Plus, Luke Skywalker’s destiny hangs in the balance, Darth Vader turns to Doctor Aphra for help, the Mandalorian and Grogu head to Tatooine, and much more!
The Separatist army has a powerful new weapon: the Megadroid. And it will take both Jedi Master Yoda and the Jedi Knight Anakin Skywalker to destroy the threat against the Republic. In Star Wars: Yoda #8, the story takes us inside a droid factor to directly connect with the events of Star Wars: Revelations.
Plus, get your first look below at the newest one-shot celebrating the 40th anniversary of Star Wars: Return of the Jedi – The Empire #1, the final installment in the Sana Starros miniseries, and other Marvel Star Wars titles coming in June 2023 — including covers and solicits for the flagship Star Wars series, the first chapter in Star Wars: The Mandalorian Season 2, Darth Vader – Black, White & Red, Doctor Aphra, and more…
Check out new images of major characters, along with a first look at pages from Star Wars: Timelines, Marvel’s High Republic comics, and more.
It wouldn’t be an episode of Star Wars: The High Republic Show without some exclusive reveals. (Or ‘sclusies, as we call them around here.) In the latest installment, we got our first look at new character concept art, never-before-seen pages from VIZ’s Star Wars: The High Republic: Edge of Balance: Precedent, and lots more.
The High Republic Show debuted concept art for three brand-new characters: Jedi Azlin Reel, who first appeared in the Path of Deceit audiobook original, seen with a blue lightsaber; Yana Ro, ancestor of the villainous Marchion Ro, sporting a green tunic and sharp nails; and Dass Leffbruk, wearing lots of gear for space prospecting…
In this episode of The High Republic Show, Krystina reveals the brand new High Republic Show set, updates the Phase II reading list, and chats with Senior Vice President, Franchise Content & Strategy James Waugh about all the exciting content coming to The High Republic.
This is the Way…to upgrade your gaming experience.
To celebrate the release of The Mandalorian Season 3, with the premiere episode now streaming only on Disney+, Xbox has teamed up with Lucasfilm to create new gaming gear modeled after Din Djarin, Grogu, and a massive one-of-a-kind gaming station modeled after Grogu’s hovering pram.
The dynamic duo at the heart of the first Star Wars live-action series has inspired a new pair of Xbox Series X and Series S consoles and controllers. The Series X features The Mandalorian’s sleek beskar armor while Grogu’s Series S is the perfect companion, painted green with new art featuring the fan-favorite youngling…
Following the House of Ideas’ bestselling recreation of Season 1, the story continues in a new eight-issue series.
The clan of two will be back at Marvel Comics.
StarWars.com is excited to announce that Star Wars: The Mandalorian Season 2, an eight-issue adaptation of the second season of the hit Disney+ series, is on the way. Like Marvel’s first The Mandalorian series, which concludes next week, every issue will retell the story of one episode. The Mandalorian Season 2 will begin with “Chapter 9: The Marshal,” adapting a memorable episode in which Mando encounters Marshal Cobb Vanth, setting the stage for major events to come.
Mando and Grogu aren’t the only duo coming back, however: The current creative team of writer Rodney Barnes and artist Georges Jeanty are returning for the series. While Jeanty will kick off The Mandalorian Season 2 with art for issue 1, he’ll be joined by artist Steven Cummings, fresh off the Star Wars event series Hidden Empire, who will be penciling every other issue.
“Adapting The Mandalorian has been a pure treat!” Barnes tells StarWars.com. “The series embodies all aspects of the Star Wars universe: the myth, the mystery, and spectacle that made me fall in love with it so long ago. It’s an honor to be part of this project!”
“I am thrilled to be able to be part of the world of The Mandalorian and get to draw some of his adventures,” adds Cummings. “The Lone Wolf and Cub via the Old West vibe of the show has me excited to pick up my pencil every day and dive in.”
Check out the main and variant covers for The Mandalorian Season 2 #1 below; a release date will be announced at a later time. This is the Way…
Check out the special variant covers that will grace Marvel’s Doctor Aphra, Darth Vader, and The High Republic – The Blade series in March and April.
Lucasfilm and Marvel will celebrate the women of Star Wars beginning in March — Women’s History Month — with a special series of variant covers by superstar artist Peach Momoko. And StarWars.com and This Week! In Star Wars are excited to reveal three additions to the collection.
