- "I see...shapes. Large. Devouring. I hear...laughter. Bizarre laughter. And...purple?"
- ―Ahsoka Tano, describing her vision of Ziro the Hutt
Ziro Desilijic Tiure, also known as Ziro the Hutt, was a Hutt male crime lord who, with the title of Master of the Hutt Clan, controlled seven star systems in the name of the Hutt Clan during the decline of the Galactic Republic. A native of the planet Sleheyron, Ziro eventually left Hutt Space in favor of the galaxy's Core Worlds and established his residence on Coruscant, the galactic capital of the Republic. In addition to his father and mother, Ziro's family included his son Hiro and Jabba Desilijic Tiure, his nephew who fathered the Huttlet heir Rotta. Gorga Desilijic Aarrpo was another influential relative of Ziro, serving as a member of the Grand Hutt Council.
In the year 22 BBY, Ziro formed a secret pact with Count Dooku—the leader of the Confederacy of Independent Systems—during the early days of the Clone Wars. With the help of the Separatists, Ziro had his great-nephew Rotta abducted and taken to a B'omarr monastery on the distant world of Teth. Knowing the Jedi Order would send their own to rescue the Huttlet, Ziro hoped that the deaths of Rotta's would-be Jedi saviors would lead to a conflict between Jabba and the Republic. With Jabba removed from power, Ziro would be in a position to seize control of their clan.
Ziro's role in the conspiracy was discovered by Senator Padmé Amidala, who confronted the gangster in his nightclub on Coruscant during the mission to rescue Rotta. With Rotta safely returned to his father on Tatooine, Ziro was taken into custody by the Coruscant Guard. However, as the war progressed, the Grand Hutt Council regarded Ziro as too dangerous to be left in a Republic prison, given his knowledge of their inner workings. As a result, the Hutts recruited the bounty hunter Cad Bane, who freed Ziro and turned him over to the Hutt Council. Although Ziro escaped the Hutts as well, he was ultimately murdered in 21 BBY by the Pa'lowick singer Sy Snootles, Ziro's one-time lover whom Jabba hired to kill his uncle and retrieve the Hutt Council records.
Biography[]
At some point, Ziro was born to Mama and Papa. He had two siblings, Jabba Desilijic Tiure's father and another[7] brother, Ebor. During his life, he had an affair with Sy Snootles, one of his nephew Jabba's dancers. However, Ziro ended the affair[4] and went to Coruscant. From his nightclub, Ziro controlled his criminal organization.[9] At some point, Ziro had a son named Hiro.[11] Eventually, Ziro earned the title of Master of the Hutt Clan for seven separate star systems.[9]
Clone Wars[]
- "You will regret this, Ziro!"
"No. I think I will become rich with this." - ―Republic Senator Padmé Amidala and Ziro.
During the Clone Wars, Ziro made a deal with Separatist leader Count Dooku; Dooku's assassin, Asajj Ventress, would kidnap his nephew Jabba's son, Rotta. However, Ziro then learned from Naboo Senator Padmé Amidala that the Jedi had rescued Jabba's son. Fearing that his role would be discovered, Ziro contacted Dooku, informing him of Amidala's investigation. Dooku assured Ziro that Jabba believed him about the Jedi killing his son. Knowing Jabba would execute the Jedi responsible for killing his son, Dooku assured Ziro that he would become master of all the Hutt Clans when the Jedi would bring Jabba to justice. Ziro was then ordered by Dooku to eliminate Amidala if she continued investigating.[9]
Ziro and his IG-86 sentinel droids then found Amidala. When Dooku realized that it was Amidala, he told Ziro that his allies would pay him for delivering Amidala to him. Ziro, agreeing to the deal, had Amidala placed in his dungeon and thanked Dooku for the profitable alliance. However, Ziro learned that Amidala had contacted her protocol droid, C-3PO, for help. Thus, he decided to execute Amidala, knowing his powerful friends in the Republic Senate would protect him. Ziro and droids were then attacked by Commander Fox and his detachment of the Coruscant Guard that 3PO called. Ziro was then held at gunpoint by Amidala. Ziro tried to plead innocence to no avail to Amidala. Ziro contacted Jabba on Tatooine, and Amidala informed Jabba that Ziro was behind Rotta's kidnapping. Ziro also confessed that Dooku also helped in the kidnapping. Jabba vowed that Ziro would be severely punished.[9]
Imprisonment and revenge on Amidala[]
- "Do you see the conditions I'm living in?! That…that insipid senator put me in here! She deserves to die for leaving me to rot in this squalor!"
