Film Original trilogy The character is referred to as "the Emperor" in the
original trilogy. He is briefly mentioned in
Star Wars (1977), the first film in the original trilogy, which was later retitled
Episode IVA New Hope. On the
Death Star,
Grand Moff Tarkin (
Peter Cushing) explains to his fellow Imperials that the Emperor has dissolved the Imperial Senate, the last remnant of the
Old Republic. The Emperor does not appear on-screen, leaving Tarkin and
Darth Vader (played by
David Prowse, voiced by
James Earl Jones) as the film's main villains. The Emperor first appears in
The Empire Strikes Back, the 1980 sequel to the original film. He appears as a hologram to inform Vader that
Luke Skywalker (
Mark Hamill) has become a threat to the Empire. Vader persuades him that the young Jedi would be a great asset if he could be turned to the dark side of the Force. In 1983's
Return of the Jedi, the Emperor appears in person to oversee the last stages of the second
Death Star's construction. He assures Vader that they will together turn Luke, Vader's son, to the dark side of the Force. Unbeknownst to Vader, the Emperor plans to replace him with Luke; Vader, meanwhile, intends to overthrow the Emperor and rule the galaxy with Luke at his side. When Vader brings Luke before his master, the Emperor tempts Luke to join the dark side by appealing to the young Jedi's fear for his friends, whom he has lured into a trap. When Padmé attempts to liberate Naboo, Sidious sends his apprentice
Darth Maul (portrayed by
Ray Park, voiced by
Peter Serafinowicz) to capture her. The invasion is eventually thwarted, and Maul is defeated in a lightsaber duel with Jedi Padawan
Obi-Wan Kenobi (
Ewan McGregor). When Obi-Wan discovers that the Separatists are secretly building a
battle droid army, Palpatine uses the situation to have himself granted
emergency powers. Anakin informs Jedi Master
Mace Windu (
Samuel L. Jackson) of Palpatine's treachery. With three other Jedi Masters at his side, Windu attempts to arrest Palpatine, but Palpatine produces a lightsaber and quickly dispatches all but Windu. Palpatine engages Windu in a duel and attacks him with Force lightning; Windu deflects the lightning back into Palpatine's face, deforming it into the gray, wizened visage first seen in the original trilogy. Before Windu can kill Palpatine, however, Anakin appears and, desperate to save Padme, betrays Windu, allowing Palpatine to kill Windu with another blast of lightning. Anakin then betrays the Jedi by pledging himself to the dark side as Palpatine's Sith apprentice, Darth Vader. In the sequel,
The Last Jedi (2017), Luke briefly mentions Palpatine as Darth Sidious while explaining the fall of the Jedi Order to Rey. Palpatine, again played by McDiarmid, appears in the trilogy's final film,
The Rise of Skywalker (2019). Prior to the film's
opening, Palpatine threatens revenge against the galaxy, having used the dark side to cheat death. Palpatine reveals himself as the power behind Ren's former master,
Snoke (
Andy Serkis), whom he created to rule the First Order and lure Ren to the dark side. He then unveils the Final Order, a Sith armada of superlaser-equipped
Star Destroyers built by the
Sith Eternal. Palpatine offers the Sith fleet to Ren on the condition that he find and kill the galaxy's last remaining Jedi, Rey, who is revealed to be Palpatine's granddaughter. It is subsequently revealed that Palpatine had a son who renounced him; the son and his partner took their daughter Rey to the planet
Jakku, assuming lives as "nobodies" to keep her safe. Palpatine's assassin Ochi eventually found Rey's parents and killed them on his orders, but never found Rey. He orders Rey to kill him in anger so his spirit can pass into her, which will allow him to
possess her body. Rey refuses, and she and Ren (now the redeemed
Ben Solo) confront Palpatine together. Sensing their power as a
dyad in the Force, Palpatine absorbs their life energy to rejuvenate his body. He incapacitates Ben and attacks the Resistance fleet with Force lightning. Rey uses the power of the past Jedi to face Palpatine once more; he attacks her with lightning, but Rey deflects it using the Skywalker lightsabers, killing Palpatine and destroying his Sith forces. In the film, Sidious engineers a Separatist plot in which Count Dooku (voiced by
Corey Burton) turns
Jabba the Hutt (voiced by
Kevin Michael Richardson) against the Republic by kidnapping his son Rotta and framing the Jedi for it. Meanwhile, Palpatine suggests that the Republic ally itself with the Hutts. Although Anakin Skywalker (voiced by
Mat Lucas) and his Padawan
Ahsoka Tano (voiced by
Ashley Eckstein) foil the plot, the outcome suits Palpatine's ends: Jabba places Hutt
hyperspace routes at the Republic's disposal. In season two of the TV series, Sidious hires bounty hunter
