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■ A b b r e v i a t i o n K e y ■This lexicon draws information not only from the films and

TV series, but from a variety of other sources as well—so many, in fact, that keeping track of them can be daunting. To that end, four-character codes indicate the source or sources in which the information in each entry can be found. Codes for entries related to the live-action and animated TV series also contain an episode number.

Some codes feature lower-case suffixes, indicating an entry was culled from the script, novelization or comic adaptation of a film or episode, rather than from the onscreen episode or film itself. To simplify the coding, “s” refers not only to a script, but also to any outlines and treatments preceding it. Most scripts and outlines are available at Hunter’s Planet of the Apes Archive (pota.goatley.com/scripts.html) or at Simply Scripts (simplyscripts.com/planet_of_the_apes.html), while others are synopsized at Mark Rogers’ Planet of the Apes: The Series Web site.

In addition, one or more symbols appear to the left of each entry, indicating its “universe”: Pierre Boulle’s Monkey Planet, the classic films, the TV series, the cartoons, Tim Burton’s remake, Ubisoft’s video games, Marvel’s Apeslayer storyline, the U.K. live stage and arena shows, or one of several unused screenplays. Thus, readers primarily interested in a particular branch of POTA can easily find all relevant entries, while skipping the rest.

Note: Some fans view the films and TV series as being in the same reality, while others consider them separate. Likewise, not all fans consider the comics to be canonical. This book does not take a stance on that debate, however, since the symbols are intended primarily to group like items together, not to dictate canonicity. All stories based on the classic films are placed in that universe, all tales based on the TV series are placed in that universe, all titles spun off from Burton’s film are set in that universe, and so forth. Thus, entries from Malibu Comics’ storylines contain the symbol for the classic films (), while

those from Power Records' audio-tales take the symbol for the TV series (), those from the HarperEntertainment novels have the symbol for the Burton film () and so on.

By way of example, the symbol and the code [TVPA-11-n/s] would indicate an entry’s source was the novelization and script of “The Tyrant,” the eleventh episode of the live-action TV series, rather than in the actual aired episode; whereas the symbol and the code [TERR] would signify that the information was taken from “Terror on the Planet of the Apes,” a Marvel Comics saga based on the classic films.

To avoid redundancy in the notes accompanying some entries, shortened forms of the film titles (Planet, Beneath, Escape, Battle and Conquest), as well as that of the animated series (Return), are used instead of full titles. Additionally, the franchise name is often shortened to either Apes or POTA.

George Taylor’s spaceship is a special case. The craft had been coined Icarus by fan Larry Evans in 1972—a designation later adopted by toy model companies, as well as in Mr. Comics’ Revolution on the Planet of the Apes miniseries. In 2008, A Public Service Announcement From ANSA, a mockumentary included with Planet’s Blu-ray release, dubbed the ship Liberty 1, a name adhered to in BLAM! Ventures’ upcoming novels. The term Liberty 1 is used throughout this book, though the code [ANSA] is not provided after every use of the name, in order to avoid needless clutter—for the purpose of this lexicon, the mockumentary is assumed to be the source of the designation.

The symbols, codes and suffixes are detailed in the charts below. Additional details for each story, along with a complete cover gallery and an exhaustive chronological breakdown of Apes history, can be found in Timeline of the Planet of the Apes: The Definitive Chronology, published in 2008 (visit hassleinbooks.com for more information).

SYMBOL UNIVERSE The classic films and their adaptations into other media, as well as all spin-off fiction The live-action TV series and its adaptations into other media, as well as all spin-off fiction► The U.K. stage and arena shows of the 1970s, which utilized concepts from the films and TV series The animated cartoon series and its adaptations into other media, as well as all spin-off fiction Tim Burton’s film remake and its adaptations into other media, as well as all spin-off fiction Pierre Boulle’s original novel Monkey Planet, on which the POTA franchise is based

Unused film or TV screenplays, as well as early-draft scripts sufficiently different than the aired versions as to be considered separate stories

Ubisoft’s POTA video games, which were loosely based on both the films and Boulle’s novel Marvel Comics’ Apeslayer storyline, which was separate from Marvel’s monthly comics

Lexicon of the Planet of the Apes xv

CODE (TITLE, MEDIUM, UNIVERSE, ETC.)

EVOL “Evolution’s Nightmare”: Marvel Comics tale in U.S. issue #5, published in 1975. Written by Doug Moench; art by Ed Hannigan and Jim Mooney. Available at pota.goatley.com.

