct a Supergate in "Beachhead", he inadvertently aids the Ori. Gerak's forces are able to capture Ba'al (later revealed as a clone) in "Ex Deus Machina" and execute him before the Council, scoring a big moral victory for the traditionalists. Although the episode "Origin" outlines Gerak as a firm believer in freedom for all Jaffa and a firm opponent of the Ori, a Prior convinces Gerak in mid-season 9's "The Fourth Horseman" that Origin should be the goal of all Jaffa. Gerak is transformed into a Prior, and when Teal'c convinces him to betray the Ori, a loyalty fail-safe triggers in Gerak and kills him.
  • Haikon, played by Tony Todd (season 9) – Leader of the Sodan people on P9G-844, where he worshipped the Ancients and spent most of his life in search of Ascension. After a visit by an Ori Prior in "Babylon", he instructs the Sodan to switch their spiritual beliefs from the Ancients to the Ori. He also presides over the ritual duel of kel shak lo between Mitchell and the Sodan warrior Jolan. Ordered to attack defenseless farmers in the name of the Ori, Haikon begins to question the Ori's worthiness as gods and finally renounces Origin. He collaborates with SG-1 in "The Fourth Horseman" to capture a Prior and find a cure against the Prior's plague. Haikon makes his last appearance in "Arthur's Mantle", where he is severely wounded by an undead Sodan, Vol'nek. Haikon's symbiote dies, but SG-12 offers him tretonin.
  • Herak, played by Michael Adamthwaite (seasons 6–7) – Introduced in "The Other Guys" as the First Prime of Khonsu, whom he kills after discovering his being a Tok'ra spy. Herak becomes the First Prime of Anubis and follows his orders in "Full Circle" and season 7's "Fallen"/"Homecoming", but fails to succeed each time. Herak is aboard Anubis' ship above Antarctica in "Lost City" when it gets destroyed. • Before being cast, Michael Adamthwaite watched Stargate SG-1 on a part-time fan basis. He auditioned for the show when he was 20 and knew it was a potentially recurring role. According to Adamswaithe, the character "takes pride in the art of killing, the art of war, the art of mastering your enemy" and "hopes that his actions take him to a positive end for his purposes, which are to follow the Goa'uld lords". Herak is one of the few Jaffa humans under Anubis' command at the end of season 7 who has not been replaced by Kull Warriors. What angers Herak most is O'Neill's jocular antagonism.[138]
  • Ishta (meaning beloved or "greatest one" in Sanskrit), played by Jolene Blalock (season 7–8) – Leader of the Hak'tyl and love interest of Teal'c. Her former position as the Goa'uld Moloc's temple high priestess enabled her for years to secretly bring many girls to another world named Hak'tyl; Moloc would have killed the newborn Jaffa girls as needless otherwise. Ishta first appears in "Birthright" where the Hak'tyl ask Earth for an alliance, and the drug Tretonin seems like a solution to the Hak'tyl's symbiote problems. Ishta kisses Teal'c goodbye when she leaves Earth. Ishta reappears one year later in "Sacrifices" where she approaches Teal'c to help her kill Moloc. The female resistance is forced to evacuate to SGC until they find a new homeworld. The resistance is ambushed by Moloc's forces during a summit on their new homeworld, sending Ishta, Teal'c and Aron on the run. However, Teal'c rescues Ishta while Aron directs SGC fired missiles at Moloc, killing the System Lord and ending his oppression. Ishta later admits that Ba'al took over Moloc's territory following his death and gained more power as SG-1 tried to warn her.
  • Ka'lel, played by Simone Bailly (seasons 7–9) – A female Jaffa warrior formerly under the service of Moloc. When SG-1 first meets her in "Birthright", she is involved with the Hak'tyl resistance movement under Ishta to fight Moloc. Ka'lel becomes a representative for the Hak'tyl in the newly formed Jaffa High Council in the Free Jaffa Nation in season 9. She gives SG-1 valuable information about Ba'al to SG-1 in "Ex Deus Machina" and initially supports Teal'c's attempts to replace the Council by a democratically elected government. Ba'al brainwashes her into changing her opinion in "Stronghold".
  • Rak'nor, played by Obi Ndefo (seasons 4–7, 9) – A Jaffa warrior whose father had burned the Goa'uld symbol off Rak'nor's forehead in the belief that Teal'c's rebellion against the Goa'uld would soon free all Jaffa, but the execution of his father pushed Rak'nor into the service of the Goa'uld Heru-ur. In season 4's "The Serpent's Venom" Rak'nor captures Teal'c in Heru'ur's name but gets convinced of Teal'c's cause. Rak'nor joins the rebel Jaffa to lead them on Teal'c's behalf and appears again in season 5's "The Warrior", season 6's "Allegiance" and season 7's "Orpheus". After the collapse of the Goa'uld Empire and the emergence of the Free Jaffa Nation, Rak'nor serves as one of Teal'c's and Bra'tac's allies among the progressive faction, and last appears serving as Teal'c's proxy during votes in season 9's "Avalon".
  • Rya'c, played by Neil Denis (seasons 1–2, 6–8) – The young son of Teal'c and Drey'auc. After Teal'c defects to Earth, Rya'c and his mother are forced to live as pariahs. In season 1's "Bloodlines", Teal'c prevents a ceremony that would have given Rya'c a symbiote to cure his illness. Apophis captures Rya'c in season 2's "Family" and brainwashes him into publicly denouncing his father, but Teal'c and SG-1 are able to break the conditioning. Rya'c grows up under the tutelage of Bra'tac and is taught the ways of the Jaffa. After Drey'auc's death in season 6's "Redemption", Teal'c allows Rya'c to go on his first mission. Rya'c and Bra'tac are captured trying to recruit more allies for the Jaffa rebellion and become prisoners of war in season 7's "Orpheus". In his last appearance in season 8's "Sacrifices", Rya'c marries Kar'yn, a young female Hak'tyl warrior with whom he has fallen in love, despite Teal'c's initial objections.
  • Oshu, played by Kevan Ohtsji (seasons 7–8) – First Prime of Yu who makes his first appearance in "Fallen". Despite knowing of Yu's deteriorating mental health, Oshu remains loyal to his master. Teal'c eventually convinces Oshu in "Homecoming" to bypass Yu for the greater good. Oshu accompanies Yu to the SGC in "New Order" and speaks for him to negotiate a treaty with Earth. Oshu last appears in "Reckoning" and is present when Replicator Carter stabs Yu to death as part of her invasion of the Milky Way galaxy.
  • Yat'Yir, played by Gardiner Millar (season 9) – A Free Jaffa formerly in the service of Montu and now a member of the Jaffa High Council. Yat'Yir is introduced as a trusted aide of the Jaffa leader Gerak in "Origin" and personally conducts a raid on Earth to find Ba'al in "Ex Deus Machina". In "The Fourth Horseman", Yat'Yir expresses his concerns about Gerak's Ori proposal and remains a member of the High Council after Gerak's death. Yat'Yir is present for the Jaffa democracy referendum in "Stronghold".

Lucian Alliance

The Lucian Alliance is an interstellar group of human smugglers and mercenaries that have joined together from many different human-settled worlds across the Milky Way Galaxy to fill the power vacuum created by the demise of the Goa'uld, and have obtained and modified Goa'uld technology for their own use. When their trade partner Vala Mal Doran does not keep an agreement in their first appearance in season 8's "Prometheus Unbound", she and Daniel are placed on a Lucian Alliance wanted list. The Lucian Alliance is first referred to by name in season 9's "The Ties That Bind" and reappears as a recurring foe in seasons 9 and 10. The Lucian Alliance story arc is continued in Stargate Universe. Producer Joseph Mallozzi explained in retrospect, "Much of the Lucian Alliance we saw in SG-1 was inept and, dare I say it, a bit goofy. They fit in with SG-1's lighter, more high adventure-driven tone but would have stood out (and not in a good way) in the new series [Stargate Universe]. As a result, I was initially leery at the prospect of introducing them to SGU but, as so often happened over the course of my many years in the franchise, I trusted in Brad [Wright] and Robert [C. Cooper] and, in the end, that trust was rewarded with a terrific story element that not only succeeded as planned [...] but offered up plenty of interesting story material for future episodes [of Stargate Universe]. The Alliance was always envisioned as a loose coalition of mercenary groups so it made sense that certain factions would have been more capable and threatening than others."[139]

  • Jup and Tenat, played by Geoff Redknap and Morris Chapdelaine (seasons 8–10) – Oranian minor members of the Lucian Alliance who make their first appearance in season 8's "Prometheus Unbound", aiming to trade a case of weapons-grade-refined naqahdah to Vala in exchange for the stolen Prometheus. After Daniel foils the plot, the Alliance sends Jup and Tenat to capture Vala in season 9's "The Ties That Bind", but Mitchell and Teal'c double-cross them. Upon meeting and recognizing Mitchell as a scam artist aboard a Lucian Alliance ship in season 10's "Company of Thieves", Tenat asks for a part of the spoils and is double-crossed again, dying in a self-induced firefight against Netan's mothership. Jup last appears in "Bounty" as one of several bounty hunters attempting the capture of SG-1 on Earth, but another bounty hunter kills him.
  • Netan, played by Eric Steinberg (seasons 9–10) – The leader of the Lucian Alliance. He first appears in "Off the Grid", trying to intercept Ba'al in stealing Stargates from several planets, including one controlled by the Lucian Alliance. Teal'c approaches the Lucian Alliance for help in attacking the invading Ori battlecruisers in "Camelot", and Netan commits three motherships to the battle. After the big losses during that battle, one of Netan's seconds (Anateo) moves against Netan in season 10's "Company of Thieves", but Anateo's skills and a trick by Mitchell lead Netan to declare war on the people of Earth. SG-1 actually does Netan a favor, killing Anateo for him while retaking the Odyssey. After SG-1 makes raids on Lucian Alliance assets in "Bounty", Netan places a bounty on the heads of SG-1 and is implied to die at the hands of another bounty hunter himself when the hunters fail.

Ori

The Ori are Ascended beings who use their infinite knowledge of the universe to force lesser beings to worship them. In essence, they used to be Ancients, however they split into separate groups due to different views of life. The Ori are religious while the Ancients prefer science. The Ori sway lesser-developed planets into worshipping them by promising Ascension through an invented and empty religion called "Origin". This religion states that they created humanity and as such are to be worshipped by their creations. It also promises its followers that, on death, they will Ascend. However, Origin was designed to channel energy from the human worshippers to the Ori. As such, the Ori never help anyone else Ascend because then they would have to share the power that they sap from their worshippers. Their ultimate goal is to completely destroy the Ascended Ancients, who they know as "the Others". All of their efforts, including their technology, are for the purpose of garnering worshippers. As Ascended beings, the Ori do not interfere directly in the mortal plane. Instead, they use humans called Priors, which they artificially evolve so that they are one step from Ascension, giving the Priors godly powers. Because the Ori have worshippers across the entire home galaxy of the Ancients, and using their knowledge to spread, they are nearly unstoppable.

Adria

 
Morena Baccarin played Adria the Orici.

Adria, played by Robert C. Cooper's daughter Emma (season 10, age 4), Jodelle Ferland (season 10, age 7), Brenna O'Brien (season 10, age 12), Morena Baccarin (season 10, adult) – The primary antagonist in season 10. Adria is the Orici, a genetically advanced human infused with Ori knowledge. The Ori had impregnated Vala Mal Doran with Adria against her will in season 9 to circumvent the Ancients' rules in the Milky Way galaxy, and as such Vala named the child after her "witch of a woman" stepmother. Losing contact with young Adria in "Flesh and Blood", Vala meets her daughter again as an adult in "Counterstrike". In "The Quest", Adria tricks SG-1 into obtaining the Sangraal for her and captures Daniel before he can complete the device. Adria attempts to convert Daniel to the path of Origin and makes him a Prior, but he betrays her in "The Shroud" and uses the weapon on the Ori galaxy. Adria is briefly implanted with the Goa'uld Ba'al in "Dominion", but the removal of the symbiote almost kills Adria and she ascends. She nevertheless continues the Ori's assault on the Milky Way in Stargate: The Ark of Truth, where the Ancient Morgan le Fay engages her in an ascended battle, "eternally distracting her from being able to continue her evil ways".[140] • The producers created Adria's character to give Vala a story and personality arc as a new member of the SG-1 team[141] and offered the role of adult Adria to Morena Baccarin, as they were fans of her former TV series, Firefly.[142] The character initially has orange contact lenses, but they irritated Baccarin's eyes so much that the lenses were dropped during the shooting of "The Quest".[143]

Tomin

Tomin, played by Tim Guinee (seasons 9–10) – A devout Ori follower of the village of Ver Isca, who becomes an Ori commander in Season 10. Tomin is intended as a representation of the Ori warriors,[144] and Cooper described Guinee as a "fabulous actor who instantly creates that humanity and empathy ... while he's mass-murdering people"[141] Tomin is introduced in flashbacks in season 9's "Crusade", having found Vala after she was transported to the Ori home galaxy. Tomin had been crippled since childhood, and was therefore looked down on by his fellow villagers. Tomin married Vala and accepted her pregnancy as his child, not knowing that it was an immaculate conception set by the Ori. A little later, a Prior visited the village and cured Tomin of his limp, allowing him to become a warrior for the Ori. The prior also told Tomin the truth about the child as "the will of the Ori", who would later be the Orici. Tomin is later able to forgive Vala.[145] As seen in "Camelot", Tomin and Vala depart aboard the first wave of Ori vessels entering the Milky Way, and they go separate ways in season 10's "Flesh and Blood". Tomin rises to the rank of commander within the Ori warrior armies, and he and Vala meet again in "Line in the Sand". Because a Prior twists the words of the Book of Origin, Tomin begins to doubt the Priors and their interpretations of Origin's teachings, and helps Vala escape. Despite his betrayal, Tomin survives and remains an Ori commander by the time of Stargate: The Ark of Truth, leading the Ori forces in the ruins of Dakara. After the Prior he serves is killed by Mitchell, Tomin finally loses his faith in the Ori and surrenders to SG-1. Tomin helps Daniel decipher his visions of the Ark of Truth and accompanies SG-1 back to the Ori galaxy where Tomin is instrumental in finding the Ark and ending the Ori threat for good. After the defeat of the Ori, Tomin becomes the new leader of his people, but Vala declines Tomin's offer to return with him, feeling that her place is with SG-1.

Minor characters

  • Doci (Latin docere, "to teach"), played by Julian Sands (season 9) – The leader of the Priors who also represents the Ori in their home galaxy.[144] He has brown hair and colored eyes, pale skin and facial markings of a Prior. He first appears in season 9's "Origin", residing in the city of Celestis, with his chambers next to the Ori's Flames of Enlightenment. He also appears in a short flash in "The Fourth Horseman, Part 1" and is hit by the Ark's beam in Stargate: The Ark of Truth, stopping his belief of the Ori as gods so that he spreads the truth to all of the Priors in the Ori galaxy and through them to their followers. The Doci immediately breaks down in tears, begging for forgiveness for his actions. • Although Sands' limited availability was a hindrance in The Ark of Truth, the producers felt it was better to include the Doci than to forgo the character.[140] Had Julian Sands not been able to resume the role, the producers had planned to hire another actor as a different Doci in charge in Celestis.[146]
  • Prior, played by Greg Anderson (seasons 9–10) – The governor of the village of Ver Eger, introduced in "Avalon" when Daniel and Vala first come to the village. As a reward for fulfilling his duties and putting Vala through a Trial by Fire, he is transformed into a Prior in "Origin". He is later sent to the Milky Way and appears in "The Powers That Be" unleashing a plague in a defiant village, in "The Fourth Horseman" turning Gerak into a Prior, and in season 10's "Line in the Sand" ordering the destruction of a village by spaceship. In Stargate: The Ark of Truth, he commands Ori ground forces alongside Tomin during the search for the Ark of Truth. With a Prior disruptor blocking his powers, the Prior is killed by Mitchell with a shot from an Ori staff weapon, proving to Tomin once and for all that the Ori are not gods.
  • Prior, played by Doug Abrahams (seasons 9–10) – A one-eyed Prior introduced in "Crusade", who cures Tomin of his limp and later informs him of being unable to father children. He is on-board one of the Ori battlecruisers invading the Milky Way in "Camelot" and is present during Adria's birth in season 10's "Flesh and Blood", informing Vala and Tomin of her divine purpose. The Prior nearly kills Daniel Jackson, but he and Vala are rescued at the last second by the Odyssey. In "The Quest", he accompanies Adria in the search of the Sangraal. He is captured in Stargate: The Ark of Truth during an attempt to convince Earth to surrender or face destruction. After the Ark of Truth is retrieved from the Ori home galaxy, the Prior is exposed to it, spreading the truth to all of the Ori followers in the Milky Way galaxy and ending their crusade.

Replicators

The Replicators are a potent mechanical life-form using a quiron-based technology composed of building blocks using nanotechnology. They strive to increase their numbers and spread across the universe by assimilating advanced technologies. They are hostile to all other life-forms in the universe, but are opposed primarily by the Asgard. In the episode "Unnatural Selection", the Replicators had developed human-form Replicators, based on the technology they extracted from their Android creator, that appear just like humans and are able to change their form. Standard Replicators are resistant to energy weapons, and can only be destroyed by projectile weapons. Human-form Replicators, on the other hand, are resistant to projectile weapons as well due to the change in their nature from large blocks to smaller units the size of organic cells (cell blocks). In the episode "New Order (Part 2)", an Ancient weapon called the Replicator Disruptor was developed by O'Neill while he still had the knowledge of the Ancients in his mind. It works by blocking the cohesion between the blocks that make up the Replicators. The Replicators in the Milky Way galaxy were wiped out by the Dakara Superweapon in the two-part episode "Reckoning" at the climax of Season 8. It has been indicated that the Asgard used the same technology to defeat the Replicators in their own home galaxy as well.

Fifth

Fifth, played by Patrick Currie (seasons 6, 8) – A human-form Replicator introduced in season 6's "Unnatural Selection". He is the fifth human-form to be created on the Asgard planet Halla, and unlike the others he lacks the programming flaws of the android Reese, on which the human-forms are based. This makes him more "human" than the other Replicators, who consider him "weak" as a result. After SG-1 is captured by the Replicators, Fifth becomes fascinated by them, especially Carter, and attempts to help them, but SG-1 break their promise and leave Fifth behind in a time dilation field. Fifth has escaped the time dilation field in the season 8 episode "New Order", and en route to the new Asgard homeworld of Orilla, he captures Samantha Carter and tortures her in revenge. He eventually relents when she appeals to his humanity again, and professes his love for her. He lets Carter go but creates a Replicator duplicate of her to serve as his consort. Fifth appears for the last time in "Gemini", conspiring with Replicator Carter to obtain data from the SGC that would immunize them from the Replicator Disruptor. Replicator Carter however never returned his feelings, believing him unfit to command the Replicators. She ultimately betrays him, taking the data for herself while manipulating him into being destroyed by the Disruptor.

Patrick Currie had auditioned for the show since the very beginning, resulting in approximately 15 auditions before being cast, according to Currie because the producers always short-listed him and waited for the perfect episode to use him in. When preparing for the role of Fifth, Currie was unsure where to take the innocence and vulnerability of the character, and later figured that the key to this character is to know "what it's like before we learn to play games and pretend". He thinks Fifth is a misunderstood character and not a villain; Fifth believes he loves Carter, but lacks comparisons.[147]

Replicator Carter

Replicator Carter (also known as RepliCarter), played by Amanda Tapping (season 8) – A human-form Replicator created by Fifth. She first appears at the end of "New Order", and becomes a major adversary in the eighth season of the series. Fifth intended her to be a duplicate of the real Samantha Carter, but one who would return his affections. Replicator Carter seemingly defects from Fifth to the SGC in "Gemini", but in fact abandons him to be destroyed while she develops a means to immunize herself from the Replicator Disruptor. In "Reckoning", Replicator Carter launches a full-scale invasion of the Milky Way and personally eliminates the last of the Goa'uld System Lords. She abducts Daniel and probes his mind to find the location of the Dakara superweapon, the only thing in the galaxy capable of stopping her. She also sends Replicators to fight the forces of Ba'al, the Jaffa Rebellion, and Stargate Command on Earth. Daniel Jackson is able to exploit his connection to the Replicator network at a critical moment, buying enough time to finish calibrating and activating the Dakara weapon. The resulting energy wave breaks Replicator Carter and all her brethren into their constituent parts.

Tok'ra

The Tok'ra (literally "against Ra", the Supreme System Lord) are a faction of Goa'uld symbiotes who are opposed to the Goa'uld culturally and militarily. Spawned by the queen Egeria, they live in true symbiosis with their hosts, both beings sharing the body equally and benefitting from each other. The Tok'ra have fought the Goa'uld for thousands of years, favoring covert tactics and balancing the various System Lords against one another. Since season 2 of Stargate SG-1, the Tok'ra have become valuable allies of Earth.

Jacob Carter

 
Carmen Argenziano played Samantha Carter's father Jacob and the Tok'ra Selmak.

