Jeffrey Sinclair Jeffrey Sinclair, played by actor
Michael O'Hare, is the Commander of the
Babylon 5 station in season one. After one full season, O'Hare and series executive producer/creator
J. Michael Straczynski made the decision for the character and actor to depart as a regular. O'Hare subsequently reprised the character of Sinclair briefly in season two and a two-episode guest appearance in season three, enabling the show to wrap up loose ends. As a result of this departure, there are several minor inconsistencies between the first season and the remainder of the show, most visibly in "
And the Sky Full of Stars" and "
Babylon Squared". At O'Hare's personal request, the full reasons for his departure from the show were kept secret until after his death in 2012. The following year, Straczynski revealed that O'Hare struggled with
delusions and
paranoia due to mental illness, which ultimately prevented him from continuing to act. However, Straczynski emphasized that O'Hare's fans, particularly those of his role as Sinclair, had helped him cope with his struggle. The character was born on Mars Colony. In an early episode of season one, Sinclair stated that his family had been pilots "ever since the
Battle of Britain" and Sinclair's father was a fighter pilot for
EarthForce who participated in the Battle of Balos, the last engagement of the
Dilgar Invasion. Sinclair continued the tradition and became a fighter pilot. Sinclair enlisted in
EarthForce in 2237. During his time at EarthForce Academy, he met
Catherine Sakai, with whom he had a relationship. After a year of living together, the two of them broke up, but continued to see each other off and on through 2258, when they became engaged. Sakai went missing in late 2259, while on a mission for the
Rangers. The season one episode "
By Any Means Necessary" establishes that Sinclair received
Jesuit education as a young man. In 2240, Sinclair was promoted to fighter pilot, continuing a Sinclair family tradition. Less than a year later, Sinclair was promoted to squadron leader. Due to his rapid rise through the ranks, the rumor of the day was that Sinclair was on the fast track to making
Admiral. As squadron leader, Sinclair fought at the Battle of the Line, the last major battle in the
Earth-Minbari War. During the course of the battle, his squadron was destroyed by the
Minbari, and his fighter was badly damaged. In a last act of defiance, Sinclair attempted to ram one of the Minbari cruisers. He failed in this when he was captured by another Minbari cruiser for interrogation by the
Grey Council. The council's Triluminary detected Valen's DNA in Sinclair, so they assumed, to their profound shock, that he possessed the soul of
Valen, a hero of the Minbari who led them to victory 1,000 years ago against the
Shadows. It was concluded by the Grey Council that Minbari souls were being born into
human bodies. The discovery of what Sinclair possessed led the Minbari to surrender and return Sinclair to his fighter. The memory of his time aboard the Minbari cruiser was blocked—though this block would not be permanent and would break down years later. Sinclair — and the Earth Alliance — believed that he had blacked out from the acceleration. When Babylon 5 was brought into operation in 2257, Sinclair was selected by the Minbari to command the newly constructed station. He was selected over many more senior officers, including Colonel Ari Ben Zayn, all of whom had been vetoed by the Minbari (they had stipulated that they should approve the choice of Station Commander, as they had shared the cost of construction). In January 2259, Sinclair was reassigned as
ambassador to
Minbar, where he took command of the
Rangers. He was succeeded at Babylon 5 by Captain
John Sheridan. In 2260, Sinclair received a 900-year old letter from himself on Minbar, revealing that he was not the
reincarnation of Valen, as the Grey Council believed, but in fact Valen himself. Armed with this knowledge, Sinclair took
Babylon 4 back with him 1,000 years to aid the Minbari in their first war against the Shadows, and in so doing, fulfilled Minbari prophecy by becoming the
One Who Was. It was here that Sinclair used the triluminary to transform himself into a Minbari, thus fulfilling the legend about Valen being "a Minbari not born of Minbari", also explaining why the triluminary responded so strongly to him during his interrogation by the Grey Council, as it had been programmed to respond to his DNA.
John Sheridan Bruce Boxleitner played Captain
John Sheridan (seasons 2–5), Sinclair's replacement on
Babylon 5 after his reassignment, and a central figure of several prophecies within the Shadow War.