EXTN Extinction: Unpublished prequel novel to Tim Burton’s film remake. Written by John Whitman for HarperEntertainment.

FALL The Fall: Sequel novel to Tim Burton’s film remake, published in 2002 by HarperEntertainment. Written by William T. Quick.

FALN “A Fallen God”: Unfilmed episode script for the TV series. Written by Anthony Lawrence; no director assigned. Available at pota.goatley.com.

FRCE Force: Prequel novel to Tim Burton’s film remake, published by HarperEntertainment in 2002. Written by John Whitman.

FREE “Freedom Road”: Unfilmed TV series episode script, synopsized in the series’ writer’s bible and in Simian Scrolls #12. Written by Arthur Rowe; no director assigned.

FUTR “Future History Chronicles”: Marvel Comics storyline, serialized in U.S. issues #12, 15, 17, 24 and 29, as well

as in an unpublished chapter entitled “The Captive of the Canals.” Written by Doug Moench; art by Tom Sutton. Available at pota.goatley.com.

GLOS “Glossary of the Planet of the Apes”: Lexicon published in 1976 in issues #17-18 of Marvel Comics’ U.S. monthly magazine. Compiled by Jim Whitmore. Available at pota.goatley.com.

GODS Old Gods: Dark Horse Comics storyline based on Tim Burton’s film remake, published in 2001 in issues #1-3 of the monthly comic. Written by Ian Edginton; art by Norman Lee, Paco Medina, Adrian Sibar and Juan Vlasco.

HAMM Unproduced screenplay for POTA film re-launch. Written by Sam Hamm in 1998; Chris Columbus announced as director. Available at simplyscripts.com.

HAYS Unproduced screenplay for POTA film re-launch. Written by Terry Hayes in 1996; Philip Noyce announced as director. Available at simplyscripts.com.

HC75 Planet of the Apes Annual (Authorised Edition): U.K. hardcover published in 1975 by Brown Watson Books,

based on the TV series. Contained four text stories and two comic strips. Writers unknown; art by John Bolton (uncredited) and a second unidentified artist. Available at potatv.kassidyrae.com.

HC76 Planet of the Apes Annual (Authorised Edition): U.K. hardcover published in 1976 by Brown Watson Books,

based on the TV series. Contained four text stories and two comic strips. Writers unknown; art by John Bolton and Oli Frey (uncredited). Available at potatv.kassidyrae.com.

HC77 Planet of the Apes Annual (Authorised Edition): U.K. hardcover published in 1977 by Brown Watson Books,

based on the TV series. Contained three text stories and three comic strips. Writers unknown; art by John Bolton (uncredited). Available at potatv.kassidyrae.com.

HER1 The Ape: Promotional mock newspaper distributed during theatrical release of Planet. Available at potamediaarchive.com.

HER2 The Ape News/The Mutant News: Two-sided promotional mock newspaper distributed during theatrical release of Beneath. Available at potamediaarchive.com.

HER3 The Ape News: Promotional mock newspaper distributed during theatrical release of Escape. Available at potamediaarchive.com.

HER4 Future News: Promotional mock newspaper distributed during theatrical release of Conquest. Available at potamediaarchive.com.

HER5 San Simian Sentinel: Promotional mock newspaper distributed during theatrical release of Battle. Available at potamediaarchive.com.

HNRY “Henry the Ape”: Unpublished Malibu Comics tale. Proposed by writer Roland Mann; no artist assigned.

HSTG “Hostage”: Unfilmed TV series episode script. Written by Stephen Kandel; no director assigned. Available at pota.goatley.com.

HUMN The Human War: Dark Horse Comics miniseries, 3 issues, published in 2001 based on Tim Burton’s film remake. Written by Ian Edginton; art by Christopher Ivy, Norman Lee, Paco Medina, Adrian Sibar and Juan Vlasco.

HUNT “Manhunt on the Planet of the Apes”: Unpublished Malibu Comics tale. Proposed by writer Mike Valerio; no artist assigned.