Sabé, loyal handmaiden to Padmé Amidala who would later challenge Darth Vader, is the cover star of Darth Vader #32 (on sale March 22); Barash, the newly introduced High Republic-era Jedi, takes the spotlight on The High Republic – The Blade #4 (on sale March 29); and the villainous Domina Tagge will grace the variant of Doctor Aphra #30 (on sale April 12). Check them out below!…
What stood out to us about the new Star Wars Jedi: Survivor footage? What do we think of the new Qi’ra book, Crimson Climb? These questions and more answered in this week’s Q&A!
Exclusive Howard Chaykin Cover and Poster in Star Wars Insider #122
To mark the 30th anniversary of The Empire Strikes Back, Titan’s December edition of Star Wars Insider magazine includes an exclusive limited edition collector’s cover and large size pull-out poster drawn by original Star Wars comic book artist, Howard Chaykin!
Chaykin, who drew the first limited-edition Star Wars poster in 1976, has now created a special Empire Strikes Back image exclusively for Star Wars Insider, the official magazine of the Star Wars saga. This limited edition collector’s cover of Insider is only available through comic stores and the large size pull-out poster comes free with the regular Insider newsstand edition.
This issue of Insider explores the making of the original Star Wars comic book by Chaykin and writer Roy Thomas and includes a never before published transcript of a meeting between George Lucas and Chaykin regarding the adaptation of Star Wars for a Marvel comic series.
Chaykin on the Star Wars characters:
“I feel that kid who plays Luke is a little soft in the face so I’m going to harden him up a little bit. He’s got a great cleft and that’s fine, but he looks like he’s 16. It’ll make him more heroic in the picture. Han Solo is perfect. He looks like I drew him. He looks my cliché mercenary hero. He looks like [classic comic book hero] Cody Starbuck. Chewbacca will be no problem. Same thing is true of Darth Vader… He looks like a comic book character — Doctor Doom.”
The magazine also features interviews with the team behind The Clone Wars series, remarks from the Mark Hamill panel at Star Wars Celebration V and an Endor location guide. Plus, there’s much more must-have material for all Star Wars fans.
Retailers can order this special Star Wars Insider with exclusive Howard Chaykin cover and large size pull-out poster from October’s Diamond Previews. See Star Wars Insider “Featured Item” listing within the Books & Magazines section in Previews for more information.
Star Wars Insider #122 goes on sale December 14, 2010.
To subscribe to Star Wars Insider click here.
Star Wars Insider is also available to read in full on PC, Mac or iPad at Zinio.com, the world’s largest digital newsstand.
Readers can keep up to date with more news and announcements from Star Wars Insider at the official Facebook page.
From island getaways to luxury starcruisers, the galaxy far, far away is full of romantic sites and locales.
While often overlooked, romance plays a substantial role in Star Wars. From Han and Leia in the original trilogy to Hera and Kanan in Star Wars Rebels, the love stories of the galaxy are part of what makes our heroes’ lives so relatable and worth fighting for. Falling in love in Star Wars only makes sense, too: If you can look past the many conflicts in the galaxy, you’d find that it’s full of many beautiful worlds that can be downright romantic.
In honor of Valentine’s Day season, we’ve compiled a list of the best potential date spots in the galaxy…
Your little ones can soon take their first steps into a larger world of reading — with Star Wars.
StarWars.com and This Week! In Star Wars are excited to reveal a new series of books for kids based on the upcoming all-ages animated series Star Wars: Young Jedi Adventures. The collection of titles has been designed for ages 3-5 and 3-7, and ranges from readers to Little Golden Books, all fully-illustrated in the art style of the show.
Young Jedi Adventures is the first full-length animated Star Wars series created for preschoolers and their families. These original stories will follow younglings as they are swept off into adventures, and start their journeys on the path to becoming Jedi Knights, learning valuable skills for our galaxy and the galaxy far, far away. The Jedi-in-training will tackle topics of compassion, self-discipline, teamwork, patience, and friendship. StarWars.com and This Week! In Star Wars also revealed the premiere date, cast, and new images from the series today.
Young Jedi Adventures will be part of the era known as the High Republic, set centuries before the events of Star Wars: The Phantom Menace and currently being explored in the New York Times bestselling series of books and comics for all ages, Star Wars: The High Republic.
Get a first look at the Young Jedi Adventures books below, along with story descriptions and release dates!
This May the 4th will see the start of a new Star Wars adventure for fans of all ages.
