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List of The Hunger Games characters
List of The Hunger Games characters
from Wikipedia

The following is a list of characters in The Hunger Games novels, a series of young adult science fiction novels by Suzanne Collins whose original trilogy was later adapted into a series of feature films.

Overview

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List indicators

This section includes characters who have appeared in the film series.

  • An empty grey cell indicates the character was not in the film.
  •  A indicates an appearance through archival footage or audio.
Character Films
The Hunger Games[1] Catching Fire[2] Mockingjay – Part 1 Mockingjay – Part 2 The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes Sunrise on the Reaping
2012 2013 2014 2015 2023 2026

Principal characters

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Coriolanus Snow Donald Sutherland Tom Blyth
Dexter Sol AnsellY
Donald Sutherland AVC
Ralph Fiennes
Katniss Everdeen Jennifer Lawrence TBA
Peeta Mellark Josh Hutcherson TBA
Haymitch Abernathy Woody Harrelson Joseph Zada
Effie Trinket Elizabeth Banks Elle Fanning
Gale Hawthorne Liam Hemsworth
Primrose "Prim" Everdeen Willow Shields
Cinna Lenny Kravitz
Tigris Snow Eugenie Bondurant Hunter Schafer
Lucy Gray Baird Rachel Zegler
Sejanus Plinth Josh Andrés Rivera
Lenore Dove Baird Whitney Peak
Maysilee Donner Mckenna Grace
Wyatt Callow Ben Wang
Louella McCoy Molly McCann
Lou Lou Iona Bell

Capitol citizens

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Caesar Flickerman Stanley Tucci Kieran Culkin
Seneca Crane Wes Bentley
Claudius Templesmith Toby Jones
Octavia Brooke Bundy
Flavius Nelson Ascencio
Portia Latarsha Rose
Venia Kimiko Gelman
Atala Karan Kendrick
Lavinia Amber Chaney
Plutarch Heavensbee Philip Seymour Hoffman Jesse Plemons
President Snow's granddaughter Erika Bierman
Antonius Robert Knepper
Egeria Sarita Choudhury
Dr. Volumnia Gaul Viola Davis
Casca Highbottom Peter Dinklage
Lucretius "Lucky" Flickerman Jason Schwartzman
Grandma'am Fionnula Flanagan
Clemensia Dovecote Ashley Liao
Festus Creed Max Raphael
Lysistrata Vickers Zoe Renee
Felix Ravinstill Aamer Husain
Arachne Crane Lilly Cooper
Drusilla Sickle Glenn Close
Magno Stiff Billy Porter
Proserpina Trinket Iris Apatow
Vitus Edvin Ryding

District 12 residents

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Asterid Everdeen Paula Malcomson Grace Ackary
Burdock Everdeen Philip Troy Linger Philip Troy Linger Scot Greenan
Mrs. Mellark Raiko Bowman
Greasy Sae Sandra Ellis Lafferty
Romulus Thread Patrick St. Esprit
Cray Wilbur Fitzgerald
Ripper Taylor St. Clair
Tam Amber Eike Onyambu TBA
Clerk Carmine Konstantin Taffet Jeffery Hallman
Billy Taupe Clade Dakota Shapiro
Mayfair Lipp Isobel Jesper
Spruce George Somner
Maude Ivory Vaughan Reilly
Willamae Abernathy Kara Tointon
Sid Abernathy Smylie Bradwell
Merrilee Donner TBA
Hattie Meeney Melody Chikakane Brown
Mr McCoy Jefferson White
Blair Devon Singletary

Tributes (74th Hunger Games)

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Marvel Jack Quaid
Thresh Dayo Okeniyi Dayo OkeniyiA
Rue Amandla Stenberg Amandla StenbergA
Glimmer Leven Rambin
Cato Alexander Ludwig
Clove Isabelle Fuhrman
Foxface Jacqueline Emerson
Tribute Boy District 3 Ian Nelson
Tribute Girl District 3 Kalia Prescott
Tribute Boy District 4 Ethan Jamieson
Tribute Girl District 4 Tara Macken
Tribute Boy District 5 Chris Mark
Tribute Boy District 6 Ashton Moio
Tribute Girl District 6 Kara Petersen
Tribute Boy District 7 Sam Ly
Tribute Girl District 7 Leigha Hancock
Tribute Boy District 8 Samuel Tan
Tribute Girl District 8 Mackenzie Lintz
Tribute Boy District 9 Imanol Yepez-Frias
Tribute Girl District 9 Annie Thurman
Tribute Boy District 10 Jeremy Marinas
Tribute Girl District 10 Dakota Hood

Tributes (75th Hunger Games)

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Beetee Latier Jeffrey Wright Kelvin Harrison Jr.
Finnick Odair Sam Claflin
Johanna Mason Jena Malone
Enobaria Meta Golding Meta Golding
Mags Flanagan Lynn Cohen Lili Taylor
Wiress Amanda Plummer Maya Hawke
Gloss Alan Ritchson
Cashmere Stephanie Leigh Schlund
Brutus Bruno Gunn
Female Morphling Megan Hayes
Blight Bobby Jordan
Cecelia Elena Sanchez
Woof John Casino
Seeder Maria Howell
Chaff E. Roger Mitchell

District 13 residents

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President Alma Coin Julianne Moore
Boggs Mahershala Ali
Cressida Natalie Dormer
Messalla Evan Ross
Castor Wes Chatham
Pollux Elden Henson
Jackson Michelle Forbes
Homes Omid Abtahi
Mitchell Joe Chrest
Leeg 1 Misty Ormiston
Leeg 2 Kim Ormiston
Dr. Aurelius April Grace

Tributes (10th Hunger Games)

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Facet Tim Torok
Velvereen Vara Kane
Marcus Jerome Lance
Sabyn Yuli Lam
Circ Felix Audu
Teslee Vanessa Blanck
Mizzen Cooper Dillon
Coral Mackenzie Lansing
Hy Kittipong Ace Cunjanagan
Sol Samia Hofmann
Otto Nova Just
Ginnee Kyra Reinert
Treech Hiroki Berrecloth
Lamina Irene Boehm
Bobbin Knox Gibson
Wovey Sofia Sanchez
Panlo Lucas Wilson
Sheaf Jona Marie Maux
Tanner Kjell Brutscheidt
Brandy Luna Kuse
Reaper Ash Dimitri Abold
Dill Luna Steeples
Jessup Diggs Nick Benson

Tributes (50th Hunger Games)

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Panache Barker Jhaleil Swaby
Loupe TBA
Silka Sharp Laura Marcus
Carat TBA
Alpheus TBA
Janus TBA
Camilla TBA
Nona TBA
Ampert Latier Percy Daggs IV
Lect TBA
Dio TBA
Coil TBA
Urchin TBA
Angler TBA
Maritte Sky Frances
Barba TBA
Hychel TBA
Fisser TBA
Anion TBA
Potena TBA
Miles TBA
Atread TBA
Wellie Rada Rae
Velo TBA
Bircher TBA
Heartwood TBA
Autumn TBA
Ringina Tatyana Muzondo
Wefton TBA
Ripman TBA
Notion TBA
Alawna TBA
Ryan TBA
Clayton Salimou Thiam
Kerna Alina Reid
Midge TBA
Buck John Doeble
Stamp TBA
Lannie TBA
Peeler TBA
Hull Kain Buffonge
Tile TBA
Chicory TBA
Blossom TBA
Woodbine Chance Serafin Mishiev

Residents of other districts

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Annie Cresta Stef Dawson
District 11 Mayor Afemo Omilami
Old Man in District 11 Leon Lamar
Rue's Aunt Kimberley Drummond
District 4 Flower Girl Mandy Neuhaus
Commander Paylor Patina Miller
Eddy Michael Garza
District 8 Hospital Helper Charles White
Commander Lyme Gwendoline Christie[3]
District 4 Officiant Mark Jeffrey Miller
District 5 Commander Desmond Phillips
Tibby Jax Gerrero
Hersilia Sandra Förster

Main characters

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Katniss Everdeen

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Katniss Everdeen, also known as "the girl on fire," is the main protagonist of The Hunger Games. She is 16 years old at the beginning of the first book and is quiet, independent, and fierce. She has long dark hair (usually tied up in a braid), olive skin, and gray eyes, which are given as a characteristic of residents of the coal mining region of District 12 known as "the Seam."[4] She was named for an aquatic plant with edible underwater tubers by her father, who jokingly said that “If you can find yourself, you'll never be hungry.” She lives with her mother and younger sister, Primrose (nicknamed "Prim"). Her father's death in a mining accident several years ago left her mother deeply depressed, forcing Katniss to become the parental figure and to use the hunting skills taught by her father to feed the family. Her favorite color is green, (as she told Peeta when he offered friendship to her) because of her familiarity with the forest. When Prim is reaped as a tribute who must fight twenty-three other tributes to the death in the 74th Hunger Games, Katniss volunteers to replace her. Katniss survives the game along with fellow tribute Peeta Mellark, who is in love with her. In the 74th Hunger Games, Katniss kills several tributes such as Glimmer, whom she indirectly kills with the tracker jacker nest; a District Four girl [book only], whom she indirectly kills with the tracker jacker nest; Marvel, whom she kills with an arrow after he kills Rue, and Cato, whom she kills as he is being eaten by the muttations to put him out of his misery. To survive, Katniss "pretends" she loves Peeta. When the Gamemakers renege on a promise to let two surviving tributes from the same district live, she defies and embarrasses the government by threatening a double suicide with Peeta, personally antagonizing Panem's leader, President Coriolanus Snow.

In the second installment Catching Fire, she is forced to fight in the next year's Hunger Games, an especially brutal edition known as the Quarter Quell which occurs every 25 years. The twist in that year's Quarter Quell was that previous victors of The Hunger Games would be reaped instead of the usual male and female 12–18-year-olds. In the games, Katniss allies herself with Peeta Mellark, Finnick Odair, Wiress, Beetee Latier, Johanna Mason, and Mags. While in the games, Katniss begins to realize her feelings for Peeta. While in the arena, she kills Gloss after he kills her ally Wiress. At the end of the book, she destroys the force field containing the Games arena and is rescued along with a few surviving tributes by members of an underground rebellion organised by the supposedly destroyed District 13 and Plutarch Heavensbee. In the third installment, she is caught in a love triangle with Gale (her childhood friend) and Peeta. She becomes the Mockingjay, an inspirational symbol of a second civil war against the Capitol. Despite her intentionally limited role as a propagandist, she is drawn into combat by her obsession to kill Snow. As the war progresses, she comes to realize the rebel leader, President Alma Coin, is no less ruthless and power-driven than Snow. Katniss learns that Coin considers her expendable; Coin staged a supposed Capitol atrocity which kills Prim, and after the war, calls for a final Hunger Games using the children of the Capitol war criminals. When finally given the chance to execute Snow, Katniss kills Coin instead. She is deemed not mentally responsible and returns to District 12, suffering trauma and suicidal depression. Peeta's return draws her out of the depression, and she finally realizes she loves him. Fifteen years after they marry, she decides to have children, giving birth to a girl and a boy.

Peeta Mellark

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Peeta Mellark is a male tribute from District 12 in both the 74th and 75th Hunger Games. He is the same age as Katniss, with fair skin, blond hair, and blue eyes, characteristic of the town residents of District 12, whose middle-class merchants are slightly more well-to-do than those of the Seam. Peeta is the baker's son and lives with two older brothers, a quiet father, and a strict disciplinarian mother. Growing up in the bakery helped Peeta to become "broad-shouldered and strong," which Katniss immediately theorized would force other tributes not to write him off in the arena. Peeta's favorite color is orange. His skills include physical strength, personal charm and charisma, public speaking, baking, and painting. He is also known for his kindness and generosity. He is highly intelligent and is always thoughtful, balancing Katniss's impulsiveness. He is described as handsome and even beautiful, with features as minuscule as his eyelashes capturing Katniss's attention. Peeta has been in love with Katniss ever since he first saw her during elementary school and declares his love for her during the pre-Games interview. Katniss believes this is a ploy to gain the support of sponsors to help them survive the Games. When they were young, Peeta saves Katniss and her family from starving to death by giving her bread, which he had accidentally burnt, and his mother had beaten him for. Since then, he is known as the "boy with the bread" to Katniss. During the first game, he carefully formulates a strategy to protect Katniss, part of which involves confessing his love for Katniss on TV in order to make her look desirable enough to have sponsors. Also, he decides to team up with the Careers and misleads them about Katniss. However, when the careers find this out, Peeta fights with them to save Katniss and is severely wounded.

In the Quarter Quell, he volunteers to replace Haymitch Abernathy as the male tribute from District 12, so that he can protect Katniss in the arena. The only time Katniss can sleep without nightmares relating back to the Games is when she is being held in Peeta's arms.

Peeta is captured by the Capitol at the end of the Quarter Quell and submitted to 'hijacking', a process of torture and brainwashing which gives him a fear of Katniss and effectively turns him into an assassination weapon against her. During the civil war, he is rescued and eventually rehabilitated by the rebels. After the Capitol is defeated, he returns to District 12 with Katniss and marries her. Twenty years after the war, they have two children.