Lexicon of the Planet of the Apes xvii

Lexicon of the Planet of the Apes 5

AlDO

A

'A' Company: A unit of Ape City’s gorilla military, under the command of General Ursus. The soldiers were dispatched across the Forbidden Zone to attack a city of human mutants, and were killed by the mutants’ detonation of the Alpha-Omega Bomb. [BNTH-s]

A.C.: An abbreviation signifying “After Crash,” used by the crew of the USAF Oberon to measure the passage of years on the planet Ashlar following the station’s crash-landing on that world. The first year post-crash was dubbed 1 A.C., the second 2 A.C. and so forth. [FALL]

A.E. Project: See Accelerated Evolution (A.E.) Project

A.P.E.: A television station operating in Ape City. [RTRN-5]

A20: An airlock aboard the USAF Oberon. Chimp pilot Pericles launched from this airlock in the space station’s Alpha Pod, in order to study an electromagnetic storm. [PA01]

A21: An airlock on the USAF Oberon. After Pericles vanished in an electromagnetic storm, Air Force pilot Leo Davidson disembarked from this site in the Delta Pod to find the lost chimp. [PA01]

A223 card: An electronic card used by an advanced human city of the USNSA. While exploring the city’s ruins, astronaut Ulysses found a note mentioning this model. [UBIP]

A233 card: An electronic card used by an advanced human city of the USNSA. While exploring the city’s ruins, astronaut Ulysses found a note mentioning this model. [UBIP]

A-41: See Section R-8, 41

A9538: An animal cage aboard the USAF Oberon, used to house the space station’s ape pilots. [PA01]

aarpan: A corrupted form of the word “airplane.” The humans of Prefect Koro’s village worshipped Jefferson’s Aarpan, an ancient warplane resting on the edge of a cliff. [HC75]

NOTE: The name “Jefferson’s Aarpan” was an in-joke referring to American psychedelic rock band Jefferson Airplane.

Abbra: A human resistance fighter who helped Ulysses cross an ape-guarded canyon during the astronaut’s search for an ancient relic known as the Key of the Return. [UBIP]

ABC: See Ape Broadcasting Corp. (ABC)

ABC Special Report: A series of breaking-news television broadcasts in ape-controlled Europe, circa 2140. The ABC Special Report was produced by the Ape Broadcasting Corp. [CITY]

Abe ("Teacher"): A middle-aged human male who lived in Ape City during the reign of Caesar. Since the apes primarily called him Teacher, he sometimes forgot his birth name. Abe was assigned to instruct the simian population on how to read

and write, in order to help improve their intelligence. One student, General Aldo, acted rebelliously in Abe’s

class, threatening his life for daring to say “No” (a violation of the First Law). Caesar, however, spared him punishment for the transgression, infuriating the general. When Caesar invited Abe and other humans to sit on the council, Aldo and his soldiers stormed out of the session in defiance. [BATL]

Among Abe’s close friends were Bruce MacDonald and his mate, Tanya. [BATL-n] Tanya sometimes prepared Bootleg Rabbit for the two men—a violation of Caesar’s restrictions on meat consumption. [BATL-s/c]

NOTE: In Marvel’s comic adaptation of Battle, Abe was named Ed.

Abelard: A chimpanzee acrobat in Armando’s Circus. Abelard performed with his mate, Heloise, and another chimp, Nero. Abelard and Heloise had a daughter, Salome, who was delivered in 1973 by Doctor Lewis Dixon. [ESCP-s] The chimp performers were collectively called the Soaring Simians. [REVL]

NOTE: The character was likely named after Peter Abelard, a 12th-century French scholastic philosopher and logician who enjoyed a legendary love affair with a nun named Héloïse d’Argenteuil.

Aboro, District Chief/Prefect ("Lord of the Apes"): A corrupt, tyrannical gorilla official in the district of Hathor. During his Academy days, Aboro befriended fellow students Bulta and Urko. Caught cheating, he found his career growth stifled after graduation, advancing only to the level of district chief over the next two decades, while they rose much higher.

Dissatisfied, Aboro turned to corruption. He and his aide, Daku, robbed local farmers of grain supplies, which they sold for gold in order to bribe Bulta—now Urko’s assistant—for a promotion. Hathor’s prefect, Augustus, learned of their activities, but was transferred out before he could do anything about it, with Aboro replacing him as prefect. [TVPA-11] In that role, the gorilla vainly referred to himself as “Lord of the Apes.” [TVPA-11-n]

Alan Virdon, Peter Burke and Galen vowed to bring the corrupt apes to justice. To that end, Galen posed as Councilor Zaius’ assistant, Octavio, in order to manipulate Aboro and

6 Lexicon of the Planet of the Apes

A

Abe

Academy of Science, The: A simian research facility located in the vicinity of Central City. Councilor Zaius was the president of this institution. [SER1]

Academy of Science, The: An academic body on the planet Orbis Terrae. Cornelius, a chimp from that world, was expelled for his radical belief that humans and apes were genetically related. [HAMM]

Accelerated Evolution (A.E.) Project: A series of scientific programs devoted to advancing simian intelligence. Following Earth’s nuclear war, USNSA scientists genetically altered an ape workforce so it could rebuild human society, but after building the Neocities, the apes overthrew their masters.