Susan Ivanova Lieutenant Commander
Susan Ivanova (seasons 1–4, guest season 5), second-in-command of
Babylon 5, was portrayed by
Claudia Christian. Ivanova is initially portrayed as a competent leader who values her work above all else. The show emphasizes her Russian heritage and gradually reveals a tragic backstory that informs her character's actions.
Michael Garibaldi Michael Garibaldi was played by
Jerry Doyle in seasons one to five and voiced by Anthony Hansen in
Babylon 5: The Road Home. He is named after the
Italian patriot
Giuseppe Garibaldi. In the first three seasons, Garibaldi serves as chief of security aboard the
space station Babylon 5. He holds the rank of
Chief Warrant Officer. In season four, during the
Shadow War, Garibaldi was secretly subjected to mental reprogramming, which was triggered after the war. Garibaldi resigned from his job as chief of security to work as an independent investigator, helping people find what they had lost during the war. Increasingly, he came into conflict with Babylon 5 staff. Eventually, Bester released Garibaldi from his psychic conditioning by making subtle adjustments to Garibaldi's personality. Garibaldi started drinking again in season five. Eventually, his long-time lover
Lise Hampton returned to Babylon 5 to help support him. They married soon afterward, and he left Babylon 5 to help her run Edgars Industries on Mars, one of the largest corporations on the planet. During the fifth and final season of Babylon 5 he was the Director of Covert Intelligence for the new Interstellar Alliance, a post parallel to the real-life present-day
CIA Director. After the episode "
Sleeping in Light" Garibaldi returned to his family on Mars. Upon arriving home, he found that his daughter had won a
tennis match. Garibaldi's life after Sheridan's departure was relatively peaceful. Series creator
J. Michael Straczynski said that his ultimate fate would be much quieter than Garibaldi could have imagined. In three novels - the last book of the Psi Corp trilogy, and the last two books of the Centauri Prime trilogy - the authors explore the period between the end of Babylon 5 and Sheridan's "death" in 2281.
Delenn Satai Delenn was played by
Mira Furlan in seasons 1–5. She is the
Minbari ambassador to Babylon 5. Delenn was originally conceived as being a male character but played by a female actor, in order to give the character feminine mannerisms and therefore make him more "alien". The
Babylon 5 pilot TV movie The Gathering was filmed with this in mind, but the computer alteration to Mira Furlan's voice to make it sound masculine wasn't convincing, so the idea was dropped and Delenn was changed to a female. The Minbari makeup used from then on gave Delenn a much more feminine appearance. When first appearing as the Minbari ambassador to Babylon 5, Delenn hides her status as a leader of the Grey Council. At the start of the 2nd season, Delenn uses a special artifact to transform into a half-human, half-Minbari hybrid. Her transformation is initially treated with suspicion by humans and
Minbari alike. Delenn was instrumental in getting Sinclair to be stationed as the first Earth ambassador to Minbar since, unbeknownst to Sinclair initially, they chose him because he was the first human the Grey Council had any direct contact with during the Battle of the Line. Delenn and John Sheridan fall in love, which drives a further wedge between the Minbari religious and warrior castes, who soon broke a thousand years' of cooperation and began a civil war against one another. After Sheridan and Babylon 5 broke away from Earth, it was Delenn who rescued the station with a fleet of Minbari ships, at the cost of destroying the symbolic circle of the Grey Council. The religious and worker castes sided with Babylon 5 and the Army of Light. Unfortunately, without the Grey Council keeping order, the divisions in Minbari society became so strong that civil war soon broke out. It was later learned that Delenn herself was descended from Valen. Delenn is the "One who is," representing both halves of the Minbari and human race merged, more literally merging in the marriage of Delenn and Sheridan. Together they became war leaders, with Delenn managing to bind together diverse planets and races into a great alliance. Sheridan was the "warrior", while she was the "spirit". This alliance ended the great war between the Shadow and Vorlon races, and ushered in the Third Age for Mankind - a great time of growth and change. But after the
Shadow War ended, both Delenn and Sheridan found their homeworlds embroiled in
civil wars. Although her work had saved countless lives and ended the great war, she returned home to a world racked with chaos and death. Delenn and the religious caste surrendered to the warrior clans. She then forced a showdown between herself and the new leader of the warrior caste. This would be a purification in which Delenn could sacrifice herself for her caste and for the Minbari people. With her sacrifice, the leadership of Minbar would continue to be held by the religious caste - not the warriors. Her old rival
Neroon saved her life, however. And in his death cries he joined the religious caste, which returned to Delenn the balance of power. Delenn then gave control of the Grey Council to the worker caste, who had for many years stayed in the middle, as the religious and warrior castes simmered with disagreement. After John Sheridan refused to stand for re-election as President of the Interstellar Alliance, Delenn was chosen to succeed him. When she accepted the role, Sheridan took command of the Rangers until his death. Delenn asked Ivanova to succeed him.