"Well, thanks to you, Ziro, and that little confession, you've just officially failed."
"You'll never get away with this! You have no idea what I'm capable of!" - ―Ziro accidentally confesses to Ahsoka Tano
Ziro was imprisoned in the Judiciary Central Detention Center. Desiring revenge on Amidala, Ziro was able to hire bounty hunter Aurra Sing to kill her as revenge for foiling his plot with the Separatists.[8] Sing followed the Naboo Senator to Alderaan, and awaited her speech to fellow senators regarding the refugee crisis that has plagued the galaxy following the outbreak of the Clone Wars. There she attempted to assassinate the senator on two separate occasions, but was foiled by Ahsoka Tano who had been experiencing premonitions of the assassination attempts.[8]
Sing was then remanded in custody on Coruscant, with Padawan Ahsoka Tano, Amidala, and Bail Organa also present to deliver the assassin to Republic authorities represented by Grand Master Yoda and Jedi Knight Anakin Skywalker. However, Ahsoka had a further vision that she thought pictured the Hutt gangster, leading Amidala to confirm the Padawan's thoughts that Ziro was behind the assassination attempts.[8]
Anakin and Ahsoka then traveled to the Republic prison complex to interrogate the Hutt, when Ziro inadvertently confirmed that he had hired Sing to complete the job. Ziro was left fuming after giving himself away, vowing to take revenge on the Jedi and the senator. When Sing failed, Ziro spoke with Skywalker and Tano. When Tano told Ziro that Sing revealed that he paid her, Ziro confessed to hiring her. However, Tano tricked him and his sentence was increased.[8]
Prison release[]
- "Oh, you can't imagine the unspeakable things I've suffered. The horror! I doubt I'll ever really recover."
- ―Ziro, after his rescue from prison
During this time, Jabba and the Hutt Council knew that it was only a matter of time before Ziro would give the Republic Senate the Council's records. Thus, the council decided to hire Cad Bane to free Ziro.[13] Bane and his team were able to hold several members of the Republic Senate hostage, forcing Chancellor Palpatine to release Ziro, who was brought out when Senator Orn Free Taa arrived to give the Detention Center's guards a pardon disc. Ziro then boarded HELIOS-3D's speeder and was taken to the Galactic Senate Building despite his objections. HELIOS-3D and Ziro then picked up Bane's team. After Bane and his group boarded the speeder, Ziro told Bane about his captivity in the detention center and approved of Bane killing off the senators. Ziro congratulated Bane on freeing him, but Bane reminded him that he expected to be paid.[12]
Death[]
- "What a world…"
- ―Ziro's last words
Ziro was taken to Nal Hutta where he spoke with Gardulla and the Hutt Council. Despite thanking them for his escape from Republic captivity, Ziro knew they did not want him to reveal the location of the Council's records. He threatened to have the records dropped off at the Republic senate should he be killed. Thus, the Council kept Ziro locked up in a prison cell. Ziro was able to escape with help from Snootles. Ziro and Snootles were able to make their escape by stealing a speeder and went to Mama's house. Ziro was able to convince his mother to give Ziro her ship in order to go to Teth.[4]
On Teth, Ziro went to his father's grave, where the council records were hidden. However, Snootles had secretly been hired by Jabba to retrieve the records. Snootles then shot Ziro through the chest and left his body to be found by both the Jedi and Bane.[4]
Legacy[]
In 19 BBY,[14] before Quinlan Vos was sent to assassinate Dooku, Obi-Wan Kenobi reflected that the last time they were paired together was for the failed mission to track down Ziro, recalling that they were never able to discover who Ziro's murderer was.[15]
Personality and traits[]
- "Oh, it's so bright out here!"
"Oh my god…"
"Why couldn't we do this at night when it's cooler?" - ―Ziro is escorted by clone troopers
Ziro was a large, purple male Hutt with emerald green eyes. His body was covered in glow-in-the dark cosmetics and there was an tattoo of a sun printed on his belly. Before his arrest, Ziro wore a feathered hat and several rings on his fingers.[9]
Even though Ziro understood his native Huttese, Ziro spoke fluent Basic with a high-pitched voice and slight lisp.[9] Like many Hutts, he was greedy and was determined to gain control of the Hutt criminal empire by any means, even if it meant blackmailing his relatives. He was also quite fashion-conscious and very flamboyant for a Hutt. Ziro held grudges, wanting to get revenge on Senator Padmé Amidala for exposing his allegiance to the Separatists where he hired bounty hunter Aurra Sing to assassinate her.[8]
Ziro was very over-dramatic where upon being released from prison, he quickly complained about over his release not taking place at dusk after being exposed to sunlight for the first time. He even complained to Cad Bane about his time in prison and worried about recovering from his experiences.[12] When his life was threatened, Ziro cowardly begged for mercy when clone shock troopers arrested him and again when his ex-girlfriend Sy Snootles held him at gunpoint before she murdered him and stole his holo-diary.[9][4]
Behind the scenes[]
Ziro the Hutt first appeared in the 2008 Star Wars: The Clone Wars animated film, voiced by prolific voice actor Corey Burton.[9] Burton went on to reprise the role in four more episodes of Star Wars: The Clone Wars.