Centuries later, a chimp academic, Professor Cornelius, conducted his own A.E. research to improve all ape species. An ambitious gorilla soldier, General Ursus, spied on Cornelius’ experiments and set up a lab in the ruins of New Cyprus to conduct a third A.E. project, intent on improving only gorilla intelligence so that he could rule ape society. However, a human astronaut named Ulysses warned the High Council of Ursus’ plans, and the project was shut down. [UBIP]

Achilles List, The: A list of simian servants accused of violating Article 4, Paragraph 9—a statute governing ape disobedience. [CQST-s/c] This document was assembled in 1991 by the Defense Council, in conjunction with the office of Governor Breck, who decreed that all violators be sent to Ape Management for reconditioning. [CQST]

NOTE: Achilles, the central character of Homer’s Iliad, was invulnerable throughout his body except for his heel, thereby spawning the phrase “Achilles’ heel,” referring to a person’s principal weakness. The servants on the list thus represented human society’s vulnerability with regard to the apes.

Ackerman: A street in the Forbidden City, near the former Ape Management complex. The Archives Section was located on the corner of Ackerman and Breck. [BATL]

NOTE: This road was named for Forest J. Ackerman, a prominent science fiction writer, editor and promoter. The film’s Blu-ray subtitles misspelled the name as “Agamon.”

ACLU: See Apes Civil Liberties Union (ACLU)

Adam: The son of scientist Billie Rae Diamond, born after she was stranded 100,000 years in the past. Diamond and fellow time-traveler Robert Plant raised Adam together, along with a primitive human girl they called Aiv (“Eve”). [HAYS]

NOTE: According to Tales from Development Hell, David Hughes’ exploration of the complicated world of writing (and re-writing) Hollywood blockbusters, the couple named the baby Adam—a counterpart to Eve. In a version of the script available at simplyscripts.com, however, that name does not appear. It’s possible the name was added to a later version not available to fans.

Daku into trying to assassinate Urko. They then alerted the security chief so he could make arrests. [TVPA-11]

NOTE: The novelization of “The Tyrant” described Aboro’s pre-prefecture function as that of a local police chief. In a description of the episode included in the TV series’ writer’s bible (excerpted in Simian Scrolls issue #12), he was said to deal in stolen pelts rather than gold; in that version, he and Daku killed their own soldiers in order to hijack their pelt shipments, then framed Mikal and Jana (a female analog to Janor) for the crime.

Above World, The: The name given by the Underdwellers to the Forbidden Zone desert located over their hidden domain, the Below World. For two millennia, the Underdwellers avoided any contact with the Above World, awaiting the arrival of astronaut Judy Franklin, whom they called “Usa.” [RTRN-3-n]

ABS: See Ape Broadcasting System (ABS)

Academy, The: An academic institution on the planet Soror that oversaw archeological digs and other scientific pursuits. A chimpanzee on that world, Doctor Cornelius, was a researcher at the Academy. [MNKY]

Academy, The: An ape training facility in or near Central City, which Security Chief Urko attended along with fellow gorillas Bulta and Aboro. [TVPA-11]

Academy of Ape Science, The: A research facility at which simian scientists and professors conducted experiments on human subjects in order to increase the apes’ knowledge of human origins and evolution, learn more about simian physiology in the process, and disprove the heretical notion that ape descended from man. Among its staff were Doctors Galen, a surgeon, and Zira, an animal psychologist. Council favoritism dictated which projects were awarded the most funding, and Galen felt Zira received preferential treatment. Due to poor funding, the academy conditions were appallingly filthy. [HER1]