Stephen Franklin Stephen Franklin was played by
Richard Biggs in seasons 1–5 and voiced by
Phil LaMarr in
Babylon 5: The Road Home. When Biggs died in May 2004, Straczynski had been working on a
Babylon 5 script titled
The Memory of Shadows. Straczynski decided not to recast the Franklin character, and rewrote the script to remove him from the story. In the
Babylon 5: The Lost Tales anthology, it is explained that both Franklin and
G'Kar – played by
Andreas Katsulas who died in February 2006 – had left to explore space beyond the "galactic rim".
Talia Winters Talia Winter was portrayed by actress
Andrea Thompson in seasons 1–2. Winters was a licensed, commercial
telepath from Earth and a member of the
Psi Corps organization. She was assigned to the Earth space station Babylon 5 in the year 2258 to serve as its second resident commercial telepath. Like all Psi Corps members, Winters' telepathic ability was numbered according to ability; Winters was classified as a
P5, the level of most commercial telepaths. Typically, commercial telepaths were assigned to help two or more business parties broker deals, by monitoring their honesty during business negotiations. Talia Winters' telepathic abilities manifested at age five. As required by law, her parents immediately sent her to be raised, educated, and trained in her gifts by the Psi Corps. During this time Talia was also tested for
telekinesis, but was disappointed to learn that she did not have enough to move even a penny. Over the years, Ms. Winters developed a strong loyalty to Psi Corps, and accepted an internship in the commercial telepath division. During this internship, she met and befriended
Lyta Alexander, another P5 telepath who had transferred out of the Psi-Cop division. After completing her education, Winters entered the workforce as a commercial telepath. In 2258, Talia Winters arrives on Babylon 5 as its second resident commercial telepath. Her work on the station repeatedly brings her into contact with the command staff. Both of the station's commanding officers (Commander
Jeffrey Sinclair and Captain
John Sheridan) consider her a valuable ally despite her strong loyalty to Psi Corps. Security Chief
Michael Garibaldi, who harbors a not-so-secret crush on Winters, is in frequent contact with her. Garibaldi routinely flirts with her and shows up in the station's transport tubes just as she is about to board them. Although annoyed by his unsubtle advances, Winters remains friendly with him and uses her Psi Corps connections to help him contact his former lover, Lise Hampton, during the riots on the Mars
colony. Talia Winters's most complicated relationship is with
Susan Ivanova, the station's second-in-command. Initially, Ivanova is hostile to Winters' arrival and refuses to acknowledge her presence. Talia quickly discovers that Ivanova's mother was a telepath who, rather than join the Corps, submitted to a decade's worth of drug injections which dampened her spirit along with her abilities. Ivanova blames Psi Corps for her mother's
suicide; her experience gives Talia her first opportunity to learn about the darker side of the Psi Corps. Also in 2258,
Jason Ironheart arrives on the station in secret while on the run from the Psi Corps. The experiments he participated in have strengthened his abilities to the point where he can telekinetically manipulate matter at the
subatomic level. Ironheart gives his lover two gifts as he transforms into a being of pure energy: her own minor
telekinetic abilities, substantially less powerful (and therefore less dangerous) than Ironheart's, and the ability to block the scans of P12 (the highest rated) telepaths. Winters puts these new abilities to use the following year when Psi Cop
Al Bester comes to Babylon 5 to stop an
Underground Railroad that Ironheart had set up for runaway telepaths. Talia's experience with the fugitive telepaths finally makes her aware of how corrupt the Psi Corps has become. It is this