Cad Bane (voiced by
Corey Burton) to infiltrate the Jedi Temple and steal a
holocron. He then takes a valuable Kyber memory crystal that contains the names of thousands of Force-sensitive younglings – the future of the Jedi Order – from around the galaxy. The final stage of the plot: to bring four Force-sensitive children to Sidious' secret facility on Mustafar. Anakin and Ahsoka again foil the plot, but Bane escapes and all evidence of Sidious' involvement is lost. In season three, Sidious senses Dooku's assassin
Asajj Ventress (voiced by
Nika Futterman) becoming powerful in the dark side and orders Dooku to eliminate her; he suspects that Dooku is planning to have Ventress assassinate him. Ventress survives and her revenge against Dooku sets off a chain of events including the return of Sidious' former apprentice and Dooku's predecessor, Darth Maul (voiced by
Sam Witwer). In season five, Sidious personally travels to the planet
Mandalore to confront Maul, who has become the leader of Death Watch. Sidious kills Maul's brother
Savage Opress (voiced by
Clancy Brown) before torturing Maul with the intent to make use of his former apprentice. In season six, Sidious goes to lengths to conceal his plan from the Jedi by silencing Clone Trooper Fives from learning of Order 66, and having Dooku wipe out anything tied to the former Jedi Master's
connection to the conspiracy. In the seventh season episode "
Shattered", Sidious issues Order 66.
Rebels In
Star Wars Rebels, set between
Revenge of the Sith and
A New Hope, Palpatine is portrayed as the Emperor of the Galactic Empire. He briefly appears off-screen at the end of season two's premiere "
The Siege of Lothal" (originally voiced by
Sam Witwer and later
Ian McDiarmid from 2019). Darth Vader informs Palpatine that the
Rebel Alliance cell on
Lothal has been broken and that Ahsoka Tano is alive and is now helping the Rebels. Palpatine sees this as an opportunity to seek out other remaining Jedi, ordering Vader to dispatch an Inquisitor to hunt down Ahsoka. originally provided the voice for Palpatine in
Rebels.|left Palpatine returns physically in season four (voiced again by McDiarmid). In the episodes "Wolves and a Door" and "A World Between Worlds", he appears as a hologram overseeing the excavation of the Lothal
Jedi Temple, which contains a portal to a separate dimension of the Force outside of space and time, which Palpatine considers a 'conduit between the living and the dead' that could give him unrivaled power of the Force itself if he can access it. Shortly after
Ezra Bridger (voiced by
Taylor Gray) reaches through time and space to rescue Ahsoka from Vader, Palpatine sets up a portal that shows Jedi Master
Kanan Jarrus' (voiced by
Freddie Prinze Jr.) final moments. While Ezra wants to reach through the portal and rescue Kanan, Ahsoka convinces him not to. Palpatine then reveals himself through the portal and attacks Ezra with Force lightning. However, Ahsoka and Ezra manage to evade him and go their separate ways, thus denying Palpatine full power. Palpatine later returns in the
series finale "Family Reunion - and Farewell". In the episode, Ezra, having surrendered himself to
Grand Admiral Thrawn (voiced by
Lars Mikkelsen) to protect Lothal, is taken by him to a room containing a reconstructed section of the ruined Jedi Temple and a hologram of Palpatine as he appears in the prequel films. Palpatine, having acknowledged the threat Ezra poses to the Empire, presents himself as a kindly old man and shows Ezra a vision of his dead parents through a doorway, promising that the youth will be with them if he enters it. Ezra is initially mesmerized by Palpatine's promise and goes to enter the door, but finally resists and destroys the reconstructed Jedi Temple and the illusion. Palpatine's hologram emerges from the rubble, flickering to show his true self, and commands his Royal Guards to kill Ezra, though Ezra manages to defeat them and escape. According to series creator
Dave Filoni, the events of
Rogue One and
A New Hope happen shortly after this episode, thus refocusing Palpatine's attention from Ezra and Lothal's liberation to the Rebel Alliance and Luke Skywalker.
The Bad Batch Palpatine appears in the first season of the 2021 animated series
Star Wars: The Bad Batch. The series is set during (and immediately following) the events of the 2005 film
Revenge of the Sith. The series' first episode depicts Palpatine's Senate speech from the film in animated form, using the archive sound of McDiarmid's dialogue. As in the film, Palpatine orders the extermination of the Jedi and declares himself Emperor. Palpatine appears in season 3, in which he inspects the progress of Project Necromancer's clone experiments under the supervision of Imperial scientist Dr. Hemlock (voiced by
Jimmi Simpson).