Today, Disney+, Disney Junior, and Lucasfilm announced that Star Wars: Young Jedi Adventures will premiere on Disney+ and Disney Junior on May 4, 2023, also known as Star Wars Day. Set during the High Republic era and the prime of the Jedi Order, the animated series follows Jedi younglings as they study the ways of the Force, explore the galaxy, help citizens and creatures in need, and learn valuable skills needed to become Jedi along the way…
It’s a double batch this week with two episodes to review. Get your tin foil hats ready as we dive into “The Clone Conspiracy,” followed by “Truth and Consequences,” which features a long-teased appearance of the Emperor himself. Note this week’s change of start time as we will begin tonight at 9 p.m. Eastern. Be sure to watch, listen, comment, chat and call in with your thoughts and observations for this super-sized RFR BAD BATCH After Show Livestream!
We’ve reached the midseason point of The Bad Batch season two, with a double drop of episodes! The Clone Conspiracy and Truth and Consequences are both great examples of what this series can be when it’s at its best. Here are my thoughts.
The following interviews were originally printed in a double issue of Filmfax magazine #69/70 from 1998.
Although the “Star Wars Holiday Special” aired only once 30 years ago, it is well remembered by Star Wars fans because it expanded the Star Wars universe: Boba Fett was introduced for the first time, and the Wookiee planet of Kashyyyk, originally conceived for the Star Wars films, was introduced, as was Chewbacca’s family. Star Wars fans were ambivalent about the show’s vaudevillian take on George Lucas’s universe. However, the involvement of Lucasfilm veterans did give it some legitimacy: Star Wars illustrator Ralph McQuarrie designed the Wookiee planet. Ben Burtt provided new sound effects, and Lucasfilm liaison Miki Herman made sure the special remained consistent with George Lucas’s Star Wars mythology. The following interviews reveal the fascinating and sometimes tempestuous story behind the making of the show.
None of the former-production staff remembers how the special came about but co-executive producer Gary Smith of Smith-Hemion Productions (The Emmy Award, The People’s Choice Awards, The Tony Awards) believes that 20th Century Fox came up with the idea. “I have a feeling that 20th Century Fox was the instigator. In typical television style they probably said, ‘Let’s sell a Christmas special promoting Star Wars and we think Smith-Hemion Productions are the right people to do it. So we met with George and played around with several concepts.” Although the original script was a collaborative effort between George Lucas and Smith-Hemion Productions, the final draft was written without Lucas’s involvement.
The first draft of The “Star Wars Holiday Special” was written by Lenny Ripps and his then-partner Pat Proft, with input from George Lucas. The final script was turned over to producers Ken & Mitzie Welch, who made significant changes to it. Both Ripps and Proft have since worked on highly successful projects. After many successful years of writing for stand-up comics such as Joan Rivers, Rodney Dangerfield and David Steinberg, Ripps worked on Tim Burton’s featurette Frankenweenie and contributed to The Flintstones and Casper. Proft went on to collaborate with Zucker, Abrahams & Zucker on the Police Squad TV series and the Naked Gun films.
FAX: How did you become involved in the “Holiday Special”?
RIPPS: Lucasfilm came to 20th Century-Fox, and they came to Smith-Hemion Productions because of their reputation for doing high quality TV specials. Pat Proft and I had worked for Smith-Hemion. We were chosen for this project because of our work on Captain & Tenniel, which combined comedy and music.
FAX: Did Lucasfilm present you with a story?
RIPPS: Yes. Pat and I spent a day with George Lucas in which he took a piece of paper and said “How long is a TV movie?” He put that number down and said “Now let’s write what we’re going to do every minute.’ It was the only day of my life that I forgot to have lunch!
At that time I was a 310 pound man who didn’t think about food for the entire day! Now I’m a couple hundred pounds lighter but, at that time. I was an eating machine who forgot to eat. It was fascinating! He had a vision of what it was going to be. The original director was a protegé of his. I don’t know why he got replaced. He was a good guy, a good director, but the vision changed. It became more a musical comedy.
FAX: What was George Lucas’s original vision?
RIPPS: I think he wanted to make a sweet and sentimental vision of a holiday season and I think it evolved into something maudlin which was not what I thought his vision was. Now I don’t mean to speak for him, but my inclination was that it got kind of sappy.
FAX: It was an eclectic combination of elements: drama. space fantasy. and musical variety.
RIPPS: To me, it didn’t come together. The ideas were all right but I’m not sure that they belonged in the same room. What was interesting to me was that Lucas started talking about Star Wars as if it was a real world. He said things like “Well, you know Han Solo is married to a Wookiee. but we can’t say that.” Now that was 20 years ago [in 1998], so my memory may be wrong. [As outrageous as Ripps’s recollection sounds, there is evidence supporting it. Pat Proft corroborates it and an early draft of the Star Wars script (January 28, 1975) has Han Solo living with a furry female creature who he kisses. Proft also remembers learning that Han was raised by Wookiees, which is verified on pages 46 & 131 of Laurent Bouzereau’s Star Wars: The Annotated Screenplays.]