epiphany that finally dissolves the tension between herself and Susan Ivanova; from that point on, the two women develop a mutual respect which later blossoms into a relationship. In 2259, dissident telepath
Lyta Alexander learns of a Psi Corps sleeper program that the Psi Corps had hidden in her. Although she knows one such sleeper has been sent to Babylon 5 to spy on its command staff, she does not know the identity of the spy. Lyta travels to Babylon 5 with the password to activate the sleeper's hidden personality. With the permission of Captain John Sheridan, Lyta sends the password into the minds of individuals among and close to the command staff. When she sends the password into Winters' mind, the hidden personality takes full control of her psyche, effectively killing the Talia Winters that everyone has come to know. Talia becomes hostile and returns to
Earth after the hidden personality takes over. There are concerns among the station's command staff over how much inside knowledge this new Ms. Winters can use against them. By this time, they are convinced that then-Vice President Clark had assassinated his predecessor with help from outsiders so he could assume the presidency, and they are clandestinely gathering evidence to that effect. The staff had just agreed to bring Talia in on the operation, and were on the verge of doing so when Lyta arrived to inform them of the sleeper. Garibaldi himself had mused that if Lyta had come one week later, they'd all be standing in front of a summary court martial board, if not worse. Psi Cop Bester hinted that she was dissected after arriving back on Earth, saying, "We learned some interesting things about Ms Winters in the course of her debriefing and dissect—that is, examination."
Vir Cotto Vir Cotto was played by
Stephen Furst in seasons 1–5. He is a
Centauri male who was from a family of minor nobility. Vir first appears in the episode "
Midnight on the Firing Line" as an assistant to Ambassador
Londo Mollari. At the time, Vir was an embarrassment to his family, and his family arranged for him to be assigned to this position as a means of getting him as far away from them as possible. In the first two seasons, Vir proves himself to be an able assistant to Ambassador Mollari and also develops a friendship with the aide to the Minbari Ambassador Delenn, the acolyte
Lennier. Vir appears less frequently during the third season, since Stephen Furst had taken a role in a sitcom and couldn't appear in many episodes. This was explained in-universe as a reassignment as liaison to Minbar. Mollari arranges to have this happen in order to help Vir further develop in his career, but privately admits to
Delenn that he does not want Vir around with the events - namely the
Shadow War - that are soon to come. Vir Cotto remains an important character during the Shadow War arc, which comprises parts of season 3 and 4. Vir was once again used as a "moral counterpart" to Mollari toward the end of the Shadow War arc. Mollari has Vir come to Centauri Prime to assist in the assassination of
Emperor Cartagia. The assassination plot goes astray, with Vir finally being the person to kill the Emperor. Following the Shadow War, Vir returns to Babylon 5. In season 4 and 5, he continues to act as Mollari's assistant, and as a representative of the Centauri to Babylon 5 when Mollari is back on Centauri Prime. When Mollari ascends to the throne as Emperor, he names Vir as the Ambassador to Babylon 5, by then an important position. As was prophesied, Vir succeeds Londo as Emperor of Centauri Republic during the Drakh War. Vir appears after the main series in "The Fall of Centauri Prime" trilogy of tie-in novels, and is Emperor of the Centauri Republic twenty years after the end of the Shadow War, as shown in "
Sleeping in Light".