Gale Hawthorne

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Gale Hawthorne is a Seam resident boy who is two years older than Katniss and shares her hunting skill, dark hair, olive skin, and gray eyes. Through hunting, they have become best friends. Lean-muscled and handsome, Gale has caught the attention of several girls in District 12. Gale lives with his mother Hazelle and his three younger siblings (Rory, Vick, and Posy) after his father's death in the same mining accident that killed Katniss's father. Being from the Seam, Gale shares a slight resemblance to Katniss. This allows the people of the Seam to cover for his close relationship with Katniss by saying they are cousins to hide the fact that the "star-crossed lovers" storyline with Peeta was staged, as it is presumed her closeness with someone as good looking as Gale would draw suspicion. Though their portrayal as cousins effectively satisfies the press from the Capitol, it makes both Katniss and Gale very uncomfortable on several occasions.

In the second book, Catching Fire, Katniss returns to District 12, but their relationship cannot continue as it was, since Katniss and Peeta must play the part of lovers due to threats from the Capitol. Gale confesses his love for Katniss after she asks him to run away with her. Soon afterward, he is brutally whipped in public for hunting on Capitol land. Katniss rescues him, getting whipped on the left cheek in doing so, and then takes care of him and they share a kiss. He and Katniss prepare to fight as it becomes clear that a rebellion is about to begin. However, Katniss, along with Peeta, is selected for the Third Quarter Quell and must leave District 12 to return to the Games. Once again, Gale is forced to say goodbye to Katniss as she prepares for a fight to the death. The book ends with Katniss waking up to see Gale's face. She is extremely confused, having been in the Hunger Games, and Gale tells her District 12 is no more.

In Mockingjay, Gale fights in the rebellion in an epic war. When District 12 was destroyed, Gale led approximately 10% of the population to safety. The survivors are forced to move to what is left of District 13. Once the people of District 13 are aware of Gale's heroism, they reward him with a higher ranking and a communicuff (which is later taken from him as punishment for helping Katniss). Towards the end of the book, his relationship with Katniss deteriorates because he feels responsible for the death of Prim, Katniss's sister (as the bombs may have been constructed by him, although both are unsure). He mentions that he would always remind Katniss of Prim's death, which Katniss silently agrees with, and the two never see each other again after President Snow's death. Afterwards, Gale decides to remain in District 2, where he obtains a better job. Katniss believes he has long since moved on and possibly has a girlfriend now.

Haymitch Abernathy

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Haymitch Abernathy is a 'paunchy, alcohol-loving, handsome middle-aged man' who won the 50th Hunger Games (the Second Quarter Quell) 24 years before the events of the first book.[5] He comes from The Seam and is described as having similar physical characteristics to Katniss and Gale: greyish hair and olive skin; in the Hunger Games films, he is portrayed with blond straight hair and blue eyes. When he was 16, Haymitch was reaped for the Second Quarter Quell, wherein four, instead of the normal amount of two tributes from each district participated. He became an ally to a girl named Maysilee Donner, the original owner of Katniss's symbolic mockingjay pin, but was later forced to watch her die. During the Games, he discovered a cliff at the edge of the Arena that concealed a force field, which would ricochet anything thrown in its direction. During the final moments of the Games, a severely wounded Haymitch positioned himself by the edge of the force field to face his final opponent, a female tribute from District 1. Since she was a career tribute and stronger than Haymitch, she was favored to win the encounter. However, Haymitch's strategy was to wait for his opponent to fling her ax at him, then he would duck, and the force field would hurl it back at her, burying it in her head. His plan was successful, leaving Haymitch the victor. Within two weeks of his victory, Haymitch's mother, younger brother, and girlfriend were all killed by President Snow as punishment for Haymitch using the force field to his advantage. Haymitch became an example of what happens to anyone who would defy the Capitol.

Following his victory, Haymitch became an alcoholic and has spent almost all of the next 24 years intoxicated. As the only surviving victor from District 12 (one of only two in the history of the Games), Haymitch has been forced to mentor all of its tributes, which consumed him with guilt by being obligated to participate in the Games that he hated. He stumbled through drunken fatalism and bemused curiosity all while teaching his new pupils his tricks. He dealt with these feelings with alcohol and by openly flouting the dignity of the games. He treats Peeta and Katniss with contempt, and initially is sarcastic, expending no effort to help them. However, when Katniss confronts him, he is stirred from his stupor and emerges as the pair's greatest advocate, impressed by her determination and Peeta's patience. Haymitch shows himself to be highly canny as he guides his protégés in a cleverly designed, highly unorthodox strategy aimed at ensuring the survival of both tributes.

In the book Catching Fire, the liquor supply in District 12 runs out. As a result, Haymitch suffers from alcohol withdrawal. It is left to Katniss and Peeta to coax him back to health and get him more liquor. After this incident, Katniss begins to develop a true affection and respect for him. When Katniss discovers Haymitch and his allies from District 13 and the Capitol failed to save Peeta from the arena as they did her, she claws him in the face. In Mockingjay, Haymitch is forced to go through detox in District 13, as they do not permit the consumption of alcohol. During the voting to decide whether the final Hunger Games will use the Capitol children, Haymitch votes yes, understanding Katniss's decision to make President Coin think she is on her side. After this, he continues to serve as a mentor to Katniss and Peeta, repairing his relationship with them and resumes his drinking after the war ends. Haymitch and Katniss, despite nearly always working towards the same goals, are usually hostile towards each other because they have similarly prickly personalities. Also, Katniss and Peeta both resent Haymitch for keeping information from both of them, sometimes at the request of the other. At the end of Mockingjay, Haymitch only appears by reference from Katniss who mentions that he is raising geese.

Haymitch is the protagonist of Sunrise on the Reaping which shares the story of his Hunger Game twenty-four years before he mentored Katniss. In the book, Haymitch is childhood friends with Katniss's father, in love with a girl named Lenore Dove, and chosen for the 50th Hunger Games after the original tribute is executed for trying to escape. Much like Katniss, Haymitch proves to be rebellious, actively working to sabotage the Games with the help of Beetee, Wiress, Mags and Plutarch Heavensbee. After killing the last tribute, Haymitch attempts to blow up the arena's generator and is implied to have succeeded. Afterwards, he is imprisoned for weeks and treated like a glorified pet while a heavily edited version of the Hunger Games is shown, one that is viewed by Katniss and Peeta in Catching Fire. When Haymitch returns home, he discovers his house set on fire, killing his mother and younger brother, while Lenore Dove dies shortly thereafter from a poisoned sweet. As a result, Haymitch pushes everyone away to protect them from Capitol retaliation and descends into alcoholism and depression.

In the novel's epilogue, taking place following the events of the original trilogy, Haymitch is at first reluctant to take part in Katniss and Peeta's memorial book, but he eventually opens up to them, sharing with his friends for the first time his own story and telling them about everyone that he loved and lost along the way. The couple get Haymitch geese to raise in honor of Lenore Dove's memory while Haymitch, although unsure of how much longer he will live given his wrecked liver from decades of drinking, finally finds peace, having kept his promise to Lenore Dove to stop the Games.

Coriolanus Snow

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President Coriolanus Snow is the main antagonist of the series. He is the autocratic ruler of the Capitol and all of Panem. Though seemingly laid-back, his demeanor hides a sadistic and psychopathic mind.[6] He initially appears in The Hunger Games giving the official welcome at the opening of the Games, but he does not speak to Katniss face-to-face until Catching Fire, when he pays her a visit at home and tells her he is angry that both she and Peeta were allowed to survive the Hunger Games, because their act of defiance (preferring joint suicide to the prospect of one killing the other) has ignited rebellion in several of the Districts. She is too prominent to kill, but he threatens her family and Gale unless she proves to the Districts that her act of saving Peeta was merely that of a love-crazed teenager and was not related to any desire to defy the Capitol.[7] Later, Snow indicates to her that she failed in this, meaning that some or all of his threats will come true. President Snow is described as having very puffy lips, which are most likely the result of an appearance-altering operation that is very popular in the Capitol. Katniss describes him as exuding a smell of blood and roses.[8]

In Mockingjay, it is revealed that the smell of blood is due to oral sores he incurred from one of the poisons that he used to kill people in his megalomaniacal efforts to control Panem. He drank the poison in order to allay suspicions, then took the antidote, but resulted in bloody sores in his mouth. He also smells strongly of genetically enhanced roses, as he always wears a white rose in his lapel to cover the scent of blood. The strong smell invariably makes Katniss gag. He is said to have prostituted winning tributes, like Finnick Odair, forcing them to have sex with wealthy Capitol citizens, under threat of killing their loved ones if they refused. Snow claims he only kills for a purpose, and he promises Katniss he will always tell her the truth. Whether these assertions are true or not is left up to interpretation by Katniss, but she ultimately believes Snow due to her own doubts about Coin only being reinforced by his words. He dies at the end of Mockingjay, after Katniss shoots President Coin instead of him at his own public execution, and he laughs maniacally at the irony of said assassination. The rebels are unable to determine whether the cause of death was by choking on his own blood from his untreated mouth sores or because he was trampled by the mob in the panic following President Coin's assassination.

He is the main character of The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes, which is set when he is aged 18. Having been orphaned during the war, he lives with his grandmother and his cousin Tigris. His family was once rich but had lost a lot of their wealth in the war, mainly due to their factory in District 13 being destroyed. He is assigned to mentor the female tribute from District 12, Lucy Gray Baird. In the leadup to the Hunger Games, they develop feelings for each other, culminating in a goodbye kiss before she enters the arena. Before and during the Hunger Games, the head gamemaker, Dr. Gaul, takes a personal interest in his education and assigns him to write a number of essays. On the first night of the Games, his friend Sejanus Plinth infiltrates the arena to administer funeral rites to a tribute, and Dr. Gaul forces Coriolanus to enter the arena and bring him out. They are attacked by a number of tributes, one of whom Coriolanus kills in self-defense. Dr. Gaul reveals that this was to educate him about the violence humans were capable of.

Lucy Gray wins the games, in part, due to illicit assistance she receives from Coriolanus: he helps her smuggle food into the arena, as well as a make-up compact filled with rat poison, which she uses to kill two other tributes. He also introduces her scent to the genetically modified snakes, which he suspects will be deployed in the arena as they are trained to only attack those with unfamiliar scents. As punishment for their indiscretions, he and Sejanus are sent to District 12 to serve as Peacekeepers. Coriolanus reunites with Lucy Gray, and they begin a relationship. The two of them get caught up in a rebel plot which Sejanus is part of, and Coriolanus is forced to kill the mayor's daughter, Mayfair Lipp, Lucy Gray's former romantic rival who it is suggested had manipulated her selection at the Reaping. Coriolanus reports the plot to the Capitol, for which Sejanus is hanged. Certain that his part in the scheme will be exposed, and with Mayor Lipp increasingly harassing Lucy Gray, whom he suspects of the murder of his daughter, the two of them run away from District 12 together. However, Lucy Gray realises Coriolanus's part in the death of Sejanus, and, deciding he cannot be trusted, leaves him. Coriolanus follows her, only to walk into a trap she had laid for him. He returns to the place they parted, and hearing her singing nearby, shoots a volley of bullets in all directions. She is not seen again after this, although it is unclear whether she was killed by Coriolanus, or she ran away and managed to survive. Coriolanus returns to District 12 and finds out he has been selected for officer training. He is placed on a hovercraft, ostensibly bound for an officer training school, only to find himself back in the Capitol. Dr. Gaul says that she had arranged for his assignment as a Peacekeeper, with the intent that it would be temporary and educational. He is effectively adopted by Sejanus's wealthy father Strabo, who is unaware of the role he played in his son's death and pays for Coriolanus's university fees. While at university, he interns as a gamemaker under Dr. Gaul and is set to inherit the Plinth fortune.

A number of features of the Hunger Games shown in the trilogy are revealed to be invented by Snow, either as a mentor or a gamemaker, namely the sponsoring of and betting on tributes, the Victors' Village, the Games being compulsory viewing, and payments for a victor's district. The Games themselves were revealed to have been a co-creation of his father, Crassus Snow, and his best friend Casca Highbottom. Casca and Crassus had fallen out after developing the idea of the Hunger Games as Highbottom had thought it an academic exercise and been horrified at the thought of it becoming reality. Later, Casca, recognizing several similarities between Crassus and his son transferred this grudge to Coriolanus. Snow's liking of the smell of roses is also explained: his family grew them on the roof of their house, and his mother used rose-scented cosmetic powder. The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes also sees Snow begin the practice of poisoning people: initially indirectly through Lucy Gray, but later directly, when he poisons Casca Highbottom as revenge for mistreating him while serving as dean of his school.

In Sunrise on the Reaping, taking place forty years later and twenty-four years before Katniss's Hunger Games, Snow is now president and has become ill. Snow clashes with the rebellious Haymitch Abernathy and hints at his past with Lucy Gray -- whose fate still remains unknown even forty years later -- to Haymitch who fell in love with a girl from the Covey, the same nomadic group as Lucy Gray belonged to, named Lenore Dove. For Haymitch's rebellious actions in the Second Quarter Quell, Snow has Haymitch's house burned down with his mother and younger brother in it and Lenore Dove poisoned with a sweet.

Primrose Everdeen

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Primrose "Prim" Everdeen is Katniss's younger sister. She is 12 years old in The Hunger Games and has blonde hair and blue eyes. Kind and compassionate, Prim is a skilled healer, a pupil of her mother. In Mockingjay, Prim is chosen by District 13 to train as a doctor. The events of Catching Fire and Mockingjay force Prim to become more solemn and mature beyond her 13 years. Katniss states that Prim is "the only person I'm certain I love".