Jacob Carter, played by Carmen Argenziano (seasons 2– 8) – A retired United States Air Force Major General and the widowed father of Samantha Carter and Mark Carter. Jacob Carter is introduced in season 2's "Secrets" as a USAF general dying of cancer, and after becoming a willing host of a Tok'ra named Selmak who would cure his illness ("The Tok'ra") he frequently recurs as the Tok'ra liaison to Earth. As a member of the Tok'ra High Council, Jacob/Selmak engages in Tok'ra covert operations and provides help to Stargate Command when problems arise. He goes on off-world missions with SG-1, and frequently provides valuable knowledge and expertise, including the ability to use a Goa'uld healing device. When the Earth-Tok'ra relations deteriorate, Jacob/Selmak remains the strongest link between the allies despite his loss of influence in the Tok'ra High Council. In season 7's "Death Knell", Jacob helps his daughter devise the Kull Disruptor as an invaluable weapon in fighting the army of Kull Warriors of Anubis's creation. He also plays a key role in retuning the Dakara Superweapon to the right pattern to attack the Replicators in season 8's "Reckoning", but Selmak dies of old age one episode later in "Threads", along with Jacob who wouldn't let go of him a few weeks earlier knowing by keeping Selmak alive he would help in the fight against the replicators but would ultimately die with Selmak due to release of a poison when a Symbiote dies. Selmak fell into a coma shortly after the Dakara Superweapon was activated thus preventing him from saving Jacob.

Martouf

Martouf, played by JR Bourne (seasons 2–4, 9) – A leader in the ranks of the Tok'ra. Martouf had been the mate of Rosha, host to Jolinar, for almost a century. SG-1 first meet Martouf during their first encounter with the Tok'ra in season 2's "The Tok'ra", and since Jolinar was once blended with Samantha Carter, Martouf develops an interest in her. Some episodes later in "Serpent's Song", Martouf recommends that Apophis, who sought asylum at the SGC, should be handed over to Sokar. In the season 3 two-parter "Jolinar's Memories"/"The Devil You Know", Martouf joins SG-1 on a mission to rescue Jacob Carter, the host of the Tok'ra Selmak, from Ne'tu. They are captured and tortured, but Martouf, Selmak and SG-1 can escape when a new Tok'ra weapon destroys Ne'tu. However, Martouf is unwittingly subjected to Goa'uld mind control, turning him into a zatarc. His attempt to assassinate the President of the United States in season 4's "Divide and Conquer" ends in failure, and Carter is forced to kill him. Martouf's symbiote, Lantash, survives and is placed in a Tok'ra stasis chamber, which is destroyed in a Goa'uld attack in season 5's "Last Stand". The new SGC recruit Lieutenant Elliot (played by Courtenay J. Stevens, season 5) blends with Lantash after a severe injury, but they give their lives to save the rest of SG-1 and the Tok'ra, eliminating the entire Goa'uld invasion force with a vial of symbiote poison. An alternate version of Martouf arrives at the SGC when many SG-1s from alternate realities start coming through the Stargate in season 9's "Ripple Effect". That universe's Martouf had joined the SGC to be closer to Carter, but their relationship did not last.

According to portraying actor Courtenay J. Stevens, the first draft for the character was that he was supposed to be a young Jack O'Neill in the then new-spin off show Stargate Atlantis. The producers dropped Elliot and minimized his role so that he was never even mentioned in Stargate Atlantis. Many fans of Stargate thought that Elliot and his team would replace Samantha Carter, Teal'c, Daniel Jackson and O'Neill as the main characters of the show. Stevens has stated that the producers took much time to look at new "Options", for the series and further stated that he knew "they were looking at it". But the plans were changed and actor Stevens left the Stargate set in Vancouver after the shooting of "Last Stand". When shooting the episode, "Summit" J.R. Bourne was booked, so he was replaced with Stevens. Before being cast in the episode "Summit", the producers told the history behind the Tok'ra symbiote Lantash. Stevens was later cast as Keras in the Stargate Atlantis episode "Childhood's End".[148]

Minor characters

  • Aldwin, played by William deVry (seasons 3–5) – A Tok'ra introduced in season 3's "The Devil You Know" to aid SG-1 on a mission to rescue Jacob Carter from Sokar's prison moon Ne'tu. In season 4's "Absolute Power", Aldwin is sent to the SGC to verify via a zatarc-detecting device that Shifu is indeed the supposed Harcesis. Alwin is killed in season 5's "Summit"/"Last Stand" when Zipacna attacks the planet Revanna where Aldwin guided SG-17 through the Tok'ra base.
  • Anise, played by Vanessa Angel (season 4) – A gifted scientist and historian whose human host Freya is attracted to Jack O'Neill, although the symbiote prefers Daniel Jackson, as stated in season 4's "Divide and Conquer". She is introduced in season 4's "Upgrades", researching the Atanik armbands on SG-1 in the hope to use the armbands' powers on a dangerous SG-1 mission to destroy Apophis' new prototype mothership. Anise is present for Tanith's introduction in "Crossroads", and assists Stargate Command in "Divide and Conquer" to uncover possible Zatarcs within the SGC ranks. She improperly diagnoses O'Neill and Carter, who unwittingly lied during the test to conceal their feelings for each other.
  • Jolinar of Malkshur, played by Amanda Tapping (season 2) and Tanya Reid (season 3 as Rosha) – Tok'ra symbiote of Rosha and temporarily Samantha Carter. The symbiote is severely injured by an ash'rak, a Goa'uld assassin, and died saving her host's life.
  • Ren'al, played by Jennifer Calvert – A member of the Tok'ra High Council. In "Enemies", she travels to Earth to inform General Hammond that, though their plan to destroy Apophis' fleet was successful, no trace of SG-1 or Jacob/Selmak has been found. In "Summit", Ren'al briefs the SGC on an upcoming summit of the Goa'uld System Lords and the Tok'ra plan to assassinate them using symbiote poison. When the Tok'ra base on Ravenna comes under attack by Anubis' minion Zipacna in "Last Stand", Re'nal is killed by falling debris.

Tollan

The Tollan are an advanced human civilization who are introduced in season 1's "Enigma" when the SGC helps a group of them relocate from the original Tollan homeworld that had undergone catastrophic volcanic activity. The Nox take the Tollan in while they continue to search for a new home, later revealed to be named Tollana. The Tollan have a strict policy against sharing technology with more "primitive" races, instituted after such a transfer caused the civilization of their neighboring planet Serita to destroy itself in a single day.[149] Teal'c notes in season 3's "Pretense" that despite the Tollans' technological superiority, they "do not think strategically". The Tollan are wiped out by the forces of the Goa'uld Tanith in season 5's "Between Two Fires" after the Goa'uld Anubis developed shields impervious to Tollan weaponry.

  • Narim, played by Garwin Sanford (seasons 1, 3, 5) – An influential Tollan who befriends SG-1 after they save him and a group of fellow Tollans in "Enigma". He develops an apparent attraction to Carter and reconfirms his feelings for her in "Pretense", although she informs him that she is not looking for a relationship at that time. After the death of the Tollan leader, Omoc, in "Between Two Fires", Narim and SG-1 discover that his government was collaborating with the Goa'uld. Narim takes action to spare Earth from destruction, but the Goa'uld begin attacking the planet. Narim escorts SG-1 to the Stargate and stays behind to help his people fight. Shortly afterwards, Narim informs Earth of Tollana's devastations via a transmission, which ends abruptly.
  • Travell, played by Marie Stillin (seasons 3, 5) – High Chancellor and a member of the Curia, the Tollan's highest ruling body. She is first seen in "Pretense", where she presides over the hearings about the future of the Goa'uld Klorel and his unwilling host Skaara. In season 3's "Shades of Grey", Travell participates in an undercover operation conducted by the SGC to expose the rogue NID agents as thieves. In Travell's final appearance in "Between Two Fires", she offers Tollan ion cannon technology to Stargate Command, later discovered to be part of Tanith's extortion of the Curia.

Other alien recurring characters

  • Cassandra, played by Katie Stuart (seasons 1–2), Pamela Perry (season 2, old woman), and Colleen Rennison (who also played Ally in the S02E10"Bane") (season 5) – A young girl whom SG-1 discovers in season 1's "Singularity" as the sole survivor of a biological plague on the planet Hanka, and whom Janet Fraiser subsequently adopts. A naqahdah bomb that the Goa'uld Nirrti once planted in Cassandra's chest shuts down on its own and is eventually absorbed into her body's tissues, allowing Cassandra to sense the people who are infested, or blended with, a Goa'uld. As such, Cassandra senses Carter to have been taken over by Jolinar in season 2's "In the Line of Duty". In season 5's "Rite of Passage", a retrovirus Cassandra contracted on her home planet several years ago causes her to evolve into a hok'taur (an advanced human being), but SG-1 makes a deal with Nirrti to save Cassandra's life. After Janet Fraiser's death in season 7's "Heroes", Carter promises to inform Cassandra about what happened to her adopted mother. Travelling from the year 1969 to several decades into the future, SG-1 meets Cassandra as an old woman in season 2's "1969", who helps them return to their own time. In season 9, Carter mentions that Cassandra is going through a hard time.
  • Chaka, played by Dion Johnstone (seasons 4–5) and by Patrick Currie (season 7) – A young Unas from P3X-888 who captures Daniel in season 4's "The First Ones" to prove his maturity to his tribe. When the two learn to communicate, Chaka kills his tribe's existing Alpha male and rises to become the new leader. After SG-1 frees Chaka from slave dealers in season 5's "Beast of Burden", Chaka chooses to remain behind to lead an ultimately fragile but successful fight for the freedom of his fellow Unas. Chaka last appears in season 7's "Enemy Mine" to negotiate between a large group of aborigine Unas and SGC personnel, whose naqahdah mining operations on the Unas planet unwittingly encroached on holy Unas ground. • When Dion Johnstone was unavailable to play Chaka in "Enemy Mine", Patrick Currie (who had previously been cast to play Fifth) prepared for the role by watching Johnstones's previous performances. Director Peter DeLuise told Currie to follow Dion's lead but to add his own spin to the character. Playing an Unas is a challenging job as it requires a full prosthetic body-suit, contact lenses, and fake teeth.[147]
  • Dreylock, played by Gillian Barber (seasons 6–7) – A high ranking Kelownan official from Jonas Quinn's home planet Langara, and a Kelownan ambassador to other nations and planets. She approaches Earth in season 6's "Shadow Play" to obtain more advanced military technology against Kelowna's two rival nations, but the SGC refuse to share their technology. Dreylock becomes Kelowna's new First Minister in season 7's "Homecoming" and ask Earth for help against Anubis. Dreylock subsequently allows Jonas Quinn, whom she previously regarded as a traitor, to remain on Langara. Since the forming of the planet's Joint Ruling Council in the aftermath of the Goa'uld invasion, Dreylock has become concerned with maintaining the uneasy peace between the three nations and again asks for Earth's help in season 7's "Fallout".
  • Martin Lloyd, played by Willie Garson (seasons 4–5, 10) – A human from another planet who crashed on Earth after deserting from his military fighting a losing war with the Goa'uld. Drugged with pharmaceuticals by his comrades, Martin loses his memories and becomes a paranoid conspiracy theorist who learns of the Stargate Program. In season 4's "Point of No Return", O'Neill helps Martin to slowly regain his memory, and Martin chooses to remain on Earth. By season 5's "Wormhole X-Treme!", Martin has become so disgruntled with his life that he starts taking the drugs again. His latent memories inspire him to create a campy science fiction television show, Wormhole X-Treme!, based on the real Stargate program and SG-1, and O'Neill helps Martin recover his memories once again. A ship approaches Earth to pick up Martin's former comrades, but Martin chooses to stay behind to continue working on Wormhole X-Treme! as a creative consultant. As becomes known in season 10's "200", Martin's show only aired for three episodes but had high DVD sales. Martin approaches the SGC to review a script for a television movie based on the series, and although the movie is eventually cancelled, the series is renewed, ultimately lasting ten years with Martin Lloyd as producer.
  • Lya, played by Frida Betrani (seasons 1, 3) – A Nox girl. She first appears in season 1's "The Nox", where her family brings her back from the dead after one of Apophis' Jaffa killed her. In season 1's "Enigma", Lya offers the Tollan sanctuary with the Nox. In season 3's "Pretense", Lya serves as the neutral attorney at a Tollan hearing and eventually gives the deciding vote to remove the Goa'uld Klorel from his host Skaara. Lya also enables the Tollan to repel a Goa'uld attack.
  • Shifu, played by Lane Gates (season 4) – The son of Sha're and of the host of the Goa'uld Apophis, conceived while Sha're was the host to the Goa'uld Amonet. Apophis intended him as his new host. As the offspring of two human hosts, Shifu possesses the Goa'uld genetic memory and is referred to as "Harcesis". After his birth in season 2's "Secrets", the boy is hidden safely on Abydos until Amonet discovers him in season 3's "Forever in a Day". She sends him to Kheb to keep him safe from the Goa'uld who want the child killed. In season 3's "Maternal Instinct", SG-1 finds and leaves him there in the care of a powerful energy being called Oma Desala. In season 4's "Absolute Power", SG-1 encounters Shifu on Abydos and invites him to Earth. After SG-1 acknowledges that Shifu would never reveal his genetic knowledge, Shifu ascends. In season 4's "Absolute Power" Dr. Daniel Jackson translates Shifu into English as "light"; however, in Chinese the word shifu also means "teacher" . In the same episode, Shifu says that all he is doing is teaching Daniel.
  • Kull Warriors (also known as Supersoldiers), played by Dan Payne and Alex Zahara (seasons 7–8) – Creatures created by Anubis for use as his personal army against minor Goa'uld. The Kull Warriors first appear in the two-part episode "Evolution", where seemingly none of the weapons of SG-1 or the Jaffa are effective against them. In "Death Knell", Samantha Carter and Selmak develop a prototype weapon designed to counteract the energy animating the Kull Warriors. After the apparent defeat of Anubis in "Lost City", Ba'al gains control of the Supersoldiers and thus a significant advantage over his rivals. As a result, in the episode "New Order" the other System Lords approach Earth for a new military arrangement. A simulated invasion of Stargate Command by Kull Warriors is the main premise of the episode "Avatar". In "Threads", the remaining Kull Warriors become aimless and confused after Anubis' final defeat, and are easily dispatched. The Kull Warriors make one appearance in the Stargate Atlantis episode "Phantoms", where they are hallucinations caused by a Wraith device. The Kull Warriors were conceived as a much more powerful adversary than the Jaffa, and one that would be more palatable to fight.[150] The art department developed the final concept while "Evolution" was written; in the original plans, the face looked a lot like that of the Borg, which eventually developed into the idea of the fiber-optic network that ran over the skull. The motion of the Kull Warrior was deliberately styled to be unique and not resemble other robotic characters, such as RoboCop, the Borg, or human-form Replicators.[151] Dan Payne described the suit as the most functional, mobile full-body unit he has ever been in. It took 15 to 30 minutes to get him into the suit, making him about seven feet tall due to the helmet and the boots.[152]

