While off duty, the Imperial decided to visit the "Trading post Wookiee Planet C," a local shop[1] located near Rwookrrorro, the capitalcity of Kashyyyk.[5] When the shopkeeper, Saun Dann, saw him looking at the merchandise, he was frightened and thought the officer wanted to see his identification. Dann reached into his pocket to pull out his ID, but the guard stopped him, stating that he was off-duty and only wished to look around the shop. The salesman then attempted to sell him a micro-sized aquarium. The black-clad guard inspected the fishes inside for a moment, before putting the container on the counter. He bluntly commented that he hated fish, which made Dann more nervous. The old man then retrieved what appeared to be a hair trimmer, which he gave to the Imperial in hopes that he would be interested in it.[1]
The situation was becoming tense, when a beeping sound was issued by a wallscreen. While Dann spoke with the caller, a female Wookiee named Mallatobuck, the guard continued browsing the goods for sale. The Imperial had been fooled: unbeknownst to him, Saun Dann was really a Rebel sympathizer. Mallatobuck was the wife of Chewbacca, one of the Rebellion heroes the Empire sought to apprehend. The Imperial did not notice Dann looking back to see if he was paying attention to him, nor did he realize that the video conversation was a secret message about Chewbacca and his friend, Han Solo.[1]
When the conversation was over, Saun Dann returned to the guard, who told him he was unimpressed with the last item he had been offered to buy. Feeling challenged, the shopkeeper picked up the manual for the groomer and started demonstrating it as he talked. The Imperial finally took the groomer from Dann's hands and put it in his belt. When the old man asked him if he wished to pay or trade for it, the mustachioed guard answered that he would simply take it. Without any further ado, he walked away with the extorted merchandise, leaving a confused and mumbling Saun Dann alone in his shop.[1]
Saun Dann attempts to sell a pocket-sized fish tank to the black-clad guard.
This Imperial guard was a Human of average size and build, with a bushy mustache and brown eyes. As a guard, he wore a black double-breasted tunic and a swooping, black-tinted blast helmet[1] made of plastoid composite alloy.[6] On both outside panels of his tunic, there were pockets containing code cylinders,[1] devices that allowed officers access to computer systems and secure areas.[6] His belt was also equipped with an officer's disk,[1] which contained additional coded information.[7]
The guard stared at Saun Dann with cold, intimidating looks and spoke with a deep, growling voice in a military fashion, using short sentences. He would take advantage of his status as an Imperial guard, ready to bully the shopkeeper to obtain what he wished. He was rather blasé about the exotic items Dann attempted to sell him, remaining calm and uninterested the entire time. When the shopkeeper left him on his own for a moment, the officer started browsing the merchandise with obvious nonchalance. The mustachioed guard also loathed fishes.[1]
"Yeah, well, as I've said, it's George Lucas' ugly child and people have fallen in love with it. And therefore it's no longer ugly… because love is in the eye of the beholder!"
―Lev Mailer, about The Star Wars Holiday Special[src]
This Imperial guard appeared in the 1978Star Wars Holiday Special, in which he was portrayed by an American actor, Lev Mailer.[1] In an interview with the Star Wars Holiday Special fan site, Mailer explained that he and Art Carney—who portrayed Saun Dann—chose to play their scene like a classic "The Bully and The Idiot" routine, with Carney playing the idiot to his bully. Unlike other actors who starred in the show, Mailer didn't express regrets for participating in the Holiday Special, stating it was "kind of a fun little show" and had "a certain charm."[8]
The Holiday Special aired only once on television and was almost unanimously panned.[9][10][11] In an article published in the 106th issue of the Star Wars Insider magazine, Star Wars author Alex Newborn credited the Imperial characters as contributing factors to the program's lack of cohesion, calling them "ineffectual Imperial antagonists".[10]
↑In the Holiday Special, the trading post was shown to be close to Chewbacca's home, which the novel Heir to the Empire established as being located in Rwookrorro.