Lexicon of the Planet of the Apes 7

A

Prefect Aboro

Lexicon of the Planet of the Apes 37

Burke

B

Ashlar. [PA01-n, FALL] Thousands of years later, a baboon on that world, Nestor, was among Attar’s academy professors. [FRCE] Another baboon professor, Ganji, taught captured humans how to read basic symbols, enabling them to build a Temple of Semos for Ashlar’s ape society. [RSST] Sapient baboons also lived on the planet Orbis Terrae. [HAMM]

In France, a cult of psychic baboon ninjas formed, known as the Baboonjas. [CITY]

Baboonjas: A psychic baboon ninja cult based in France. In 2140, the Baboonjas, under orders from their mystical leader, Krak, tried to steal a power crystal from the Vindicators’ spaceship, sparking a war with ape gangsters intent on taking the crystal for themselves. [CITY]

Baby-Chimp's Breath Mints: A commercial product that sponsored Apewitness News. [RTRN-8-n]

Backfire: A TV journalism program on the American News Network (ANN) whose host avoided controversial topics. While much of the world was discussing Caesar’s rebellion, Backfire interviewed a comedian. [REVL]

Bacra: A village outside Ape City that suffered severe forest fires in 3979. [RTRN-2-n]

Baird Clinic, The: A 20th-century facility that pioneered painless organ replacement for failing livers, kidneys, hearts, eyes, lungs or other organs, through a procedure known as Formula CA3. [TVPA-3]

NOTE: The clinic appeared on a subway station poster, its name obscured by shadow. As such, the spelling “B-a-i-r-d” may not be correct, as the second and fourth letters are difficult to discern.

Bakersfield: A human city in which an ape revolt mirrored Caesar’s revolution. [REVL]

'B' Company: A unit of Ape City’s gorilla military under the command of General Ursus. The soldiers were dispatched across the Forbidden Zone to attack a city of human mutants, and were killed by the mutants’ detonation of the Alpha-Omega Bomb. [BNTH-s]

B Console: A monitoring station at Ape Management headquarters used to coordinate security cameras. In the event of unauthorized entry, the console could pinpoint an intruder’s location. [BATL]

B.J. and the Bear: Reloaded: A 20th-century television series broadcast on the American News Network (ANN). [REVL] The series aired immediately after the ANN News Hour. [CMBT]

NOTE: Presumably, this was a sequel to the real-life television series B.J. and the Bear, which aired on NBC from 1979 to 1981.

B-1: A section of Ape Management’s Conditioning Area, containing Chimpanzees 3, a holding pen in which Caesar was housed during his stay at the facility. [CQST-n]

B-3: See Clip 1

B-5: See Clip 2

Babo: A simian baker living in Ape City in the mid-22nd century. [MLBU]

NOTE: This ape's species was unspecified.

baboon: A group of five primate species closely related to mandrills and drills. Upon learning that astronaut John Landon had been lobotomized, his crewmate George Taylor called Doctor Zaius a “bloody baboon.” [PA68] Some baboons attained sapience following man’s downfall

on Earth, and earned a reputation for reacting unwisely when panicked. [UBIP] Many refused to acknowledge Ape City as the simian capital, and were thus deemed foreigners, settling instead in outlying regions. [RTRN-8-n]

Several baboons were among the ape test subjects aboard the USAF Oberon when the space station crashed on the planet

38 Lexicon of the Planet of the Apes

B

A Baboonja

Bandor

banding: The practice of attaching metal bands to the wrists of producers—humans enslaved to work as commercial spear fishermen or in other capacities at enforced labor communities. [TVPA-6]

Bando: An ape soldier who served in Central City’s security police force under Security Chief Urko. [SER2]

NOTE: This ape's species was unspecified, though he was likely a gorilla, given his career choice.

Bandor: An orangutan supervisor of several West Coast fish-producing communities, including one run by Prefect Hurton. Bandor presided over the banding of new human fishermen in the Ceremony of the Bracelets. Highly connected, he personally knew Urko, Central City’s security chief.

Frequently raising Hurton’s productivity quotas unreasonably, Bandor planned to replace him with his own nephew. When Hurton captured Alan Virdon and Peter Burke to work in his labor camp, Galen claimed they were his property, but Bandor upheld Hurton’s claim, forcing the fugitives to trick the two administrators in order to escape. [TVPA-6]

Barbaria: An orangutan celebrity gossip columnist on the planet Orbis Terrae. She had lacquered red hair, an overly solicitous manner and a slight lisp. [HAMM]

NOTE: Barbaria was likely modeled after Earth journalist Barbara Walters.