See also

References

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list, stargate, characters, this, article, contain, improper, references, user, generated, content, please, help, improve, removing, references, unreliable, sources, where, they, used, inappropriately, december, 2019, learn, when, remove, this, template, messa. This article may contain improper references to user generated content Please help improve it by removing references to unreliable sources where they are used inappropriately December 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Over its decade of existence science fiction TV series Stargate SG 1 developed an extensive and detailed backdrop of diverse characters Many of the characters are members of alien species discovered while exploring the galaxy through the Stargate although there are an equal number of characters from offworld human civilizations While Stargate SG 1 Stargate Atlantis and Stargate Universe are separate shows they take part in the same fictional universe so no character is internally show specific The main characters of Stargate SG 1 from left Vala Mal Doran Janet Fraiser recurring Hank Landry Teal c Cameron Mitchell Jack O Neill Samantha Carter Daniel Jackson George Hammond missing Jonas Quinn Contents 1 Main characters 1 1 Jack O Neill 1 2 Daniel Jackson 1 3 Samantha Carter 1 4 Teal c 1 5 George S Hammond 1 6 Jonas Quinn 1 7 Cameron Mitchell 1 8 Hank Landry 1 9 Vala Mal Doran 2 Recurring Stargate Command personnel 2 1 Janet Fraiser 2 2 Walter Harriman 2 3 Charles Kawalsky 2 4 Sylvester Sly Siler 2 5 Minor characters 3 Recurring oversight agency characters 3 1 Malcolm Barrett 3 2 Harry Maybourne 3 3 Robert Kinsey 3 4 Richard Woolsey 3 5 Frank Simmons 4 Other recurring characters 4 1 Chekov 4 2 Catherine Langford 4 3 Earth ship crew characters 4 4 Minor characters 5 Abydonians 6 Ancients 6 1 Oma Desala 6 2 Minor characters 7 Asgard 7 1 Thor 7 2 Minor characters 8 Goa uld 8 1 Anubis 8 2 Apophis 8 3 Ba al 8 4 Minor characters 9 Jaffa 9 1 Bra tac 9 2 Minor characters 10 Lucian Alliance 11 Ori 11 1 Adria 11 2 Tomin 11 3 Minor characters 12 Replicators 12 1 Fifth 12 2 Replicator Carter 13 Tok ra 13 1 Jacob Carter 13 2 Martouf 13 3 Minor characters 14 Tollan 15 Other alien recurring characters 16 See also 17 ReferencesMain characters EditExcept for the commanders of the top secret Stargate Command military base SGC all main characters of Stargate SG 1 are members of the SG 1 team the primary unit of the SGC in the show SG 1 s duties include first contact reconnaissance and combat diplomacy initial archaeological surveying and technological assessment The composition of SG 1 changes several times during the series run and varies in several alternative universes 1 Jack O Neill Edit Main article Jack O Neill Jack O Neill is a USAF colonel later brigadier general major general and then lieutenant general who led the original mission through the Stargate in Stargate He is played by Kurt Russell in the film and by former MacGyver actor Richard Dean Anderson in a regular role in seasons 1 8 and in a recurring role in seasons 9 10 also Michael Welch played young Colonel O Neill in episode Fragile Balance He also appears in Stargate Continuum and in seasons 1 and 3 of Stargate Atlantis Colonel O Neill is the leader of the SG 1 team in the first seven seasons and takes charge of Stargate Command after his promotion to brigadier general at the beginning of season 8 He is promoted to major general at the beginning of season 9 and is reassigned to Washington D C then makes sporadic appearances in the final episodes of season one of Stargate Universe Daniel Jackson Edit Main article Daniel Jackson Stargate Dr Daniel Jackson is a brilliant archaeologist and linguist specializing in Egyptology whose unusual theories concerning the origin of the Egyptian Pyramids led to his participation in the original mission through the stargate in Stargate He is played by James Spader in the film and by Michael Shanks in a regular role in seasons 1 5 and 7 10 with a recurring role in season 6 He also appears in both direct to DVD films and in seasons 1 and 5 of Stargate Atlantis Daniel joins the SG 1 team in search of his kidnapped wife Sha re until she dies in season 3 However he decides to remain a part of SG 1 and does so until his ascension at the end of season 5 Following his decision to retake human form he rejoins SG 1 at the beginning of season 7 As stated in season 2 s 1969 Daniel speaks 23 languages including Russian German Spanish and Egyptian Throughout the run of the series he becomes Earth s foremost expert on the Ancients and also learns many alien languages such as Goa uld Ancient and Unas Samantha Carter Edit Main article Samantha Carter Samantha Sam Carter is an astrophysicist and USAF captain later major lieutenant colonel colonel then brigadier general She is played by Amanda Tapping in a regular role in seasons 1 10 in both direct to DVD films and makes an appearance in all seasons of Stargate Atlantis Captain Carter joins SG 1 under the command of Col O Neill in season 1 Following her promotion to major in season 3 she is promoted to lieutenant colonel in early season 8 and assumes command of SG 1 She assists Lt Col Cameron Mitchell in seasons 9 and 10 After her appearance in Stargate The Ark of Truth she is promoted to a full bird colonel and becomes the new commander of the Atlantis expedition in season 4 of Stargate Atlantis before joining SG 1 again for Stargate Continuum She is later made the commander of the USS George Hammond a Daedalus class Earth ship named after former SGC commander General Hammond who died in correlation with the actor who played him Don S Davis Teal c Edit Main article Teal c Teal c ˈ t iː el k is a Jaffa from the planet Chulak He is played by Christopher Judge in a regular role in seasons 1 10 in both direct to DVD films and in season 4 of Stargate Atlantis Throughout the entire run of Stargate SG 1 the only episode that the character was absent was Season 8 s Prometheus Unbound Teal c states that he is 101 years old in season 4 s The Light and ages an additional 50 years in season 10 s Unending His catchphrase is Indeed Teal c s most notable feature is a golden tattoo on his forehead a sign that he once served the Goa uld Apophis as First Prime the highest Jaffa rank His interaction with Bra tac Apophis former First Prime and his own personal experiences led him to doubt the divinity of the Goa uld Teal c defects from Apophis in the pilot episode and joins the SG 1 team believing this to be an opportunity to eventually defeat the Goa uld and bring freedom to all Jaffa 2 He leaves his wife Drey auc and his son Rya c behind on Chulak After succeeding in killing Apophis in season 5 s Enemies Teal c and Bra tac make first progress in uniting a sizable group of Jaffa resistance warriors in season 5 s The Warrior Teal c and Bra tac lose their symbiotes after a sabotaged rebel Jaffa summit in season 6 s The Changeling but the Tok ra drug Tretonin can sustain them and eventually becomes instrumental in liberating Jaffa from physiological reliance on Goa uld symbiotes Teal c and Bra tac eventually lead the Jaffa to victory over the Goa uld in season 8 s Reckoning Threads Teal c is chosen as a member of the new Jaffa High Council and supports Bra tac as an interim leader in season 9 s The Fourth Horseman before a type of government is solidified George S Hammond Edit Main article George Hammond Stargate George S Hammond is a USAF Major General later Lieutenant General who commands Stargate Command in the first seven seasons He is played by Don S Davis in a regular role in seasons 1 7 and in a recurring role afterwards He also appears in Stargate Continuum and season 1 of Stargate Atlantis Hammond took over from Major General West commander of the Stargate Project in the original Stargate film and originally intended the Stargate Program to be his last assignment before retirement 2 In season 2 s 1969 General Hammond is shown to have worked at the Cheyenne Mountain complex the present day location of Stargate Command in 1969 Hammond originates from Texas 3 and became a widower when his wife died of cancer Hammond briefly retires under duress in season 4 s Chain Reaction where he spends time with his two grandchildren Kayla and Tessa He is promoted to the rank of lieutenant general at the beginning of season 8 being placed in command of the new Homeworld Security command a department in control of Stargate Command the Prometheus project and the Atlantian Antarctica outpost Hammond recurs in the season 1 of Stargate Atlantis and seasons 8 through 10 of Stargate SG 1 Hammond appears in a civilian suit instead of a military uniform in season 9 s The Fourth Horseman and Carter confirms his retired status in season 10 s The Road Not Taken In his last appearance in the alternate timeline film Stargate Continuum Hammond acts as a military advisor to President Henry Hayes Don S Davis knew Richard Dean Anderson O Neill from Anderson s starring role in MacGyver in which Davis was a stand in for Dana Elcar playing Pete Thornton MacGyver s boss before making several guest appearances Davis died from a heart attack at the age of 65 on June 29 2008 shortly before the release of Continuum making this his final on screen appearance as General Hammond 4 For his portrayal of Hammond Don S Davis was nominated for a 2004 Leo Award in the category Dramatic Series Best Supporting Performance by a Male for the season 7 episode Heroes Part 2 5 Jonas Quinn Edit Main article Jonas Quinn Jonas Quinn is an alien from the planet Langara He is played by former Parker Lewis Can t Lose actor Corin Nemec in a regular role in season 6 and in a recurring capacity in seasons 5 and 7 Jonas leaves his home planet Langara the penultimate season 5 episode Meridian after witnessing Daniel Jackson s lethal sacrifice and the following gleeful reaction of his planet s leaders He is a fast learner and fills Daniel s empty spot on SG 1 in season 6 Following Daniel s return at the beginning of season 7 Jonas returns to his planet and last appears in the mid season 7 episode Fallout Corin Nemec replaced Michael Shanks Daniel Jackson during season 6 after Shanks had left the show amid controversy after season 5 6 The producers based Jonas s motivation to join SG 1 on his momentary reluctance to actively prevent Daniel s death and his feelings of responsibility afterwards 7 Jonas was slowly integrated into the story in a prolonged transition stage over the first half of season 6 8 9 Nemec was open to continue playing Jonas Quinn after season 6 but a new contract was reached with Michael Shanks for Daniel to return in season 7 8 The role of Jonas was reduced to recurring status in season 7 Cameron Mitchell Edit Main article Cameron Mitchell Cameron Cam Mitchell is a USAF lieutenant colonel He is played by former Farscape actor Ben Browder in a regular role in seasons 9 10 and in both direct to DVD films Mitchell is introduced in Avalon as the leader of a squadron of F 302s against the forces of the arch villain Anubis in season 7 s Lost City Assigned as the new commanding officer of SG 1 at the beginning of season 9 Mitchell struggles to reunite the team s former members under his command Assisted by Carter who is of equal rank he remains in command of SG 1 throughout the series run and both films He is promoted to the rank of full bird Colonel in Stargate Continuum Ben Browder joined the cast after Richard Dean Anderson s departure from Stargate SG 1 in 2005 From the beginning producer Robert C Cooper wanted Mitchell to be a super fan of SG 1 who is openly enthusiastic about exploring the galaxy 10 11 Mitchell is often at the center of the action and fight sequences 12 The producers did not realize the physical resemblance between Browder and Michael Shanks when Browder was cast and employed make up and costuming techniques to make the transition easier for the audience 13 The writers decision to put Mitchell in command of SG 1 instead of Carter was met with resistance by some critics and audience members 14 15 For his portrayal of Cameron Mitchell Ben Browder was nominated for a Saturn Award in the category Best Supporting Actor on Television in 2006 16 Hank Landry Edit Beau Bridges played Hank Landry Henry 17 Hank Landry is a United States Air Force Major General and the commander of Stargate Command from season 9 onwards He is played by Beau Bridges in a regular role in seasons 9 10 in both direct to DVD films and in the Stargate Atlantis episodes The Intruder Critical Mass No Man s Land and the two part episode The Return of seasons 2 and 3 General Landry is introduced in SG 1 s season 9 premiere Avalon having been hand picked by Jack O Neill to succeed him Landry once served as a pilot in the Vietnam War 18 and met a Vietnamese woman named Kim Lam 19 They had a child Carolyn Lam but Landry became estranged to them and left them due to his involvement in military intelligence 20 Carolyn Lam grew up to be a doctor and was assigned to Stargate Command as chief medical officer in seasons 9 and 10 Bridges said that Landry truly loves his work but respects and appreciates his daughter He wants a real relationship with her and hopes that will happen some day At the start of season 9 you re not sure what their relationship is 20 The late season 10 episode Family Ties brings some conclusion to the Landry Lam enstrangement showing a reunification between Landry Carolyn and Kim Lam in a restaurant TV Zone s Steven Eramo described Landry as fair intelligent even tempered and having a good sense of humour 21 Bridges thought that Landry likes to empower his team He realizes how challenged they are It s a huge burden to protect their country from the entire galaxy but he also recognizes that like himself they are human beings Sometimes he does that with a bark and sometimes with a bite but he also has a sense of humor this man And he likes to fool with people 22 According to Bridges Landry appreciates Carter s knowledge and needed some patience with the fast speaking Daniel Jackson to realize how important a piece of puzzle he is He respects Teal c as a warrior and is willing to foster the potential he sees in Vala 21 The Stargate producers approached Beau Bridges a self claimed fan of science fiction 22 directly to play the role of Hank Landry 20 Although the producers had some ideas for the characters they collaborated with Bridges to develop the character s backstory before the writing of season 9 began 22 Bridges wanted the character to be three dimensional by revealing a layered backstory over the course of the show 23 Bridges researched famous US generals from George Washington to John P Jumper to get a feeling for the role 20 He accumulated quotes by generals that Landry would respect and gave the list to producer Robert C Cooper who in turn used it as free research 23 Bridges made no deliberate effort to distinguish his character from General O Neill believing that the character could stand on his own 22 Vala Mal Doran Edit Main article Vala Mal Doran Vala Mal Doran is a con artist from an unnamed planet and a former human host to the Goa uld Qetesh She is played by former Farscape actress Claudia Black in a regular role in season 10 after having recurred in seasons 8 and 9 of SG 1 Her first appearance in season 8 s Prometheus Unbound is followed by a recurring role in season 9 where she and Daniel unintentionally set off the new Ori threat She joins SG 1 after giving birth to the new leader of the Ori at the beginning of season 10 and appears in both direct to DVD films Vala was created by Damian Kindler and Robert C Cooper as a one time character but because of the on screen chemistry between Black s Vala and Shanks character Daniel Jackson and the character s popularity with the producers and the audience Claudia Black became a recurring guest star in season 9 and joined the main cast in season 10 For her portrayal of Vala Claudia Black was nominated for a 2006 Saturn Award in the category Best Supporting Actress on Television 16 and won a Constellation Award in the category Best Female Performance in a 2006 Science Fiction Television in 2007 24 Recurring Stargate Command personnel EditThe Stargate Command SGC is a fictional military base and real broom closet 25 at the Cheyenne Mountain complex near Colorado Springs Colorado It is the main setting in Stargate SG 1 and occasionally features on Stargate Atlantis The base extends many levels beneath the ground and is protected from most forms of attack including indirect nuclear detonations also serving to contain biological chemical or alien hazards to the outside world by means of a lockdown status Stargate Command is typically commanded by a General and is staffed by subject matter experts and military support personnel several elite special operations teams and several SG teams including SG 1 The majority of the teams are United States Air Force with some United States Marine Corps civilians and United States Army but other nations have SG teams operating from the SGC as well after the events of season 5 Janet Fraiser Edit Doctor Janet Fraiser as portrayed by Teryl Rothery in Stargate SG 1 Captain Major Janet Fraiser the resident Chief Medical Officer of the SGC played by Teryl Rothery seasons 1 7 9 She is responsible for maintaining the health of the SG teams as well as the SGC s support staff and base personnel On many occasions she also cares for the health of alien refugees to Earth including Goa uld symbiotes In her first appearance in The Broca Divide Dr Fraiser holds the rank of captain and is promoted to major in Season 3 In season 1 s Singularity Fraiser adopts Cassandra an alien orphan whose people had been exterminated by the Goa uld System Lord Nirrti Dr Fraiser is killed by a staffweapon blast in season 7 s Heroes during an off world medical emergency but she returns in season 9 s Ripple Effect as a parallel universe version of Dr Fraiser in her reality a regular member of SG 1 Before Fraiser returns to her reality Carter Jackson and Teal c are able to give her a final goodbye Dr Fraiser is also shown alive in an alternate timeline in the year 2010 in season 4 s 2010 but Fraiser and SG 1 alter the timeline to prevent a catastrophe on Earth involving the Aschen race Fraiser joined the United States Air Force USAF after breaking up with her husband there she got some training with firearms Her husband did not want Fraiser to join the US military which is one of the main reasons for their breakup As a doctor Fraiser looks for peaceful solutions and is disinclined towards armed solutions In the episode Serpent s Song Fraiser is the only one in Stargate Command SGC who is resistant to the idea to give Apophis over to his enemies She is eventually forced to give up Apophis 26 27 Teryl Rothery was asked by then producer and writer for Stargate Jonathan Glassner and Brad Wright if she wanted to play the role as Fraiser 28 In an interview Rothery was asked what it was like to play a doctor in Stargate SG 1 Rothery replied just being true to the character And as far as the medical stuff knowing what to do and what to say She got a lot of help from the medical advisor on the set In the first two seasons Rothery did not have a contract and was booked on every episode in which she appeared In season three of SG 1 she finally got a contract deal with the producers She also commented on her acting life once The life of an actor is always very up and down So sometimes you work a lot but sometimes So if you re on a series like Stargate SG 1 you have that work for seven years So that s a gift 29 After her character s death in season 7 there were various rumours which said she would appear in the upcoming Stargate film this never happened Rothery said it was unlikely since she had not had any contact with the Stargate producers since her character s death 29 Rothery has stated many times that she admires the character because of her strength and intelligence 30 Robert C Cooper producer for Stargate SG 1 called Rothery about the death of her character Cooper said It is our last year so we are thinking of killing one of our regulars 28 Fraiser was killed off in the episode Heroes because the producers thought season seven would be the last in the series and felt that a death of the main cast was needed 30 Rothery also appeared on the Women of Sci Fi calendar produced by fellow Stargate cast Michael Shanks and Christopher Judge 28 Walter Harriman Edit Gary Jones played Walter Harriman an SGC technician who was also known as Norman Davies and Chevron Guy Chief Master Sergeant Walter Harriman also known as the Chevron Guy among others portrayed by Gary Jones seasons 1 10 joined the Stargate Command SGC after excelling in navigation and automatic flight control operations during the first Gulf War General Hammond recruited him as someone with excellent technical ability and a cool head to operate the Stargate under extreme pressure He specializes in installing maintaining and repairing bomb navigation weapons control as well as automatic flight control systems He is also an expert in radio and navigational equipment and in maintaining test and precision measurement equipment He is primarily a Stargate technician running the dialing computer and other equipment from the Control Room He also acts as an occasional administrative assistant to the head of Stargate Command and has manned the flight console on the bridge of the Prometheus 31 From season 8 to 10 Harriman s role is expanded to advisor to the Head of Command of the SGC His name has been a source of confusion for many fans of Stargate SG 1 Originally he was simply Technician or Sergeant listed as such in the show credits 32 At some point some of the writers gave him the name Norman Davis which came with a name tag but was never used in dialogue In the episode 2010 Jack O Neill refers to him as Walter Later in the eighth season of Stargate SG 1 the character is addressed as Sergeant Harriman with Harriman actually based on General George Hammond addressing him as Airman what was misheard by fans because of Don S Davis s Texan accent resulting in the final name of Walter Harriman Many fans fondly refer to him as the Chevron guy as many of his on screen appearances especially earlier on in the show had him saying Chevron insert number here encoded 31 On several DVD commentaries after the introduction of the name Walter producer director Peter DeLuise refers to the character as Walter Norman and Walter Norman Davis The first time he ever says his own name is in the Stargate Atlantis episode Home 33 As the series continued Harriman got a heavier role in the series According to Jones his role was expanded since Richard Dean Anderson wanted him as his personal assistant in the show when his character Jack O Neill was the leader of the SGC The Stargate producer and writer staff called 2005 The Year of Walter because the staff evolved Harriman s relationship with General Hank Landry 34 Jones does not have a binding contract with the Stargate producers 32 Charles Kawalsky Edit Jay Acovone at Comic Con 2007 Charles Kawalsky portrayed by John Diehl in the film and Jay Acovone in the series is introduced in the 1994 Stargate as lieutenant colonel He is Jack O Neill s second in command for the first mission through the Stargate to Abydos and returns to Earth afterwards When the Goa uld Apophis attacks the SGC in the pilot episode of Stargate SG 1 Kawalsky is re introduced as a captain and reunites with his former teammates to bring Daniel Jackson back to Earth Kawalsky is promoted to major and becomes the leader of the newly formed SG 2 team accompanying SG 1 on their mission to Chulak to rescue Sha re and Skaara However before returning to Earth Kawalsky is invaded by a Goa uld parasite from a dead Jaffa warrior In season 1 s The Enemy Within the symbiote starts to take control of him back on Earth A surgical removal of the Goa uld is initially successful but the symbiote turns out to be a dead husk whose intelligence has already taken over Kawalsky s mind Kawalsky is eventually killed when Teal c forces his head through the event horizon and closes the gate severing most of Kawalsky s skull including the lobes controlled by the symbiote Despite the character s death Kawalsky appears several more times in the series In season 2 s The Gamekeeper O Neill and Teal c encounter Kawalsky in a virtual reality simulation In season 3 s Point of View Kawalsky and Samantha Carter from an alternate reality arrive through the gate seeking help in contacting the Asgard His last appearance is in season 8 s Moebius in which Kawalsky returns in an alternate timeline accidentally created when the destruction of their time machine traps SG 1 in the distant past Kawalsky accompanies O Neill Carter and Daniel to Chulak and again meets his end although here he is merely shot it is the alternate Daniel Jackson who is infected with the Goa uld and killed by Teal c Darren Sumner called Kawalsky one of the 1994 film s strongest characters Sumner called the high death numbers of secondary and recurring characters on the show The Kawalsky Effect 35 A Kawalsky action figure was created after the release of the 1994 film 36 He also has a card in the card game Stargate TCG In the card game he is listed as a good soldier 37 While only appearing in six episodes in total actor Jay Acovone frequently appears at Stargate conventions 38 Sylvester Sly Siler Edit Master Sergeant