This was a world that the audience only knew a little bit about. It was like he was showing pieces of history; however, he knew the whole world, a world that we may never know. It was almost like he had discovered the Sphinx and was only showing parts of it, but he had it all.
He creates not just biography but history and context. It was remarkable. I hope that, as a writer, I learned from that. When you look at a character it’s not just who they are on the page but who they were before you created them. He was one of the most interesting people that I ever spent any time with because he had so much focus and passion. I subsequently re-wrote a movie for Steven Spielberg [Casper] and spent a day with him, and he was the same way: passionate and focused. He knew what it was about even though it wasn’t done yet. By the same token, however, both men were totally open to ideas. There was no egotism at all.
FAX: After the meeting ended, how did work progress?
RIPPS: We went off and did an outline based on his notes, and then it was approved. We did not see him subsequently. Pal and I did not do the final re-write. People were brought in who did a lot more of the variety writing. It changed, in terms of style, from what we wrote.
FAX: Did George Lucas’s basic story stay the same? Was it always about Chewie trying to get home for in time for Life Day?
RIPPS: That was the story. It was a re-interpretation of Thanksgiving: home, family, and tradition. I viewed it as a Thanksgiving movie in a stellar context. I felt it became less cinematic and more television. It was George Lucas’s story but not necessarily his vision.
FAX: One of the more interesting aspects about the “Holiday Special” was the lack of violence.
RIPPS: I remember that we were talking about prime time television for families. You have to remember that this was a long time ago when what was violent then would be considered a cartoon now. I know that we were careful not to show violence.
FAX: Was it a challenge writing a Star Wars script with minimal violence?
RIPPS: In the context of a holiday special, it was not hard to accommodate. Even though there was no violence, there should have been more tension. I think it could have been more dramatic without being melodramatic.
Smith & Hemion are terrific producers with real integrity. My inclination — and I could be wrong — was that their vision was not the same as Lucas’s. Everybody involved had great respect for the film because it was more than a movie: it was almost literature. This was a newly-minted icon and maybe we had too much reverence for it. It’s always a problem when you’re trying to interpret somebody else’s vision.
FAX: What was your favorite part of the special?
RIPPS: Obviously the high point was working with Lucas. He was one of the most interesting people that I ever spent any time with.
[After this interview was conducted, Ripps had a chance to watch the special for the first time in decades. He described it as “sweet” but added “I don’t think it was George Lucas’s vision. That’s pretty clear because he doesn’t even want to talk about it.”]
What should you read or watch before The Mandalorian season three? What hobbies should each member of the Bad Batch pick up to be more well rounded? These questions and more answered in this week’s Q&A!
MANDALORIAN WATCH LIST
The Clone Wars:
The Mandalore Plot
Voyage of Temptation
Duchess of Mandalore
A Friend in Need
Eminence
Shades of Reason
The Lawless
Old Friends Not Forgotten
The Phantom Apprentice
Star Wars Rebels:
Visions and Voices
Trials of the Darksaber
Legacy of Mandalore
Heroes of Mandalore
0:00 What to watch before The Mandalorian Season Three
5:11 When will we see more Sequel Trilogy books and comics?
10:19 Will The High Republic fill in the gaps between phases?
12:02 Should we see Ventress and Barriss in the next Tales of the Jedi?
14:38 What hobbies should the Bad Batch pick up?
21:29 Is Cid a Final Fantasy reference?
23:22 What will Ezra and Thrawn’s relationship look like?
26:49 Can the Emperor issue Order 66 AGAIN?
Rick McCallum
Producer and Head of Production, Lucasfilm Ltd.
He has been with the Lucas Companies for six years, and has been working on the Star Wars Trilogy Special Edition for two and a half years.
McCallum lived in Missouri until he was twelve, then in Europe. He went to school in France, Germany and England, and college in New York.
Films he has produced include Pennies From Heaven, Neil Simon’s I Ought To Be In Pictures, Dreamchild, Link, Castaway, Track 29, The Singing Detective, On Tidy Evenings, Strapless, Blackeyes, Heading Home, Radioland Murders, and 44 episodes of The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles.
For the work on the Star Wars Trilogy Special Edition, his mandate was simple. George had made many compromises during the original production because he didn’t have sufficient resources, technology, or support to make the film he had envisioned. McCallum’s job was to make sure that the film was restored properly and that all the things he had wanted in the original film were included in the restoration.