At the Reaping for the 74th Hunger Games, Prim is chosen by lottery as the female "representative" of District 12. Katniss volunteers to and takes her place. Before Katniss leaves for the Capitol, Prim makes her promise to try hard to win, and Katniss agrees. This promise guides many of Katniss's actions, and Katniss's sacrifice makes her symbolically popular in the Capitol, prompting Johanna to note that the Capitol cannot afford to threaten Prim to get to Katniss because of the potential outcry.

In Mockingjay, President Alma Coin, head-of-state in District 13 and de-facto political leader of all the rebelling districts, sends Prim as a casualty nurse into the final battle against the Capitol. Prim is one of many medics that rush in to aid survivors when a Capitol-marked hovercraft bombs a group of Capitol children huddled outside the gates of the Presidential palace. Katniss calls out a warning as the disguised bombs fall, and in her final moments, Prim spots Katniss and speaks her name.

Prim's death sends Katniss into a deep depression, leaving her unable to speak or interact with anyone for a time, her spirit nearly broken by the loss. As he awaits execution, an imprisoned President Snow tells Katniss the rebels were in fact behind the bombing and made it resemble the work of the Capitol and timed a second explosion to kill the medical corps assisting the first round of survivors. This leads Katniss to kill Coin instead of Snow, repaying Coin for her leading role in Prim's death.

Buttercup, Prim's beloved cat, held a strong mutual dislike toward Katniss for years, but was so loyal to Prim that he journeyed from District 12 to District 13 to find Prim after the bombings, and back to 12 again at the war's end, hoping to find her a second time. Buttercup and Katniss ultimately united in their grief over losing Prim, with Buttercup taking to guarding Katniss at night. Peeta decided to plant primrose in the garden outside their house in the former Victor's Village, the smell of which was briefly intolerable to Katniss due to the plant's association with her sister, but ultimately, she found comfort in the flowers' presence and valued the deep affection and understanding which led Peeta to plant them.

10th Hunger Games tributes

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Lucy Gray Baird

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Lucy Gray Baird is the District 12 female tribute and victor of the 10th Hunger Games. She was not born in District 12 but was a member of the Covey, a group of travelling musicians. Following the war, the Covey were forced to settle down in District 12. Before the Reaping, Lucy Gray was in a relationship with fellow Covey member Billy Taupe, who was also seeing the mayor's daughter, Mayfair Lipp. Both girls discover this and Lucy Gray believes that Mayfair arranged for her to be reaped. Coriolanus Snow is assigned to be her mentor, and they develop mutual feelings. She dazzles audiences with her charisma and singing ability and has a penchant for snake charming. Coriolanus provides her with a compact to smuggle rat poison into the Games and familiarizes the snake mutations with her smell so they will not attack her. During the games, she poisons Wovey and Reaper, and is able to control the snake mutations. However, due to the illicit assistance she received, she receives very little publicity afterwards.

She is reunited with Coriolanus after he is assigned to District 12 as a Peacekeeper. She is the writer of the song "The Hanging Tree". After Mayfair is killed by Coriolanus, the mayor becomes determined to arrest Lucy Gray for her murder, so she and Coriolanus leave District 12, only for Lucy Gray to realize his role in the death of Sejanus Plinth. Deciding that he is untrustworthy, she flees and possibly leaves a trap. Coriolanus shoots a rifle in Lucy Gray's direction as she flees but is unable to find any evidence of what may have become of her. Lucy Gray's fate is left ambiguous as she never makes an appearance again and is swiftly erased from public memory by Dr. Gaul, who destroys all recordings of the games except for one master tape that she keeps for herself. In The Hunger Games, she is indirectly mentioned by Katniss who references a District 12 victor other than Haymitch Abernathy.

In Sunrise on the Reaping, taking place forty years after The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes, Lucy Gray is mentioned several times, but her fate remains unknown and she is mostly considered the mysterious victor who has all but vanished from memory. While searching the Covey's secret graveyard for Lenore Dove's grave, Haymitch stumbled across Lucy Gray's grave. However, the poem on it suggested that the Covey believed her to possibly still be alive, at least when they put up the grave marker. The poem on the grave marker read "yet some maintain that to this day she is a living child; that you may see sweet Lucy Gray upon the lonesome wild."

Jessup Diggs

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Jessup Diggs is the District 12 male tribute in the 10th Hunger Games. He contracts rabies before the Games begins after being bitten by a rabid raccoon (or in the film, a bat) during his first night in captivity at the Capitol Zoo. By the time that the game begins, Jessup has already started to display symptoms, rejecting food and spitting in Reaper Ash's eye. He initially forms an alliance with his district partner, Lucy Gray, only to go completely rabid and start chasing her. He falls to his death during the chase when his assigned mentor, Lysistrata Vickers, bombards him with water bottles, using Jessup's rabies-induced hydrophobia to cause him to fall to his death. Lysistrata expresses deep sorrow for Jessup's death, having grown close to him, particularly after Jessup had saved Lysistrata's life during a rebel bombing.

Minor 10th Hunger Games tributes

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  • Facet is the District 1 male tribute in the 10th Hunger Games. Along with Velvereen, he is shot down by Peacekeepers while trying to escape the arena after the bombing. His assigned mentor is Livia Cardew.
  • Velvereen is the District 1 female tribute in the 10th Hunger Games. Along with Facet, she is shot down by Peacekeepers while trying to escape the arena after the bombing. Her assigned mentor is Palmyra Monty.
  • Marcus is the District 2 male tribute in the 10th Hunger Games. He is a former classmate of his mentor, Sejanus Plinth. When the tributes and mentors are being shown through the arena, a bombing attack opens up an exit, and he escapes, hiding in the sewers. He is later recaptured and badly beaten. At the start of the Hunger Games, he is strung from his wrists to a crossbar. Lamina kills him shortly after the games begin.
  • Sabyn is the District 2 female tribute in the 10th Hunger Games. She leaps over a wall, while trying to escape the arena after the bombing, but falls to her death. In the film she is killed in the bombing attack. Her assigned mentor is Florus Friend.
  • Circ is the District 3 male tribute in the 10th Hunger Games. He and Teslee capture a broken drone to redesign it as a weapon, but he is killed by the snake mutations before they can use it. In the movie, he was killed by Coral in the Cornucopia Bloodbath. His assigned mentor is Io Jasper.
  • Teslee is the District 3 female tribute in the 10th Hunger Games. She and Circ capture a broken drone and redesign it. She survives until fourth to last, then is killed by Treech sneaking up with an axe. In the movie, she was killed by Mizzen in the Cornucopia Bloodbath. Her assigned mentor is Urban Canville.
  • Mizzen is the District 4 male tribute in the 10th Hunger Games. He forms an alliance with Tanner and Coral. They betray Tanner, and Coral kills Tanner. Before they broke the alliance Coral killed Sol and Lamina along with help from Mizzen and Tanner. While he was being chased by reprogrammed drones, made by the District 3 tribute Teslee, he puts pressure on his bad knee that Lamina had injured, which made him fall and snap his neck. In the movie, he is killed by the poisonous snakes. His assigned mentor is Persephone Price.
  • Coral is the District 4 female tribute in the 10th Hunger Games. She forms an alliance with the Tanner and Mizzen, only to betray and kill Tanner. Before they broke the alliance, Coral killed Sol and Lamina along with help from Mizzen and Tanner. She is the second tribute to be killed by the snake mutations. Her assigned mentor is Festus Creed. She is known to have long, red hair. In the movie she is the leader of the Career Pack, considered the most likely to win, and comes out as the runner-up
  • Hy is the District 5 male tribute in the 10th Hunger Games. He dies due to an asthma attack immediately before the games begin. In the movies, he was killed in the tunnels by Mizzen and Treech. His assigned mentor is Dennis Fling.
  • Sol is the District 5 female tribute in the 10th Hunger Games. She is killed with a trident by Coral, with help from Mizzen and Tanner. Her assigned mentor is Iphigenia Moss.
  • Otto is the District 6 male tribute in the 10th Hunger Games. He and Ginnee are both killed in the bombing attack. In the movie, he survived the bombing and he was probably killed by Treech and Tanner after the Cornucopia Bloodbath. His assigned mentor is Apollo Ring.
  • Ginnee is the District 6 female tribute in the 10th Hunger Games. She and Otto are both killed in the bombing attack. Her assigned mentor is Diana Ring.
  • Treech is the District 7 male tribute in the 10th Hunger Games. He is killed by Lucy Gray Baird with a snake mutation, finishing 3rd overall before Lucy Gray and Reaper. In the movie he joined the District 4 alliance with Tanner and was killed when he inhaled rat poison Lucy Gray dropped on him. His assigned mentor is Vipsania Sickle.
  • Lamina is the District 7 female tribute in the 10th Hunger Games. She spends the majority of the Games sheltering on top of the crossbeam Marcus was hanging from. She kills Marcus with her axe, and then is eventually killed by Coral with help from Mizzen and Tanner. Her assigned mentor is Pliny Harrington.
  • Bobbin is the District 8 male tribute in the 10th Hunger Games. He was killed by Coriolanus Snow when Coriolanus was sent to retrieve Sejanus Plinth from the arena. His assigned mentor is Juno Phipps.
  • Wovey is the District 8 female tribute in the 10th Hunger Games. Wovey dies from drinking a water bottle that Lucy Gray had poisoned in the book, however, in the movie, Wovey is killed by the poisonous snakes. Her assigned mentor is Hilarius Heavensbee.
  • Panlo is the District 9 male tribute in the 10th Hunger Games. He and Sheaf die from injuries sustained in the bombing attack. In the movie, he was killed by Coral in the Cornucopia Bloodbath. His assigned mentor is Gaius Breen.
  • Sheaf is the District 9 female tribute in the 10th Hunger Games. She and Panlo die from injuries sustained in the bombing attack. In the movie, she was shot twice with a crossbow by Otto, in the Cornucopia Bloodbath. Her assigned mentor is Androcles Anderson.
  • Tanner is the District 10 male tribute in the 10th Hunger Games. He forms an alliance with the District 4 tributes, only to be betrayed and killed by Coral. Before he was killed they worked together to kill Sol and Lamina. His assigned mentor is Domitia Whimsiwick.
  • Brandy is the District 10 female tribute in the 10th Hunger Games. She is shot dead by Peacekeepers after murdering her mentor, Arachne Crane.
  • Reaper Ash is the District 11 male tribute in the 10th Hunger Games. He killed a Peacekeeper sometime before the Reaping, and attacks Coriolanus on his arrival in the Capitol. Reaper spends most of his time creating a makeshift morgue for deceased tributes. He chases Lucy Gray, which forces him to drink from a puddle of water Lucy Gray had poisoned. He soon dies, leaving Lucy Gray the victor of the 10th Hunger Games. In the movie, he was willingly killed by the poisonous snakes. His assigned mentor is Clemensia Dovecote. Lucy Gray later attributes his strange behavior during the game to rabies, telling Snow that Reaper was infected when Jessup had spat in his eye on the night before the game started.
  • Dill is the District 11 female tribute in the 10th Hunger Games. She dies early in the Games from tuberculosis. In the movie, she dies when drinking water poisoned by Lucy Gray Baird. Her assigned mentor is Felix Ravinstill.

50th Hunger Games tributes

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Maysilee Donner

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Maysilee Donner is Madge's aunt and was reaped along with Haymitch and two others for the 50th Hunger Games, and temporarily became Haymitch's ally. She and Katniss's mother were friends. She teams up with Haymitch after saving him from a fight against 3 other tributes using poisonous darts. After breaking the alliance with Haymitch, Maysilee is killed by a large number of bright, "candy-pink birds", who use their razor-sharp beaks to fatally wound her in the neck. Haymitch stays with her until she dies, as Katniss stayed with Rue until she died. The mockingjay pin Madge gave Katniss belonged to Maysilee.

Maysilee appears in Sunrise on the Reaping which expands upon her story. It is also revealed that the recording that Katniss had seen of Haymitch's games was a heavily edited version created by the Capitol.

Louella McCoy

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Louella McCoy, a thirteen-year-old girl, was reaped along with Haymitch and two others for the 50th Hunger Games, and was Haymitch's first ally. She and Haymitch have been friends since they were kids. She dies during the tribute parade and Haymitch carries her body to the steps of President Snow's mansion. She is later replaced with a body double who has been forced to replace the deceased Louella and drugged by the Capitol to "act normal" via a pump in her chest. Decades later, a young Katniss Everdeen reminds Haymitch of Louella.

Wyatt Callow

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Wyatt Callow was the first male tribute reaped along with Haymitch and two others for the 50th Hunger Games. He is an oddsmaker from a family of bookmarkers who take bets on the Hunger Games, a taboo in District 12. He dies trying to protect Lou Lou, Louella's body double, in the arena's initial bloodbath, becoming one of six Newcomers killed by Panache Barker.

Ampert Latier

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Ampert Latier is the son of Beetee Latier, the victor of the 34th Hunger Games. He is one of the male tributes from District 3 for the 50th Hunger Games. He is Haymitch's ally in the arena and a part of the Newcomers alliance. Haymitch and Ampert work together to hijack the games and take down "the brain" of the arena. He dies by squirrel mutts that leave only his bones and axe behind.

Silka Sharp

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Silka Sharp was one of the girls reaped from District 1 for the 50th Hunger Games. She had a rivalry with Maysilee over her insults about her fashion. She was bigger and better built than most of the male tributes and proved to be one of the most lethal tributes during the Games. After the death of the remaining Careers, Haymitch, hiding in a tree, sees her crying and gives her a piece of chocolate. The next day she kills Haymitch's last ally and nearly disembowels him before he tricks her into throwing her axe at the arena's force field resulting in her death.