Sylvester Sly Siler played by Dan Shea seasons 1 10 A sergeant at the SGC and one of its primary technicians and engineers First appearing in season 1 s Solitudes he remains a background character throughout the run of Stargate SG 1 and also occasionally appears in Earth based episodes of Stargate Atlantis Dan Shea is primarily the stunt co ordinator for Stargate SG 1 responsible for the budgets and locations of stunts and the hiring of stunt people before co ordinating all stunt action 39 Siler is subsequently shown to be involved in many accidents at the SGC which is parodied in dialogue and action in several SG 1 episodes such as season 4 s Window of Opportunity season 7 s Heroes and the milestone episode 200 Shea first auditioned for the role as Siler with executive producer Brad Wright and director Martin Wood Shea commented on his first audition that he tried to be Funny thinking he could get the role easier that way Executive producer Michael Greenberg said that Shea Blew it Shea then went for a second audition acting more serious since according to Greenberg the role was Serious and he needed to act that way 40 Siler also frequently appears in the background of scenes carrying an oversized wrench 39 which he sometimes hands to director Martin Wood as a gag prop in the series Siler s first name is never mentioned in dialogue in the series although his uniform patch and magazines give his first name as Sly several times 39 41 and his uniform patch in Entity reads Dan According to producer and writer Peter DeLuise Siler s name and dialog deliberately contain the letter S because Dan Shea lisps 42 Shea had previous worked with both Richard Dean Anderson who portrayed Jack O Neill and Greenberg before on the American television series MacGyver in the 80s and early 90s as Anderson s stand in in stunt scenes 40 he continued this role in Stargate SG 1 Anderson s partner Greenberg gave the job as stunt coordinator and stand in to Shea in Stargate SG 1 The first time Shea was officially double for Anderson was in Toronto when they did a MacGyver movie Anderson had broken his foot so Shea was forced to do a stand in 40 Minor characters Edit Major Louis Ferretti played by French Stewart in the film as Lieutenant Louis Ferretti and Brent Stait in season 1 A member of the United States Air Force and one of the four survivors of the first expedition through the Stargate in Stargate Ferretti joins O Neill s team on another mission to Abydos in Children of the Gods and is put in charge of the SG 2 team after the death of Charles Kawalsky in The Enemy Within Ferretti makes his last appearance in season 1 s Within the Serpent s Grasp to follow SG 1 through the Stargate and is mentioned in season 3 s Shades of Grey as a possible new leader of SG 1 Colonel Robert Makepeace played by Steve Makaj seasons 1 3 was a former member of the United States Marine Corps and of Stargate Command SGC Originally Makepeace was the commander of SG 3 His first on screen appearance is in The Broca Divide as ranking officer and team leader of SG 3 He reappears in the two episodes two parters in Stargate SG 1 season 2 In the two parters of season 2 Makepeace leads a rescue mission to save SG 1 without Teal c from the grasp of Hathor in Into the Fire 43 44 In season 3 s Shades of Grey Makepeace is discovered to be a spy for the rogue N I D group under the command of Colonel Harry Maybourne who is covertly reverse engineering stolen alien technologies Smaller items stolen by the rogue group would be left on a designated world for Makepeace to covertly pick up and pack back to Earth in his gear during routine missions O Neill had Makepeace arrested and charged with high treason against the United States and its allies 45 While it is unknown who immediately replaced Makepeace as the commander of SG 3 eventually this position was assigned to Colonel Reynolds 46 Colonel Albert Reynolds played by Eric Breker seasons 2 5 7 10 Introduced in Touchstone as a Major stationed at Area 51 and a member of the National Intelligence Department NID In early 2001 He is promoted to lieutenant colonel and was given command of SG 16 on a mission to Velona citation needed By early 2003 Reynolds had received command of SG 3 succeeding Robert Makepeace who was charged for high treason against the United States and its allies 46 He was also one of the few airman who helped Jack O Neill defend Stargate Command against the Replicator army that Replicator Carter had sent through the Stargate to attack Earth while she focused on conquering the Milky Way galaxy Reynolds was the leader of the SGC during Hank Landry s vacation to Jack O Neill s cabin Samantha Carter assumed his post until he returned from his mission to P9J 333 Doctor Robert Rothman played by Jason Schombing seasons 3 4 A scientist who prior to joining Stargate Command was Daniel s research assistant He first appears in season 3 s Forever In A Day in a Hand device induced delusion of Daniel Jackson where he is placed on SG 1 His first non fantasy appearance is in Crystal Skull where Rothman is tasked with researching a crystal skull Rothman becomes a host to a Goa uld larva and during a rescue mission on an offworld archaeological dig site in The First Ones and is shot dead by Colonel Jack O Neill Major Michael Griff played by Russell Ferrier season 4 Was a member of SG 2 as a captain He accompanied SG 1 in its search to recover SG 11 and Dr Daniel Jackson on P3X 888 during the course of the mission he was wounded by a staff weapon blast but recovered As commander of SG 2 Griff led a search for SG 1 after that team went missing on P3R 118 After braving a glacier that Administrator Calder had insisted SG 1 had set out to investigate he became convinced that Colonel O Neill would never have authorized such a mission At General Hammond s instruction Griff drew up plans for a covert search and rescue mission which ultimately proved unnecessary Later that year Griff and SG 2 were assigned to babysit a team of scientists on M4C 862 a mission he sarcastically described as non stop excitement When O Neill and Teal c arrived to relieve him he was visibly pleased not to be responsible for dealing with the scientists anymore Doctor Bill Lee played by Bill Dow seasons 4 6 10 A civilian scientist and engineer who works at Stargate Command and is often called upon to work with alien technology He first appears in Prodigy but does not step in the foreground until Evolution where he and Daniel go on a mission to Honduras to locate the Ancients healing device but are captured and tortured by local terrorists As seen in Heroes Dr Lee is responsible for creating a staff weapon resistant armor He is also a recurring character on Stargate Atlantis He devises a way to relay a warning to Atlantis in Critical Mass and gates to the Pegasus Galaxy from the Midway Station in Adrift when Atlantis goes missing Dr Lee remains stationed at Midway training Kavanagh as his replacement until the midway station is destroyed in Midway Dr Lee is seen in Stargate Universe s pilot Air as Dr Nicholas Rush Robert Carlyle uses the Ancient Communication stones see Ancient technology in Stargate to trade places with him In Twin Destinies Eli Wallace switches bodies with Lee to present his plan for dialing the Stargate from within a star to Homeworld Command while Lee is presented the plan on Destiny Major Evan Lorne played by Kavan Smith seasons 7 and 10 A member of SG 11 Lorne first appears in Stargate SG 1 episode Enemy Mine Lorne appears as the team leader of the SG 1 unit in an alternate universe in the SG 1 season 10 episode The Road Not Taken Lorne reappears as a part of the new personnel sent after the Wraith siege by the Daedalus in the Stargate Atlantis episode Runner A natural carrier of the Ancient gene Lorne becomes a major recurring character in Stargate Atlantis often acting as backup for John Sheppard and his team and seemingly Sheppard s second in command Lorne s final appearance is in Enemy at the Gate where he joins Sheppard s team in boarding a hive ship orbiting the Earth in an attempt to destroy it from the inside Doctor Carolyn Lam played by Lexa Doig seasons 9 10 Stargate Command s chief medical officer in seasons 9 and 10 She first appears in Avalon Part 2 and is seemingly the first permanent one since the death of Dr Janet Fraiser in season 7 Prior to joining Stargate Command Dr Lam worked with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention her specialty is infectious diseases Dr Lam has a strained relationship with her father General Hank Landry In The Fourth Horseman General Landry apologizes for not having been with her when she needed him as a child Carolyn her father and her mother Kim Lam have dinner in the episode Family Ties Actress Lexa Doig is the real life spouse of Michael Shanks who plays Daniel Recurring oversight agency characters EditThe NID is a shadowy intelligence agency that appears throughout the run of Stargate SG 1 and occasionally on Stargate Atlantis The official mandate of the NID is to provide vital civilian oversight of top secret military operations but one of their unofficial primary goals is to procure alien technologies A set of well resourced illegal cells named the Rogue NID uses unscrupulous methods to achieve the goals of the official NID and is later replaced by The Trust a shady interplanetary terrorist group The International Oversight Advisory IOA is a civilian oversight committee created after the United States and Russia revealed the existence of the Stargate Program to the other permanent members of the UN Security Council in season 6 The producers initially wanted to call the NID NRD for No Real Department but went for NID because it sounded better 47 Although the acronym still stands for nothing in particular 48 the Stargate SG 1 Roleplaying Game says it stands for National Intelligence Department 49 When the producers came up with story ideas for the Trust they found that Alias had used all the names they could think of It was not until several weeks after they had decided on the name Trust that they found out that Alias had used that name as well Faced with the choice to either go with the Trust or with what producer Joseph Mallozzi called The Former Rogue Elements of the N I D Now Working for Private Interests Bent on Global Domination they chose the first option 50 The IOA has also been referred to as the International Oversight Committee on the show until producer Joseph Mallozzi realized during the writing of The Ties That Bind that the acronym IOC is already used by the International Olympic Committee 51 The writers originally wanted to set up an IOA watchdog character on SG 1 and possibly have Richard Woolsey on the base all the time but season 9 already had so many new characters that the writers did not develop this idea 51 Malcolm Barrett Edit Special agent Malcolm Barrett played by Peter Flemming seasons 5 7 9 10 An NID agent introduced in season 5 s Wormhole X Treme His first significant appearance follows in Smoke amp Mirrors where he helps uncovering a shadow group behind the NID who tried to attribute Senator Kinsey s apparent assassination to O Neill After collaborating with SG 1 in season 7 s Heroes Part 2 and Resurrection Barrett expresses a personal romantic interest in Samantha Carter in season 9 s Ex Deus Machina and season 10 s Uninvited but she rejects his advances His last SG 1 appearance is in season 10 s Dominion Agent Barrett also recurs in Stargate Atlantis He warns General Landry in that show s season 2 episode Critical Mass of the Trust s plan to destroy Atlantis with a bomb and aids several Expedition team members to track down Rodney McKay s sister Jeannie Miller on Earth in season 4 s Miller s Crossing Peter Flemming had a two line audition for Wormhole X Treme for a Man in Black character in a possible recurring role Every NID character introduced before Agent Barrett had been very shady always had an agenda and Barrett was the first mainstay in NID who is actually law abiding honest and a good person 52 Harry Maybourne Edit Colonel Harry Maybourne played by Tom McBeath seasons 1 6 8 A USAF Colonel introduced in season 1 s Enigma as an NID member with ambiguous morals and loyalties In season 2 s Bane Maybourne leads an NID attempt to claim Teal c for study after alien insect infected Teal c After further antagonizing SG 1 through rogue NID operations in Touchstone and Shades of Grey and helping SG 1 in Foothold Maybourne flees to Russia and aids in establishing the Russian Stargate Program He is caught in season 4 s Watergate convicted of treason and placed on death row O Neill contacts Maybourne in season 4 s Chain Reaction to help reinstate General Hammond who was blackmailed into resigning from his position Maybourne escapes after the mission s success and covertly helps O Neill in season 5 s Desperate Measures and 48 Hours in the Adrian Conrad case Maybourne tricks SG 1 into taking him off world in season 6 s Paradise Lost and is eventually exiled to a far off planet When SG 1 meets him again in season 8 s It s Good To Be King Maybourne leads a life of leisure as the seemingly clairvoyant ruler of the local peoples King Arkhan I Although the people later discover the deception they welcome him to stay as his technological expertise has improved their standard of life and SG 1 returns to Earth without him He had ascended to power using an Ancient time travelers log of his journeys into the future of the planet and ended up facing a Goa uld invasion but the soldiers were repelled by Jackson and Teal c with help from one of the villagers and O Neill destroyed in the ship in orbit killing the System Lord behind the attack When the team leave O Neill and Maybourne part amicably with Maybourne having finally accepted responsibility towards the people he was ruling After auditioning for the part as Harry Maybourne the producers revealed that he maybe could get a spot as a recurring character in the show McBeath called his role as Maybourne at the start of the series boring but was glad for the new change in the character s direction in the series after he was convicted for treason McBeath also commented that the writers and the producers for the show had more fun when his character started to loosen up 53 When the portraying actor Tom McBeath was asked about the O Neill Maybourne relationship he explained their rapport as I can t stand you but at some level I have a lot of respect for you And I do actually grudgingly have a good time when you re around and things seem to work out 53 McBeath once stated that the character of Maybourne diminished after Richard Dean Anderson s departure from the show in season 8 54 Robert Kinsey Edit Ronny Cox plays Robert Kinsey Senator Robert Kinsey played by Ronny Cox seasons 1 4 8 A US senator who first appears in season 1 s Politics In Politics Kinsey ignores warnings of an imminent Goa uld invasion and instead manages to briefly shut down Stargate Command for budget reasons only for SG 1 to prove the program s worth and save Earth through defying orders In season 4 s Chain Reaction Kinsey and the NID temporarily succeed in controlling the Stargate by blackmailing General Hammond into retirement and appointing a new general to his position but O Neill is able to find evidence of the blackmail and get Hammond reinstated In season 5 s 2001 Kinsey aims to gain prestige through an alliance with the Aschen but the alliance fails However the alliance went ahead in the alternate but unfulfilled future reality witnessed in season 4 s 2010 in which Kinsey also achieved his goal of the presidency only a warning from that future helped the SGC prevent it In season 6 s Smoke and Mirrors a group controlling the rogue NID known as the Committee tries to assassinate Kinsey and frame Col O Neill for his murder but NID agent Malcolm Barret and SG 1 foil this attempt Kinsey becomes Vice President in season 7 s Inauguration and tries again to take control of the Stargate Program in Lost City Shortly after NID Agent Richard Woolsey presents incriminating evidence against Kinsey to President Henry Hayes in the same episode Hayes accepts Kinsey s resignation Kinsey makes his last appearance in season 8 s Full Alert where the SGC convinces Kinsey to go undercover to undermine the hierarchy of the Trust However the Goa uld have completely infiltrated the Trust through their operatives working outside of the solar system and have already implanted a symbiote within Kinsey to aid in their plans of starting a nuclear war between the US and Russia After the SGC foil the attempt Kinsey flees aboard an Al kesh but Kinsey s future remains uncertain as the Al Kesh is destroyed while he operated a transport device leaving it open ended if he was able to escape or the ship was destroyed before he could transport away Kinsey is briefly mentioned as a President in the alternative timeline with Hayes as Secretary of Defense in season 8 finale Moebius The producers of Stargate SG 1 asked Ronny Cox if he would be interested in a role in one episode but according to Cox it was so much fun that they and I decided we would like to do more together According to executive producer Brad Wright every time they got a script from an outside editor Kinsey was included Cox has been noted for saying that the character has become a Malevolent force on the show Because of the collaboration between the producers and himself Cox described him as a self aggrandizing senator who like s to throw his weight around and as Kinsey feels that the Stargate is being used in completely the wrong way and one that is endangering American ideals and a way of life that he believes in and a Born again right wing Christian fundamentalist Cox played him as a heroic antagonist rather than villainous Cox was approached by the producers to play Kinsey instead of auditioning himself Kinsey holds the position of chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee until season 7 and oversees the national defense budget of secret projects such as the Stargate Program 55 56 Richard Woolsey Edit Main article Richard Woolsey Picardo at ComicCon 2008 Richard Woolsey played by Robert Picardo seasons 7 9 10 Woolsey s first appearance is following the death of Dr Janet Fraiser late in season 7 of Stargate SG 1 Woolsey is brought into Stargate Command in the episode Heroes to examine the command decisions and threatens SGC personnel with court martial if they do not cooperate When Woolsey brings his report to President Hayes in Inauguration he comes to realize Senator Kinsey s ambitions and presents incriminating evidence against him 57 indirectly forcing Kinsey into resigning Woolsey returns in the season 9 episode Prototype and encourages the SGC to take great risks with the captured Goa uld human Ancient hybrid Khalek to learn more about the Ascension process When the studies cause injury and death among SGC personnel Woolsey acknowledges his own error and pleads for forgiveness from the SG 1 team 58 Being the US s representative on the newly formed International Oversight Advisory Committee IOA Woolsey and some colleagues are rescued by SG 1 and the crew of the Odyssey after a catastrophe at the Gamma Site in The Scourge which he later considers an eye opening experience 59 Woolsey makes two more appearances in Flesh and Blood and Morpheus and last appears on SG 1 in season 10 s The Shroud Woolsey remembers the Khalek incident and decides that Daniel who transformed into a Prior is too dangerous and must be placed indefinitely into stasis However Daniel frees himself before Woolsey s plans can be enacted 60 Robert Picardo was in the main cast of Star Trek Voyager from 1995 to 2001 He was familiar with Stargate SG 1 from his time as a Showtime subscriber He was offered a one day guest star as Richard Woolsey for the SG 1 episode Heroes in season seven 2004 while he was working on The Outer Limits in Vancouver where Stargate SG 1 is filmed He was then brought back for the follow up episode Inauguration which began the rehabilitation of the Woolsey character With the story introduction of the IOA the Woolsey character made more regular appearances to annoy people Eventually humor was added to the role and the character was spun over to Atlantis as a recurring guest character Picardo later became a main character in Stargate Atlantis 61 62 Producer Joseph Mallozzi said that whenever I do interviews I often draw parallels between Amanda Tapping and Robert Picardo They are both incredibly kind professional delightful to work with and gifted actors who always elevate the performances of anyone they share a scene with 62 Frank Simmons Edit Colonel Frank Simmons played by John de Lancie seasons 5 6 The NID liaison to Stargate Command after Col Harry Maybourne s arrest for treason Simmons is introduced in season 5 s Ascension and is notorious for claiming to have the best interest of the nation at heart while really he has his own political agenda In Desperate Measures Simmons shoots O Neill in the back while O Neill was attempting to capture a Goa uld who has taken Adrian Conrad as host 48 Hours Simmons involvement in the disappearance of the Adrian Conrad Goa uld whom he now holds captive is revealed and General Hammond has him arrested In season 6 s Prometheus rogue NID agents hijack the unfinished starship Prometheus and demand that Simmons along with Adrian Conrad s Goa uld be released It later turns out that Simmons had orchestrated the entire affair When Conrad is killed the Goa uld infects Simmons O Neill is able to open an emergency airlock and releases Simmons into hard vacuum killing both him and the Goa uld Other recurring characters EditChekov Edit Colonel Chekov played by Garry Chalk seasons 5 6 8 10 Russia s liaison to Stargate Command following the early season 4 events of the short lived Russian Stargate program He first appears in season 5 s The Tomb blaming SG 1 for the death of several Russian SG team members 63 Chekov collaborates with the SGC several episodes later in 48 Hours giving them a DHD from Russian possession and allowing the SGC to use the Russian Stargate 64 Colonel Chekov is appointed as the Russian envoy to the SGC around season 6 s Redemption and agrees to give the Russian Stargate to the US in exchange for money X 302 technology and a Russian SG team 65 In season 6 s Disclosure Colonel Chekov supports the US s presentation for the disclosure of the Stargate Program to the other three permanent members of the UN Security Council 66 In season 8 s Full Alert Colonel Chekov helps General O Neill deal with the possible Goa uld compromise of the US government and establishes a direct line between O Neill and the Russian President to avert a nuclear war 67 Chekov appears in season 9 s The Fourth Horseman and Crusade where he has become a Russian representative of the IOA He makes his last appearance in Camelot as the commander of the Earth ship Korolev to stop the Ori fleet from invading the Milky Way but is killed when his ship was obliterated by the Ori Fleet though six other crew members were transported from the ship before its destruction 68 Garry Chalk was assigned to the role as Chekov by executive producer Michael Greenberg and N John Smith They asked him if he could speak Russian Chalk replied No Greenberg then replied No matter And gave him his own Russian coach named Alexander Kalugin who made an appearance in the Stargate SG 1 episode Watergate as one of the Russian soldiers Portraying actor Chalk had previously worked with Richard Dean Anderson Don S Davis and Greenberg in 1986 on MacGyver and Smith in The Beachcombers Greenberg had said to Chalk that they were going to bring him into the show at first there was no audition or a single phone call until season 5 of the series During the shows history Chalk Begged the producers for his character to go through the Stargate but they said no but eventually they came up with the idea of giving him his own starship Chalk was the only non Russian actor assigned in Flesh and Blood 69 Catherine Langford Edit Not to be confused with Katherine Langford Catherine Langford played by Kelly Vint girl in the film Viveca Lindfors elderly lady in the film Elizabeth Hoffman elderly lady in season 1 Nancy McClure young woman in season 1 and Glynis Davies middle aged woman in season 2 Ellie Gall Stargate Origins Daughter of archeologist Prof Paul Langford who discovered the Stargate as a girl she acquired an amulet depicting the Eye of Ra during the excavation of the Stargate in Giza in 1928 70 In present day of Stargate she gives the amulet to Daniel before his first mission through the Stargate to Abydos Her fiance a scientist named Ernest Littlefield played by Keene Curtis and Paul McGillion is the first human to have travelled through the Stargate since the ancient Egyptians buried it Catherine and Ernest were separated by a gate incident in 1945 and were re united in the mid season 1 episode The Torment of Tantalus but Ernest is never seen again in the series although he is mentioned in season 1 s There But For the Grace of God and season 2 s The Fifth Race Catherine Langford appears again in alternate universes and times in There But For the Grace of God and 1969 Her death is announced in season 8 s Moebius Part 1 she leaves her personal collection of documents and artifacts including the golden medallion of Ra to Daniel Jackson Earth ship crew characters Edit In the show Earth s efforts to construct starships of its own using reverse engineered alien