Of all the work on the Special Edition McCallum’s biggest challenge, and aspect of the work that made him most proud, was supervising the restoration process. It was an opportunity to work with a group of extraordinary people, all of whom worked incredibly hard to make this happen for George. These people include T.M. Christopher, restoration expert Leon Briggs, Ted Gagliano and Tom Sherak at Fox, Pete Comandini at YCM Labs, and Phil Feiner at Pac Title. Tom Kennedy, who was the visual effects producer, did an outstanding job on all three films as well as visual effects producers Alex Seiden, Dave Carson, Steve Williams, and everyone else at ILM who went beyond the call of duty to get the work done. It was truly great collaborative process, which McCallum enjoyed immensely.
Hobbies and interests:
“I love to travel and work in other countries. So far I have been lucky enough to film in over 30 countries around the world. This leaves little time for anything else except my one great passion when I am not working: seeing movies!”
The Star Wars movie that has had the most influence on McCallum is the first one. “Star Wars was the first movie that had ever come close to showing a real world outside of our own. To me, it was by far the most successful and believable work of science fiction that I had ever seen. The design and look of the film were so bold — everything looked dirty and used. The effects were so seamless — I bought into it completely. The moment the Millenium Falcon went into hyperspace everyone in the theater stood up and freaked. Thinking back on the experience I remember being amazed by the soundtrack, set design and special effects — they were all so perfect, so right, you felt as if you had been transported into a totally different sensory world. The effect it has had on his work today? “Simple. Virtually anything is possible.”
McCallum’s favorite Star Wars character is R2-D2. “Why? Because he is relentless — no matter what goal is set for him he achieves it.”
McCallum’s favorite Star Wars moment is the scene before Luke begins his journey. “Luke is anxious and restless, and he goes out of the crater and gazes up at the two suns above Tatooine. We see so clearly every young man’s yearnings: all of us at some point have experienced that moment.”
George Lucas loves going fast. He doesn’t care about real world physics or limitations, he wants his films to FEEL as fast as possible, too. After the most recent episode of The Bad Batch, Faster, I think it’s the perfect time to talk about how speed has always been an integral part of Star Wars.
Introduced to George Lucas by Steven Spielberg, John Williams agreed to write the music for Star Wars without having any huge expectations for the project. “Along with others involved with the film, I was surprised at what a great success it was. I think we all expected a successful film. In my mind I was thinking of it as a kind of Saturday afternoon movie for kids really, a kind of popcorn, Buck Rogers show . . . never imagining that it would be this world-wide international success.” Williams didn’t see Star Wars until it was nearly finished because he prefers to avoid reading scripts before scoring a film, so as not to create any preconceived ideas about the film. “I remember seeing the film and reacting to its atmospheres and energies and rhythms. That for me is always the best way to pick up a film — from the visual image itself and without any preconceptions that might have been put there by the script.” Williams remembers his collaboration with George Lucas as a positive experience marked by communication and agreement about the music. “When he first heard the music he liked it very well. It was encouraging — I felt positive reinforcement always with George. A lot of people will say, ‘Don’t go in that direction’, it’s always ‘Don’t do this, don’t do that.’ With George, my experience with him was ‘That’s right, keep going.’ With that kind of collaboration, we get better results I think.”
Williams approached each film as a separate assignment, and was pleased and somewhat surprised with the unity of theme and sound of the three film scores. “I think if the score has an architectural unity, it’s the result of a happy accident. I approached each film as a separate entity. The first one completely out of the blue, but the second one of course connected to the first one; we referred back to characters and extended them and referred back to themes and extended and developed those.”
Much of the score is derived from Williams’ impression of characters in the films: “Darth Vader’s theme seemed to me to need to have, like all of the themes if possible, strong melodic identification, so that that when you heard if or part of the theme you would associate it with the character.” In Star Wars, Williams intended Leia’s theme to have strong romantic elements, while Luke’s theme has a different tonality. “Flourishing and upward reaching, idealistic and heroic . . . a very uplifted kind of heraldic quality. Larger than he is. His idealism is more the subject than the character itself I would say.” This concentration on the features of the characters in the films produced musical themes to enhance and accompany each character’s appearance in a scene.
In writing the main theme, Williams aimed for music that would match the visual impact of the first scene of the film, but would also be simple, strong, and direct. “I tried to construct something that again would have this idealistic, uplifting but military flare to it. . . . And try to get it so it’s set in the most brilliant register of the trumpets, horns and trombones so that we’d have a blazingly brilliant fanfare at the opening of the piece.” Finally, Williams wanted a theme that was ceremonial in tone, almost a march.