Barbarus: The leader of Old Hydromeda, a territory of the city-ship Hydromeda. When the rebel gorilla opened peace talks with New Hydromeda’s leader, Argol, a human named Alaric murdered officials from both factions, disrupting the peace process, in order to free his people from bondage during the ensuing chaos. Barbarus was wounded by Alaric in a cutlass duel, then died when the human set the ship aflame. [FUTR]

NOTE: The character’s name was a pun on the word “barbarous,” meaning “cruel or savage.”

Barbary ape: A type of macaque with only a stub of a tail; despite its name, the species was actually a monkey, not an ape. Some Barbary apes attained sapience following mankind’s fall, but refused to acknowledge Ape City as the simian capital, and were thus deemed foreigners, settling instead in outlying regions. Many apes considered it an insult to be called a Barbary ape. [RTRN-8-n]

General Urko’s father made a name for himself battling an army of Barbary apes at Point Tuska. [RTRN-9-n]

Barga: A grim-looking gorilla officer, the chief of a Mounted Patrol outpost in the Rural Zone. After his underling, Lupuk, spotted Peter Burke and Alan Virdon toiling on the Polar family farm, Barga rode out with Security Chief Urko to investigate. The farmers protected Burke by claiming Lupuk had seen Polar’s son, Anto, imitating humans for amusement, and Lupuk was demoted for humiliating authority. [TVPA-4-n]

NOTE: Barga’s name, not spoken onscreen, appeared in the script to “The Good Seeds.”

Barlow, Prefect: The administrator of Kaymak in the mid to late 31st century. A sophisticated, erudite chimp in his late 50s,

NOTE: It’s unknown in which state this city was located, as there are numerous Bakersfields in the United States.

Baldridge, C. Leroy: An artist who illustrated the book Translations from the Chinese, written by Arthur Waley. A copy of that work was shelved next to A Young Queen Falls in a bookstore near the Civic Center. [CQST]

NOTE: Cyrus Leroy Baldridge (1889 to 1977) was an author and illustrator.

baldy: A derogatory term used by some apes to describe humans, mocking their hairless skin. [RFKN]

balloon: See hot-air balloon

Balloon Rigging: An ancient reference book explaining how to build a flying balloon using a large bag of heated air to carry passengers suspended in a basket. Cornelius utilized a copy of this tome while attempting to build such a contraption based on blueprints found at an archeological site. [RTRN-6]

Balls, The: A huge, steam-driven fighting machine used by the army of an ape civilization that lived 100,000 years ago. The device utilized two large stone balls suspended from an overhead jib to smash enemies’ walls and doors. [HAYS]

Banana King: A fast-food chain on the planet Orbis Terrae. [HAMM]

NOTE: This company’s name was a pun on that of the Burger King franchise.

banana wine: An intoxicant best served aged. Colonel Urchak often partook of this beverage. [URCH]

Band 9: A broadcasting frequency used by Apetown’s air-traffic controllers to communicate with helicopter pilots. [SERP]

Band 9: A communications frequency used by the mutant humans of the Forbidden City. [BATL-c]

Lexicon of the Planet of the Apes 39

B

Barbarus

The following lists provide a breakdown of this lexicon’s approximately 3,200 entries into multiple categories for easier navigation. For example, a reader wishing to look up every chimpanzee character, every city or province, every vehicle or vessel, or every mutant could consult the appropriate list below, and then thumb

through the alphabetical portion of the book to learn more about each name on that list.The category headings, like the terms listed beneath those headings, are sorted alphabetically. Some terms appear

on more than one list, depending on the content of their lexicon entries. “Aboro,” for instance, appears under “Characters: Gorillas,” “Characters: Profession—Government, Leadership, Politics, Royalty and the Clergy” and “Characters: Profession—Military, Paramilitary, Police, Resistance Fighters, Security and Warriors.”

A.P.E.American ExpressAmerican News Network

(ANN)Angelo’s PizzaApe Broadcasting Corp.