Lennier Lennier was played by
Bill Mumy in seasons 1–5. He is
Minbari and acts as ambassadorial aide to
Delenn throughout most of the series. Just as
Delenn was an
acolyte of
Dukhat, Lennier was the faithful acolyte of
Minbari Ambassador Delenn for five years. A member of the Third Fane of Chu'Domo of the religious
caste and a fierce fighter, he later joined the
Rangers. He had family aboard the Minbari flagship Black Star when it was destroyed by Babylon 5 commander
John Sheridan. Though other Minbari felt much animosity toward Sheridan, as they felt he'd acted dishonorably in destroying it, Lennier held no hard feelings, apparently understanding why Sheridan had done it. In the episode "
Day of the Dead," Lennier is confronted by the ghost of
Morden, the human who worked with the
Shadows. Lennier, who had returned from training hoping to speak to a spirit as part of an alien religious observance, makes the mistake of asking Morden for wisdom. Morden predicts that Lennier will one day betray the Rangers. This encounter foreshadows later events in the series. Eventually it was revealed that Lennier was secretly in love with Delenn. He explained to
Marcus Cole that it was "not romantic love as you would understand it, something nobler." Lennier did not act on his feelings due to her involvement with
John Sheridan. Lennier did confess his feelings to her when he and
Delenn were both trapped in
hyperspace facing death, but
Delenn, who had long known of his feelings for her, feigned that she hadn't heard his confession to spare him embarrassment. Lennier's feelings later caused his downfall. When Sheridan suffered an accident aboard a White Star ("
Objects at Rest"), Lennier, seeing for the opportunity to remove his 'competition', refused to help him and fled, for a short moment leaving him for dead. Almost immediately after he realized the foolishness of his actions and did come back, but by then Sheridan had managed to rescue himself. Lennier ran away, deeply ashamed of what he had done, and was never heard from again, except for a final, untraceable call to Delenn in which he asked her and Sheridan for forgiveness. This would likely constitute his "Betrayal of the Rangers" as predicted by Morden. The series left Lennier's final fate unknown, although most of Morden's prophecies came true and there are hints in the series finale "
Sleeping in Light" (during a sequence when the guests were remembering their fallen friends), that Lennier was killed in the
Telepath War. This has been confirmed by
J. Michael Straczynski in
The Babylon 5 Scripts of J. Michael Straczynski TV Movies, in which he writes that both Lennier and
Lyta Alexander were killed in the explosion of Psi Corps Headquarters in a major battle of the Telepath War. Straczynski had previously said of Lennier's death (in his commentary for "Sleeping in Light"): "That's a very sad story and maybe I'll tell it some day".
Elizabeth Lochley Elizabeth Lochley was played by
Tracy Scoggins in the fifth and last season of
Babylon 5, replacing the previous commander of the station,
John Sheridan, and filling the role of the character
Susan Ivanova. She was also a semi-regular character in
Crusade, where she has a romantic relationship with
Matthew Gideon, the captain of the
Excalibur. Lochley featured prominently in the first volume of
Babylon 5: The Lost Tales entitled "Voices in the Dark", released on DVD in July 2007. Due to a troubled youth, Lochley never consumed
alcoholic beverages or other drugs from the moment she began her military career. After Captain Sheridan is relieved of his command, he requests Earth to assign Lochley as his replacement. Although she chooses not to join Sheridan's rebellion against the corrupt government headed by Morgan Clark, he still trusts her judgement and ability. The show later reveals that Sheridan and Lochley had been married briefly after graduating from
EarthForce Academy. While the marriage did not work out, they still have a mutual respect and appreciation. She proves to be a strong and capable leader, finding solutions to many crises and coping with the ones that had no solutions. During the
Brakiri Day of the Dead, in which the dead return for one night, the Brakiri on the station purchase a part of it for the night which includes Lochley's quarters. She is subsequently visited by the ghost of her friend Zoe, who confirms that she deliberately committed suicide by overdosing on drugs. Prior to this, nobody knew for certain whether Zoe's death was intentional. Lochley remains in command of the station in the
River of Souls television film, where she saves the life a Soul Hunter played by
Martin Sheen who comes aboard the station, earning his gratitude. She tries to shut down a holo-brothel that has set up shop in the station's lower levels, and becomes shocked and angry when she discovers that her image is among those available for rent to the brothel's customers. The series
Crusade is set approximately five years after the events of the fifth season of Babylon 5 and show that she is still the captain. In
Babylon 5: The Lost Tales, Lochley is still in command of the station but now holds the rank of EarthForce colonel. It is unknown whether she and Gideon are still intimate. During her communication with President Sheridan, Lochley says of Dr Stephen Franklin, "Oh, I thought you'd heard. Doctor Franklin went with G'Kar, exploring beyond the Rim." This was filmed in the last quarter of 2006, with actor
Richard Biggs (Franklin) having died in 2004 and actor
Andreas Katsulas (G'Kar) having died in February 2006, several months prior to principal photography on
The Lost Tales. Actor Tracy Scoggins, who portrays Lochley, admitted on the DVD commentary to having difficulty delivering the line, at one point nearly breaking down in tears. The line was a subtle eulogy to both actors.