The music for the cantina scene, which is many fans’ favorite, came about at a stopping-point in Williams’ work on the score. When he saw shots of the alien band, he realized that the music could sound like anything, but he needed to decide the specific sound. When he asked George Lucas whether he had any ideas for the band’s sound, Lucas had an idea. He asked Williams to imagine what would happen if a member of the alien band lifted up a rock on some remote planet and came across sheet music from Benny Goodman’s swing band from 1930’s Earth. Williams liked the idea, and had fun composing a slightly off-tune variation on the swing sound, as played by aliens. He had musicians record the tune using Trinidad steel drums, reed instruments, and kazoos.
This seamless connection between Lucas’ cinematic vision and Williams’ musical one produced a film score that is the most popular ever, selling four million copies, more than any non-pop album in recording history. Williams credits the group effort for much of the success of the score: “I have to credit the film for a lot of this. If I had written the music without the film probably nobody ever would have heard of the music; it was the combination of things and the elusive, weird, unpredictable aspect of timing that none of us can quite get our hands around.”
John Williams was born in New York and moved to Los Angeles with his family in 1948. There he attended UCLA and studied compositions privately with Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco. After service in the Air Force, Mr. Williams returned to New York to attend the Juilliard School where he studied piano with Madame Rosina Lhevinne. While in New York he also worked as a jazz pianist in both clubs and on recordings. Again Mr. Williams moved to Los Angeles where he began his career in the film studios working with such composers as Bernard Herrmann, Alfred Newman, and Franz Waxman. He went on to write music for many television programs in the 1960s, winning two Emmys for his work. In January 1980, John Williams was named nineteenth conductor of the Boston Pops Orchestra since its founding in 1885. Mr. Williams assumed the title of Boston Pops Laureate Conductor following his retirement in December 1993.
Mr. Williams has led the Boston Pops on United States tours in 1985, 1989, and 1992, and on three tours of Japan in 1987, 1990, and 1993. Mr. Williams has also appeared as guest conductor with a number of major orchestras including the London Symphony, the Cleveland Orchestra, the Chicago Symphony, the Philadelphia Orchestra, the Pittsburgh Symphony, the Denver Symphony, the San Francisco Symphony, the Dallas Symphony, the Indianapolis Symphony, and with the Los Angeles Philharmonic in many performances at the Hollywood Bowl. He holds honorary doctorate degrees from fourteen American Universities.
Many of Mr. Williams’ film scores have been recorded. His highly acclaimed albums with the Boston Pops Orchestra include Pops in Space, Pops on the March, Aisle Seat, Pops Out of This World, and Boston Pops on Stage, a collaboration with soprano Jessye Norman entitled With a Song in My Heart, a collection of favorite Americana entitled, America, the Dream Goes On, Bernstein by Boston Pops, Swing, Swing, Swing, Pops in Love, and By Request . . . Featuring the Music of John Williams, Holst’s The Planets, Digital Jukebox, Pops Britannia, featuring music of the British Isles, Salute to Hollywood, Pops a La Russe, an album of favorite Russian music, and an all-Gershwin album entitled Pops by George. The first recording by John Williams and the Boston Pops Orchestra on the Sony Classical label, Music of the Night, an album of contemporary and classic show tunes, was released in 1990. Also for Sony Classical, they have recorded a collection of favorite marches, entitled I Love A Parade, an album of John Williams’ music for the films of Steven Spielberg entitled the Spielburg/Williams Collaboration, the Green Album, which includes “This Land is Your Land,” “Simple Gifts,” and “Theme for Earth Day,” a Christmas album entitled Joy to the World, an album of music of George Gershwin, Cole Porter, Richard Rodgers and Jerome Kern, entitled Night and Day, a tribute to Frank Sinatra, entitled Unforgettable, and their latest release, Music for Stage and Screen, an album featuring music by John Williams and Aaron Copland, It Don’t Mean a Thing if It Ain’t got that Swing, with vocalist Nancy Wilson, and most recently Williams: The Classic Spielberg Scores.