Obi-Wan Kenobi Palpatine appears in the
sixth episode of the 2022 series
Obi-Wan Kenobi. The series is set ten years after
Revenge of the Sith. After Darth Vader is defeated by Obi-Wan Kenobi following their second duel, Palpatine contacts Vader in his Mustafar castle via hologram, questioning Vader's motives and loyalty when Vader reports that he will not rest until Obi-Wan is found. Vader reassures Palpatine that Obi-Wan does not mean anything, reaffirms his commitment to Palpatine and abandons his search.
Tales of the Jedi Darth Sidous appears in the fourth episode of the
Tales of the Jedi TV series, once again voiced by McDiarmid, talking with Count Dooku (voiced by
Corey Burton).
Books and comics The first appearance of Palpatine in
Star Wars literature was in the prologue of
Alan Dean Foster's ghostwritten novelization of the script of
A New Hope, published as
Star Wars: From the Adventures of Luke Skywalker (1976). His background as a senator of the Republic was explored in
James Kahn's
novelization of Return of the Jedi. The novelization also describes Palpatine's son as a failed clone of himself. However, the 2021 book
Skywalker: A Family at War describes Palpatine's son as an "offshoot of [his] genetic research, not precisely a clone but made of cloned tissue and donated cells."
Star Wars: Lords of the Sith (2015) was one of the first canon spin-off novels to be released in the Disney canon begun in 2014. In it, Vader and Palpatine find themselves hunted by revolutionaries on the
Twi'lek home planet
Ryloth. In
Thrawn (2017), the
titular character warns Palpatine of "threats lurking in the Unknown Regions."
Chuck Wendig's
Aftermath book trilogy reveals that, prior to his death, Palpatine enacted a plan for the remnants of the Empire, intended to be led by his adoptive son
Gallius Rax, to retreat to the Unknown Regions, where they formed into the
First Order. The dark side was thought to be concentrated in this region, where one Sith cultist believed that Palpatine would be found alive. The 2021 illustrated book
Star Wars: The Secrets of the Sith is told from Palpatine's perspective. Palpatine appears frequently in the comic book series
Darth Vader: Dark Lord of the Sith (2017–2018), written by Kieron Gillen and Charles Soule. It is suggested at the end of the series that Palpatine manipulated the Force to impregnate Vader's mother
Shmi Skywalker, making him, in essence, Vader's father—although this is left somewhat ambiguous. This builds on the plot point of Anakin's
virgin birth introduced in
The Phantom Menace, and the claim that a Sith lord "could use the Force to influence the
midi-chlorians to create life," as Palpatine tells Anakin in
Revenge of the Sith. This would seem to have vaguely
incestuous implications for Rey and Ben Solo at the end of
The Rise of Skywalker, but Soule says that "The Dark Side is not a reliable narrator," and a
Lucasfilm story group member who collaborated on the comic confirmed that a direct connection between Palpatine and Vader was not their intent. The character also appears in the final chapter of the comic book
Star Wars: The Rise of Kylo Ren (2020), which illustrates Palpatine's manipulation of the young Ben Solo into becoming Kylo Ren.
Video games Star Wars Battlefront II adds a canonical tale spanning the destruction of the second
Death Star through the events of
The Force Awakens. The story takes an Imperial perspective, following an elite squadron known as Inferno Squad, led by
Iden Versio, as they help execute
Operation: Cinder following the Emperor's death.
Operation: Cinder was the ultimate negative sum move carried out by the Galactic Empire as a means of devastating several Imperial planets a few weeks after the Battle of Endor. The operation was part of the "Contingency", a plan devised by Emperor Palpatine to ensure that the Empire and its enemies would not outlive him should he perish. It is the logic of "if I cannot have it, no one can"; echoing Hitler's
Nero Decree in 1945 where he ordered the destruction of Germany's own infrastructure. He preferred to see his own country reduced to ash rather than surrender. The plan was put into action following the Emperor's death during the
Battle of Endor. Palpatine's threat of revenge referenced in the
opening crawl of
The Rise of Skywalker was included in a
live event in the video game
Fortnite Battle Royale before the film's release. Palpatine was later added to
Fortnite as a purchasable cosmetic outfit, as part of the
Battle Pass for the
Star Wars: Galactic Battle season. The character has appeared in every
Lego Star Wars video game to date, including
Lego Star Wars: The Skywalker Saga. ==
Star Wars Legends ==