In Catching Fire, Katniss and Peeta view a heavily edited version of her death while watching old Hunger Games to prepare for the 75th Hunger Games.

Panache Barker

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Panache Barker was one of the boys reaped from District 1 for the 50th Hunger Games. He is related to Palladium Barker, the victor of the 46th Hunger Games, and considered the likeliest to win. Despite his massive size and skills with a sword he proves to be a vain idiot, with Caesar Flickerman making a fool of him during his interview. However, he proves to be particularly lethal in the Games, killing six Newcomers single-handedly during the bloodbath, including Wyatt Callow. He nearly succeeds in killing Haymitch before he's shot with a poisoned dart by Maysilee.

In Catching Fire, Katniss and Peeta see the events surrounding his death while watching old Hunger Games in preparation for the 75th Hunger Games.

Maritte

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Maritte was one of the girls reaped from District 4 for the 50th Hunger Games. According to Wyatt during his interview she scored an 11. She is Silka's closest ally during the Games. After she kills a Gamemaker she is executed by the squirrel mutts used to kill Ampert.

Wellie

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Wellie was one of the girls reaped from District 6 for the 50th Hunger Games. She was one of Haymitch's first allies after the death of Louella. When Haymitch and Ampert made an alliance of all the non Career tributes she came up with the name Newcomers. Wellie survived most of the games, even after the Careers and the Newcomers were all but wiped out. After Maysilee's death Haymitch found her and fed her, promising to protect her. While gathering fire wood he discovered Silka had murdered her.

74th Hunger Games tributes

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Marvel

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Marvel is the District 1 male tribute in the 74th Hunger Games. Marvel was a Career tribute and was very skilled at throwing spears. He scored a 9 in his private session, a score considered low for a Career. Marvel played a strong part in the initial bloodbath, killing off many of the 13 tributes that died in the first 8 hours. He then took part in the hunt for Katniss during the Games, along with the other Career tributes and Peeta. When the Careers were attacked by the tracker jacker nest, he survived as the sole District 1 tribute. He survived through to the final eight tributes but was then shot in his neck by Katniss (or in the film, his stomach), in self-defense, after he had fatally speared Rue, Katniss's ally. He finished 8th overall.

Glimmer

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Glimmer is the District 1 female tribute in the 74th Hunger Games. She was a Career tribute. She chose to use bow and arrows as her weapons during the bloodbath, but it is later revealed that she was incompetent at shooting. Glimmer was later indirectly killed by Katniss after she dropped a tracker jacker nest on the career tributes along with the District 4 female tribute (book). After her death, Katniss managed to steal her bow and arrows from her 'dismembered body'. Katniss had to break several of her bloated fingers to retrieve the bow from her. Glimmer finished 12th overall. Her death was described as extremely disgusting. In the film, she was seen flirting with Cato during the games, but Cato left her to die when she was attacked by tracker jackers.

Cato

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Cato is the District 2 male tribute in the 74th Hunger Games and the main antagonist of the first novel. He was the leader of the Career pack and tall, good-looking, the second largest/physically strongest tribute, being only slightly smaller than Thresh, the District 11 male tribute. In the training centre, he is shown being proficient in a variety of weapons. Katniss states that Cato's training distracted her: "I've been preoccupied with watching the boy from District 2 send a spear through a dummy's heart from fifteen metres." He was the only tribute in the 74th Hunger Games, aside from Katniss, who is confirmed to have volunteered for the Games. Cato was skilled with many weapons and proved this by scoring a 10 in his private session, earning many sponsors in the process. Cato played a strong part in the initial bloodbath, killing off many tributes, one being the District 4 male. He then took part in the hunt for Katniss during the Games, along with the other career tributes and Peeta. He managed to escape the attack of the tracker jackers, caused by Katniss while they were sleeping.

Cato made it through to the final six and was absent from the feast, as Clove had gone to the Cornucopia herself and fought with Katniss. Cato presumably killed Thresh (book) and outlasted Foxface to make the final three, as she died to poison berries. At this point, gamemakers sent in mutations representing the dead tributes (book) and dogs (film) which drove Katniss, Peeta, and Cato to the cornucopia, where Cato is seen to have received full body armour. After a brief fight on the cornucopia, Cato captured Peeta, but Katniss shoots him in the hand, forcing him to release Peeta. He then falls off the cornucopia and is partially eaten by the mutts for several hours before Katniss mercifully kills him.

Clove

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Clove is the female tribute from District 2. A Career tribute, she is described as having dark hair and possesses exceptional knife-throwing skills, receiving a training score of 10, typical for tributes from Career districts. During the initial bloodbath, Clove is the first to directly threaten Katniss, killing the male tribute from District 9 who attempted to attack her, then throwing a knife that Katniss deflected with her backpack.

Clove joined the alliance of Career tributes and took part in hunting Katniss throughout the arena out of resentment after Katniss outscored her in training. After cornering Katniss in a tree, Clove and her fellow Careers were weakened by a tracker jacker attack and by Katniss destroying their supplies. She reappears during the feast at the Cornucopia, where she ambushes Katniss and nearly kills her while taunting her over Rue's death. However, she is fatally attacked by Thresh, who avenges Rue after witnessing the fight. In the novel, Clove is killed by a strike to her head with a rock, while in the film, she is violently slammed against the Cornucopia's walls. Clove finishes 6th overall.

Foxface

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Foxface is the female tribute from District 5. Her real name is not revealed, and she is referred to by Katniss only as "Foxface" due to her sharp features. She received a training score of 5 and managed to survive the initial bloodbath at the Cornucopia, encountering Katniss in the process. Throughout most of the game, Foxface avoided direct confrontation with other tributes and relied on her stealth to survive.

Katniss sees Foxface again stealing food from the Career tributes' supply cache while carefully avoiding their booby traps. During the feast at the Cornucopia, she retrieves her district's bag while remaining hidden. She ultimately dies after unknowingly consuming nightlock berries Peeta had gathered, mistaking them for safe food. She finishes 4th overall; in the film adaptation, she finishes 5th.

Thresh

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Thresh is the District 11 male tribute in the 74th Hunger Games. He was the physically strongest and largest tribute, which lent him an advantage in the Games, and was one of the oldest contenders. He scored a 10 in his private session, which proved he was as strong as the Career tributes. He survived the initial bloodbath and even killed one of the tributes himself. During the games, he stayed hidden away from all the other tributes, which helped him survive through to the final six. When the feast was announced, he made his way to the Cornucopia and witnessed Clove attack Katniss. He then brutally killed Clove, upon hearing her say that she killed Rue, his female counterpart. He spared Katniss's life as she was Rue's ally. His death in the book is very different from that in the film: in the book, he is presumably killed by Cato and finishes fifth overall. However, in the film, he is the first victim of the Mutts and finishes fourth overall.

Rue

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Rue is the District 11 female tribute in the 74th Hunger Games. She was the youngest of all the tributes in the Games, at just 12 years old. She scored a 7 in her private session which was unusually high for such a young tribute and most suspect that she got such a high score by demonstrating her climbing skills. Rue also survived the initial bloodbath. She spent the first few days climbing through the trees and hiding. On Day 5, she found Katniss up a tree, trapped there by the career tributes. She pointed out a tracker jacker nest to Katniss. Katniss planned to drop the nest on the careers and cut the branch it was hanging under,[9] which caused it to fall on the Careers. This resulted in the deaths of Glimmer (and the female tribute from District 4 in the book). Katniss then collapses, having been stung by some of the tracker jackers, and sleeps for a few days. Rue tends to her tracker jacker stings during this time, stating that it was "lucky that she had the sense to pull out the stingers, otherwise she would have been a lot worse".

Upon her awakening, Katniss and Rue became allies. They talk, hunt, prepare food, and form a friendship. Rue asks questions about if Katniss likes Peeta and if all of it is true. Katniss also protects Rue while she sleeps. In both the film and book it is shown how much Rue reminds Katniss of her sister, Prim. Later, Katniss and Rue make plans to destroy the Careers' supplies. Katniss destroys the supply mountain the next day, shooting a sack of apples that, upon landing, sets off the pedestal mines that the male tribute from District 3 had reactivated, but Rue finds herself trapped in a net set up by the Careers. Katniss comes to her rescue, but, while dodging her own death, Marvel spears Rue in the abdomen. In the ensuing conflict, Marvel is killed by Katniss, who was trying to defend Rue. The dying Rue tells Katniss she has to win and asks her to sing for her as she died. When Katniss sees the violence of the Hunger Games happen personally to Rue, someone she deeply cared about and who was so young, caring, and innocent, it fuels her hate for the Capitol and the games as well. Rue also serves as motivation to the rebellion, her death causing several uprisings as well as Katniss presenting a speech for her. Rue finished seventh overall. Rue had five brothers and sisters, and her father died when she was 9. She was evidently close to her siblings and had some hunting skills, even though the only weapons she had were a slingshot and a rock for a knife. Rue is often mentioned by Katniss in the later books as they were not only allies but friends as well.

75th Hunger Games tributes

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Finnick Odair

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Finnick Odair is the male tribute from District 4 who was reaped into the Third Quarter Quell. He was 24 years old and described as being very handsome, muscular, athletic, and tall with tan skin, bronze hair, and stunning sea-green eyes. He was very popular among the people of the Capitol, both because he was a victorious Career tribute and a sex symbol, known for having many lovers in the Capitol, none of whom he stayed with for long. At age 14, he won the 65th Hunger Games by using a trident and a net against other tributes (a skill unique to District 4's trade of fishing). Katniss remarks that the trident given to him by a sponsor may have been the most expensive gift ever seen in the Games. During the Quarter Quell, Katniss is hesitant to make Finnick her ally, because she does not trust him—to her, he appears to be shallow, arrogant, and superficial. However, Finnick soon proved to be trustworthy by saving Peeta by using CPR to resuscitate him (which Katniss notes as, "one of the things I will never stop owing him for") and using his skills to provide shelter.

When jabberjays that make sounds of the screams of loved ones being tortured appear in the Quell, the one made to target Finnick used the voice of Annie Cresta, his "poor, mad" lover in District 4, who was also a victor of the Games. In Mockingjay, Finnick entered a deep depression, a result of Annie's being held prisoner by the Capitol and formed a close bond with Katniss over their mutual pain and experiences. He assisted with the rebellion by appearing in rebel propaganda. He later revealed that victors of the Games are often prostituted to wealthy citizens of the Capitol by President Snow, which resulted in Finnick's reputation for having many lovers. He also revealed all of the political secrets he learned from clients, including the fact that President Snow only became the leader of Panem by poisoning his opponents. Finnick was reunited with Annie (when District 13 retrieved her, Johanna, and Peeta from the Capitol), and they married.

Finnick was a member of the "Star Squad" that went to fight in the Capitol during the final stages of the rebellion. He and Katniss fought off lizard mutations (or "mutts") during the attempt to infiltrate the Capitol, with Finnick holding them off for Katniss to escape but being dragged back by them before he can escape himself. Katniss says "Nightlock" three times into the Holo, causing it to explode, allowing Finnick to die quickly and painlessly. In the novel, however, Finnick is decapitated by the mutts. Katniss sees moments from Finnick's life pass before her eyes as he dies. Some months after his death, Annie has their son. Finnick and Katniss grew very close in Catching Fire, and he was Katniss's best friend throughout the last novel, being one of the only people who understood what she was going through.

Beetee Latier

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Beetee Latier is the District 3 male tribute in the 75th Hunger Games. He was skilled in electronics and won his game by electrocuting groups of tributes at once. Beetee also contributed substantially to the technology of the Capitol. He joined the alliance to protect Katniss and devised a plan to electrocute the Careers. Although injured, he survived the game and was brought by the rebels to District 13. Beetee joined the district's technology division, working on the military equipment and designing a bomb that President Coin later used to bomb the Capitol children and medics, killing Prim. However, Beetee had no direct role in the actual bombing itself with Gale Hawthorne later admitting that neither he nor Beetee knew for sure if it was their bomb that had been used.

In Sunrise on the Reaping, Beetee is the father of one of the tributes for the 50th Hunger Games and plots with Haymitch, Wiress, Mags and Plutarch Heavensbee to sabotage the games. Afterwards, Plutarch reveals that Beetee's life was spared as he simply too valuable and Beetee chose not to commit suicide as his wife is pregnant again.

Mags Flanagan

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Mags Flanagan is the female tribute from District 4. She was the oldest tribute in the Quarter Quell at approximately 80 years old and a victor of the 11th Hunger Games. Despite her frailty and limited speech—communicating mostly through gestures and fragmented words (portrayed as mute in the film adaptation)—Mags bravely volunteers in place of Annie Cresta, Finnick's girlfriend, aware that she has little chance of survival.

Mags is noted for her ability to fashion fishing hooks out of nearly any material. During the Quarter Quell, she teams with Katniss, Peeta, and Finnick. Mags eventually sacrifices herself by walking into a poisonous fog to spare the others from having to carry her and allow them to escape. She finishes 15th overall in the Games.

In Sunrise on the Reaping, Mags serves as a mentor to District 12 during the 50th Hunger Games due to the lack of surviving victors from that district. As part of an early rebellion plot, Mags and Wiress are later captured and tortured by the Capitol, resulting in lasting trauma that left Mags in a wheelchair.

Johanna Mason

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Johanna Mason is the female tribute from District 7. She won her games by initially feigning weakness and cowardice to avoid being perceived as a threat, only revealing her viciousness once the competition narrowed. Haymitch implies that, like Finnick Odair, she may have been forced into prostitution by President Snow; however, it is also suggested that she resisted, prompting the Capitol to retaliate by executing her loved ones. The loss left her emotionally hardened and in turn, she openly defies the Capitol without fear of Snow retaliating: "He can't hurt me. There is no one left I love."