John Williams has composed the music and served as music director for more than seventy-five films including The Lost World, Rosewood, Sleepers, Sabrina, Nixon, Schindler’s List, Jurassic Park, Home Alone 2, Far and Away, JFK, Hook, Home Alone, Presumed Innocent, Always, Born on the Fourth of July, Stanley and Iris, Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, The Accidental Tourist, Empire of the Sun, The Witches of Eastwick, Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, Return of the Jedi, E.T. (The Extra-Terrestrial), Raiders of the Lost Ark, The Empire Strikes Back, Superman, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Star Wars, Jaws and Goodbye, Mr. Chips. He has received thirty-four Academy Award nominations and has been awarded five Oscars, four British Academy Awards and sixteen Grammies as well as several gold and platinum records. Mr. Williams’ most recent Oscar was for Best Original Score for Schindler’s List. Most recently he received Academy Award nominations for his scores for Sydney Pollack’s remake of Sabrina, Oliver Stone’s Nixon and Barry Levinson’s Sleepers.
In addition to his film music, Mr. Williams has written many concert pieces including two symphonies, a bassoon concerto premiered by the New York Philharmonic in 1995, a cello concerto premiered by Yo-Yo Ma and the Boston Symphony Orchestra in 1994, concertos for flute and violin recorded by the London Symphony Orchestra, and concertos for clarinet and tuba. His most recent work, a trumpet concerto, was premiered by the Cleveland Symphony Orchestra in 1996. In addition, Mr. Williams has composed the well-known NBC News Theme “The Mission”, “Liberty Fanfare,” composed for the rededication of the Statue of Liberty, “We’re Lookin’ Good!” composed for the Special Olympics in celebration of the 1987 International Summer Games, and the themes for the 1984, 1988, and 1996 Summer Olympic Game.
Star Wars: The Bad Batch brought back Clone Force 99, an elite group of clone troopers who were genetically modified to have a unique set of skills. The first season put us right into the very early days of the Empire and the immediate galactic changes occurring alongside the members of the Bad Batch in Hunter, Wrecker, Tech, Crosshair, and Echo.
But one unexpected addition to the group was Omega, a young clone who served as a medical assistant on Kamino. From her first introduction to the Bad Batch, Omega is set apart from the other clones in a number of ways — all of which help make her a truly unique addition to the Star Wars galaxy.
Spoiler warning: The following article contains plot points and story details from Star Wars: The Bad Batch Season 1 and Season 2 on Disney+…
Han and Chewie are looking to break in somewhere, while Aphra hopes to break out. So goes it in the galaxy far, far away.
As Marvel’s Star Wars: Han Solo & Chewbacca series continues with issue #8, the titular duo looks to pull off the impossible: stealing from the office of Grand Moff Tarkin. In StarWars.com’s exclusive first look at the issue, Han and Chewie take an alternate (and gross) route to gain entrance. Hopefully it turns out to be worth it.
Meanwhile, in Star Wars: Doctor Aphra #27, the Spark Eternal maintains possession of Doctor Aphra’s body. While Aphra’s friends pick up the pieces from the Spark Eternal’s latest attack, Aphra hatches a plan from within to save herself…
Han Solo & Chewbacca #8, written by Marc Guggenheim and illustrated by David Messina, with a cover by Phil Noto, arrives December 28 and is available for pre-order now on ComiXology. Doctor Aphra #27, written by Alyssa Wong and illustrated by Minkyu Jung, with a cover by W. Scott Forbes, also arrives December 28 and is available for pre-order now on ComiXology. Both issues will also be available at your local comic shop…
There’s a new bounty for fans of The Mandalorian and writer-artist Jeffrey Brown’s charming Star Wars books.
StarWars.com is thrilled to announce The Mandalorian and Child, the next installment in Brown’s classic series of all-ages titles on parenting in the galaxy far, far away. Following the bestselling Darth Vader and Son and Vader’s Little Princess, The Mandalorian and Child will tell heartwarming and humorous tales of Mando and Grogu, with appearances by other characters from The Mandalorian, including Luke Skywalker, IG-11, Peli Motto, Moff Gideon, Bo-Katan, the Armorer, and more. You can get a first look at art from the book below, featuring the titular duo riding a speeder bike. (Note Grogu’s adorable helmet!)…
Sana Starros can’t catch a break. In the debut of the new Marvel comic miniseries, Star Wars: Sana Starros, the formidable scoundrel heads back to her homeworld and encounters the Empire.
Get your first look below at the debut issue of Star Wars: Sana Starros and other Marvel Star Wars titles coming in February 2023 — including covers and solicits for the flagship Star Wars series, Chapter 8 in the adaptation of The Mandalorian on Disney+, new installments in Star Wars: The High Republic and The Blade, and more!…
For three months, Hannalee Pervan and her mother, Catherine, had carefully planned out how to create a 6-foot-tall, 3-foot-wide sculpture of Solo encased in carbonite using the tools of their trade from One House Bakery in Benicia, California. After the bakery closed for the day, mother and daughter worked side by side for four weeks, baking three massive batches — 30 kilos each — of a special yeastless dough, rolling it into thin sheets reminiscent of fresh pasta, and then racing up the stairs from the bakery’s ovens to the loft where they would assemble their masterpiece.