Marcus Cole Marcus Cole was played by
Jason Carter in the third and fourth seasons of the show. He is a leading member of the Rangers, a military force consisting of Humans and Minbari who serve the "One", a
triumvirate consisting of
Jeffrey Sinclair /
Valen,
Delenn, and
John Sheridan. The character's backstory is given as being born on the Arisia Mining Colony, where his family operated a relatively dangerous mining operation. His brother William had left the colony and become a Ranger on
Minbar; he was killed by the Shadows while visiting Marcus on Arisia. Marcus was one of the few survivors (if not the only survivor) of the attack. Much of Marcus Cole's early background is told in the novel
To Dream In the City of Sorrows by Kathryn Drennan. Marcus Cole joined the Rangers following the death of his brother, William, and at times he seems to have joined the Rangers as a form of guilt over his brother's death. Cole becomes close friends with Dr. Franklin. Defending Delenn during her transition to become "Ranger One", Cole engages
Neroon in a fierce one-on-one battle. Despite losing, and nearly being killed, he earns Neroon's respect, even getting Neroon to laugh warmly. It was also revealed on the show (episode:
The Summoning) that Marcus Cole was a virgin, a character aspect which was a marked departure for a dashing hero role. However, the combination of his virginity and fighting skill once led him to (only half-jokingly) compare himself to
Sir Galahad ("
A Late Delivery From Avalon"). He falls in love with Susan Ivanova. However, the two do not become involved. Some attribute this to Ivanova's previous history of disastrous romantic relationships, such as her relationship with Talia Winters. Later, after a devastating attack on Ivanova and Cole's White Star during the battle to reclaim Earth from the tyrannical government of President Clark, Cole takes the severely injured Ivanova to Babylon 5. Using an alien execution device that takes one person's life-energy and transfers it to another, he sacrifices his life to save hers. His corpse is then preserved at Ivanova's request in cryogenic suspension in the hope that he might be revived in the future. This was actually not shown in the series, but in the credits of "
Sleeping in Light". The credits showed each character as first and last seen. Cole's story concludes in "Space, Time & the Incurable Romantic", a short story written by
JMS and published in
Amazing Stories #602. It takes place hundreds of years after the series ends. Cole is revived when the homeworld of those who built the life-energy transfer machine was found. He then proceeds to create a clone of Ivanova by enlisting one of Garibaldi's descendants to help him. Endowing it with her exact memories by stealing the scans done of her memory, he then strands her and himself on a lush, fertile and uncharted world with the intent of living "happily ever after" together. There are significant moral questions raised by his actions in this story, but JMS has been quoted as "wishing to give the character the happy ending he deserves" while at the same time raising the type of ethical question for which
Babylon 5 is famous.
Na'Toth Na'Toth is the aide to
Narn Ambassador
G'Kar. She was played by
Julie Caitlin Brown in the first season. For the second season, Brown was replaced by
Mary Kay Adams. Na'Toth was written out of the series after appearing in two more episodes. Brown returned to reprise the role in the fifth-season episode "
A Tragedy of Telepaths". In
The Babylon Files, a
Babylon 5 guidebook, series creator Straczynski said he had considered having G'Kar have a "revolving-door" series of aides, akin to
Murphy Brown. Na'Toth was the second aide to G'Kar, after his first aide Ko'Dath died in an airlock accident. When Na'Toth arrived, a member of the Narn assassins' guild was attempting to kill G'Kar at the behest of an old rival. G'Kar was eventually kidnapped by the assassin. Na'Toth went to the assassin and claimed to be his backup. She was then able to disable the pain device that had been placed on G'Kar, allowing G'Kar to defeat the assassin, who left the station before the assassin guild had him killed. Na'Toth went home to Narn at some point during the second season. She was on Narn when the Centauri used
mass drivers to pluck asteroids out of orbit and bomb the Narn homeworld. Na'Toth was missing and presumed dead. In the fifth season, Na'Toth was found to be alive and imprisoned in the Centauri Royal Palace ("A Tragedy of Telepaths").