(ABC)Ape Broadcasting System

(ABS)Ape Management

Publications (AMP)Armando’s CircusAtomic General Lines, Inc.Baby-Chimp’s Breath MintsBanana KingBebo’sBooks & ThingsBriles Wing & Helicopter,

Inc.Brown Derby Restaurant Cald R

AhasuerusBe-Five, Gestalt CommanderBe-Four, Gestalt

CommanderBe-One, Supreme Gestalt

CommanderBe-Seven, Gestalt

Commander

Be-Six, Gestalt CommanderBe-Three, Gestalt

CommanderBe-Two, Gestalt CommanderCentral System, TheElectro-Electorate, TheFixer-FourFixer-Three

Fixer-TwoIllevitchJacquardMaster FourMaster TwelveMutant-Drone Aitch (H)Mutant-Drone Arr (R)Mutant-Drone Bee (B)

Mutant-Drone Dee (D)Mutant-Drone Eff (F)Mutant-Drone Em (M)Mutant-Drone En (N)Mutant-Drone Ess (S)Mutant-Drone Ex (X)Mutant-Drone Kyew (Q)Mutant-Drone Vee (V)

Mutant-Drone Zee (Z)OrwellSlasherSmashoreThaddeusWarlord, The

CalviniusCarroll & Co.CBWL-Hayden, Stone, Inc.CefaloradionCLRCommunity Bus SystemCooky-ColaCoopersCosmosD&L RestaurantDetergallDisneylandDMDrucker’sEver-SealExxonnFats’ PalaceFetishField’sGaijin Art Studios

Giorgio’sGluckGoGasGolden Flea-Be-GoneGracela TavernGreelig CinemaHenri’s Beauty SalonHostess Fruit PiesHughes AeronauticsHumanoid Pet StoreInternational House of

Mango PattiesJolly’sJudson’s GarageKm’rtLady LLanglan’s Gunsmith ShopLong Look, TheLos Angeles Savings and

Loan

Lowell’s Mini-MartMcCoconutsMcKinley & Son ShipyardMonkey Television (MTV)Motel 6Mr. Phyllis—CoiffuresNationwide Ape

Employment, Inc.Norddeutscher Rundfunk

(NDR)Oolog TheatrePhil’s Hardware and

Plumbing, Inc.Pilla Meal Inc.Pop TateProfessor Monty’s Trained

Man Emporium Prosperity ResearchPurple Onion Bar and Grill Rea Voom 88

Rent-a-BoatRhesus PiecesRoy Rodgers Bar-B-QRoy’s Dept. StoreSimian Broadcasting

Company (SBC)Stanley Stores Inc.Stay-DriESTStromannStukeysTantalizing TastesUn-ColaWetherby Kayser ShoesWheatiesWilberYoung Look, TheZeat & ZeatZeeka’sZeeka’s Simian SaunaZuuba Coats

Brand names, Businesses, Companies, Corporations and retail stores

Adrian, DoctorAlarBoboFred, UncleGargantuaGorilla Force Ten

Growler, TheGruntHerkimer, DoctorHernandezHydo, DoctorJekkill, Mister

JinaMajor Ursa Monkey, MickeyNalickPagoPhoebus

PlatoProtusRoccoRoverSpokkaTabby

Thuravampire mandrillXanda ZantarZooma

CharaCters: aliases and FiCtional

CharaCters: androids, artiFiCial intelligenCe, CyBorgs and roBots

Lexicon of the Planet of the Apes 377

■ C a t eg o r i c a l I n d e x ■

254AbelardAdrian, DoctorAglaiaAisonAlarAlcibiadesAldoAlexanderAndroclesAnn Anto Antony ArchosAriArno Aro AspasiaAugustus, Prefect Barlow, Prefect Benavides, Jonathan

(a.k.a. Semos)BoboBusboyByronCaesar CaiusCaria Carsia Cassius, DoctorChilotCirce CliaCody, SheriffColumbus, ChristopherCorneliusCornelius, DoctorCornelius, ProfessorCornelius ArmandoCoure

DardonDeadeyeDelphiaDemetriusDikteDogen, Lawgiver Fabian Faron FatsFauna Fyn Gaddi GalateiaGalenGalen, DoctorGeorges Glaukos Glyppos Grimaldi GrundigGurio, Nebb, SecretaryHector HeliosHélius, DoctorHeloise Hood, RobinHubert, UncleHurton, Prefect Hydo, DoctorHyllos IntaJaila, Nurse JangoJanusJanus, Doctor JeminarJilliaJinaJinnJoshua

JulianJuliusKalia, Doctor KallistoKira, Doctor Kobal, PrefectLaetron Landa, PrefectLeander, Doctor LeetaLennyLeonidas LeukipposLiamLiet LisaLittle MoLolaLoraLot 8LucianLuciusLykiaLykos, DoctorMakaria Malthus, DoctorManusMarcellusMardikMarduk, CommanderMartin MaximusMenuasMessenioMilesMiloMilo, DoctorMojoMokkaMonk, The

