Born to the Purple
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“Born to the Purple” | |||||||
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Babylon 5 episode | |||||||
G'Kar, Londo and Sinclair |
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Episode no. | Season 1 Episode 3 |
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Written by | Larry DiTillio | ||||||
Directed by | Bruce Seth Green | ||||||
Guest stars | Fabiana Udenio (Adira Tyree) Clive Revill (Trakis) |
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Production no. | 104 | ||||||
Original airdate | 9 February 1994 | ||||||
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List of Babylon 5 episodes |
"Born to the Purple" is an episode from the first season of the science-fiction television series Babylon 5. This episode is named after the Greek word Porphyrogenitos.
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[edit] Synopsis
Londo Mollari is being forced to negotiate with the Narn. He would rather be pursuing a new love interest though. The love interest, Adira Tyree, is actually the slave of an alien named Trakis. He is using her to get Londo's Purple Files, a stash of dirt and information on Centauri's elite that Trakis hopes to sell to the highest bidder. Londo promotes Vir Cotto to diplomatic status and orders him to negotiate with the Narn while he pursues Adira.
Meanwhile Michael Garibaldi has discovered unauthorized use of the Gold Channel communications network, which he attempts to track down. Eventually he traces it to Susan Ivanova, who is using it to talk to her dying father back in Russia.
Adira, having drugged Londo and stolen of his Purple Files, is about to meet her master. She starts to have second thoughts about the deception and makes a run for it.
Sinclair is able to trick Trakis into divulging Adira's whereabouts. Trakis is then triumphantly floored by a punch from Londo and Sinclair is able to locate Adira and return the crystal to Londo.
Adira, despite Londo's pleading, decides to leave the station.
[edit] Arc significance
Adira Tyree's return to Babylon 5 plays a major part in the third-season episode "Interludes and Examinations," and also returns briefly in the epsiode Day of the Dead in the fifth season.
This episode marks the first real development of Londo's character, as he shows a great deal of tenderness and genuine emotion to counterbalance his usual Machiavellian cynicism.
[edit] Production details
"Born to the Purple" was originally titled "Amaranth."