Sarcastic, blunt, and rebellious, Johanna first meets Katniss shortly after the 75th Tribute Parade and disrobes from her tree costume to unsettle her. She later teams with Katniss, Peeta, and Finnick in the Quarter Quell and safely brings Beetee and Wiress with her. As part of the secret rebel alliance, she protects Katniss during the arena's chaos and removes Katniss' tracker by cutting it from her arm. However, Johanna is captured by Capitol forces during the rescue mission at the end of Catching Fire.

In Mockingjay, she is rescued alongside Peeta and Annie and taken to District 13. Johanna suffers from trauma and a fear of water from Capitol torture involving repeated soaking and electrocution. As a result, Johanna panics during combat training and is ultimately not selected for the mission into the Capitol. She and Katniss room together after refusing extended treatment in the District 13 hospital. Johanna and all other surviving Victors post-rebellion later participate in the vote to hold a symbolic Hunger Games using Capitol children; Johanna casts her vote in favor.

Enobaria

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Enobaria is the female tribute from District 2. A career tribute in both her previous Games and the Third Quarter Quell, she gained notoriety in her Games by fatally biting another tribute's throat, an act that secured her victory and established her savage reputation. Following her win, she had her teeth sharpened into fangs and inlaid with gold to score her popularity within the Capitol.

During the Quarter Quell, Enobaria is the only tribute not aligned with the rebels to survive the arena. She is captured by Capitol forces alongside Peeta and Johanna but is notably not rescued by District 13; Boggs speculates that due to her career background, Enobaria may not have been detained in the same way, and Katniss even suggests that she was likely spared from torture. Although the book states that Victors were targeted by both sides during the war due to distrust over their loyalties, Enobaria remains alive at the war's end, making her the only surviving non-rebel victor. She votes in favor of holding a symbolic Hunger Games using Capitol children, stating that the Capitol should "taste their own medicine". Nevertheless, her inclusion among the surviving rebel victors prompted hostility from Johanna, who threatened to kill her. Her presence in the final vote and at President Snow’s execution is retained in the film adaptations, although her capture and rescue are not depicted.

Other 75th Hunger Games Tributes

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  • Gloss is the male tribute from District 1 and the brother of his district's female tribute Cashmere. As Career tributes, Gloss and Cashmere won back-to-back Hunger Games. In Catching Fire, he is killed after Katniss shoots him with an arrow to the temple; in the film adaptation, she shoots him in the chest. He finishes 11th overall.
  • Cashmere is the female tribute from District 1 and Gloss's sister. A lethal Career tribute alongside Gloss, she is depicted as beautiful and closely bonded with her brother. In the arena, she charges toward Katniss but is killed by Johanna, who throws an axe into her chest. In Mockingjay, Finnick implies that Cashmere was one of the many victors forced into prostitution by the Capitol.
  • Brutus is the male tribute from District 2. In the film, he is shown as bald, muscular, and adept with spears. He is the final tribute to die in the arena, killed by Peeta after Brutus kills Chaff; this was confirmed in Mockingjay during Peeta's interview with Caesar Flickerman. Brutus finishes 7th overall.
  • Wiress is the female tribute from District 3 and an intellectual known for her technological expertise and erratic speech patterns. She discovers that the arena operates as a clock but becomes increasingly unstable after Blight's death. Wiress is killed by Gloss, who slits her throat in an ambush. In Sunrise on the Reaping, Wiress is a temporary mentor for District 12 during the 50th Hunger Games due to the district's lack of surviving victors. Both Wiress and Mags were involved in a covert rebel effort and were later tortured by the Capitol, causing Wiress's mental deterioration. She finishes 12th overall.
  • An unidentified female Morphling is the District 6 female tribute in the 75th Hunger Games. She sacrificed herself by jumping in front of a monkey mutation before it could kill Peeta, who afterward comforted her in the book, by telling her stories about colors and letting her paint a flower on his face with her blood, and in the film by having her admire the sky. She finished 14th overall.
  • Blight is the District 7 male tribute in the 75th Hunger Games. He protested his inclusion by not joining the Training Period. He formed an alliance with his fellow tribute, Johanna, and with Beetee and Wiress, but ran into a force field during a blood rain, which stopped his heart. Johanna stated: "he was not that much, but he was from home".
  • Woof is the District 8 male tribute in the 75th Hunger Games. He is the second oldest living tribute, about 70 years old. He is forgetful and eats insects even after being told they are poisonous. He is killed in the bloodbath.
  • Cecelia is the District 8 female tribute in the 75th Hunger Games. She had three children who begged her not to enter the Hunger Games, as seen in the footage of the Reaping. Katniss chose her as one of her allies in the arena, but Cecelia was killed in the bloodbath.
  • Chaff is the District 11 male tribute in the 75th Hunger Games. He was the victor of the 45th Hunger Games and refused a prosthetic arm after losing it. Chaff was best friends with Haymitch, and they frequently drank together. He kisses Katniss during their first meeting, without warning, to tease her. He is killed by Brutus on the final day of the game, finishing 8th overall.
  • Seeder is the District 11 female tribute in the 75th Hunger Games. She had dark hair and olive skin, which made her look like a person from the Seam if not for her golden eyes. She embraced Katniss after the chariot rides, assuring Katniss that Rue and Thresh's families were safe after the commotion in District 11. Katniss chose her as one of her allies in the arena, but she was killed in the bloodbath.

Tributes from other games

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Annie Cresta

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Annie Cresta won the 70th Hunger Games for District 4. She has sea-green eyes and dark hair. She became mentally unstable after seeing the male tribute from her district decapitated. When an earthquake broke a dam, the arena was flooded. She won because, being from the fishing district, she was the best swimmer. Annie seems never to have fully recovered after the games and suffers from serious mental trauma. Despite this, she is a kind person. She is chosen at the Reaping for the Quarter Quell, but Mags volunteers to take her place, to spare her. Her scream is used by the jabberjays (birds that can mimic whatever they hear) in the Quarter Quell to torment Finnick Odair, who loves her. In Mockingjay, she and Finnick marry, and she gives birth to their son after his death. Annie votes against another Hunger Games for Capitol children, noting that, if alive, Finnick would do the same.

Titus

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Titus was a male tribute from District 6 who competed in an unspecified Hunger Games. The Arena of that game was a frozen tundra, and the tributes were constantly in dire need of food. Titus became a cannibal by eating the corpses of dead tributes, forcing the Gamemakers to stun him with electric guns to collect the bodies. He was eventually killed by an avalanche, and since then, there is an unspoken rule for the tributes not to eat other tributes. Katniss speculates the Gamemakers staged his death to prevent a "lunatic" from winning the game.

Other Tributes from other games

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  • Porter Millicent Tripp was a female tribute from District 5 who competed in the 38th Hunger Games. Though she was not mentioned in any of the books or movies, she was depicted in the Capitol Couture. She suffered from a neck injury that was given to her during the games. She is most likely deceased, as she was absent from the voting of the 76th Hunger Games.
  • Palladium Barker was a male tribute from District 1 who competed in the 46th Hunger Games. He was mentioned in Sunrise on the Reaping by Wyatt Callow, who was calculating Panache Barker's odds. Palladium was most likely related to Panache. He is most likely deceased, as he was absent from the voting of the 76th Hunger Games.
  • Augustus Braun was a male tribute from District 1 who competed in the 67th Hunger Games. He was also known as "Panem's Favorite Son" and "Cavalier Career". He is most likely deceased, as he was absent from the voting of the 76th Hunger Games.

The Capitol

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Effie Trinket

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Effie Trinket is a Capitol woman who was assigned to oversee District 12's tributes in the Hunger Games, specifically Katniss and Peeta in the 74th and 75th Games. She must carry out such tasks as drawing the tributes' names at the Reaping and escorting them to the Capitol. At first, she shows herself brainwashed and clueless. Later, Effie becomes attached to her District 12 charges. During the 74th Hunger Games, Effie appears oblivious to the misfortunes of District 12 and The Hunger Games. She dresses in the expensive, flamboyant manner typical to the Capitol and has a different-colored wig to go with the prevailing color of her clothes, leading Katniss to wonder if Capitol citizens realize "how freakish they look to the rest of us."

Mostly interested in moving up in Capitol society and in keeping with her socialite ambitions, Effie is keenly attentive to and highly knowledgeable of customs, courtesies and manners in the Capitol, always showing up on time. Katniss notes in the first book that "although she can be tiresome, Effie has a very keen instinct about certain things" and "a certain determination I admire". Effie's catchphrase in the first book is "Happy Hunger Games, and may the odds be ever in your favor!" which became a famous phrase among fans of the saga.

During the 75th Hunger Games, Effie's facade of perky civility cracks as she faces the prospect of seeing Katniss and Peeta forced into the arena for a second time. In the film of Catching Fire, Effie starts off trying to plan out a yellow-gold fashion theme that she, Haymitch, Katniss and Peeta will share. She insists this is to "Show them we are a team!" She then struggles to continue, managing "They can't just-" before becoming too emotional to continue. This leads Haymitch, Katniss and Peeta to each gently express empathy, appreciating Effie's concern.

For reasons unknown, however, Effie was not brought in on the scheme to bring down the 75th Hunger Games and rescue the surviving victors to kick off a second rebellion against the Capitol. In Mockingjay, it is said she was imprisoned after Katniss's escape but unlike many others Katniss knew in the Capitol, she is not executed. She meets up again with Katniss before Snow's execution, and Katniss notes that she now has a "vacant look" in her eyes. The book states Haymitch and Plutarch had some difficulty in keeping her from being executed at the end of the war, but her imprisonment had actually helped in that regard. In the films, Effie's role in the third film, Mockingjay Part 1, is expanded as, rather than getting captured by the Capitol, she is instead evacuated by the Rebels and taken to District 13. Though initially hesitant, she eventually consents to help Katniss and effectively replaces the role of Katniss's prep team, who does not appear beyond the second film.

In the end of Mockingjay Part 2, Effie and Haymitch shares a kiss while she says goodbye to Katniss, hearing from Haymitch "don't be a stranger". This scene is not in the books.

Effie appears in Sunrise on the Reaping where she's one of Haymitch's stylists for the 50th Hunger Games. She appears in the book after going to help her sister Proserpina Trinket, who was part of Haymitch's preparation team, so she ends up being included in the team and helping the tributes with clothes that belonged to her relatives. Because of this, we know more about her family's past and that her grandparents' uncle had stained the name of the family.

She ends up helping Haymitch get into the tubes that lead to the arena, advises him not to leave the place before the time and promises to deliver Lenore Dove's gift back to her if he dies, it is mentioned that he realizes that she is shaking.

After the arena, Effie replaces the injured District 12 chaperone Drusilla Sickle in accompanying Haymitch on the Victory Tour and other public events, setting up her taking that escort job. Haymitch also mentions that "The only person who kept an eye on me is Effie Trinket", anticipating what we would see in the future where she tried to help him not to drink.

Cinna

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Cinna is Katniss's stylist, responsible for her public appearances. After designing the spectacular outfits for the opening ceremony, which include costumes ignitable with synthetic fire, he nicknames Katniss "the Girl on Fire". Cinna is in his first year as a stylist for the Games and specifically requested to be assigned to District 12. His amazing designs immediately win over the audience in favor of the District 12 tributes. Cinna is better than most at seeing through the superficiality and spectacle of the Games to their barbaric core.[10] Cinna's role was also to support and calm Katniss down before entering the arena. Although he did this very subtly, he had a unique nonverbal connection, which gave Katniss much strength. He and Katniss establish an easy, comfortable relationship, and he demonstrates a genuine concern for her well-being.

In Catching Fire, Cinna dresses Katniss for her television interview in her wedding dress, as insisted by President Snow, but alters it so that when Katniss raises her arms and twirls, the white dress burns away to be replaced with a black and grey dress of feathers that resembles a mockingjay, which has become the symbol of the resistance in Panem. Because of this, Cinna is savagely beaten in front of Katniss, right before she enters the arena for the Quarter Quell, which unnerves her greatly. It is suggested that he might have been tortured to death after the arena explodes. Effie Trinket states in Mockingjay, Part 1, before showing Katniss sketches of her Mockingjay costume made by Cinna, that he is dead. Cinna is very different from the other inhabitants of the Capitol. He does not use surgery to alter his features, wears simple black clothes, and leaves his hair its natural dark brown color, close-cropped. His only concession to the Capitol's fashion style is a small amount of metallic gold eyeliner, applied with a light hand, that brings out the gold flecks in his green eyes. In Mockingjay he is confirmed as one of the rebels.

Plutarch Heavensbee

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Plutarch Heavensbee is the new Head Gamemaker following the death of Seneca Crane. He is actually the judge who falls into the punch bowl when Katniss shoots the apple out of a pig's mouth during her scoring in the first book, but Katniss does not formally meet him until the Victory Tour celebration in the second book. He is later shown to be the leader of the rebel movement in the Districts and is the mastermind behind the plan to break the tributes out of the arena in Catching Fire. He tries to give Katniss hints about the nature of the arena for the Quarter Quell, but Katniss does not pick up on it until much later. In Mockingjay he has become a "rebel filmmaker",[11] and helps create propaganda featuring Katniss as the Mockingjay for District 13's war against the Capitol. He is elected Secretary of Communications after the war ends.