technology begin in the season 4 episode Tangent with the less than successful X 301 The first spaceworthy Earth fighter the X 302 later F 302 is introduced in season 6 s Redemption and a few episodes later in Prometheus Earth s first space battlecruiser the Prometheus Squadrons of F 302s are eventually stationed on Earth Atlantis the SGC s alternative sites and its battlecruisers In season 2 of Stargate Atlantis the Daedalus class battlecruiser is introduced incorporating advancements that were tested on the Prometheus Six Daedalus class battlecruisers appeared in the franchise the Daedalus 71 the Odyssey 72 the Korolev 73 the Apollo 74 the Sun Tzu and the George Hammond named the Phoenix in an alternate timeline 75 Except for the Korolev and the Sun Tzu which are operated by the Russians and Chinese respectively all Earth combat spacecraft are operated by the United States Air Force Set designer Peter Bodnarus based the design of the F 302 on the F 117A U S Air Force stealth fighter and the HL 10 aircraft from the 1970s while still leaving the Goa uld glider origins of the design recognizable He and his team focused on creating a realistic looking cockpit interior for the X 302 in terms of the headrest with overhead ejection handles and emergency systems 76 The original concepts for the look of the Prometheus as well as the X 303 s interior were aircraft carriers 76 77 For the Prometheus the producers wanted to build something that was exactly the opposite of Goa uld ships which according to Paul Mullie are basically big empty rooms with nowhere to sit no screens and no buttons to press Andy Mikita thought the Prometheus was a fun set to shoot in because there s lots of layers and textures and flashing lights 77 Catherine Womack played by Chelah Horsdal seasons 8 9 A US Airforce officer of unknown rank She takes over from Major Erin Gant as the helmsman of the Prometheus in season 8 s in New Order Part 2 and is last seen in Full Alert Paul Emerson played by Matthew Glave seasons 9 10 Introduced as the commander of the Odyssey in season 9 s Off the Grid rescuing SG 1 and aiding in their mission to take back all stolen Stargates from Ba al s ship In the next episode The Scourge he again rescues SG 1 and a team of the IOA from the Gamma Site In the season 9 finale Camelot Emerson teams up the Odyssey with many other ships of the Jaffa the Asgard and the Lucian Alliance to battle the Ori battlecruisers which come through an open Supergate and the Odyssey takes much damage Emerson continues serving as the commander of the Odyssey in season 10 but is killed by a member of the Lucian Alliance in Company of Thieves Erin Gant played by Ingrid Kavelaars seasons 6 7 A US airforce Major and the first known helmsman of the Prometheus under Colonels Ronson and Kirkland as well as General George Hammond She is first seen in Memento and last seen in Lost City Kevin Marks played by Martin Christopher seasons 9 10 A USAF officer aboard the Prometheus introduced in Avalon Part 1 helping Mitchell and SG 1 locate and gain access to the Ancient stronghold at Avalon Marks is also present during the Kalana mission in Beachhead and the subsequent search for Gerak s hidden mothership in orbit of Earth s moon in Ex Deus Machina after which he is promoted to captain Following the destruction of the Prometheus in Ethon Marks is promoted to major and becomes a bridge officer on board the Odyssey where he participates in various operations in Camelot The Scourge Flesh and Blood Talion and Unending Marks last apparent SG 1 mission on board the Odyssey is the retrieval of the Ark of Truth from the Ori Home Galaxy in Stargate The Ark of Truth He takes a similar bridge position on board the Apollo in Atlantis s Be All My Sins Remember d and transfers to Daedalus in Search and Rescue In The Daedalus Variations Teyla mentions that Marks gave her preliminary training on the battlecruiser s systems an offer that Ronon Dex had declined He is last seen on board the George Hammond under the command of Samantha Carter in Stargate Universe s Air Aside from the commanders of each ship Marks is the most recurring crewmember to appear and the only character shown to serve on each of Stargate s major space vessels Lionel Pendergast played by Barclay Hope seasons 8 9 Replaces Colonel William Ronson as commander of the Prometheus and is first seen in New Order Part 2 patrolling Earth Pendergast intercepts Thor s Asgard mothership Daniel Jackson after its arrival in Earth s solar system and destroys a Trust controlled Al kesh in Full Alert He is leading the search of Osiris s cloaked Al kesh in Earth s orbit in Endgame and transports the Stargate and SG 1 aboard before the enemy vessel enters hyperspace In season 9 s Beachhead Pendergast delivers a Mark IX warhead to an Ori beachhead and maintains the ship s position during the mission despite Jaffa and Ori interruption Pendergast dies during the destruction of the Prometheus by an Ori satellite weapon in Ethon he remained aboard to beam his crew off the ship thus saving 76 lives William Ronson played by John Novak seasons 6 7 A USAF Colonel and Commander of the Prometheus during seasons 6 and 7 Ian Davidson played by Fulvio Cecere season 10 A USAF Colonel who takes command of the Odyssey in the Season 10 episodes Family Ties and Dominion following the death of his predecessor Colonel Paul Emerson Minor characters Edit Adrian Conrad played by Bill Marchant seasons 5 6 A wealthy business man suffering from an incurable terminal illness and desperate to uncover the regenerative biological secrets of Goa uld symbiotes He hopes to learn the effects a blending had on a human by abducting Carter in Desperate Measures but her resistance forces him to be blended with the symbiote himself Conrad incarcerated under the control of Frank Simmons of the NID unknowingly assists in freeing Teal c from the inner workings of the Stargate in 48 Hours Rogue NID agents are eventually able to release Conrad and Simmons from custody and escape with them aboard the hijacked and unfinished starship Prometheus The Goa uld desires to gain control of the Prometheus and finds its way into Col Simmons after Simmons killed Conrad O Neill releases the infected Simmons into the vacuum of space through an airlock during a fight Colin Cunningham played Major Paul Davis Paul Davis played by Colin Cunningham seasons 2 6 8 A United States Air Force Major stationed at the Pentagon He is introduced in season 2 s A Matter of Time and recurs in fifteen Stargate SG 1 episodes usually aiding Stargate Command during conflicts with other nations on Earth and other portions of the United States government He last appears in an alternate timeline in season 8 s Moebius and makes a cameo appearance at the beginning of Stargate Continuum He also appeared in the Stargate Atlantis series finale Enemy at the Gate Despite the number of years the character was on the series he always remained a major and was never seen to be promoted Julia Donovan played by Kendall Cross seasons 6 8 10 A TV reporter who learns of the Prometheus program in season 6 s Prometheus and intends to do a story on it When she gets caught up in a rogue NID operation during her tour of the ship she changes her mind in promised to be the first one to publish the story if and when the Stargate Program goes public She helps cover up Stargate related issues in season 8 s Covenant and season 9 s Ex Deus Machina and appears in an alternate universe in season 10 s The Road Not Taken Henry Hayes played by William Devane season 7 The President of the United States from season 7 onwards introduced in season 7 s Inauguration After Vice President Robert Kinsey and NID agent Richard Woolsey inform him about the Stargate Program and several problems at Stargate Command Hayes replaces General Hammond with civilian Dr Elizabeth Weir as the new commander of Stargate Command in Lost City Hayes then appoints Hammond to command of the Prometheus during Anubis s actual invasion on Earth and forces Kinsey into resigning After Anubis s defeat Hayes puts O Neill in command of the SGC and Hammonds in command of the Homeworld Command and selects Dr Elizabeth Weir as the leader of the Atlantis expedition His first official visit to the SGC is alluded to in season 8 s Zero Hour and he is mentioned again in season 10 s Bad Guys President Hayes returns in an alternate timeline in Stargate Continuum Rodney McKay played by David Hewlett seasons 5 6 8 10 A brilliant scientist who works with Samantha Carter in 48 Hours Redemption two parter Moebius two parter The Pegasus Project The Road Not Taken Rodney McKay went on to become a main character on the spinoff series Stargate Atlantis Robert Samuels played by Robert Wisden seasons 1 2 8 A USAF Lieutenant Colonel who re introduces O Neill to the Stargate Program in Children of the Gods He repeatedly raises his concerns over the SGC s and Hammond s incompetence in Politics and The Serpent s Lair Samuels last appears in an alternate universe in season 8 s Moebius Part 1 Pete Shanahan played by David DeLuise seasons 7 8 A police detective working in Denver Colorado He meets Carter and develops a romantic relationship with her in the late season 7 episode Chimera after Carter s brother set them up He is divorced since his previous wife could not quite cope with his work Curious about Carter s work he finds out about Carter s involvement with a top secret project through an FBI acquaintance After witnessing a fight between SG 1 and Osiris he is given security clearance and learns the true nature of the Stargate program Carter and Shanahan continue to see each other throughout season 7 and 8 until Shanahan proposes to marry Carter in Affinity She agrees but she cancels the wedding and breaks up with him in Threads after he had already made wedding arrangements and was ready to buy a house General Maurice Vidrine played by Steven Williams seasons 4 7 A USAF General who oversaw the development and operations of Earth s fleet of spacecraft built using alien technology including the X 301 and BC 303 Abydonians EditThe Abydonians are the people whom Colonel O Neill s team encounters on another planet in the Stargate film They are the slaves of the alien Ra and are descendants from ancient Egyptians brought through the Stargate to mine the fictional mineral naqahdah The film gives the location of their homeworld named Abydos in SG 1 s pilot episode Children of the Gods as the Kaliem galaxy on the far side of the known universe in the film and as the closest planets to Earth in the Stargate network in Children of the Gods In the film O Neill and Daniel Jackson inspire the Abydonians and their leader Kasuf to rise up against Ra The military personnel return to Earth while Daniel falls in love with Kasuf s daughter Sha re and remains behind In Children of the Gods set a year after the film the Goa uld Apophis attacks Abydos abducting Sha re and her brother Skaara to serve as hosts for his queen Amonet and son Klorel In season 6 s Full Circle the Goa uld Anubis destroys Abydos but Oma Desala helps its entire population Ascend Erick Avari played Kasuf in the film and the television series Kasuf Hebrew for silver colored citation needed played by Erick Avari film seasons 2 4 and Daniel Rashid Origins The leader of the Abydonians in the film and the father of Sha re and Skaara In season 2 s Secrets one year after Apophis s kidnapping of Kasuf s children in Children of Gods Daniel returns to Abydos and learns that Sha re has become pregnant by Apophis Kasuf helps Daniel to hide the newborn child from Heru ur Kasuf returns in season 3 s Forever in a Day when his daughter Sha re dies Kasuf last appears in season 4 s Absolute Power introducing SG 1 to his rapidly aged grandchild Shifu In the prequel web series Origins it is shown that Kasuf served Aset in Abydos and met Catherine Langford and her group when a German officer named Brucke first activated the Stargate in a warehouse near Giza on Earth Upon Ra s return to Abydos Aset made Kasuf the leader of the village of Nagada Sha re Sha uri in the film played by Mili Avital film and Vaitiare Bandera seasons 1 3 Kasuf s daughter who becomes Daniel Jackson s wife and the host of the Goa uld Amonet also spelled Amaunet In the film her father Kasuf offers Sha re to Daniel Jackson as a gift and although he initially refuses to take her as his wife they eventually fall in love with each other After one year of marriage in Children of the Gods Apophis takes Sha re hostage and makes her a host for his symbiote queen Amonet against her will Daniel meets a now vastly pregnant Sha re on a visit to Abydos in season 2 s Secrets She hides her child a Harcesis fathered by Apophis from Heru ur as Amonet is dormant during the pregnancy When Sha re gives birth to a boy Shifu Amonet takes control of Sha re but keeps information about the child to herself Amonet returns for the child one year later in season 3 s Forever in a Day sending him to the planet Kheb with one of her handmaidens During a battle at Abydos in Forever in a Day Amonet attacks Daniel with her hand device in a tent and Teal c kills Sha re with his staff weapon to prevent Daniel s death Skaara played by Alexis Cruz film seasons 1 3 6 The son of Kasuf and brother to Sha re In the film Skaara and his friends aid O Neil and his soldiers to beat Ra In Children of the Gods Skaara is taken hostage by Apophis and is made the host for his symbiote son Klorel against his will SG 1 invades Klorel s ship in the season 1 finale Within the Serpent s Grasp but Skaara is only able to emerge shortly After O Neill shoots Klorel to prevent him from killing Dr Jackson Bra tac revives him in a Sarcophagus Skaara and Apophis flee before their ships are destroyed in the season 2 opener The Serpent s Lair In season 3 s Pretense Klorel s ship crashes on the Tollan homeworld while fleeing from Heru ur s forces With help from the Tollan technology Skaara regains control and participates in a Tollan trial to get the symbiote separated from his body Skaara wins the trial and eventually returns to Abydos where he meets SG 1 one last time in the season 6 finale Full Circle Skaara helps SG 1 in the search for the Eye of Ra before Anubis can find it on Abydos Skaara is mortally wounded during the firefight with Anubis Jaffa but ascends with the help of Oma Desala Ancients EditMain article Ancient Stargate See also List of Stargate Atlantis characters Ancients The Ancients are the original builders of the Stargate network who by the time of Stargate SG 1 have ascended beyond corporeal form into a higher plane of existence The humans of Earth are the second evolution of the Ancients The Ancients originally known as the Alterans colonized the Milky Way galaxy millions of years ago and built a great empire They also colonized the Pegasus galaxy and seeded human life there before being driven out by the Wraith The civilization of the Ancients in the Milky Way was decimated millions of years ago by a plague and those who did not learn to ascend travelled to the Pegasus galaxy on board Atlantis With few exceptions the ascended Ancients respect free will and refuse to interfere in the affairs of the material galaxy However their legacy is felt profoundly throughout the Stargate universe from their technologies such as Stargates and Atlantis to the Ancient Technology Activation gene that they introduced into the human genome through interbreeding Oma Desala Edit Oma Desala Mother Nature played by Carla Boudreau season 3 and Mel Harris seasons 5 8 An Ascended being who goes against the ways of the Ancients It is unclear if she is an Ancient herself as the Ancients Orlin and Merlin give different accounts of knowing Oma 78 79 Oma is responsible for once helping the fallen System Lord Anubis the main SG 1 antagonist between seasons 5 through 8 ascend 80 Although the Ancients banished her for her actions Oma remains convinced of her responsibility to guide those beneath to the Great Path of enlightenment even if this interferes in the lower planes of existence 78 Oma therefore only guides individuals leaving the final decision to travel the great path to them 81 SG 1 first encounters Oma Desala on their search for Shifu in season 3 s Maternal Instinct Oma eventually guides Shifu to ascension in season 4 s Absolute Power Oma is involved in Daniel Jackson s ascension in Meridian and forceful de ascension in Fallen and also helps the entire Abydonian population ascend after Anubis s attack in season 6 s Full Circle Oma Desala last appears in season 8 s Threads sacrificing herself to enter an eternal battle with Anubis to prevent him from wreaking further havoc on the galaxy Note Mel Harris s teenage son was a Stargate SG 1 fan and introduced her to the series The Stargate producers offered her the part when she was visiting the set while in Vancouver for another job The best direction she got for playing this almost omniscient character was that she was not like others and was a being of her own 82 Minor characters Edit Ganos Lal or Morgan le Fay played by Sarah Strange season 10 An ascended Ancient who would give rise to the Arthurian legend of Morgan le Fay Her fictional backstory closely links her to her fellow ascended Ancient Myrddin Merlin who aimed to construct a weapon to fight the Ori that also posed a danger to the Ancients Morgan le Fay is first referenced in season 10 s Morpheus and first appears in person in The Pegasus Project where she poses as a hologram in Atlantis She gives SG 1 information about the location of Merlin s weapon the Sangraal but the Others banish her for this action Morgan le Fay is mentioned again in The Quest and returns in Stargate The Ark of Truth to help SG 1 in their fight against Adria in the Ori galaxy She is last seen engaging Adria in an eternal battle Moros also known as Myrddin or Merlin played by Matthew Walker season 9 10 The High Councilor of Atlantis during the days of the first siege of the city and is one of the most influential Ancients in the series Moros is named after Moros from Greek legend the personification of impending doom and destruction while his name Merlin refers to the Arthurian legend Merlin is introduced in the Stargate Atlantis season 1 episode Before I Sleep where an alternate Elizabeth Weir travels through time and meets him as Moros during his days on Atlantis A tablet Merlin created thousands of years ago is found in season 9 s Avalon and sets the Ori arc of SG 1 in motion Merlin appears as a hologram in Avalon season 9 s Camelot and season 10 s The Pegasus Project providing information about his background and his motivations As revealed in season 10 s The Pegasus Project SG 1 must find a weapon that Merlin sought to construct to defeat the Ori the Sangraal On this quest SG 1 finally find Merlin in stasis in season 10 s The Quest and awaken him His body dies shortly afterwards but his transferred consciousness remains in Daniel Jackson until The Shroud to complete the building of the Sangraal After the Ori are destroyed Daniel s body returns to normal due to a time limit Merlin had placed upon the transfer and he confirms that Merlin is gone for good having sacrificed himself to ensure the destruction of the Ori Note Matthew Walker was nominated for a Leo Award in 2007 for Best Supporting Performance by a Male in a Dramatic Series for this role 83 Orlin played by Sean Patrick Flanery season 5 and Cameron Bright season 9 child An outcast Ancient whom SG 1 encounters on the dead planet Velona in season 5 s Ascension He once broke the rules of the Ancients by giving advanced technology to the planet s people who immediately abused it After his staying on Earth and developing feelings for Carter he tries to stop the Earth research of the same weapon and is redeemed and re ascended by the Ancients Orlin returns in the form of a human child to retain his Ancient knowledge longer in season 9 s The Fourth Horseman and informs Stargate Command of the feud between Ancients and Ori and false promises of ascension and religion He suffers significant brain damage and is eventually interned in a mental institution on Earth Asgard EditThe Asgard are a benevolent race that according to the mythology of Stargate gave rise to Norse mythology on Earth and inspired accounts of the Roswell grey aliens The Asgard can no longer reproduce and perpetuate themselves by transferring their minds into new clone bodies as necessary Extremely advanced technologically the threat of their intervention shields many planets in the Milky Way from Goa uld attack including Earth 84 They also provide much assistance to Earth in the way of technology equipment and expertise Their main adversary in Stargate SG 1 are the mechanical Replicators against which they enlist the aid of SG 1 on several occasions The entire Asgard civilization chooses to self destruct in Unending due to the degenerative effects of repeated cloning A small colony of Asgard still exist in the Pegasus galaxy that were able to stop cloning s diminishing returns Most Asgard characters on the show are directly named after Norse gods Prominent one time characters include Aegir voiced by Michael Shanks in New Order named after Aegir Heimdall voiced by Teryl Rothery in Revelations named after Heimdallr and Loki voiced by Peter DeLuise in Fragile Balance named after and based on Loki Stargate SG 1 had several Asgard puppets and six puppeteers are necessary to make the different parts of the main Asgard puppet work 85 On set Teryl Rothery Dr Frasier wearing CGI reference gear was the stand in for Thor Small Victories episode 4 1 and Heimdall Revelations episode 5 22 when full motion is required and puppets could not be used Thor Edit Thor voiced by Michael Shanks seasons 1 8 10 The Supreme Commander of the Asgard Fleet SG 1 first encounter him as a Viking holographic recording played by Mark Gibbon on the planet Cimmeria in Thor s Hammer 86 They meet the real Thor one season later when they enlist him to save Cimmeria from Heru ur s invasion 87 After O Neill manages to make friendly contact with the Asgard in their galaxy 88 Thor includes Earth in the Protected Planets Treaty to safeguard it from a direct Goa uld attack 84 Late in season 3 SG 1 helps to destroy Thor s ship the Beliskner which has been overtaken by the Replicators in Nemesis 89 Impressed by SG 1 s primitive but effective tactics Thor requests SG 1 to help fight the Replicators in his Asgard homeworld soon after in Small Victories 90 Anubis captures Thor and probes his mind for Asgard technology and Thor s body lapses into a coma in Revelations 91 SG 1 retrieve Thor s consciousness from the ship s database a while later and transfer it into a new body 92 Thor asks for SG 1 s assistance after his people s plan to trap the Replicators inside a time dilation field on the planet Halla backfired 93 Thor personally makes an appearance at a secret meeting between the permanent members of Earth s UN Security Council taking place in the Pentagon to ensure the SGC retains control over the Earth Stargate 94 As the time dilation device on Halla cannot keep the Replicators bottled up forever Thor collapses Halla s sun into a black hole but some Replicators escape 95 Some weeks later Thor and Carter modify their Replicator Disruptor but as the Replicators quickly adapt they use the Dakara superweapon to destroy all Replicators in one strike Thor gets a new clone body soon after 96 Thor summons the Odyssey to the Asgard homeworld Orilla and installs the entire knowledge base of the Asgard race on the ship As attempts to save the Asgard civilization from their genetic difficulties have failed he informs Lt Col Carter that the Asgard consider people of Earth the fifth race heirs first to the Ancients and now the Asgard and that it is their turn to safeguard the future Thor perishes along with the rest of the Asgard race when their planet self destructs before the Ori can attack Carter later programs the Asgard data core s interface to look and behave like Thor but admits that it isn t the same as talking to the god that became her friend 97 Thor originally speaks slower in the first season but Michael Shanks who voiced him since the beginning joked that he is not getting paid by the hour but by the amount of dialog when commenting on the increased dialog speed in later episodes 98 As the Thor puppet is able neither to walk nor stand the puppet is often put in a chair 99 Minor characters Edit Freyr voiced by Brian Jensen season 5 A member of the Asgard High Council named after Freyr the Norse fertility god and god of love SG 1 first encounters Freyr as a Viking hologram on the Asgard protected planet K Tau in season 5 s Red Sky but Freyr refuses to help SG 1 to avoid a violation of the Protected Planets Treaty SG 1 meets Freyr and the Asgard High Council again in Fail Safe to save Earth from an approaching asteroid and again receive no help Freyr eventually requests SG 1 to rescue one of their scientists in Revelations and protects SG 1 the Asgard scientist Heimdall and his studies with a fleet of three O Neill class battleships Kvasir voiced by Trevor Devall and Morris Chapdelaine seasons 9 10 An Asgard scientist and expert in time dilation technology He is named after Kvasir a Norse god and wisest of the Vanir As Thor is busy in the Asgard home galaxy in season 9 s Ripple Effect Kvasir visits Earth in Thor s stead to help Earth fix a problem with alternate realities Kvasir also assists SG 1 in battling the Ori in season 9 s Camelot and