The underlayer was forgiving, a rock-solid form with a high-protein flour and high sugar content to give the carbonite base its shape. Upon discovering she was the same height as Harrison Ford, Hannalee volunteered to lie down on the plywood base while her mother traced her with a Sharpie marker, approximating the placement of Han’s shoulders, his waist, his legs…
This week in Star Wars, we continue the Halloween spirit with a look into Tales from the Rancor Pit with a StarWars.com interview with author Cavan Scott and the artists, journey into Phase II of The High Republic with George Mann’s Quest for the Hidden City, and take a deep dive into episode 8 of Andor, “Narkina 5,” streaming now on Disney+. Plus, the Empire arrives as Kyle Soller and Denise Gough stop by to talk about their character’s motivations.
The mission behind the new star wars and sackcloth & ashes collaboration – reveal
Unveiled today as part of bring home the galaxy, the trio of new blankets is environmentally friendly and helps keep homeless shelters stocked with a basic necessity.
Star wars stories tend to be about hope and perseverance despite overwhelming odds, a theme shared with the mission-driven sackcloth & ashes, which launches its first star wars collaboration today.
In 2014, ceo bob dalton founded the company during a dark time in his life, when his own mother experienced homelessness. “prior to my mom being on the streets, I was pretty judgmental toward people on the street corners holding signs and asking for money,” dalton admits. “it was hard for me to wrap my mind around the idea that some of these people weren’t capable of going to get a job. The irony in all of it was that my mom is the hardest working person I know, so it deconstructed my bias. She ended up on the streets due to impulsive decision making and addiction.”…
Ever wanted to draw Star Wars characters and vehicles just like the professional comic book artists? In this step-by-step series, Star Wars artists and illustrators show you how to draw some of the most beloved characters in the saga.
Star Wars illustrator Cynthia Cummens-Narcisi explains with these easy-to-follow steps how to draw Chewbacca, his wife Malla and his son Lumpy from “The Star Wars Holiday Special.” Steps 1-3 are to be drawn lightly with a pencil. Finished lines and details will come at the end.
Step One:
This may look like an advanced tutorial, but even the beginning artist can get something out of it. With any drawing you make, begin by lightly sketching in your figures. You might decide ahead of time what you want your composition to look like by drawing thumbnails in your sketchbook.
**Missing**
Step Two:
Begin to fill in your sketch with larger shapes. Don’t get too involved in drawing detail yet. Just make sure as you begin your sketch that the composition is balanced. Sketch with a light hand, and don’t press too hard. If you’d like to use the same supplies professional artists use, try drawing with a HB pencil for your rough sketch. H pencils can be difficult to erase so don’t use anything harder than an HB.
Step Three:
You’ve probably been anxious to add detail. I drew an apron on Malla to break up the colors a bit. I also placed that X-wing Fighter into the composition to add a nice splash of color. Is Lumpy enjoying Wookiee cookies in your sketch? Maybe you can draw some other unusual food he might have stolen off the table.
Step Four:
Now that you polished your sketch, you can start the fun part, the part everyone loves — coloring! You can use anything you want to color it like crayons, colored pencils, watercolors or maybe scan your image and color it in Adobe Photoshop. I used my beloved Copic Markers and colored pencils. There’s lots of layering of color involved, and blending (which I love to do), so be patient if you try this. Notice how loosely I placed that first layer of color.
Step Five:
Here’s the drawing after many layers of color have been applied. I even started adding more detail just with colored pencil.
Step Six:
Add more contrast by making some areas darker. Then I then grabbed some Deleter White which is similar to White Out in that it’s used primarily by comic book artists to make corrections. It can be watered down and applied in thin washes over a painting or applied opaquely. There’s lots of uses and a lot of artists use it, but you can also use a white colored pencil or a gel pen, or white acrylic paint and a very fine brush to add some nice white highlights.
One thing you might be tempted to do is to draw every strand of Wookiee fur. Resist the temptation to do that! Focus on just suggesting the fur by drawing fewer lines than you think you’ll need. Be as creative as you want to be with your sketch. That’s the magic of the Star Wars universe — once you’re in it, there are no limitations to your artistry.
KX droids are back! It was all but inevitable that we would see them in this series, considering K-2SO, but as we wait for that familiar droid to reappear, today I’m going over what the KX-series security droid was created for and its role within the Galactic Empire.