Plutarch appears in Sunrise on the Reaping as a young cameraman covering the 50th Hunger Games. Plutarch offers Haymitch advice about the arena and reveals his involvement in a rebel movement made up of several victors and tributes, some of whom would later be involved in the rebellion in Catching Fire and Mockingjay. Haymitch wonders several times if Plutarch can really be trusted, particularly because he comes out of the failed rebellion fairly well off compared to everyone else. Plutarch tells Haymitch that while their efforts failed, they need someone like him who is luckier and with better timing in the future to succeed, although it may not be in their lifetime. Plutarch speaks of building an army or better yet finding one to that end. When Haymitch accuses Plutarch of exploiting the games for his benefit, Plutarch states that he's no one's idea of a hero, but he's still in the game. He is related to Hilarius Heavensbee, a mentor in the 10th Hunger Games.

Seneca Crane

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Seneca Crane is the Head Gamemaker during the 74th Hunger Games. The bait-and-switch tactic of proclaiming two tributes could win if they came from the same district was his idea, and so when it came back to bite the Capitol in the end, Crane was held responsible for the embarrassment. Near the beginning of the Catching Fire book, Snow tells Katniss that he had him executed for letting both her and Peeta live. At the end of the first Hunger Games film, Crane is shown being escorted by Capitol guards and locked in a room containing poisonous nightlock berries to consume. In both the Catching Fire book and film, Katniss hangs a dummy with the words "Seneca Crane" on it before the judges when her skills test is performed, shocking the judges greatly.

Prep team

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Octavia, Venia, and Flavius are Katniss's prep team. They are residents of the Capitol and sport the radically altered appearances typical of Capitol residents, including pea-green skin (Octavia), aqua-colored hair and a face etched with gold tattoos (Venia), and orange corkscrew hair and purple lipstick (Flavius). At first, it appears they are dull-witted and care only about their appearance. However, they prove themselves less shallow when they begin to cry while preparing Katniss for the Quarter Quell, from which they do not expect her to return. Katniss gleans valuable information from them by listening to them gossip about shortages of supplies, giving Katniss clues about which districts have rebelled. In Mockingjay, they are kidnapped and taken to District 13 to help with Katniss's styling, and they very quickly run afoul of District 13's draconian rules and end up cruelly punished for stealing bread. Katniss orders them set free and healed. Venia is said to have always been the strongest: for example, in Catching Fire, Venia is the only one to contain her emotions while working on Katniss's appearance, while Octavia and Flavius both need to leave the room to control their emotions. Katniss's prep team only appears in the first two films (except for Venia, who only appears in the first); their roles in the final two films are filled by Effie.

Caesar Flickerman

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Caesar Flickerman is the Master of Ceremonies and commentator for the Hunger Games, along with Claudius Templesmith. He has served as the master of ceremonies since the 50th Hunger Games, but his unchanged appearance leads Katniss to speculate that he had received extensive surgeries to look and be as young as possible. Caesar interviews each Tribute on live television the night before the Games begin and is renowned for his innate ability to create relaxed, insightful conversations, making each Tribute stand out to the audience and potential sponsors. Flamboyantly outgoing and stylish, Caesar is also known for wearing a different color of hair and suit for each Hunger Games, though not all his selections have gone over well, such as a frightening blood-red hair dye that he used at the 73rd Hunger Games (and did not use again). In the films, he is also known for flashing a huge smile and distinctive laugh. He interviews Peeta after the events of the 75th Hunger Games in Mockingjay and makes no further televised appearances after Peeta's rescue by rebel commandos, his fate unspecified. It is implied that he is a descendant of the first Hunger Games commentator, Lucky Flickerman.

Tigris Snow

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Tigris Snow is a former Hunger Games stylist who later works in a small shop specializing in fur-trimmed underwear in the Capitol. Her face has been altered into a "semi-feline mask" through many surgical operations. It is implied these alterations, too strange for even people in The Capitol, caused her to be shunned and banned as a stylist for the Games; this resulted in Tigris's becoming embittered towards the Capitol. She aids Katniss's squad on their final mission by hiding them in her shop and disguising them. When Katniss offers Tigris food, she says: "I eat next to nothing, and then, only raw meat". After that, Katniss says that Tigris is too into her character.

In The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes, she is revealed as Coriolanus Snow's cousin (raised as his sister), and is three years his senior. She cooks for him and their grandmother as the rest of their family are dead. In this book, she is training to be a fashion designer, and she and Coriolanus are shown to care deeply for each other.

Volumnia Gaul

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Dr. Volumnia Gaul is a sadistic and misanthropist mad scientist who is the indirect creator of the Hunger Games. She is the initial Head Gamemaker of the 10th Hunger Games. She developed the Hunger Games from an assignment done by two of her university students before the war, Crassus Snow and Casca Highbottom. She views the Games as a way to represent the lack of control and order without the Capitol in a Hobbesian fashion. She is also head of the Capitol's Experimental Weapons Division, creating many muttations as part of her job, and a professor of military theory at the university. In The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes, she behaves eccentrically and sadistically places mentors in dangerous situations. She specifically takes a particular liking to Coriolanus Snow, due to his ideas for the Games and thoughts on control and order. Eventually, she has him honorably discharged from the Peacekeepers, enrolls him at the university, and even makes him an intern for the Gamemakers.

In Sunrise on the Reaping, taking place forty years later, Haymitch recalls that Gaul hosted the 25th Hunger Games, the First Quarter Quell, with Lucky Flickerman. Haymitch described Gaul as a relic of a woman at that point who was credited with coining the phrase "may the odds be EVER in your favor." The phrase caught on as a way to wish someone good luck, but Haymitch considered it to be a sadistic thing to say to a tribute given that survival's an impossibility for twenty-three of the twenty-four kids.

Casca Highbottom

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Casca Highbottom is the academic dean of the Academy, the most prestigious high school in Panem, and publicly credited as the creator of the Hunger Games. While attending the university, Crassus Snow got him drunk during an assignment to get him to give him all his ideas for a thought experiment, this assignment later morphed into the Hunger Games. Traumatized and betrayed by his former best friend, Highbottom became a morphling addict, leading to a young Coriolanus Snow to mockingly call him "High-as-a-kite-Bottom" behind his back. He never forgave Crassus for what he did and so he made his son, Coriolanus, the mentor for Lucy Gray Baird out of revenge. Eventually he proves Coriolanus cheated in the Games and forces him to join the Peacekeepers as punishment, clueless that Dr. Gaul was backing Coriolanus from behind the scenes. Just before Coriolanus started at the university, he visited Highbottom one final time, his mere presence back in the Capitol proof that, despite all Highbottom's efforts to finish his hated enemy for good, "Snow lands on top." Highbottom dies soon after as he takes tainted morphling that Coriolanus intentionally left behind, the first to die from Snow's signature weapon of poison.

Minor Capitol characters

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  • Claudius Templesmith is an announcer and commentator for the Hunger Games with Caesar Flickerman.
  • Portia is Peeta's stylist in the 74th and 75th Hunger Games. She is only mentioned a few times in the series. She praises Katniss on a job well done in the first book, when Katniss receives an 11 in her private session. Alongside the other stylists and prep teams for other tributes (except for Katniss's prep team), Portia is publicly executed by the Capitol after the Third Quarter Quell due to their alleged collaboration with the tributes that facilitates their escape from the arena.
  • Atala is the training center coach before the Games.
  • Cressida is the resident director from the Capitol. She and her camera crew join the rebellion, moving to District 13 after fleeing the Capitol. Cressida is described as "a woman with a shaved head tattooed with green vines". She films propos for District 13 and later accompanies Katniss and her squad during their assault on the Capitol. She becomes upset by the deaths of two of her crew members, Castor and Messalla, but survives the war and begins filming the war destruction in Panem alongside Pollux.
  • Messalla is Cressida's assistant from the Capitol. He moved to District 13 after fleeing the Capitol. He assists in filming propos for the rebels in Districts 8 and 13. He joins the Star Squad in the rebellion, on their final mission in the Capitol. When the troops find their way into the Capitol's underground, they are soon found by lizard mutations. While fleeing from the lizards, Messalla is killed by a pod that emits a shaft of impenetrable light, melting his skin off.
  • Castor and Pollux are brothers who comprise Cressida's camera crew from the Capitol. They often wear "insect shells", that is, a wearable carapace holding the camera and equipment. Pollux is a former Avox, having escaped from servitude in the Capitol, and Castor interprets for him. As photojournalists, they are courageous and have an incredible sense for "capturing the right moment" on film. After Katniss sings "The Hanging Tree", Pollux comes to truly accept and admire her. Castor is killed by the lizard mutations, with Finnick and Homes, while Pollux survives and assists Cressida to document the war destruction after the war's end. The brothers' names derive from the twins of Greek mythology. In the myth, as in Mockingjay, Castor is killed, while Pollux lives on, alone.
  • Clemensia Dovecote is a mentor during the 10th Hunger Games. After the death of Arachne Crane, she is very affected and fails to help Coriolanus Snow write the essay Dr. Gaul had assigned them. When they go to turn it in, she pretends she co-wrote the essay. Dr. Gaul drops the essay into a cage with genetically modified snakes. She forces Clemensia to reach into the cage to retrieve the pages and is bitten by the snakes. She is envenomated and rushed to the hospital where she remains in critical condition for several days. When Coriolanus is hospitalized, she lurks over his bed and it is shown she is extremely pale, her chest is covered in scales and has severe mental alteration. Her family and friends are lied to about what happened to her and told she caught a contagious virus. She is eventually discharged and her scars are fading, though painfully, and her mental stated improved slightly. She developed a phobia of snakes. She is originally angry at Coriolanus for not visiting her, but eventually forgives him.
  • Arachne Crane was a mentor in the 10th Hunger Games. She began taunting her District 10 tribute, Brandy, by offering her a sandwich through the bars of the zoo cage, only to then withdraw it. Brandy eventually grabbed her and slit her throat with the knife she used to cut the food. She bled out in Coriolanus Snow's arms. During her funeral procession, her tribute's lifeless body was hanged from a crane and attached to a truck that carried the (shackled) remaining tributes. She is most likely an indirect relative of Seneca Crane.
  • Livia Cardew was a mentor in the 10th Hunger Games. Her assigned tribute was the District 1 male, Facet. After Facet died in the arena bombing, she attempted to be given Clemensia Dovecote's tribute, Reaper, arguing that he did not have a mentor as Clemensia was in the hospital at that time. It is heavily implied that Livia ended up marrying Coriolanus Snow in the future, as he stated that he hoped to one day marry someone he disliked so much that he would not feel guilt over manipulating them, naming Livia as "perfect". She is likely an indirect relative of Fulvia Cardew.
  • Palmyra Monty was a mentor in the 10th Hunger Games. Her assigned tribute was the District 1 female, Velvereen.
  • Florus Friend was a mentor in the 10th Hunger Games. His assigned tribute was the District 2 female, Sabyn.
  • Io Jasper was a mentor in the 10th Hunger Games. Her assigned tribute was the District 3 male, Circ. Her parents were scientists, and Coriolanus stated that she "seemed to have been born with a microscope attached to her eye".
  • Urban Canville was a mentor in the 10th Hunger Games. His assigned tribute was the District 3 female, Teslee. He was short to be short-tempered, reacting in anger when Lucky Flickerman forgot his name and nearly snarling in contempt at Lepidus Malmsey after his elimination from the Games.
  • Persephone Price was a mentor in the 10th Hunger Games. Her assigned tribute was the District 4 male, Mizzen. Her father was railroad tycoon Nero Price.
  • Festus Creed was a mentor in the 10th Hunger Games. His assigned tribute was the District 4 female, Coral.
  • Dennis Fling was a mentor in the 10th Hunger Games. His assigned tribute was the District 5 male, Hy.
  • Iphigenia Moss was a mentor in the 10th Hunger Games. Her assigned tribute was the District 5 female, Sol.
  • Apollo Ring was a mentor in the 10th Hunger Games. His assigned tribute was the District 6 male, Otto. His twin sister was Diana, both of whom were killed in the bombing of the Capitol Arena.
  • Diana Ring was a mentor in the 10th Hunger Games. Her assigned tribute was the District 6 female, Ginnee. Her twin brother was Apollo, both of whom were killed in the bombing of the Capitol Arena.
  • Vipsania Sickle was a mentor in the 10th Hunger Games. Her assigned tribute was the District 7 male, Treech. Her aunt was Agrippina Sickle, and she is likely related to Drusilla Sickle.
  • Pliny Harrington was a mentor in the 10th Hunger Games. His assigned tribute was the District 7 female, Lamina.
  • Juno Phipps was a mentor in the 10th Hunger Games. Her assigned tribute was the District 8 male, Bobbin.
  • Hilarius Heavensbee was a mentor in the 10th Hunger Games. His assigned tribute was the District 8 female, Wovey. He is related to Plutarch Heavensbee.
  • Gaius Breen was a mentor in the 10th Hunger Games. His assigned tribute was the District 9 male, Panlo.
  • Androcles Anderson was a mentor in the 10th Hunger Games. His assigned tribute was the District 9 female, Sheaf.
  • Domitia Whimsiwick was a mentor in the 10th Hunger Games. Her assigned tribute was the District 10 male, Tanner.
  • Felix Ravinstill was a mentor in the 10th Hunger Games. His assigned tribute was the District 11 female, Dill. He was then-President Maximinius Ravinstill's grandnephew. In the films, Ravinstill was killed in the bombing of the Capitol Arena.
  • Lysistrata Vickers was a mentor in the 10th Hunger Games. Her assigned tribute was the District 12 male, Jessup Diggs.
  • Fulvia Cardew is Plutarch Heavensbee's assistant who defects from the Capitol to join the Second Rebellion. Gale notes that she is "so well intended, yet so insulting". She proposes that Katniss would become the center of the propos by reading out speeches written by her, which Katniss vehemently rejects because she does not want to become anyone other than herself. Later, Fulvia suggests for a propo about the fallen tributes with Finnick narrating; this time, her idea is green-lit. Fulvia survives the Second Rebellion and continues to assist Plutarch. She is likely an indirect relative of Livia Cardew. In the films, Fulvia does not appear, her role instead being taken by Effie.
  • Lucky Flickerman was the host for the 10th Hunger Games. This was the first time there was a host to interview the tributes and provide commentary during the Games. He made no effort to remember the tribute's and mentor's names and eventually resorted to magic tricks and showing off his pet parrot to entertain the viewers. He is most likely an ancestor of Caesar Flickerman.
  • Crassus Xanthos Snow is Coriolanus Snow's father. He died during the First Rebellion. He co-created the idea of the Hunger Games with his former friend Casca Highbottom as part of a university assignment, submitting a thought experiment of Casca's as an actual societal plan.
  • The Grandma'am is Coriolanus and Tigris Snow's paternal grandmother. She took care of her grandchildren after they were orphaned. She is extremely patriotic and holds extreme disdain towards the districts and its citizens. She keeps a rose garden in the roof of the Snow's apartment building.
  • Pluribus and Cyrus Bell were the owners of a nightclub in The Capitol. Sometime prior to the 10th Hunger Games, Cyrus was killed in a bombing and Pluribus closed their nightclub in favor of becoming a black marketeer. Bell later lent Coriolanus Snow one of his guitars to give to Lucy Gray Baird.
  • Satyria Click was a communications professor at the Academy during the 10th Hunger Games.
  • Crispus Demigloss was a history professor at the Academy during the 10th Hunger Games.
  • Hippocrata Lunt was a counselor at the Academy during the 10th Hunger Games.
  • Agrippina Sickle was the gymnasium mistress at the Academy during the 10th Hunger Games. Her niece was Vipsania Sickle, and she is likely related to Drusilla Sickle.
  • Remus Dolittle was a Gamemaker-in-Training and the downstairs neighbor of the Snow family.
  • Dr. Kay was a scientist who worked in the Citadel and was the head of the original jabberjay project.
  • Dr. Wane was a doctor who worked at the Capitol Hospital and took care of Coriolanus Snow and Clemensia Dovecote while admitted there.
  • Lepidus Malmsey was a reporter for Capitol News during the 10th Hunger Games.
  • Pontius and Venus were two children who visited Lucy Gray Baird while she was in the Capitol Zoo.
  • Nero Price was a railroad tycoon and the father of 10th Hunger Games mentor Persephone Price. During the Dark Days, in which many families fell upon hard times, Coriolanus and Tigris witnessed Nero chopping off a maid's leg for food.
  • Fabricia Whatnot was a fashion designer and Tigris Snow's boss.
  • Maximinius Ravinstill was the President of Panem at the time of the 10th Hunger Games. His grand-nephew was Felix Ravinstill.
  • Drusilla Sickle is a Capitol chaperone for the District 12 tributes during the 50th Hunger Games. She is married to Magno Stift, the stylist for the District 12 tributes during the 50th Hunger Games. She is likely indirectly related to Agrippina and Vipsania Sickle. After falling down an escalator and breaking her hip before the Victory Tour, Drusilla is replaced by Effie Trinket.
  • Incitatus Loomy was the parade master for the 50th Hunger Games. Due to the accident in the parade, he was forced to eat poisoned oysters by Snow.[12]