helps to repair the transporters of the Odyssey in season 10 s Flesh and Blood Goa uld EditMain article Goa uld The Goa uld are the dominant race in the Milky Way and the primary adversaries from seasons 1 to 8 of Stargate SG 1 The most powerful Goa uld in the galaxy are collectively known as the System Lords The Goa uld are a parasitic species that resemble finned snakes which can burrow themselves into a humanoid s neck and wrap around the spinal column The Goa uld symbiote then takes control of its host s body and mind while providing longevity and perfect health In their fictional backstory the Goa uld invaded and ruled over Earth thousands of years ago masquerading as gods from ancient mythologies The Goa uld transplanted humans throughout the galaxy to serve as slaves and hosts and they created the Jaffa to serve as incubators for their larvae Most of the appearing and mentioned Goa uld characters are named after and based on Egyptian mythology Amunet Atum 100 Bastet 101 102 Hathor Horus Imhotep 103 Khonsu 104 Isis 105 Montu 106 Nefertum 107 Sekhmet 108 Set 105 109 Sobek 101 Thoth 110 but also Celtic mythology Camulus Grannus 111 Morrigan 101 102 Greek mythology Ares 102 Athena 112 113 Nereus 114 72 Pelops 115 Japanese mythology Amaterasu Mesopotamian mythology Ishkur 116 Marduk 117 Hindu mythology Kali 101 Canaanite mythology Moloch 118 119 Mot 120 Qetesh 121 Yoruba mythology Olokun Slavic mythology Svarog 101 122 Babylonian mythology Tiamat 123 117 and Maya mythology Zipacna Anubis Edit Anubis played by David Palffy seasons 5 7 hooded Dean Aylesworth and Rik Kiviaho season 8 s Reckoning and George Dzundza season 8 as Jim A half ascended Goa uld System Lord who replaces Apophis as the main enemy in season 5 Based on the god Anubis of Egyptian mythology the character is first mentioned in season 5 s Between Two Fires and makes his first appearance in Revelations It is revealed that like all the other Egyptian gods he is in fact a Goa uld one so vicious and cruel that he was banished by the other Goa uld Earth is eventually able to annihilate Anubis s fleet above Antarctica in Lost City but Anubis survives in energy form Lockdown Anubis regains his power throughout season 8 and develops a plan to destroy all life in the galaxy and then repopulate it to his own designs Reckoning Just as he prepares to use the weapon in Threads Oma Desala who aided in his ascension thousands of years ago engages him in an eternal battle David Palffy was cast to play Sokar before he got the part of Anubis 124 Since Anubis is cloaked all the time Palffy had to express the character s weight through the voice and movements Mainly because of the severe time restraints of filming television the producers gave Palffy no background on the character and encouraged Palffy to experiment and find the character s tone himself 125 What was under Anubis cloak became a main question among fandom 124 Anubis was received as an over the top character 125 126 but Palffy pointed to what the character represents saying Anubis is a god he s not fully ascended he s basically an outcast And as I say this resulting displacement of energy that s evil that has been temporarily harnessed under a hood to give him physical form He s the image of death the figure of death incarnate and he s surrounded by a black robe That symbol in itself has been around since the dawn of time That in itself is over the top His whole existence is basically predicated on living up to that theme and that s a theme that s time immemorial And of course as an actor you ve got to work with that To do otherwise to underplay that will work against the idea of what he represents 126 Palffy was open to continue playing Anubis beyond season 7 but other actors played the character in season 8 126 Apophis Edit Apophis symbol Apophis played by Peter Williams seasons 1 6 8 A System Lord and the main villain for most of the first four seasons of Stargate SG 1 Based on the god Apep of Egyptian mythology the character gained power after Ra s death in the film and commands a raid on Earth and Abydos in Children of the Gods leading to the restart of the Stargate Program His then First Prime Teal c defects from his army afterwards Apophis s standing amongst the System Lords is severely diminished after a failed full scale assault on Earth in season 2 s The Serpent s Lair Apophis is killed and eventually revived by the Goa uld Sokar in season 3 After defeating Sokar s massive fleet and army in season 3 s The Devil You Know Apophis becomes the most powerful Goa uld in the galaxy Despite his death aboard his Replicator infested ship in season 5 s Enemies Apophis appears in visions and alternate timelines in season 6 s The Changeling season 8 s Moebius and Stargate Continuum In the latter he is the last System Lord to resist the rule of Ba al who kills Apophis shortly before his attempted takeover of Earth The astronomers David J Tholen and Roy A Tucker enjoyed the character so much that they named a near Earth asteroid that they co discovered in 2004 99942 Apophis 127 Ba al Edit Ba al s symbol Ba al played by Cliff Simon seasons 5 10 A System Lord based on the Baal of Canaanite religion Introduced in season 5 s Summit and recurring until the end of the show he is the longest running villain in Stargate history After Anubis fleet is destroyed in season 7 s Lost City Ba al gains substantial power and wages a war against all other System Lords driving them to the brink of defeat in early and mid season 8 Anubis return in Reckoning Threads forces Ba al back into his service Ba al secretly collaborates with SG 1 and Jacob Selmak to thwart Anubis plan of overtaking the galaxy with the Dakara Superweapon but flees when the Jaffa storm his mothership With his traditional power base gone Ba al exiles to Earth and takes over the Trust posing as a wealthy businessman in season 9 s Ex Deus Machina Having made multiple clones of himself Ba al begins a campaign to battle the invading Ori for control of the galaxy in Stronghold and tries to gain power through various means in Off the Grid and season 10 s Insiders and The Quest Ba al captures Adria in Dominion and implants one of his cloned symbiotes within her massacring most of his other clones with symbiote poison The symbiote is extracted and killed but he fatally poisons Adria first forcing her Ascension to survive The Tok ra extract the symbiote from the last Ba al clone in Stargate Continuum However the real Ba al travels back in time to 1939 and alters history by intercepting the Stargate as it is transported by the ocean freighter Achilles creating a timeline in which Ba al gains dominion over the System Lords and lays siege to Earth with Teal c as his First Prime and Qetesh the Goa uld who used Vala as a host as his queen Cameron Mitchell manages to travel back in time to 1929 and set an ambush for Ba al when he boards the Achilles The real Ba al is shot and killed by Mitchell restoring the original timeline With Ba al gone the extraction of the last Ba al clone proceeds as planned and the symbiote dies ending the reign of the System Lord forever Ba al s host survives the extraction and Vala plans to help him adjust to life after over two thousand years under Ba al s control Cliff Simon met with executive producers Robert C Cooper and Brad Wright and auditioned eight months before the character Ba al was created for the series Simon Cooper and Wright came to an agreement to wait until they found the right character for Simon in the show Simon said I was very lucky when talking about his character in an interview with The Sci Fi World 128 According to portraying actor Simon Ba al was his most interesting he s done because of Ba al s character development and diversity among others Simon felt that he needed to diversify the character to make it more exciting as he put it if you re always bad it gets pretty boring He wanted to change the development of the character the writing staff eventually agreed with him and started fleshing out his character 129 Minor characters Edit Amaterasu played by Kira Clavell A System Lord named for the sun goddess Amaterasu in Japanese mythology She visits the SGC after Anubis defeat to negotiate a new arrangement against Ba al 95 The war against Ba al goes poorly and she and Yu rally their armies for a last stand 102 Her motherships are amongst the first to be infested by Replicators 96 Kira Clavell originally auditioned for the role of Teyla Emmagan for Stargate Atlantis but although she caught the eye of the producers she was not quite right for Teyla and was given the role of Amaterasu instead 130 Amonet also spelled Amaunet played by Vaitiare Bandera seasons 1 3 See Sha re Bastet played by Natasha Kadhr A minor character within Stargate who appears in and is peridocally mentioned in multiple episodes as a System Lord She was killed when Ba al gained control of the Kull warrior army in season 8 s It s Good To Be King Camulus played by Steve Bacic season 8 A System Lord who visits the SGC in season 8 s New Order to first negotiate a new arrangement against Ba al only to later request asylum on Earth to hide from Ba al Camulus leaves Earth in Zero Hour with a ZPM in an alleged attempt to assassinate Ba al However Jack O Neill gives him a dead ZPM and Daniel later states that Ba al killed Camulus Camulus appears briefly in the alternate timeline of Stargate Continuum as one of Ba al s lieutenants Cronus symbol Cronus played by Ron Halder seasons 3 4 A System Lord named for Cronus in Greek mythology He was the one who banished Sokar After Cronus punished Teal c s father Cronus s First Prime with a painful death for losing an unwinnable battle Teal c became the First Prime of Apophis mortal enemy of Cronus to avenge his father s death 84 131 Cronus first appears in season 3 s Fair Game alongside Nirrti and Yu to negotiate Earth s entry into the Protected Planets Treaty Cronus is shot dead by an android Teal c in season 4 s Double Jeopardy Cronus appears briefly in the alternate timeline of Stargate Continuum as one of Ba al s allies Hathor played by Suanne Braun seasons 1 3 The Queen of Ra and mother of Heru ur whom archaeologists find imprisoned in a sarcophagus in Mexico in season 1 s Hathor Her breath contains a brainwashing drug that enables her to influence males After temporarily taking over the male population of the SGC in Hathor she creates an elaborate replica of the SGC in Out of Mind Into the Fire to trick SG 1 into giving her much sought information O Neill throws her unprotected into a cryogenic chamber thus killing her Heru ur s symbolHeru ur played by Douglas H Arthurs seasons 2 4 A System Lord named for Horus in Egyptian mythology He is the son of Ra and Hathor 87 and is a sworn enemy of Apophis Heru ur is introduced in season 2 s Thor s Chariot as an invader of the planet Cimmeria but an arriving Asgard mothership forces Heru ur to retreat In Secrets Heru ur unsuccessfully tries to seize Amonet and her Harcesis child to fight Apophis In season 4 s The Serpent s Venom Heru ur eventually plans an alliance with Apophis but after the Tok ra and SG 1 sabotage their meeting Apophis destroys Heru ur s ship and absorbs his forces Klorel played by Alexis Cruz seasons 1 3 See Skaara Marduk played by Alexander Kalugin named for Marduk of Mesopotamian mythology A Goa uld so evil that his own priests rose up against him and imprisoned him in a sarcophagus with a flesh eating creature that would prolong his suffering However Marduk survived by possessing the creature and is released by a Russian SG team He possesses Major Vallarin and tries to escape but is buried when Jack O Neill sets off C 4 explosives inside his ziggurat Marduk possessed the Eye of Tiamat a powerful weapon 117 Symbol of Moloc Moloc played by Royston Innes A powerful Goa uld named for Moloch of Canaanite mythology In order to strengthen his armies Moloc ordered that all female children born to his Jaffa be sacrificed in the Ceremony of Fire Appalled by this his High Priestess Ishta began to secretly take those children to another planet These female Jaffa become the Hak tyl resistance a substantial force that launches regular raids against Moloc s forces and eventually ally themselves with the SGC 118 Moloc eventually discovers Hak tyl forcing Ishta s group to evacuate and attacks a meeting of rebel Jaffa who are planning an insurrection against him He then prepares his Ha taks to crush a rebel army marching on his temple but before he can give the order he is struck by two missiles fired by the SGC through the Stargate and laser guided to him by Aron ending Moloc s territory However the death of Moloc allowed Ba al to take control of his territory and gain even more power 119 Montu A minor Goa uld named after Montu of Egyptian Mythology who served Ra and later Ba al His First Prime was Gerak 106 Morrigan played by Bonnie Kilroe A System Lord named for Morrigan of Irish mythology known for using her lo taur to draw out strategic information from the servants of her enemies She votes to readmit Anubis as a System Lord 101 She is eventually forced to capitulate to Ba al 102 Mot played by Victor Talmadge A minor Goa uld in service of Ba al and named for Mot of Canaanite mythology He controlled a naqahdah mining operation on P4S 237 hoarding the naqahdah for himself in the hopes of one day rising up against his master He is killed in an SG 1 supported uprising on the planet 120 Nirrti s symbol Nirrti played by Jacqueline Samuda seasons 3 5 6 A System Lord interested in engineering an advanced human host a hok taur for herself Named for Nirṛti in Hindu mythology she is first mentioned in season 1 s Singularity where she wiped out a planet s entire population except for one girl she experimented on Cassandra Nirrti first appears in person in season 3 s Fair Game alongside Cronus and Yu to negotiate Earth s entry into the Protected Planets Treaty and she is handed over to Cronus after attempting to murder him After Cronus death in season 4 s Double Jeopardy Nirrti appears in season 5 s Rite of Passage when Cassandra s modified DNA causes life threatening physiological changes In season 6 s Metamorphosis Nirrti conducts experiments on the local population and later SG 1 using an Ancient DNA resequencer A local eventually rises up and kills her by telekinetically breaking her neck Nirrti appears briefly in the alternate timeline of Stargate Continuum as one of Ba al s lieutenants Jacqueline Samuda played the part as if Nirrti always has a secret something up her sleeve that no one else knows and that s always playing in the subtext That way she always has the upper hand and is really enjoying it She thought of Nirrti as a scientist and an explorer in a way who obviously has an end in mind that is nefarious She found Nirrti s subtle sense of humor the most appealing Samuda pitched the concept of the DNA machine for Metamorphosis its purpose and potential dangers to the producers but she did not pitch Nirrti as the Goa uld who possessed it co writer and visual effects producer James Tichenor did 132 Olokun played by Kwesi Ameyaw A System Lord named for Olokun of Yoruba mythology In season 5 s two parter Summit Last Stand he attends a meeting of the System Lords to discuss a new enemy and votes to readmit Anubis into their collective Anubis later sends his Kull Warriors against Olokun slaughtering thousands of his Jaffa and capturing many of his commanders At the time the rebel Jaffa are attempting to recruit from Olokun s ranks and ask the Tok ra to assassinate Olokun In season 8 s It s Good To Be King Olokun is killed by Ba al s forces Osiris played by Anna Louise Plowman seasons 4 5 7 A Goa uld based on the Osiris of Egyptian mythology Season 4 s The Curse explains that Osiris was banished by his brother Seth thousands of years ago who had him enclosed in a stasis jar along with his queen Isis Osiris escapes when Daniel s former archaeologist colleague Sarah Gardner opens the jar and is possessed by him Osiris then escapes Earth and is recruited to represent Anubis at a summit of the System Lords in season 5 s Summit Last Stand In season 5 s Revelations Osiris locates the base of the Asgard Heimdall and is able to defeat and capture Thor but is forced to retreat with the arrival of Asgard reinforcements Osiris last appears in season 7 s Chimera where she uses a Goa uld memory device on Daniel to find the location of the Lost City of the Ancients in his mind She is discovered and captured and the symbiote is extracted from Sarah s body Osiris s later fate is unclear but the implication is that he was killed after being extracted Qetesh played by Claudia Black seasons 8 10 Continuum See Vala Mal Doran Ra s symbol Ra played by Jaye Davidson Stargate Jay Williams season 8 The alien villain in the film based on the Ra of Egyptian mythology The outline of Ra s original humanoid form in some scenes of the movie contradicts Stargate SG 1 s definition of a Goa uld and was later retconned as being Ra s previous host an Asgard named Famrir The series describes him as the most powerful and cunning of the Goa uld holding the title of Supreme System Lord 133 Ra s Queen was Hathor 134 his son was Heru ur 87 and his brother and enemy was Apophis 2 As explained in the film and the series Ra voyaged across the galaxy 10 000 years ago in search of a new host discovered that the primitive humans of Earth were ideal hosts and eventually he seeded humans throughout the galaxy to serve as Goa uld slaves see Mythology of Stargate A nuclear weapon kills Ra aboard his mothership in Abydos orbit in the Stargate film creating a power vacuum in the galaxy and drawing the attention of the other Goa uld to Earth as the premise of Stargate SG 1 Ra appears in masked form in SG 1 s season 8 time travel episode Moebius and also briefly appears unmasked in the alternate timeline of Stargate Continuum as one of Ba al s lieutenants Sokar s symbol Sokar played by David Palffy seasons 2 3 A System Lord who replaces Apophis as the principal enemy of SG 1 for the first half of season 3 He is named for the Seker of Egyptian mythology Sokar s backstory is mostly revealed in dialog and he only appears in person in the season 3 two parter Jolinar s Memories The Devil You Know although his magnified voice is heard in season 2 s Serpent s Song Sokar once ruled the System Lords until an alliance including Ra Apophis and Cronus defeated him 84 135 Sokar was then forced to use an Unas as host body and posed as the god of death on many different worlds 135 with Satan as one of his guises Demons Sokar slowly gains power in the Goa uld domain in season 2 and to prevent Sokar from becoming unstoppable the Tok ra enact a plan in Jolinar s Memories The Devil You Know to assassinate him By blowing up Sokar s prison moon of Netu the Tok ra are able to destroy Sokar s mothership in orbit killing him However a disguised Apophis who became Sokar s prisoner in Serpent s Song takes advantage of the situation and takes control of Sokar s massive army David Palffy became involved with Stargate through the regular audition process He remembers doing automated dialogue replacement in post production for Stargate but is not entirely sure if he provided Sokar s voice in Serpent s Song before being cast as Sokar in season 3 He was later cast to play Anubis 124 Tanith played by Peter Wingfield seasons 4 5 A Goa uld symbiote incubated by the Jaffa priestess Shan auc In season 4 s Crossroads the nearly matured symbiote convinces Shan auc to defect to Stargate Command and eventually to the Tok ra where he blends with the willing host Hebron After the symbiote murders Shan auc for betraying her true god Shan auc s lover Teal c swears revenge The Tok ra use Tanith to feed misinformation to the System Lords until Exodus where Tanith escapes and brings Teal c to Apophis Season 5 s Between Two Fires reveals that Tanith has switched masters to Anubis and Tanith commands an assault that annihilates the Tollan In Tanith s final appearance in 48 Hours Teal c kills him by firing directly into the bomber s cockpit of Tanith s Al kesh Yu s symbol Yu played by Vince Crestejo seasons 3 5 8 The eldest of the System Lords introduced as Yu the Great in season 3 s Fair Game when he visits Stargate Command along with Cronus and Nirrti to negotiate Earth s entry into the Protected Planets Treaty He is re imagined in season 5 s Summit as the Jade Emperor the exalted Yu Huang Shang Ti a separate figure in Chinese mythology Yu is the only System Lord in season 5 s Last Stand who opposes re admitting Anubis into their ranks and his forces manage to hold their own in the lone ensuing battle in season 5 and 6 despite facing superior numbers and technology In season 6 s Full Circle Yu convinces the other System Lords to join him in opposing Anubis but Anubis decimates their collected fleet Yu s First Prime Oshu reveals in season 7 s Fallen that Yu s mind is failing due to old age and he is no longer able to take a new host During negotiations on Earth against the threat of Ba al in season 8 s New Order Oshu must speak for Yu to hide Yu s further deteriorated mind from the other present System Lords Yu is killed by Replicator Carter in season 8 s Reckoning as the first act of her invasion of the Milky Way Yu appears briefly in the alternate timeline of Stargate Continuum as one of Ba al s lieutenants Zipacna played by Kevin Durand seasons 3 5 A Goa uld who once served Apophis He is named for the Zipacna of Mayan mythology He is introduced in season 3 s Pretense as Klorel s defender at a Tollan trial while he secretly plots to destroy the Tollan ion cannon network After this failed attack Zipacna reappears in season 5 s Summit Last Stand and pledges allegiance to Anubis He recruits Osiris into his service and commands an attack on the main Tok ra base at Revanna killing almost all the Tok ra there Zipacna and his armies are mentioned again in season 5 s The Warrior in season 6 s Abyss and in an alternate timeline in Stargate Continuum Jaffa EditMain articles Jaffa Stargate and Teal c The Jaffa are an offshoot of humanity genetically engineered by the Goa uld They have an abdominal pouch which serves to incubate larval Goa uld The infant Goa uld provides strength longevity and good health at the cost of supplanting the Jaffa s natural immune system making them dependent on the Goa uld for more symbiotes The Jaffa have a warrior culture and form the armies of the Goa uld In season 8 of Stargate SG 1 the Jaffa Resistance wins their race s freedom from Goa uld oppression resulting in the Free Jaffa Nation Bra tac Edit Tony Amendola played Bra tac from season 1 through 10 of Stargate SG 1 Bra tac played by Tony Amendola seasons 1 3 5 10 A Jaffa warrior former First Prime of the Goa uld System Lord Apophis and Teal c s former teacher and closest friend His surviving to an age of retirement as First Prime is a noted rarity and affords him a significant amount of respect among Jaffa Bra tac is over 133 years of age at the beginning of the series a fact he reminds SG 1 of on multiple occasions 136 He is introduced in season 1 s Bloodlines and is one of the most frequently recurring characters on Stargate SG 1 Bra tac having been one of the first Jaffa to doubt the Goa uld as gods has been an outcast among the Jaffa since at least season 1 Bra tac was also the one who initially influenced Teal c to doubt the Goa uld as well Bra tac helps Teal c and SG 1 on many missions He is initially suspicious of the humans particularly O Neill This dynamic is played out somewhat comically but Bra tac slowly learns to trust and respect humans 137 In seasons 1 and 2 Bra tac helps to save Teal c s son Rya c from several threats and becomes a guardian to him During a mission to find the Harcesis child Shifu on Kheb in season 3 s Maternal Instinct Bra tac is presented with the idea of Ascension but in the end decides against this possibility for himself At the end of season 6 Bra tac and Teal c are both badly wounded during a Jaffa meeting and lose their symbiotes surviving only by taking the new drug Tretonin Bra tac is the primary instigator of the Jaffa Resistance a rebellion aimed at overthrowing the Goa uld and establishing the freedom of all Jaffa At the end of season 8 Bra tac and Teal c convince the other members of the Jaffa Rebellion to attack Dakara in an ultimately successful mission The Jaffa obtain freedom and Bra tac receives a position of honor Bra tac becomes a member of the High Council the governing body of the new Free Jaffa Nation but still stays loyal to Stargate Command Some time after the destruction of Dakara by the Ori leaders of the Free Jaffa Nation meet to consider the future but Bra tac and Teal c are badly injured during an ambush by a former enemy of Teal c When they get nursed back at the SGC Bra tac tells Teal c that he is like a son to him Minor characters Edit Drey auc played by Salli Richardson season 1 and Brook Parker seasons 2 5 Introduced in Bloodlines as Teal c s wife and mother to Rya c Drey auc remains a loyal follower of Apophis even after Teal c had defected to Earth She works diligently to restore Apophis s faith in her and her son so that Rya c can reach puberty Unable to support herself and her son by season 2 s Family Drey auc is forced to marry the Jaffa Fro tak for financial and political security but Fro tak betrays them to Apophis when he deduces that she had never stopped loving Teal c After Fro tak s death she and Rya c take refuge in the Land of Light and eventually