Although Ziro was the first Hutt to speak Galactic Basic Standard onscreen, this was not originally intended. Ziro was meant to speak Huttese into a microphone which would translate his speech into English, but this idea was dropped when the producers felt that younger audiences wouldn't understand what the translator was. Later, George Lucas stepped in and specifically asked for Ziro to sound like Truman Capote. Since the character was a favorite of the production team, they brought him back for further appearances in the subsequent The Clone Wars series.[16]Ziro's dying words, “What a world…” are a reference to the 1939 film “The Wizard of Oz”, where “What a world” was among the last words of the film's main antagonist.
Reviewers of The Clone Wars film from some media outlets criticized Ziro as an anti-gay stereotype, but Dave Filoni considered Ziro's sexuality ambiguous.[17] Other outlets disputed the framing of Ziro's traits as offensive stereotypes, with some instead regarding the character as "campiness in a franchise known for being far too self-serious."[18] Continuity experts had also told Filoni that Ziro, similar to slugs, did not have a sex,[17] but there are separate sexes in the Hutt species in the new canon continuity, unlike in Star Wars Legends.[19]
Appearances[]
- Star Wars: The Clone Wars film (First appearance)
- Star Wars: The Clone Wars — "Assassin"
- Star Wars: The Clone Wars — "Evil Plans" (Appears in hologram)
- Star Wars: The Clone Wars — "Hostage Crisis"
- Star Wars: The Clone Wars — "Hunt for Ziro"
- Dark Disciple (and audiobook) (Mentioned only)
- Star Wars: The Clone Wars — "Dangerous Debt" (Mentioned only)
- "Satisfaction" — From a Certain Point of View: Return of the Jedi (and audiobook) (Appears through imagination)
- Star Wars: Hunters (Mentioned only)
Non-canon appearances[]
- LEGO Star Wars: The Skywalker Saga (Mentioned only)
Sources[]
Notes and references[]
- ↑ Ultimate Star Wars, New Edition
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Star Wars: The Clone Wars: Character Encyclopedia - Join the Battle!
- ↑ Star Wars: Timelines dates the events of "Hunt for Ziro" to 21 BBY.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 4.7 4.8 Star Wars: The Clone Wars — "Hunt for Ziro"
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 Ziro the Hutt in the Databank (backup link)
- ↑ Star Wars: Scum and Villainy: Case Files on the Galaxy's Most Notorious
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 Star Wars Super Graphic: A Visual Guide to a Galaxy Far, Far Away
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 8.5 8.6 8.7 Star Wars: The Clone Wars — "Assassin"
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 9.4 9.5 9.6 9.7 9.8 9.9 Star Wars: The Clone Wars film
- ↑ Star Wars: The Visual Encyclopedia
- ↑ Star Wars: Galaxy's Edge has official backstory elements that, though not directly published for the public, are officially canon details that can be obtained verbally from cast members working in the land.
- ↑ 12.0 12.1 12.2 12.3 Star Wars: The Clone Wars — "Hostage Crisis"
- ↑ Star Wars: The Clone Wars — "Evil Plans"
- ↑ Star Wars: Galactic Atlas dates the mission to Utapau and the Second Battle of Dathomir to 19 BBY. As the novel this event takes place within takes place between the events of the episode and comic the other events are attached to according to Star Wars: The Clone Wars Chronological Episode Order on StarWars.com (backup link), this event must take place in 19 BBY.
- ↑ Dark Disciple
- ↑ Star Wars: The Clone Wars film DVD commentary
- ↑ 17.0 17.1 Is Ziro The Hutt The First Gay Alien In 'Star Wars' History? by Adler, Shawn on www.mtv.com (August 12, 2008) (archived from the original on August 3, 2020)
- ↑ Leave Ziro Alone! by Newitz, Annalee on gizmodo.com (August 13, 2008) (archived from the original on July 14, 2021)
- ↑ SWCA: One Big Story – Star Wars Canon Panel Liveblog on StarWars.com (backup link)