District 2

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  • Sejanus Plinth is a mentor during the 10th Hunger Games and the best friend of Coriolanus Snow. He is idealistic and fundamentally opposes the Capitol's treatment of the districts and the existence of the Hunger Games. His rebellious nature lands him in trouble at the Academy and his father negotiates for Sejanus to become a Peacekeeper in District 12. There, he is reunited with Coriolanus and begins helping the rebels. Coriolanus records him talking about breaking out an imprisoned rebel and helping several of them escape to the north. This leads to him being arrested and hanged for treason which Coriolanus had not anticipated happening, having thought that Sejanus's father would buy his way out of trouble again.
  • Strabo Plinth is Sejanus's father. He has a munitions empire in District 2 and sided with the Capitol during the war. This granted him considerable wealth and political favor, allowing him to relocate his family to the Capitol. He is frustrated with his son's idealism and constantly uses his influences to both force him into doing his bidding and bail him out of trouble. After his son's death, he essentially adopts Coriolanus Snow, provides for him and his family, and names him his heir.
  • Mrs. Plinth, also referred to as Ma Plinth is Sejanus's mother and Strabo's wife. She is an excellent cook and often sends her son and Coriolanus treats during their time as Peacekeepers in District 12. She misses her life in District 2 and is saddened by the fact they are considered traitors and most of her family has disowned her. After Strabo named Snow his heir, she moved with her husband to the apartment below the Snows and helped Tigris take care of the Grandma'am.

District 8

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  • Commander Paylor first appears in Mockingjay. Paylor is described as having dark brown eyes that are puffy with fatigue, and she smells of metal and sweat. Paylor is the leader of the rebel troops in District 8. Katniss meets her while in District 8 to film a propo. Later in Mockingjay, while wandering around President Snow's now rebel-inhabited mansion, Paylor allows Katniss to see President Snow, who is now imprisoned and awaiting execution. Two days after Katniss kills Coin, Paylor becomes President of Panem. It is implied that living conditions in all the districts improved considerably under her presidency.
  • Bonnie and Twill meet Katniss in the woods during Catching Fire. Both are from District 8 and are rebels. Twill proves this by holding out a cracker with the image of a mockingjay; in the book, it is the first time Katniss sees that the mockingjay has become a symbol of rebellion. Bonnie and Twill are on their way to District 13, and are the first to tell Katniss that District 13 may exist. Katniss also begins to ponder the reality of District 13, when she realizes that they show the same footage of the burned-down justice building again and again, each time implying it is current footage. However, in Mockingjay, it is mentioned the pair never made it to 13, and they are presumed dead. Bonnie and Twill are not featured in the films.
  • Eddy is a boy who is hospitalized along with his sister in District 8 by the time Katniss arrives there to film a propo. He seems to idolize Katniss with how he tries to come close to see her. He and his sister presumably perish when the Capitol bombs the hospital they are in.

District 12

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Asterid Everdeen

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Katniss's mother, Asterid Everdeen, has fair skin, blonde hair, and blue eyes, which symbolize that she is not from the Seam. She was raised in town as the daughter of an apothecary and consequently had a fairly comfortable life. During the 50th Hunger Games (2nd Quarter Quell) Reaping, she and Madge's mother were clinging on Maysilee Donner, Madge's aunt, and Ms. Everdeen's friend, who was reaped and killed at the time. She gave it all up to marry Katniss's father and move to the Seam, where she lived in poverty. After her husband Burdock died in a mining accident, she fell into a deep depression and did not speak for a long time, neglecting her daughters and forcing Katniss to become Prim's primary parent figure. Asterid eventually recovered enough to set up an apothecary in District 12, but it was not until after Katniss's first Hunger Games that she finally forgave her mother for not offering any support to her and Prim during her depression. In Mockingjay, Asterid is seen working in the hospital in District 13, and following Prim's death at the end of the book, she does not return to District 12 with Katniss. Instead, she stays in District 4, working in a hospital and coping with her grief. She and Katniss maintain contact through telephone calls.

She appears in Sunrise on the Reaping which gives her name as Asterid Everdeen, originally Asterid March. She and her husband were friends of Haymitch's before his games. After the murder of his family and girlfriend, Haymitch pushed everyone away to protect them with the Everdeens being two of the last to give up on him.

Burdock Everdeen

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Katniss's father, Burdock Everdeen, died in the District 12 mines with Gale's father, when Katniss was 11 and Prim was 7. Memories of him run through Katniss's mind throughout the series, with Katniss mentioning his singing voice, his handsomeness, and the things he taught her. Peeta's father says that although he was in love with Katniss's mother, she chose to marry Katniss's father because of his lovely singing voice. Katniss recalls that when her father sang, "all the birds stopped to listen" (this is one of the memories that Peeta responds successfully to). Katniss misses her father terribly, and the pain of losing him almost destroyed his wife, Asterid. He is depicted through flashbacks in the films.

He appears in Sunrise on the Reaping which reveals that his name is Burdock and he was a childhood friend of Haymitch Abernathy's. He is also related to the Covey and a distant cousin of Lenore Dove Baird. Burdock introduced Haymitch to the love of his life, Lenore Dove, who was Burdock's cousin. After the murder of his family and Lenore Dove following the 50th Hunger Games, Haymitch pushed away all of his friends in order to protect them with Burdock being one of the last ones to give up on him. Burdock later helped Haymitch to find the Covey's secret graveyard and Lenore Dove's grave.

Madge Undersee

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Madge Undersee is the mayor's daughter and Katniss's friend. She is not included in the film adaptations. She is described as having blonde hair and blue eyes, similar to the other merchant kids such as Peeta and Delly Cartwright. She and Katniss were always thrown together at school in the books, as both were solitary in nature. Madge gives Katniss her mockingjay pin,[13] which becomes a symbol of rebellion. After Katniss volunteers in place of her sister, Madge visits Katniss in the Hall of Justice and insists that she wears the pin for the games. In the film, Katniss obtains the pin at the market from Greasy Sae, who lets her take it free of charge. Katniss later learns the pin belonged to Maysilee Donner, a tribute in the 50th Hunger Games, and Madge's aunt, who was also friends with Katniss's mother, who became Haymitch's ally and was killed by candy-pink birds with spear beaks. Katniss and Madge spend more time together during the months after the Games. Katniss finds out that Madge does not see her parents often; her father has to run District 12 and her mother suffers from severe headaches that cause her to stay in bed. Katniss and Madge frequently went over to each other's houses, particularly during Catching Fire. Madge tried to teach Katniss to play the piano, but Katniss preferred to listen to her play. Madge wanted to go out into the woods to hunt, so Katniss took her and showed her how to shoot. Katniss is at Madge's house when she first hears of the uprisings in District 8 on the mayor's television in his room. Madge and her family perish in the District 12 bombings, and Katniss is very sorrowful at Madge's death and recalls how brave and kind she was.

Delly Cartwright

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Delly Cartwright is a girl from District 12 whom Katniss describes as being "the friendliest person on the planet". Delly is Peeta's friend and became one of the refugees in District 13, after escaping the District 12 fire bombing with her younger brother. Her parents, who hid in the shoe shop during the bombing, were not so lucky, as Katniss describes. Delly is first mentioned in The Hunger Games, when Peeta, trying to explain Katniss's reaction upon recognizing an Avox as someone she met on a hunting trip, lies and says that the Avox is a "dead ringer for Delly". In Mockingjay, after Peeta is rescued from the Capitol, Delly is used as a psychological "balm" to stir his childhood memories and help begin his recovery from the mind-control tortures the Capitol inflicted upon him. In the same book, it was revealed that Delly and Peeta used to create chalk drawings on paving stones, and Peeta's father used to let them make dough people. Delly does not appear in the film series, her role instead being taken by Prim.

Greasy Sae

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Greasy Sae is an old woman who sells bowls of soup from a large kettle at The Hob in District 12. Katniss Everdeen and Gale Hawthorne trade with her often, and make a conscious effort to remain on good terms with her, as she could be counted on to buy wild dogs, which most of their other customers decline. Greasy Sae started a collection to sponsor Peeta and Katniss during the 74th Hunger Games, and some people chipped in. She has a granddaughter described as "not quite right" (this probably refers to her having a mental disorder) who is generally treated as a pet by people in The Hob, who give her scraps of food from their stands. At the end of the book, Greasy Sae is one of the few hundred people to return to District 12 following the war, both Greasy Sae and her granddaughter survived the bombing of District 12. When Katniss returns to District 12 after the war, Greasy Sae comes over in the morning and evening to cook and do light housekeeping. It is unclear whether she is doing this out of friendship or if she has been paid. Her granddaughter can be seen fiddling with a ball of yarn. Greasy Sae is not directly mentioned in the Hunger Games films, but is a character who is presumably seen dealing with Katniss; she gives the Mockingjay pin to Katniss in the film although in the book Madge gave Katniss the pin.

Buttercup

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Buttercup is Prim's cat. He is Prim's companion and is loyal only to her, maintaining a years-long mutual dislike with Katniss. Prim cherishes Buttercup, while Katniss finds him to be "the world's ugliest cat." In the early chapters of The Hunger Games, Katniss states the only love they shared for each other were the leftover entrails of her food and less hissing from Buttercup.

Katniss was at first hesitant to let Prim keep the cat, but Prim begged, "even cried" to let her keep him. Katniss initially tried to drown Buttercup but later, when she is on the way to the Capitol, states that she is glad she did not as he would have been a source of comfort to Prim. Initially missing in the chaos after the Capitol's air force bombed District 12, Buttercup survived among the ruins until Katniss visited and brought him back with her to 13. He is said to dislike District 13, due to its underground location and lack of fresh air. After Prim's death and the end of the war, he makes his way back to District 12 on foot and is found again by Katniss. The two mourn Prim's death in Mockingjay and end up comforting each other, burying their lengthy feud as Buttercup takes to guarding Katniss at night.