Londo Mollari and G'Kar smuggled her from the palace, and arranged for her to be sent back home to receive treatment for her injuries. Na'Toth did not appear in any further
Babylon 5 television episodes or movies. The short story “True Seeker”, published in the July 2000 issue 23 of
The Official Babylon 5 Magazine, depicts Na'Toth as living on Narn in the winter of 2269 and enjoying a state of celebrity. The book
Out of the Darkness by
Peter David suggested that as of 2278 Na'Toth was still alive and living on Narn.
Zack Allan Zack Allan was played by
Jeff Conaway. He regularly appeared in the show from season 2 onward. During the second and third seasons of the series he was a security officer on the Babylon 5 station. In the fourth season, he was promoted to become Babylon 5's Security Chief and he retains that position through to the end of the series' fifth and final season. Briefly in season 2 and 3, Allan was a member of
Nightwatch, a civilian para-police force created by Earth Alliance President Morgan Clark to expose and arrest "traitors to Earth". True to form, Zack joined Nightwatch for the bonus pay they offered, without paying much attention to their political views and
fascist nature. However, he had the truth of their nature driven home when a shopkeeper accused of
sedition for publicly criticizing Clark's presidency was physically dragged away from his store and imprisoned by Nightwatch officers in the episode, "
The Fall of Night". After this experience Zack agreed to help Babylon 5's command staff, eventually playing a critical role in "
Point of No Return" in leading the bulk of the station's Nightwatch into a trap set up to capture them. Allan was the second aide to B5 Chief of Security
Michael Garibaldi from 2259 to 2261. Following Garibaldi's resignation as chief of security in season 4, Allan was appointed Chief of Security. He held the position for many years; except for a brief stint back on Earth, he remained there until the station was decommissioned in 2281. Because of this, he was the only one not to receive his invitation to Sheridan's farewell party in "
Sleeping in Light", though Allan was still to meet Sheridan one more time as Sheridan took one last walk through the station. In "
Sleeping in Light", he walked with a noticeable limp, which has never been explained on screen. In the voiceover commentary of the episode, series creator
J. Michael Straczynski explained that Zack was involved in heroic activity and lost his leg. In keeping with his previous experience with uniforms, it is suggested that the prosthetic he was supplied with never fitted correctly. Later in the episode, after the aged and abandoned Babylon 5 was destroyed and the Drakh influence on Centauri Prime was exposed and eliminated, Zack joined the Rangers and became
Centauri Emperor
Vir Cotto's assistant.
Lyta Alexander Lyta Alexander was played by
Patricia Tallman. Lyta was introduced in the pilot episode "
The Gathering" as a
telepath assigned to the
Babylon 5 space station by the
Psi Corps, a fictional organization providing support to telepaths and monitoring their activity. However, she did not appear in the remainder of Season One due to a dispute concerning Tallman's salary. Lyta's role in the series was largely taken up by
Andrea Thompson, who was cast as
Talia Winters, a telepath who took over Lyta's responsibilities in the station. After Thompson left the series due to disagreements regarding the amount of screen time given to her character, Lyta returned as a recurring character in Seasons Two and Three, after Capt.