move to a Jaffa rebel camp Drey auc s unwillingness to obtain a new symbiote to replace her matured one leads to her death in season 6 s Redemption where Teal c cremates her Louis Gossett Jr played Gerak Gerak played by Louis Gossett Jr season 9 The former First Prime of Montu He is first mentioned in season 9 s Avalon Part 2 and appears one episode later in Origin as the first leader of the Free Jaffa Nation and the first head of the Jaffa High Council As the leader of the traditionalist faction he is the political rival of Teal c When Gerak helps SG 1 in thwarting a plan of the Ori to construct a Supergate in Beachhead he inadvertently aids the Ori Gerak s forces are able to capture Ba al later revealed as a clone in Ex Deus Machina and execute him before the Council scoring a big moral victory for the traditionalists Although the episode Origin outlines Gerak as a firm believer in freedom for all Jaffa and a firm opponent of the Ori a Prior convinces Gerak in mid season 9 s The Fourth Horseman that Origin should be the goal of all Jaffa Gerak is transformed into a Prior and when Teal c convinces him to betray the Ori a loyalty fail safe triggers in Gerak and kills him Haikon played by Tony Todd season 9 Leader of the Sodan people on P9G 844 where he worshipped the Ancients and spent most of his life in search of Ascension After a visit by an Ori Prior in Babylon he instructs the Sodan to switch their spiritual beliefs from the Ancients to the Ori He also presides over the ritual duel of kel shak lo between Mitchell and the Sodan warrior Jolan Ordered to attack defenseless farmers in the name of the Ori Haikon begins to question the Ori s worthiness as gods and finally renounces Origin He collaborates with SG 1 in The Fourth Horseman to capture a Prior and find a cure against the Prior s plague Haikon makes his last appearance in Arthur s Mantle where he is severely wounded by an undead Sodan Vol nek Haikon s symbiote dies but SG 12 offers him tretonin Herak played by Michael Adamthwaite seasons 6 7 Introduced in The Other Guys as the First Prime of Khonsu whom he kills after discovering his being a Tok ra spy Herak becomes the First Prime of Anubis and follows his orders in Full Circle and season 7 s Fallen Homecoming but fails to succeed each time Herak is aboard Anubis ship above Antarctica in Lost City when it gets destroyed Before being cast Michael Adamthwaite watched Stargate SG 1 on a part time fan basis He auditioned for the show when he was 20 and knew it was a potentially recurring role According to Adamswaithe the character takes pride in the art of killing the art of war the art of mastering your enemy and hopes that his actions take him to a positive end for his purposes which are to follow the Goa uld lords Herak is one of the few Jaffa humans under Anubis command at the end of season 7 who has not been replaced by Kull Warriors What angers Herak most is O Neill s jocular antagonism 138 Ishta meaning beloved or greatest one in Sanskrit played by Jolene Blalock season 7 8 Leader of the Hak tyl and love interest of Teal c Her former position as the Goa uld Moloc s temple high priestess enabled her for years to secretly bring many girls to another world named Hak tyl Moloc would have killed the newborn Jaffa girls as needless otherwise Ishta first appears in Birthright where the Hak tyl ask Earth for an alliance and the drug Tretonin seems like a solution to the Hak tyl s symbiote problems Ishta kisses Teal c goodbye when she leaves Earth Ishta reappears one year later in Sacrifices where she approaches Teal c to help her kill Moloc The female resistance is forced to evacuate to SGC until they find a new homeworld The resistance is ambushed by Moloc s forces during a summit on their new homeworld sending Ishta Teal c and Aron on the run However Teal c rescues Ishta while Aron directs SGC fired missiles at Moloc killing the System Lord and ending his oppression Ishta later admits that Ba al took over Moloc s territory following his death and gained more power as SG 1 tried to warn her Ka lel played by Simone Bailly seasons 7 9 A female Jaffa warrior formerly under the service of Moloc When SG 1 first meets her in Birthright she is involved with the Hak tyl resistance movement under Ishta to fight Moloc Ka lel becomes a representative for the Hak tyl in the newly formed Jaffa High Council in the Free Jaffa Nation in season 9 She gives SG 1 valuable information about Ba al to SG 1 in Ex Deus Machina and initially supports Teal c s attempts to replace the Council by a democratically elected government Ba al brainwashes her into changing her opinion in Stronghold Rak nor played by Obi Ndefo seasons 4 7 9 A Jaffa warrior whose father had burned the Goa uld symbol off Rak nor s forehead in the belief that Teal c s rebellion against the Goa uld would soon free all Jaffa but the execution of his father pushed Rak nor into the service of the Goa uld Heru ur In season 4 s The Serpent s Venom Rak nor captures Teal c in Heru ur s name but gets convinced of Teal c s cause Rak nor joins the rebel Jaffa to lead them on Teal c s behalf and appears again in season 5 s The Warrior season 6 s Allegiance and season 7 s Orpheus After the collapse of the Goa uld Empire and the emergence of the Free Jaffa Nation Rak nor serves as one of Teal c s and Bra tac s allies among the progressive faction and last appears serving as Teal c s proxy during votes in season 9 s Avalon Rya c played by Neil Denis seasons 1 2 6 8 The young son of Teal c and Drey auc After Teal c defects to Earth Rya c and his mother are forced to live as pariahs In season 1 s Bloodlines Teal c prevents a ceremony that would have given Rya c a symbiote to cure his illness Apophis captures Rya c in season 2 s Family and brainwashes him into publicly denouncing his father but Teal c and SG 1 are able to break the conditioning Rya c grows up under the tutelage of Bra tac and is taught the ways of the Jaffa After Drey auc s death in season 6 s Redemption Teal c allows Rya c to go on his first mission Rya c and Bra tac are captured trying to recruit more allies for the Jaffa rebellion and become prisoners of war in season 7 s Orpheus In his last appearance in season 8 s Sacrifices Rya c marries Kar yn a young female Hak tyl warrior with whom he has fallen in love despite Teal c s initial objections Oshu played by Kevan Ohtsji seasons 7 8 First Prime of Yu who makes his first appearance in Fallen Despite knowing of Yu s deteriorating mental health Oshu remains loyal to his master Teal c eventually convinces Oshu in Homecoming to bypass Yu for the greater good Oshu accompanies Yu to the SGC in New Order and speaks for him to negotiate a treaty with Earth Oshu last appears in Reckoning and is present when Replicator Carter stabs Yu to death as part of her invasion of the Milky Way galaxy Yat Yir played by Gardiner Millar season 9 A Free Jaffa formerly in the service of Montu and now a member of the Jaffa High Council Yat Yir is introduced as a trusted aide of the Jaffa leader Gerak in Origin and personally conducts a raid on Earth to find Ba al in Ex Deus Machina In The Fourth Horseman Yat Yir expresses his concerns about Gerak s Ori proposal and remains a member of the High Council after Gerak s death Yat Yir is present for the Jaffa democracy referendum in Stronghold Lucian Alliance Edit Lucian Alliance redirects here For characters in Stargate Universe see List of Stargate Universe characters Recurring Lucian Alliance characters The Lucian Alliance is an interstellar group of human smugglers and mercenaries that have joined together from many different human settled worlds across the Milky Way Galaxy to fill the power vacuum created by the demise of the Goa uld and have obtained and modified Goa uld technology for their own use When their trade partner Vala Mal Doran does not keep an agreement in their first appearance in season 8 s Prometheus Unbound she and Daniel are placed on a Lucian Alliance wanted list The Lucian Alliance is first referred to by name in season 9 s The Ties That Bind and reappears as a recurring foe in seasons 9 and 10 The Lucian Alliance story arc is continued in Stargate Universe Producer Joseph Mallozzi explained in retrospect Much of the Lucian Alliance we saw in SG 1 was inept and dare I say it a bit goofy They fit in with SG 1 s lighter more high adventure driven tone but would have stood out and not in a good way in the new series Stargate Universe As a result I was initially leery at the prospect of introducing them to SGU but as so often happened over the course of my many years in the franchise I trusted in Brad Wright and Robert C Cooper and in the end that trust was rewarded with a terrific story element that not only succeeded as planned but offered up plenty of interesting story material for future episodes of Stargate Universe The Alliance was always envisioned as a loose coalition of mercenary groups so it made sense that certain factions would have been more capable and threatening than others 139 Jup and Tenat played by Geoff Redknap and Morris Chapdelaine seasons 8 10 Oranian minor members of the Lucian Alliance who make their first appearance in season 8 s Prometheus Unbound aiming to trade a case of weapons grade refined naqahdah to Vala in exchange for the stolen Prometheus After Daniel foils the plot the Alliance sends Jup and Tenat to capture Vala in season 9 s The Ties That Bind but Mitchell and Teal c double cross them Upon meeting and recognizing Mitchell as a scam artist aboard a Lucian Alliance ship in season 10 s Company of Thieves Tenat asks for a part of the spoils and is double crossed again dying in a self induced firefight against Netan s mothership Jup last appears in Bounty as one of several bounty hunters attempting the capture of SG 1 on Earth but another bounty hunter kills him Netan played by Eric Steinberg seasons 9 10 The leader of the Lucian Alliance He first appears in Off the Grid trying to intercept Ba al in stealing Stargates from several planets including one controlled by the Lucian Alliance Teal c approaches the Lucian Alliance for help in attacking the invading Ori battlecruisers in Camelot and Netan commits three motherships to the battle After the big losses during that battle one of Netan s seconds Anateo moves against Netan in season 10 s Company of Thieves but Anateo s skills and a trick by Mitchell lead Netan to declare war on the people of Earth SG 1 actually does Netan a favor killing Anateo for him while retaking the Odyssey After SG 1 makes raids on Lucian Alliance assets in Bounty Netan places a bounty on the heads of SG 1 and is implied to die at the hands of another bounty hunter himself when the hunters fail Ori EditMain article Ori Stargate The Ori are Ascended beings who use their infinite knowledge of the universe to force lesser beings to worship them In essence they used to be Ancients however they split into separate groups due to different views of life The Ori are religious while the Ancients prefer science The Ori sway lesser developed planets into worshipping them by promising Ascension through an invented and empty religion called Origin This religion states that they created humanity and as such are to be worshipped by their creations It also promises its followers that on death they will Ascend However Origin was designed to channel energy from the human worshippers to the Ori As such the Ori never help anyone else Ascend because then they would have to share the power that they sap from their worshippers Their ultimate goal is to completely destroy the Ascended Ancients who they know as the Others All of their efforts including their technology are for the purpose of garnering worshippers As Ascended beings the Ori do not interfere directly in the mortal plane Instead they use humans called Priors which they artificially evolve so that they are one step from Ascension giving the Priors godly powers Because the Ori have worshippers across the entire home galaxy of the Ancients and using their knowledge to spread they are nearly unstoppable Adria Edit Morena Baccarin played Adria the Orici Adria played by Robert C Cooper s daughter Emma season 10 age 4 Jodelle Ferland season 10 age 7 Brenna O Brien season 10 age 12 Morena Baccarin season 10 adult The primary antagonist in season 10 Adria is the Orici a genetically advanced human infused with Ori knowledge The Ori had impregnated Vala Mal Doran with Adria against her will in season 9 to circumvent the Ancients rules in the Milky Way galaxy and as such Vala named the child after her witch of a woman stepmother Losing contact with young Adria in Flesh and Blood Vala meets her daughter again as an adult in Counterstrike In The Quest Adria tricks SG 1 into obtaining the Sangraal for her and captures Daniel before he can complete the device Adria attempts to convert Daniel to the path of Origin and makes him a Prior but he betrays her in The Shroud and uses the weapon on the Ori galaxy Adria is briefly implanted with the Goa uld Ba al in Dominion but the removal of the symbiote almost kills Adria and she ascends She nevertheless continues the Ori s assault on the Milky Way in Stargate The Ark of Truth where the Ancient Morgan le Fay engages her in an ascended battle eternally distracting her from being able to continue her evil ways 140 The producers created Adria s character to give Vala a story and personality arc as a new member of the SG 1 team 141 and offered the role of adult Adria to Morena Baccarin as they were fans of her former TV series Firefly 142 The character initially has orange contact lenses but they irritated Baccarin s eyes so much that the lenses were dropped during the shooting of The Quest 143 Tomin Edit Tomin played by Tim Guinee seasons 9 10 A devout Ori follower of the village of Ver Isca who becomes an Ori commander in Season 10 Tomin is intended as a representation of the Ori warriors 144 and Cooper described Guinee as a fabulous actor who instantly creates that humanity and empathy while he s mass murdering people 141 Tomin is introduced in flashbacks in season 9 s Crusade having found Vala after she was transported to the Ori home galaxy Tomin had been crippled since childhood and was therefore looked down on by his fellow villagers Tomin married Vala and accepted her pregnancy as his child not knowing that it was an immaculate conception set by the Ori A little later a Prior visited the village and cured Tomin of his limp allowing him to become a warrior for the Ori The prior also told Tomin the truth about the child as the will of the Ori who would later be the Orici Tomin is later able to forgive Vala 145 As seen in Camelot Tomin and Vala depart aboard the first wave of Ori vessels entering the Milky Way and they go separate ways in season 10 s Flesh and Blood Tomin rises to the rank of commander within the Ori warrior armies and he and Vala meet again in Line in the Sand Because a Prior twists the words of the Book of Origin Tomin begins to doubt the Priors and their interpretations of Origin s teachings and helps Vala escape Despite his betrayal Tomin survives and remains an Ori commander by the time of Stargate The Ark of Truth leading the Ori forces in the ruins of Dakara After the Prior he serves is killed by Mitchell Tomin finally loses his faith in the Ori and surrenders to SG 1 Tomin helps Daniel decipher his visions of the Ark of Truth and accompanies SG 1 back to the Ori galaxy where Tomin is instrumental in finding the Ark and ending the Ori threat for good After the defeat of the Ori Tomin becomes the new leader of his people but Vala declines Tomin s offer to return with him feeling that her place is with SG 1 Minor characters Edit Doci Latin docere to teach played by Julian Sands season 9 The leader of the Priors who also represents the Ori in their home galaxy 144 He has brown hair and colored eyes pale skin and facial markings of a Prior He first appears in season 9 s Origin residing in the city of Celestis with his chambers next to the Ori s Flames of Enlightenment He also appears in a short flash in The Fourth Horseman Part 1 and is hit by the Ark s beam in Stargate The Ark of Truth stopping his belief of the Ori as gods so that he spreads the truth to all of the Priors in the Ori galaxy and through them to their followers The Doci immediately breaks down in tears begging for forgiveness for his actions Although Sands limited availability was a hindrance in The Ark of Truth the producers felt it was better to include the Doci than to forgo the character 140 Had Julian Sands not been able to resume the role the producers had planned to hire another actor as a different Doci in charge in Celestis 146 Prior played by Greg Anderson seasons 9 10 The governor of the village of Ver Eger introduced in Avalon when Daniel and Vala first come to the village As a reward for fulfilling his duties and putting Vala through a Trial by Fire he is transformed into a Prior in Origin He is later sent to the Milky Way and appears in The Powers That Be unleashing a plague in a defiant village in The Fourth Horseman turning Gerak into a Prior and in season 10 s Line in the Sand ordering the destruction of a village by spaceship In Stargate The Ark of Truth he commands Ori ground forces alongside Tomin during the search for the Ark of Truth With a Prior disruptor blocking his powers the Prior is killed by Mitchell with a shot from an Ori staff weapon proving to Tomin once and for all that the Ori are not gods Prior played by Doug Abrahams seasons 9 10 A one eyed Prior introduced in Crusade who cures Tomin of his limp and later informs him of being unable to father children He is on board one of the Ori battlecruisers invading the Milky Way in Camelot and is present during Adria s birth in season 10 s Flesh and Blood informing Vala and Tomin of her divine purpose The Prior nearly kills Daniel Jackson but he and Vala are rescued at the last second by the Odyssey In The Quest he accompanies Adria in the search of the Sangraal He is captured in Stargate The Ark of Truth during an attempt to convince Earth to surrender or face destruction After the Ark of Truth is retrieved from the Ori home galaxy the Prior is exposed to it spreading the truth to all of the Ori followers in the Milky Way galaxy and ending their crusade Replicators EditThe Replicators are a potent mechanical life form using a quiron based technology composed of building blocks using nanotechnology They strive to increase their numbers and spread across the universe by assimilating advanced technologies They are hostile to all other life forms in the universe but are opposed primarily by the Asgard In the episode Unnatural Selection the Replicators had developed human form Replicators based on the technology they extracted from their Android creator that appear just like humans and are able to change their form Standard Replicators are resistant to energy weapons and can only be destroyed by projectile weapons Human form Replicators on the other hand are resistant to projectile weapons as well due to the change in their nature from large blocks to smaller units the size of organic cells cell blocks In the episode New Order Part 2 an Ancient weapon called the Replicator Disruptor was developed by O Neill while he still had the knowledge of the Ancients in his mind It works by blocking the cohesion between the blocks that make up the Replicators The Replicators in the Milky Way galaxy were wiped out by the Dakara Superweapon in the two part episode Reckoning at the climax of Season 8 It has been indicated that the Asgard used the same technology to defeat the Replicators in their own home galaxy as well Fifth Edit Fifth played by Patrick Currie seasons 6 8 A human form Replicator introduced in season 6 s Unnatural Selection He is the fifth human form to be created on the Asgard planet Halla and unlike the others he lacks the programming flaws of the android Reese on which the human forms are based This makes him more human than the other Replicators who consider him weak as a result After SG 1 is captured by the Replicators Fifth becomes fascinated by them especially Carter and attempts to help them but SG 1 break their promise and leave Fifth behind in a time dilation field Fifth has escaped the time dilation field in the season 8 episode New Order and en route to the new Asgard homeworld of Orilla he captures Samantha Carter and tortures her in revenge He eventually relents when she appeals to his humanity again and professes his love for her He lets Carter go but creates a Replicator duplicate of her to serve as his consort Fifth appears for the last time in Gemini conspiring with Replicator Carter to obtain data from the SGC that would immunize them from the Replicator Disruptor Replicator Carter however never returned his feelings believing him unfit to command the Replicators She ultimately betrays him taking the data for herself while manipulating him into being destroyed by the Disruptor Patrick Currie had auditioned for the show since the very beginning resulting in approximately 15 auditions before being cast according to Currie because the producers always short listed him and waited for the perfect episode to use him in When preparing for the role of Fifth Currie was unsure where to take the innocence and vulnerability of the character and later figured that the key to this character is to know what it s like before we learn to play games and pretend He thinks Fifth is a misunderstood character and not a villain Fifth believes he loves Carter but lacks comparisons 147 Replicator Carter Edit Replicator Carter also known as RepliCarter played by Amanda Tapping season 8 A human form Replicator created by Fifth She first appears at the end of New Order and becomes a major adversary in the eighth season of the series Fifth intended her to be a duplicate of the real Samantha Carter but one who would return his affections Replicator Carter seemingly defects from Fifth to the SGC in Gemini but in fact abandons him to be destroyed while she develops a means to immunize herself from the Replicator Disruptor In Reckoning Replicator Carter launches a full scale invasion of the Milky Way and personally eliminates the last of the Goa uld System Lords She abducts Daniel and probes his mind to find the location of the Dakara superweapon the only thing in the galaxy capable of stopping her She also sends Replicators to fight the forces of Ba al the Jaffa Rebellion and Stargate Command on Earth Daniel Jackson is able to exploit his connection to the Replicator network at a critical moment buying enough time to finish calibrating and activating the Dakara weapon The resulting energy wave breaks Replicator Carter and all her brethren into their constituent parts Tok ra EditThe Tok ra literally against Ra the Supreme System Lord are a faction of Goa uld symbiotes who are opposed to the Goa uld culturally and militarily Spawned by the queen Egeria they live in true symbiosis with their hosts both beings sharing the body equally and benefitting from each other The Tok ra have fought the Goa uld for thousands of years favoring covert tactics and balancing the various System Lords against one another Since season 2 of Stargate SG 1 the Tok ra have become valuable allies of Earth Jacob Carter Edit Carmen Argenziano played Samantha Carter s father Jacob and the Tok ra Selmak Jacob Carter played by Carmen Argenziano seasons 2 8 A retired United States Air Force Major General and the widowed father of Samantha Carter and Mark Carter Jacob Carter is introduced in season 2 s Secrets as a USAF general dying of cancer and after becoming a willing host of a Tok ra named Selmak who would cure his illness The Tok ra he frequently recurs as the Tok ra liaison to Earth As a member of the Tok ra High Council Jacob Selmak engages in Tok ra covert operations and provides help to Stargate Command when problems arise He goes on off world missions with SG 1 and frequently provides valuable knowledge and expertise including the ability to use a Goa uld healing device When the Earth Tok ra relations deteriorate Jacob Selmak remains the strongest link between the allies despite his loss of influence in the Tok ra High Council In season 7 s Death Knell Jacob helps his daughter devise the Kull Disruptor as an invaluable weapon in fighting the army of Kull Warriors of Anubis s creation He also plays a key role in retuning the Dakara Superweapon to the right pattern to attack the Replicators in season 8 s Reckoning but Selmak dies of old age one episode later in Threads along with Jacob who wouldn t let go of him a few weeks earlier knowing by keeping Selmak alive he would help in the fight against the replicators but would ultimately die with Selmak due to release of a poison when a Symbiote dies Selmak fell into a coma shortly after the Dakara Superweapon was activated thus preventing him from saving Jacob Martouf Edit Martouf played by JR Bourne seasons 2 4 9 A leader in the ranks of the Tok ra Martouf had been the mate of Rosha host to Jolinar for almost a century SG 1 first meet Martouf during their first encounter with the Tok ra in season 2 s The Tok ra and since Jolinar was once blended with Samantha Carter Martouf develops an interest in her Some episodes later in Serpent s Song Martouf recommends that Apophis who sought asylum at the SGC should be handed over to Sokar In the season 3 two parter Jolinar s Memories The Devil You Know Martouf joins SG 1 on a mission to rescue Jacob Carter the host