MorrisMoto, DoctorMungwort, PrivateMyraNalickNatenNeroNova Octavio OphraOracleOrpheusPagoPanPavelPaxPericlesPernickPhoebusPhyllisPinchus, Doctor PlexidesPolarProfessorProtus Quintus R.E.RemusRomulus, DoctorSallus, SenatorSalomeSandar, SenatorScumhoundSeltaSemos, LawgiverSeneca, SenatorSeraph SerenaSestusShako

Shiva, MinisterSophoclesSteffaStole, DoctorTelemonThade, GeneralThadosThados, Commander/PrinceThanatosTimon, Pontifex/High PriestTitus, DoctorTrajanTrippoVeska, PrefectViragavon Gruen, ThoraWandaWeenieWhelpWingdingWynoraYaluZaiusZaius, PrinceZantesZarka, SpeakerZeldaZenirZinaZira, DoctorZirkoZoomaZoran, Doctor

CharaCters: Chimpanzees

Almighty Bomb, TheAlmighty, TheApe God, TheCreator, TheEvil One, TheFirst Ape, TheFirst Lawgiver, TheGhost in the Trees, The

GodGod-Thing God of the Mountain, The Gods of the Sea, The Gods, The Great Caesar’s GhostGreat Legislator, The Great Simian

Grodd guardian demon Jefferson’s AarpanKerchak King of the ApesKygoorLawgiver of the EarthLawgiver, The

Name, The Perfect Ape, TheProtector of the Delphi, The Queen of the Caves, The Sage, The Semos, LawgiverSilent One, TheSpirits, The

Star GodsUsaWise Ones, TheYtrebil

CharaCters: deities and religious iCons

378 Lexicon of the Planet of the Apes

“Who knows everything about everything?”

—Bruce MacDonald,

Battle for the Planet of the ApesIf you’ve ever wished you could learn more about the Planet of the Apes mythos, if you’ve never read the comic books or novels but are curious about the tales told within, if you’re tantalized by time travel and titillated by trivia, if—like Virgil, the subject of MacDonald’s query—you think you know all there is to know about simian society, then From Aldo to Zira: Lexicon of the Planet of the Apes—The Comprehensive Encyclopedia is meant for you.

This staggeringly complete lexicon, by Timeline of the Planet of the Apes author Rich Handley, contains:

• Nearly 3,200 alphabetical entries, in more than 50 indexed categories, detailing every character,creature, device, institution, location, scientific innovation, weapon, vehicle and more, from every Planet of the Apes movie, episode, cartoon, comic and novel ever produced or published

• Morethan25breathtaking, lifelike, full-pagesketchesfromartistPatricioCarbajal,whocreatedthesterling covers for both of Handley’s Planet of the Apes titles—produced exclusively for this volume

• Amotherlodeof information regardingunpublished,unfilmedoruncompletedscripts,novels, comicsandmore—directfromthecreatorsthemselves,includingcomic-booklegendDougMoench,aswellaslong-forgottenstageandarenashowsandshortfilmsfromthe1970s

• Aninsightful,nostalgicandwittyforewordbyfamedliterarycritic(andproudPlanet of the Apes fan) JohnKennethMuir,authorof21referencebookstodateaboutfilmandtelevision

• Andasneak-peakatBLAM!Ventures’upcominglicensednovel,Conspiracy of the Planet of the Apes, courtesyofco-authorAndrewE.C.Gaska

John Muir calls Lexicon of the Planet of the Apes: The Comprehensive Encyclopedia “the realization of a childhood fantasy… the book I only wish I had in hand when I was twelve years old and longing for more detail, more knowledge, more understanding of time warps, Hasslein Curves, Achilles Lists and the like.”

Designed for both casual readers and those who devour encyclopedias from start to finish, Lexicon of the Planet of the Apes can help you, too, know everything about everything.

Planet of the Apes©™istheintellectualpropertyof20th Century Fox and its parent, subsidiariesandaffiliates.Nocopyrightinfringementisintendedorimplied.From Aldo to Zira: Lexicon of the Planet of the Apes—The Comprehensive Encyclopedia isascholarlysource-workthathasnotbeenlicensedorauthorizedbyanypersonorentity associated with Fox.

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