The Imperials barged into the house and found three Wookiees: Chewbacca's wife, Mallatobuck, his father, Attichitcuk, and his son, Lumpawarrump. The Human traderSaun Dann was also present. As the residents cowered, the technician reported that another adult male Wookiee lived in the home; although unaware that the Wookiee in question was[1] the famous Chewbacca,[2] the Commander demanded to know where he was. Dann offered his services as a translator between the Imperials' Basic and the Wookiees' Shyriiwook, but the Commander was only interested in seeing the trader's identification. As he plugged Dann's identification card into a reader, he ordered his men to search the residence for any signs of Rebel activity. When the trader's card checked out, the Commander dismissed him from the home, and a nervous Dann—who was also secretly a member of the Alliance, hoping to protect Chewbacca's identity—only departed when he found a stormtrooper's blaster rifle pointed at his chest.[1]
The impatient Commander bid his men to finish their search, but when one of the troopers pointed his rifle at a furious Mallatobuck after the other trooper knocked Lumpawarrump and Attichitcuk out of his way, the Commander intervened. He ordered Mallatobuck to keep her son quiet, implying that harm would otherwise come her way. She cooperated by letting her son watch a cartoon about his father's adventures in the Rebellion, and when the video caused Lumpwarrump to scream, the Commander investigated. The young Wookiee quickly changed the screen of his video book to instead display a game, and the Commander lost interest. Meanwhile, the technician and one of the troopers tore apart Lumpawarrump's room during their search, and the Commander afterward sent the young Wookiee to clean it up, hoping that it would keep him out of the Imperials' way.[1]
All four Imperials directed their attention to the residence's wallscreen when a program began that announced itself as required viewing for all members of the Imperial forces. The program, entitled Life on Tatooine, was a live broadcast of a harrowing night in the life of Ackmena, the nightshift bartender of a cantina in the planet Tatooine's city of Mos Eisley. It was shown with the hope that viewers would be uplifted by a feeling of superiority over the cantina's lowly denizens. Following the program, the Commander's comlink transmitted a "return to base" order, which the Imperials failed to realize had actually been broadcasted by Lumpawarrump via a mini-transmitter. The Commander led the technician and one stormtrooper out the door but left trooper B4711 behind to await the return of the missing Wookiee. When Chewbacca did return, he and his Human companion, Han Solo, sent B4711 tumbling from the treetops down to the forest floor, and Saun Dann reported to another Imperial officer that the stormtrooper had fled into the woods. The officer believed the lie, and the Wookiees were free to celebrate Life Day without Imperial interference.[1]
"Finish the search of this house. We have other areas to cover today. You! Take the upper area!'"
―The Commander, addressing his men and then losing patience with a stormtrooper[src]
The Imperial Commander had brown hair, brown eyes, and light skin. He wore prominent sideburns,[1] which were popular with Imperial officers at the time.[5] While in Chewbacca's home, the Commander was short with Saun Dann and had little patience for the trader's attempts to interfere with the search for Rebel activity. He displayed a similar temperament to his own men and grew annoyed with their slow progress, adamant that there were other homes to be searched before the day's end. He frequently addressed his men with nothing more than a snap of his fingers.[1]
Although the Commander prevented one of his stormtroopers from firing on Mallatobuck, he warned her not to test the trooper's patience, and subtly threatened her with harm unless she kept a reign on her son Lumpawarrump, whom the Commander found annoying. Despite being unaware that he was in the home of Chewbacca, the Commander suspected that the residence's missing Wookiee was one of the Rebels for whom he was searching, and acted on his suspicion by leaving B4711 behind after departing.[1]
"Factor in the song by Jefferson Starship, the holographic circus troupe, some ineffectual Imperial antagonists (including the Wilhelm-screaming stormtrooper, B4711), and it's no wonder the Star Wars Holiday Special is accused of having an identity crisis."
The Imperial Commander first appeared in The Star Wars Holiday Special, a 1978 television feature that was spun off from the original 1977Star Wars film.[1] He was played by actor Jack Rader.[6] Although addressed only as "officer" in the program,[1] and referred to as "Guard officer" in the fourth draft of the Holiday Special's script,[7] he was later identified as a commander in 1995's The Essential Guide to Characters.[2] An Imperial commander was included in the Holiday Special as early as its initial story treatment, which features the character at an Imperial base, adamant with his aides that the Starship Musicavessel—carrying several Rebels—not be allowed to reach the Wookiee planet in time for holiday celebrations. A guest star, written to be played by actress Raquel Welch, volunteers to sabotage the ship.[8]
Following its only airing, the Holiday Special was almost universally panned.[9][10][11]Star Wars author Alex Newborn has credited the Imperial characters as contributing factors to the program's poor finished product, calling them "ineffectual Imperial antagonists" in the midst of a 1970svariety show who helped lead to an overall lack of focus.[10]