of the Tok ra Selmak from Ne tu They are captured and tortured but Martouf Selmak and SG 1 can escape when a new Tok ra weapon destroys Ne tu However Martouf is unwittingly subjected to Goa uld mind control turning him into a zatarc His attempt to assassinate the President of the United States in season 4 s Divide and Conquer ends in failure and Carter is forced to kill him Martouf s symbiote Lantash survives and is placed in a Tok ra stasis chamber which is destroyed in a Goa uld attack in season 5 s Last Stand The new SGC recruit Lieutenant Elliot played by Courtenay J Stevens season 5 blends with Lantash after a severe injury but they give their lives to save the rest of SG 1 and the Tok ra eliminating the entire Goa uld invasion force with a vial of symbiote poison An alternate version of Martouf arrives at the SGC when many SG 1s from alternate realities start coming through the Stargate in season 9 s Ripple Effect That universe s Martouf had joined the SGC to be closer to Carter but their relationship did not last According to portraying actor Courtenay J Stevens the first draft for the character was that he was supposed to be a young Jack O Neill in the then new spin off show Stargate Atlantis The producers dropped Elliot and minimized his role so that he was never even mentioned in Stargate Atlantis Many fans of Stargate thought that Elliot and his team would replace Samantha Carter Teal c Daniel Jackson and O Neill as the main characters of the show Stevens has stated that the producers took much time to look at new Options for the series and further stated that he knew they were looking at it But the plans were changed and actor Stevens left the Stargate set in Vancouver after the shooting of Last Stand When shooting the episode Summit J R Bourne was booked so he was replaced with Stevens Before being cast in the episode Summit the producers told the history behind the Tok ra symbiote Lantash Stevens was later cast as Keras in the Stargate Atlantis episode Childhood s End 148 Minor characters Edit Aldwin played by William deVry seasons 3 5 A Tok ra introduced in season 3 s The Devil You Know to aid SG 1 on a mission to rescue Jacob Carter from Sokar s prison moon Ne tu In season 4 s Absolute Power Aldwin is sent to the SGC to verify via a zatarc detecting device that Shifu is indeed the supposed Harcesis Alwin is killed in season 5 s Summit Last Stand when Zipacna attacks the planet Revanna where Aldwin guided SG 17 through the Tok ra base Anise played by Vanessa Angel season 4 A gifted scientist and historian whose human host Freya is attracted to Jack O Neill although the symbiote prefers Daniel Jackson as stated in season 4 s Divide and Conquer She is introduced in season 4 s Upgrades researching the Atanik armbands on SG 1 in the hope to use the armbands powers on a dangerous SG 1 mission to destroy Apophis new prototype mothership Anise is present for Tanith s introduction in Crossroads and assists Stargate Command in Divide and Conquer to uncover possible Zatarcs within the SGC ranks She improperly diagnoses O Neill and Carter who unwittingly lied during the test to conceal their feelings for each other Jolinar of Malkshur played by Amanda Tapping season 2 and Tanya Reid season 3 as Rosha Tok ra symbiote of Rosha and temporarily Samantha Carter The symbiote is severely injured by an ash rak a Goa uld assassin and died saving her host s life Ren al played by Jennifer Calvert A member of the Tok ra High Council In Enemies she travels to Earth to inform General Hammond that though their plan to destroy Apophis fleet was successful no trace of SG 1 or Jacob Selmak has been found In Summit Ren al briefs the SGC on an upcoming summit of the Goa uld System Lords and the Tok ra plan to assassinate them using symbiote poison When the Tok ra base on Ravenna comes under attack by Anubis minion Zipacna in Last Stand Re nal is killed by falling debris Tollan EditThe Tollan are an advanced human civilization who are introduced in season 1 s Enigma when the SGC helps a group of them relocate from the original Tollan homeworld that had undergone catastrophic volcanic activity The Nox take the Tollan in while they continue to search for a new home later revealed to be named Tollana The Tollan have a strict policy against sharing technology with more primitive races instituted after such a transfer caused the civilization of their neighboring planet Serita to destroy itself in a single day 149 Teal c notes in season 3 s Pretense that despite the Tollans technological superiority they do not think strategically The Tollan are wiped out by the forces of the Goa uld Tanith in season 5 s Between Two Fires after the Goa uld Anubis developed shields impervious to Tollan weaponry Narim played by Garwin Sanford seasons 1 3 5 An influential Tollan who befriends SG 1 after they save him and a group of fellow Tollans in Enigma He develops an apparent attraction to Carter and reconfirms his feelings for her in Pretense although she informs him that she is not looking for a relationship at that time After the death of the Tollan leader Omoc in Between Two Fires Narim and SG 1 discover that his government was collaborating with the Goa uld Narim takes action to spare Earth from destruction but the Goa uld begin attacking the planet Narim escorts SG 1 to the Stargate and stays behind to help his people fight Shortly afterwards Narim informs Earth of Tollana s devastations via a transmission which ends abruptly Travell played by Marie Stillin seasons 3 5 High Chancellor and a member of the Curia the Tollan s highest ruling body She is first seen in Pretense where she presides over the hearings about the future of the Goa uld Klorel and his unwilling host Skaara In season 3 s Shades of Grey Travell participates in an undercover operation conducted by the SGC to expose the rogue NID agents as thieves In Travell s final appearance in Between Two Fires she offers Tollan ion cannon technology to Stargate Command later discovered to be part of Tanith s extortion of the Curia Other alien recurring characters EditCassandra played by Katie Stuart seasons 1 2 Pamela Perry season 2 old woman and Colleen Rennison who also played Ally in the S02E10 Bane season 5 A young girl whom SG 1 discovers in season 1 s Singularity as the sole survivor of a biological plague on the planet Hanka and whom Janet Fraiser subsequently adopts A naqahdah bomb that the Goa uld Nirrti once planted in Cassandra s chest shuts down on its own and is eventually absorbed into her body s tissues allowing Cassandra to sense the people who are infested or blended with a Goa uld As such Cassandra senses Carter to have been taken over by Jolinar in season 2 s In the Line of Duty In season 5 s Rite of Passage a retrovirus Cassandra contracted on her home planet several years ago causes her to evolve into a hok taur an advanced human being but SG 1 makes a deal with Nirrti to save Cassandra s life After Janet Fraiser s death in season 7 s Heroes Carter promises to inform Cassandra about what happened to her adopted mother Travelling from the year 1969 to several decades into the future SG 1 meets Cassandra as an old woman in season 2 s 1969 who helps them return to their own time In season 9 Carter mentions that Cassandra is going through a hard time Chaka played by Dion Johnstone seasons 4 5 and by Patrick Currie season 7 A young Unas from P3X 888 who captures Daniel in season 4 s The First Ones to prove his maturity to his tribe When the two learn to communicate Chaka kills his tribe s existing Alpha male and rises to become the new leader After SG 1 frees Chaka from slave dealers in season 5 s Beast of Burden Chaka chooses to remain behind to lead an ultimately fragile but successful fight for the freedom of his fellow Unas Chaka last appears in season 7 s Enemy Mine to negotiate between a large group of aborigine Unas and SGC personnel whose naqahdah mining operations on the Unas planet unwittingly encroached on holy Unas ground When Dion Johnstone was unavailable to play Chaka in Enemy Mine Patrick Currie who had previously been cast to play Fifth prepared for the role by watching Johnstones s previous performances Director Peter DeLuise told Currie to follow Dion s lead but to add his own spin to the character Playing an Unas is a challenging job as it requires a full prosthetic body suit contact lenses and fake teeth 147 Dreylock played by Gillian Barber seasons 6 7 A high ranking Kelownan official from Jonas Quinn s home planet Langara and a Kelownan ambassador to other nations and planets She approaches Earth in season 6 s Shadow Play to obtain more advanced military technology against Kelowna s two rival nations but the SGC refuse to share their technology Dreylock becomes Kelowna s new First Minister in season 7 s Homecoming and ask Earth for help against Anubis Dreylock subsequently allows Jonas Quinn whom she previously regarded as a traitor to remain on Langara Since the forming of the planet s Joint Ruling Council in the aftermath of the Goa uld invasion Dreylock has become concerned with maintaining the uneasy peace between the three nations and again asks for Earth s help in season 7 s Fallout Martin Lloyd played by Willie Garson seasons 4 5 10 A human from another planet who crashed on Earth after deserting from his military fighting a losing war with the Goa uld Drugged with pharmaceuticals by his comrades Martin loses his memories and becomes a paranoid conspiracy theorist who learns of the Stargate Program In season 4 s Point of No Return O Neill helps Martin to slowly regain his memory and Martin chooses to remain on Earth By season 5 s Wormhole X Treme Martin has become so disgruntled with his life that he starts taking the drugs again His latent memories inspire him to create a campy science fiction television show Wormhole X Treme based on the real Stargate program and SG 1 and O Neill helps Martin recover his memories once again A ship approaches Earth to pick up Martin s former comrades but Martin chooses to stay behind to continue working on Wormhole X Treme as a creative consultant As becomes known in season 10 s 200 Martin s show only aired for three episodes but had high DVD sales Martin approaches the SGC to review a script for a television movie based on the series and although the movie is eventually cancelled the series is renewed ultimately lasting ten years with Martin Lloyd as producer Lya played by Frida Betrani seasons 1 3 A Nox girl She first appears in season 1 s The Nox where her family brings her back from the dead after one of Apophis Jaffa killed her In season 1 s Enigma Lya offers the Tollan sanctuary with the Nox In season 3 s Pretense Lya serves as the neutral attorney at a Tollan hearing and eventually gives the deciding vote to remove the Goa uld Klorel from his host Skaara Lya also enables the Tollan to repel a Goa uld attack Shifu played by Lane Gates season 4 The son of Sha re and of the host of the Goa uld Apophis conceived while Sha re was the host to the Goa uld Amonet Apophis intended him as his new host As the offspring of two human hosts Shifu possesses the Goa uld genetic memory and is referred to as Harcesis After his birth in season 2 s Secrets the boy is hidden safely on Abydos until Amonet discovers him in season 3 s Forever in a Day She sends him to Kheb to keep him safe from the Goa uld who want the child killed In season 3 s Maternal Instinct SG 1 finds and leaves him there in the care of a powerful energy being called Oma Desala In season 4 s Absolute Power SG 1 encounters Shifu on Abydos and invites him to Earth After SG 1 acknowledges that Shifu would never reveal his genetic knowledge Shifu ascends In season 4 s Absolute Power Dr Daniel Jackson translates Shifu into English as light however in Chinese the word shifu also means teacher In the same episode Shifu says that all he is doing is teaching Daniel Kull Warriors also known as Supersoldiers played by Dan Payne and Alex Zahara seasons 7 8 Creatures created by Anubis for use as his personal army against minor Goa uld The Kull Warriors first appear in the two part episode Evolution where seemingly none of the weapons of SG 1 or the Jaffa are effective against them In Death Knell Samantha Carter and Selmak develop a prototype weapon designed to counteract the energy animating the Kull Warriors After the apparent defeat of Anubis in Lost City Ba al gains control of the Supersoldiers and thus a significant advantage over his rivals As a result in the episode New Order the other System Lords approach Earth for a new military arrangement A simulated invasion of Stargate Command by Kull Warriors is the main premise of the episode Avatar In Threads the remaining Kull Warriors become aimless and confused after Anubis final defeat and are easily dispatched The Kull Warriors make one appearance in the Stargate Atlantis episode Phantoms where they are hallucinations caused by a Wraith device The Kull Warriors were conceived as a much more powerful adversary than the Jaffa and one that would be more palatable to fight 150 The art department developed the final concept while Evolution was written in the original plans the face looked a lot like that of the Borg which eventually developed into the idea of the fiber optic network that ran over the skull The motion of the Kull Warrior was deliberately styled to be unique and not resemble other robotic characters such as RoboCop the Borg or human form Replicators 151 Dan Payne described the suit as the most functional mobile full body unit he has ever been in It took 15 to 30 minutes to get him into the suit making him about seven feet tall due to the helmet and the boots 152 See also EditList of Stargate Atlantis characters List of Stargate Universe charactersReferences Edit In Season 3 Charles Kawalsky was included Alternative teams in Season 9 s Ripple Effect include Martouf and Janet Fraiser Season Ten s The Road Not Taken includes reference to an SG 1 commanded by Major Lorne a b c Children of the Gods Master Bra tac has been known to call Hammond Hammond of Texas Sumner David June 30 2008 Don S Davis 1942 2008 GateWorld Retrieved 2008 11 20 Awards for Stargate SG 1 IMDb Retrieved 2008 11 20 Ryan Maureen June 7 2002 Sci Fi shows on the same wavelength Chicago Tribune Archived from the original on 2002 08 03 Retrieved 2002 08 03 Eramo Steven July 2002 Season Six Preview Coming up on SG 1 TV Zone Special 46 66 76 a b Eramo Steven July 2002 Corin Nemec Jonas Quinn TV Zone Special 46 22 26 Eramo Steven July 2002 Don S Davis The Don General Hammond TV Zone Special 46 30 33 Perenson Melissa March 10 2008 Ben Browder and Michael Shanks find Truth in a new straight to DVD Stargate SG 1 movie scifi com Retrieved 2010 10 05 permanent dead link Cooper Robert C and Mikita Andy 2006 Audio Commentary for Avalon Part 1 DVD Stargate SG 1 Season 9 MGM Read David March 20 2008 Action Man An interview with Ben Browder GateWorld Retrieved 2009 02 19 Waring Will Mallozzi Joseph and Gero Martin 2006 Audio Commentary for The Ties That Bind DVD Stargate SG 1 Season 9 MGM Read David January 1 2006 Workin Man An interview with Ben Browder GateWorld Retrieved 2009 02 19 Denise Skydiver January 7 2007 Looking Backward Looking Forward An interview with Amanda Tapping GateWorld Retrieved 2009 03 01 a b Fetter Sharon February 21 2006 SG 1 earns three Saturn nominations GateWorld Retrieved 2008 04 07 Stargate The Ark of Truth Will Waring director Damian Kindler writer Uninvited Stargate SG 1 Season 10 Episode 5 Sci Fi Channel Landry I was flying air support out of Bien Hoa Caught some triple A in my left engine and had to eject Ended up landing somewhere near the Laotian border well north of the DMZ Peter DeLuise director Joseph Mallozzi amp Paul Mullie writers Family Ties Stargate SG 1 Season 10 Episode 5 Sci fi Channel a b c d Eramo Steven July 2005 Beau Bridges Helping Bridge the Gap TV Zone Special 64 50 52 a b Eramo Steven January 2007 Actor Beau Bridges Building Bridges TV Zone Special 74 44 46 a b c d Read David August 14 2006 Bridging Seasons An interview with Beau Bridges GateWorld Retrieved 2008 11 20 a b Cooper Robert C and Mikita Andy 2006 Audio Commentary for Avalon Part 2 DVD Stargate SG 1 Season 9 Metro Goldwyn Mayer Looking Back At The 2007 Constellation Awards constellations tcon ca Retrieved 2008 03 04 Cheyenne Mountain Nuclear Bunker Atlas Obscura David Read A Tribute to Janet Fraiser GateWorld Archived from the original on July 1 2009 Retrieved June 18 2009 Fraiser Janet GateWorld Retrieved June 18 2009 a b c Carole Gordon From Doctor Janet to Kiss Me Kate Interview with Teryl Rothery Eclipse Magazine Retrieved June 18 2009 a b Tobias Mauer Interview with Teryl Rothery GateWorld Archived from the original on June 25 2009 Retrieved June 18 2009 a b Kate Ritter An Interview with Stargate s Janet Fraiser Teryl Rothery Richard Dean Anderson com Archived from the original on 2009 06 25 Retrieved June 18 2009 a b Gilles Nuytens Gary Jones interview The SciFi World Retrieved June 18 2009 a b Gilles Nuytens Interview with Gary Jones The SciFi World Retrieved June 17 2009 D Read September 19 2020 Jonesy Encoded An interview with Gary Jones GateWorld Retrieved June 19 2009 Gilles Nuytens Gary Jones interview The SciFi World Retrieved June 19 2009 Darren Sumner The Kawalsky Effect GateWorld Archived from the original on June 25 2009 Retrieved June 15 2009 Stargate the movie Lt Kawalsky action figure Amazon Retrieved April 5 2009 Charles Kawalsky Good Soldier Stargate TCG cz Retrieved May 23 2009 Sam Sloan 25 November 2007 CON Report Secaucus Stargate CON Slice of SciFi Retrieved May 5 2009 a b c Eramo Steven July 2002 Dan Dare Stunt man TV Zone Special 46 28 29 a b c Colvin Chad November 21 2008 Stunts and Wrenches An interview with Dan Shea GateWorld Retrieved June 18 2009 Martin Wood director Brad Wright writer Stargate Continuum Stargate franchise Season 2008 Episode Film 3 Sci Fi Channel DeLuise Peter 2004 Audio commentary for Death Knell DVD MGM Brad Turner director Jonathan Glassner writer Tok ra Stargate SG 1 Season 2 Episode 9 amp 10 Showtime Martin Wood director Brad Wright Part 1 and 2 and Jonathan Glassner Part 1 writers Into the Fire Stargate SG 1 Season 2 amp 3 Episode 22 amp 1 Showtime Martin Wood director Jonathan Glassner writer Shades of Grey Stargate SG 1 Season 3 Episode 18 Sky1 a b Martin Wood director Brad Wright and Robert C Cooper writers Lost City Stargate SG 1 Season 7 Episode 21 amp 22 Sky1 Joseph Mallozzi Paul Mullie and Don S Davis 2003 Audio Commentary for Disclosure DVD MGM Audio Commentary for Wormhole X Treme DVD MGM 2002 Stargate SG 1 Roleplaying Game Core Rulebook Mallozzi Joseph In the Making Affinity GateWorld Retrieved 2008 08 03 a b Mallozzi Joseph Gero Martin 2006 Audio Commentary for The Ties That Bind DVD MGM Read David December 4 2008 Agent Of Honor An Interview With Peter Flemming GateWorld Retrieved November 29 2008 a b Read David 15 November 2004 Hanging with Harry GateWorld talks to Tom McBeath GateWorld Retrieved December 10 2019 Nuytens Gilles Tom McBeath interview The SciFi World Retrieved April 6 2009 Sumner Darren September 15 2003 Senator On the Rise An Interview With Ronny Cox GateWorld Retrieved June 19 2009 Eramo Steven February 2004 Stargate SG 1 Ronny Cox Politically Incorrect TV Zone Special 55 64 Peter F Woeste director Joseph Mallozzi amp Paul Mullie writers Inauguration Stargate SG 1 Season 7 Episode 20 Sky1 Peter DeLuise director Alan McCullough writer Prototype Stargate SG 1 Season 9 Episode 9 Sci Fi Channel Ken Girotti director Joseph Mallozzi and Paul Mullie writers The Scourge Stargate SG 1 Season 9 Episode 17 Sky1 Andy Mikita director Robert C Cooper and Brad Wright writers The Shroud Stargate SG 1 Season 10 Episode 14 Sky1 Sumner Darren July 15 2008 Brave New Woosley GateWorld Retrieved April 6 2009 a b Mallozzi Joseph September 28 2008 September 26 2008 Robert Picardo Answers Your Questions josephmallozzi wordpress com Retrieved June 18 2009 Peter DeLuise director Joseph Mallozzi and Paul Mullie writers The Tomb Stargate SG 1 Season 5 Episode 8 Showtime Robert C Cooper writer 48 Hours Stargate SG 1 Season 5 Episode 14 Sky1 Martin Wood director Robert C Cooper writer Redemption Stargate SG 1 Season 6 Episode 1 amp 2 Sci Fi Channel William Gereghty director Joseph Mallozzi and Paul Mullie writers Disclosure Stargate SG 1 Season 6 Episode 13 Sky1 Andy Mikita director Joseph Mallozzi and Paul Mullie writers Full Alert Stargate SG 1 Season 8 Episode 14 Sky1 Martin Wood director Joseph Mallozzi and Paul Mullie writers Camelot Stargate SG 1 Season 9 Episode 20 Sci Fi Channel David Read June 15 2006 Adverse Ally An Interview With Garry Chalk GateWorld Retrieved 18 June 2009 Stargate Origins Full Trailer Stargate Command Archived from the original on February 2 2018 Retrieved February 1 2018 The Siege Part 3 Stargate Atlantis a b Off the Grid Stargate SG 1 Camelot Stargate SG 1 First Strike Stargate Atlantis The Last Man Stargate Atlantis a b Eramo Steven July 2002 SG 1 The Production Design Team Peter Bodnarus Set Designer TV Zone Special 46 41 42 a b Mikita Andy Mullie Paul 2006 Full Alert DVD MGM a b Ascension Stargate SG 1 The Quest Part II Stargate SG 1 Threads Stargate SG 1 Meridian Stargate SG 1 Read David June 14 2004 Oma In Brief An interview with Mel Harris GateWorld Retrieved 2008 11 27 Matthew Walker Awards IMDb Retrieved 2008 09 05 a b c d Fair Game Stargate SG 1 Mikita Andy 2005 Audio commentary for New Order DVD MGM Thor s Hammer Stargate SG 1 a b c Thor s Chariot Stargate SG 1 The Fifth Race Stargate SG 1 Nemesis Stargate SG 1 Small Victories Stargate SG 1 Revelations Stargate SG 1 Descent Stargate SG 1 Unnatural Selection Stargate SG 1 Disclosure Stargate SG 1 a b New Order Stargate SG 1 a b Reckoning Stargate SG 1 Unending Stargate SG 1 Peter DeLuise in the audio commentary for Reckoning Part 1 James Tichenor VisFX supervisor 2001 Audio Commentary for Small Victories DVD Stargate SG 1 Season 4 MGM Home Entertainment Talion Stargate SG 1 a b c d e f Summit Stargate SG 1 a b c d e Michael Greenburg Peter DeLuise Joseph Mallozzi and Paul Mullie writers It s Good To Be King Stargate SG 1 Season 8 Episode 13 Sky1 The Warrior Stargate SG 1 The Other Guys Stargate SG 1 a b The Curse Stargate SG 1 a b Origin Stargate SG 1 New Ground Stargate SG 1 Resurrection Stargate SG 1 Seth Stargate SG 1 Evolution Stargate SG 1 The Ties That Bind Stargate SG 1 Ex Deus Machina Stargate SG 1 Memento Mori Stargate SG 1 Beachhead Stargate SG 1 Brief Candle Stargate SG 1 Babylon Stargate SG 1 a b c The Tomb Stargate SG 1 a b Birthright Stargate SG 1 a b Sacrifices Stargate SG 1 a b Prophecy Stargate SG 1 The Powers That Be Stargate SG 1 The Sentinel Stargate SG 1 Full Circle Stargate SG 1 a b c Read David July 2004 The Hour of Anubis Part 1 of 3 GateWorld talks with David Palffy GateWorld Retrieved 2008 12 22 a b Read David July 2004 The Hour of Anubis Part 2 of 3 GateWorld talks with David Palffy GateWorld Retrieved 2008 12 22 a b c Read David July 2004 The Hour of Anubis Part 3 of 3 GateWorld talks with David Palffy GateWorld Retrieved 2008 12 22 Cooke Bill August 18 2005 Asteroid Apophis set for a makeover Astronomy Magazine Archived from the original on 2005 11 10 Gilles Nuytens Cliff Simon Interview The Sci Fi World Retrieved 2009 04 16 Desiree Jackson System Lord Summit An Interview with Cliff Simon Daily Dragon Retrieved 2009 04 16 Mallozzi Joseph In the Making New Order Part 1 GateWorld Retrieved 2008 08 03 Crossroads Stargate SG 1 Read David January 2004 Nirrty On The Couch GateWorld talks with Jacqueline Samuda GateWorld Archived from the original on 2008 10 05 Retrieved 2008 11 27 The Tok ra Stargate SG 1 Hathor Stargate SG 1 a b Serpent s Song Stargate SG 1 Bra tac in season 1 s Bloodlines Not bad for a man of 133 Bra tac in season 3 s Into the Fire In too great a number for an old man of 135 Bra tac in season 5 s Threshold Twice in my 137 years Eramo Steven July 2002 Tony Tony TV Zone Special 46 10 11 Read David May 5 2004 Under The Armor An Interview With Michael Adamthwaite GateWorld Retrieved 2008 11 28 Mallozzi Joseph December 25 2010 December 25 2010 Christmas Marty G And the return of the mailbag josephmallozzi wordpress com Retrieved 2010 12 27 a b Sumner Darren April 8 2008 Myth Maker Part 2 An Interview With Robert C Cooper GateWorld Retrieved 2008 04 14 a b Sumner Darren April 8 2008 Myth Maker Part 1 An Interview With Robert C Cooper GateWorld Retrieved 2008 04 08 Eramo Steven January 2007 Actress Morena Baccarin Child s Play TV Zone Special 74 48 49 Audio commentary for The Quest Part 1 a b Sumner Darren amp Read David April 14 2006 Directing The Future An Interview With Robert C Cooper GateWorld Retrieved 2008 03 05 Crusade Stargate SG 1 Sumner Darren amp Read David June 29 2007 New Directions Part 1 An Interview With Robert C Cooper GateWorld Retrieved 2008 03 05 a b Read David January 15 2005 Fifth Unleashed An Interview With Patrick Currie GateWorld Retrieved 2008 12 03 Read David August 15 2004 Chillin With Elliott An Interview With Courtenay J Stevens GateWorld Retrieved 18 June 2009 Enigma Stargate SG 1 Interview with Robert C Cooper SFX Magazine May 2003 Interview with Dan Payne Gateworld com September 2006 Dan Payne in a DVD special about the creation of the Kull warriors Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of Stargate SG 1 characters amp oldid 1135510948 Goa uld, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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