John Sheridan took over as station commander, and became a regular cast member from Season Four onward. Her character simply resumed the dramatic arc once intended for Thompson's. In the series' pilot, she is described as a sixth-generation
telepath, although she points out that telepathy may have been running in her family undetected even earlier, since telepaths were not monitored before that generation. In the series it is stated that Lyta was trained by the
Psi Corps, and that she briefly interned with the Psi Cops division. After an incident whilst accompanying
Alfred Bester, she transferred to commercial work. In 2257, she was assigned as Babylon 5's first commercial telepath. Soon after arriving at the station, she scanned Vorlon Ambassador
Kosh, in violation of the wishes of the Vorlon government, in order to try to discover the identity of his attacker. In Season Two, Lyta's experience with the Vorlon ambassador permanently changed her. She was recalled from her assignment a few weeks later and questioned regarding her encounter with Kosh. Interrogated for months by the Psi Corps, she eventually escaped and joined the Mars Resistance. While underground, she uncovered information regarding a
mole among the
Babylon 5 command staff, and returned to the station in late 2259 where she revealed
Talia Winters as an unwitting mole for secret forces in EarthGov and Psi Corps. In Season Four, Lyta was key to eventual resolution of the Shadow War on Coriana 6, serving as the vessel through which Sheridan and
Delenn confronted the elder races and forced them to leave the galaxy. Immediately after the Shadow War, she was part of the expedition to the Shadows' homeworld of
Z'ha'dum. Using unknown abilities and implanted instructions from the Vorlons, she triggered the destruction of the planet to spite
Alfred Bester and to prevent Shadow technology from falling into the wrong hands. However, after the conclusion of the Shadow War, she found herself unwelcome and had difficulty finding employment. She would go on to play a decisive role in the end game of the Earth Civil War, triggering the Shadow-modified telepaths smuggled aboard Earth ships to disable the fleet at Mars. In Season Five, Alexander became romantically involved with
Byron, revealing to the telepaths that they had been created by the Vorlons as weapons for their war with the Shadows. After Byron's death, Alexander was inspired by his cause to create a homeworld for telepaths, and became the leader of a movement sponsoring violent resistance against the Corps. Lyta also began to more thoroughly explore the abilities the Vorlons had given her. She was eventually arrested for supporting terrorism aboard Babylon 5 by
John Sheridan. Alexander then struck a deal with
Michael Garibaldi to help her avoid prosecution, as well as provide funding for her cause. Former
Narn Ambassador
G'Kar took her with him on a mission of exploration. Lyta does not appear in any of the
canonical material released since the end of the series. It is strongly implied in
Crusade and some of the canonical novels that her actions (both on Babylon 5 in 2262 and afterward) led to the
Telepath War of the mid-2260s, in which she was killed. According to Straczynski, Lyta was intended to appear in the
Crusade episode "The Path of Sorrows" as part of a flashback, but Tallman's salary could not be negotiated. The scene as aired featured an unnamed telepath who died striking against the Psi Corps. Whether or not this was intended to be Lyta, Straczynski confirmed Lyta did die in such an attack. In the aforementioned script book, Straczynski wrote that both Lyta and
Lennier were killed in the explosion of Psi Corps Headquarters in a major battle of the Telepath War. Hints about her death had also been stated by Straczynski in posts to the
Babylon 5 newsgroup, and in the final novel of the Psi Corps Trilogy by
J. Gregory Keyes.
G'Kar G'Kar is the
Narn ambassador to Babylon 5 and was played by
Andreas Katsulas in seasons 1–5. He makes his first appearance in
The Gathering as a
villainous diplomat opposite
Londo Mollari, being constantly engaged in insidious, if petty and often comical schemes, usually driven by his hostility to his people's historical enemies, the
Centauri, whom Londo represents. However, in the course of the series, he is transformed into a
Messianic figure and the foremost spiritual leader of his people. At the start of the series, Londo seems to be ineffective in his role as ambassador. As the events of the Shadow War come to a peak, Mollari is promoted to the position of advisor on planetary security. Later, with Cartagia dead and a Vorlon fleet en route to destroy Centauri Prime, Mollari is promoted to the position of Prime Minister, making him temporarily head of state until a new Emperor can be elected. Following the galactic
war with the
Shadows, Mollari eventually rises to become Emperor of the
Centauri Republic, taking the title Emperor Mollari II, since another member of his family was
Emperor in the past. ==Earth Alliance==