Buttercup has black and white fur in the first film (contrary to his name), but in later films better fits the books' description of him.

Minor District 12 characters

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  • Hazelle Hawthorne is Gale's mother. A very self-reliant woman, after her husband is killed in the same mining accident that killed Katniss's father, she takes up work doing people's laundry. In the book, after Gale is caught poaching and is publicly whipped, people stop using Hazelle's services for fear of being punished for associating with her. She gets a new job cleaning Haymitch's house sometime after that.
  • Rory, Vick, and Posy Hawthorne are Gale's younger siblings. The book states Rory is 12, Vick is 10, and Posy is 5. Posy was born after the mining accident that killed Gale and Katniss's fathers. After Thread's lockdown, Posy got sick, and Rory received tesserae in exchange for his name to be entered more times in the Reaping. Hazelle, Rory, Vick, and Posy all escape the District 12 bombings. In the final book, Posy cheers up Octavia, saying that she would be pretty in any color.
  • Otho Mellark is Peeta's father. He owns a bakery. Kind and soft-spoken, he resembles his son. He does not appear except when he trades with Katniss and Gale, and when he visits Katniss before the 74th Hunger Games to give her cookies. It is later revealed that he grew up with Katniss's mother, Asterid, and even loved her. In Mockingjay, it is revealed that he used to let Peeta and Delly Cartwright make dough girls and boys. Otho and his wife die in the District 12 bombings.
  • Mrs. Mellark is Peeta's mother. Very stern and strict, she only appears in the series once, when she beats Peeta. Peeta mentions that he likes his father more than his mother. Katniss calls her a "witch" on several occasions and hints that Otho only married her because he could not have Asterid March, Katniss's eventual mother. Mrs. Mellark dies in the District 12 bombings.
  • Cray is the Head Peacekeeper of District 12. As such Cray does not enforce many of the laws of the Capitol. He is often found in The Hob, District 12's black market, where he buys illegal alcohol and game from Gale and Katniss. Although lenient with the law, he is also known to abuse his position by luring starving young women into his bed in exchange for a small amount of money. He disappears abruptly the day Thread comes to take his place and there is no further word of his fate. In the film he is seen stepping out to greet Thread right before having a bag placed over his head and being taken away by Peacekeepers, suggesting he met a bad end.
  • Romulus Thread is Cray's replacement as Head Peacekeeper of District 12. He is extremely cruel, intimidating and sadistic. His only appearance is in Catching Fire at Gale Hawthorne's whipping for poaching off the Capitol's land. The film changes his reason for whipping Gale to because he tackles him when he is about to beat a defiant bystander. Thread makes major changes to District 12 by adding new gallows, stocks, and a whipping post, as well as enforcing curfew. He also has The Hob (District 12's black market) burned down.
  • Mayor Undersee is Madge Undersee's father as well as District 12's mayor. He enjoys the strawberries that Katniss Everdeen and Gale Hawthorne pick illegally from the woods. He was present at the Reaping in The Hunger Games. He is also mentioned as throwing a Harvest Festival party in District 12 in Catching Fire. He dies in the District 12 bombing.
  • Goat Man is an old man who raises goats for a living. In The Hunger Games, Katniss recalls him as the man who sells Katniss and Gale a goat. Later, the goat is given to Primrose and named Lady. Goat Man is said to have died during the initial bombing of District 12.
  • Rooba is the District 12 butcher. She helps Katniss by refusing the Goat Man's offer, thus letting Katniss have the goat for a lower price. She is also known to buy meat (such as rabbits and deer) from Katniss and Gale. She dies in the District 12 bombing.
  • Ripper is a seller of white liquor in the Hob market of District 12. Peeta threatens to report her to the Peacekeepers if she continues to sell liquor to Katniss and Haymitch, who drink together after the twist for the Third Quarter Quell is revealed. She presumably dies during the District 12 bombings, as she is not mentioned among the 10% of the population who manage to reach District 13.
  • Lady is a nanny goat owned by Prim, who usually milks it before going to school every day. Lady was not brought to District 13 (and neither was Buttercup) during the evacuation. Her fate is not confirmed, but Katniss did not see her anywhere when she visited District 12 after the bombings.
  • Mrs. Undersee is Mayor Undersee's wife, Madge's mother, and Maysilee Donner's sister. She is said to have been in a very deep depression, partially brought on by her sister's death. She is described as staying in bed all day, shutting away reality. She takes pills to calm her pain, which does not seem to work. She perishes along with her daughter, husband, and two other people in the District 12 bombings.
  • Darius is a friendly Peacekeeper who became an Avox because he interfered with Gale's public whipping. He is Katniss's Avox servant for the Quarter Quell, along with Lavinia. Because of this, he was arrested with Lavinia, questioned about Katniss, tortured, and eventually killed. Peeta mentioned in Mockingjay that while Lavinia died relatively quickly (if accidentally), it took days to finish Darius off. As Avoxes cannot speak, it can be assumed the only purpose for questioning them was to torture Peeta by making him listen. Darius does not appear in the film series.
  • Leevy is Katniss's neighbor, who makes her first appearance in Catching Fire. She offers to help after Gale's whipping, and Katniss tells her to go to the Hawthorne house. She survived the bombing of District 12. She is shown in District 13 in Mockingjay as being cautious of Katniss's prep team, but still gives them a greeting. She is supportive of Katniss, and she tells Haymitch that she was inspired by Katniss's drive when she volunteered for Prim at the Reaping. It can be assumed that she survived the rebellion, and most likely returned to District 12. She is described as being from the Seam, so she likely has dark hair and gray eyes, and is likely the same age as Katniss. When Leevy goes to get Hazelle Hawthorne after Gale's whipping, Katniss reminds her to leave Rory, Vick, and Posy at their house so that they could not see the pain that their older brother was in.
  • Mayfair Lipp was the daughter of District 12's Mayor Lipp, the girlfriend of Billy Taupe Clade, and the rival of Lucy Gray Baird. She was the direct cause of Lucy's reaping into the Games, having convinced her father to call out her name after discovering that Billy was dating them both at the same time. She was shot and killed by Coriolanus Snow towards the end of the story.
  • Mayor Lipp was the mayor of District 12 at the time of the 10th Hunger Games, as well as the father of Mayfair Lipp.
  • Arlo Chance was a coal miner and rebel who was executed by hanging after the war, inspiring Lucy Gray Baird to write "The Hanging Tree".
  • Lil was the probable lover of Arlo Chance who was told to run by Arlo just before his execution. Her brother, Spruce, later attempted to break her out of the Peacekeepers' base, but she was caught and executed.
  • Spruce was the brother of Lil who attempted to break her free from the Peacekeepers' base, later killing Billy Taupe Clade. He was captured and executed alongside his sister and Sejanus Plinth.
  • Maude Ivory is a member of the Covey and Lucy Gray's cousin. It is said she never forgets a tune, even after only hearing it once. Maude Ivory briefly appears in both the book and movie adaption of The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes. She died sometime in the forty years that followed with Haymitch Abernathy finding Maude Ivory's grave while looking for Lenore Dove's.
  • Barb Azure Baird is a member of The Covey who played the bass in their performances. Her cousin is Lucy Gray Baird.
  • Billy Taupe Clade is a member of The Covey who played the accordion in their performances. The older brother of Clerk Carmine Clade and the lover of Lucy Gray Baird, he caused Lucy's reaping into the Games after having an affair with Mayfair Lipp, resulting in Mayfair asking her father, the mayor, to call out Lucy's name at the reaping. Lucy wrote the song "The Ballad of Lucy Gray Baird" in response to Billy's actions. Exiled from The Covey, Billy was shot and killed by Spruce near the end of the story.
  • Clerk Carmine Clade is a member of The Covey who plays the fiddle in their performances. He is Billy Taupe Clade's younger brother and Lenore Dove Baird's uncle. At the time of Sunrise on the Reaping, he had been dating a man for over 30 years, keeping their relationship quiet for fear of discrimination.
  • Tam Amber is a member of The Covey that plays the mandolin in their performances. He is additionally a sought-after blacksmith. Amber's niece is Lenore Dove Baird, who commissioned him to create a flint starter for Haymitch's birthday, which later became his tribute token. He's also the creator of the Mockingjay pin.
  • Shamus is a goat owned by The Covey.
  • Bug, Junius, and Smiley were three men who befriended Coriolanus Snow after enlisting as Peacekeepers in District 12. Bug was originally from District 11, Junius from the Capitol, and Smiley from District 8.
  • Cookie was a Peacekeeper who worked as a cook in District 12 and was assigned as Coriolanus Snow's overseer while working in kitchen detail.
  • Commander Hoff was the leader of District 12's Peacekeepers at the time of the 10th Hunger Games.

District 13

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President Coin

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President Alma Coin is the leader of District 13. She is described as having gray hair that falls in an unbroken sheet to her shoulders and gray eyes that look like "all the color was sucked away" and "slush that you wish would melt away". She has a special dislike of Katniss and mentions that Katniss is more useful to her dead than alive. It is also revealed that she wanted Peeta rescued from the Third Quarter Quell, not Katniss.

During the assault on the Capitol, Coin deliberately places Peeta in Katniss's squad to endanger Katniss's life, which Snow had warned about for he and Coin had been political rivals. After taking over the Capitol, Coin becomes the "interim" president of Panem and proposes a final Hunger Games with the Capitol children as tributes.

During an encounter, Snow reveals the truth about Coin's actions to Katniss and explains that Coin had always intended to pit the Capitol and the districts against each other and then swoop in to seize power in replacement of Snow once the war was over. After Snow reminds Katniss of their promise to never lie to each other and recalling Coin's various actions, Katniss realizes that Snow is right about Coin. Coin had orchestrated the death of her sister Prim and many other children solely to secure victory in the war and to ensure Katniss's loyalty. Given that Katniss would wield significant influence over the selection of Panem's new leader after the war, her tolerance for Coin was minimal at best. As a result, instead of killing President Snow at his public execution, Katniss shoots and kills Coin and is arrested for her assassination. Although put on trial for Coin's murder, Katniss is ultimately exonerated due to her poor mental state at the time with the help of Plutarch Heavensbee and Dr. Aurelius.

Boggs

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Boggs is first introduced as President Coin's right-hand man, holding the rank of colonel in District 13's military. At first, Katniss writes him off as someone she will dislike due to his close association with Coin. However, he is shown to be honest, witty, and friendly, and Katniss learns to trust him. He serves as Katniss's bodyguard for part of Mockingjay and is assigned to Squad 451 along with Katniss, Gale, and Finnick. Boggs knew one way or another that Coin did not want or expect for Katniss to come back from the battle to take the Capitol alive, but privately tells her he will not let this come to pass, intending for Katniss to have a long life. When Katniss asks why, Boggs answers "Because you've earned it."

Not long after that conversation with Katniss, Boggs falls victim to a Capitol land mine that his Holo failed to detect, losing both his legs in the blast. The squad drags him into an apartment, where he gives Katniss his Holo and tells her to complete her "mission", to not trust "them" (whom this is referring to is unclear), and to kill Peeta. He dies soon afterward.

Minor District 13 characters

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  • Leeg 1 and Leeg 2 are sisters who were born in District 13 and placed in the sharpshooting Star Squad to assist Katniss in her final mission. They are said to look almost completely alike. Since everyone is addressed as "Soldier", they are distinguished by 1 and 2. Four days after arriving in the Capitol, Leeg 2 is the first to be killed in the Star Squad. She dies after a metal dart, shot out of an incorrectly labelled pod, hits her in the temple. Leeg 1 continues through to the Capitol's underground until she is killed when Katniss discovers that Leeg 1 and Jackson chose to stay at a pod called the Meat Grinder, to hold back the lizard mutations. In the films, their deaths are modified; the two die together after Leeg 1 chooses to stay with Leeg 2, who is injured in a landmine trap, as the building they are in is destroyed by the Peacekeepers.
  • Mitchell, Jackson, and Homes are part of Katniss's sharpshooting team, the Star Squad; they are all killed in the war. Mitchell is kicked into a net of barbed wire by a raging Peeta and subsequently killed by a black tar-like substance. Jackson, second in command after Boggs in the Star Squad, stays behind to hold back the wolf mutations, along with Leeg 1, presumably resulting in their deaths. Homes is presumed to have been decapitated by the lizard mutations, along with Finnick and Castor.
  • Dr. Aurelius is a doctor from District 13. He takes care of Katniss during her time in District 13 and heads the study on Peeta's hijacking. He is also Katniss's doctor/therapist after Prim's death (however, he generally sleeps during their sessions unless she feels like talking, which suits them both). He serves as a witness in Katniss's defense during her trial for the killing of Coin and states Katniss is mentally unstable, resulting in her exoneration. After the war, Katniss continues her sessions with Dr. Aurelius by telephone. Dr. Aurelius does not appear in the film series.
  • Dalton is a man from District 10 who made it to District 13 on foot years before the series takes place. He makes his first appearance in Mockingjay in District 13. He conducts Annie and Finnick's wedding because it was close to the ceremony that is in his district.

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The list of The Hunger Games characters catalogs the fictional individuals central to Suzanne Collins' dystopian young adult novel series, published by Scholastic Press, which depicts a post-apocalyptic society in the nation of Panem where an authoritarian Capitol subjugates twelve surrounding districts through enforced poverty, surveillance, and the annual Hunger Games—a televised death match among selected adolescent tributes from each district. The series comprises the original trilogy—The Hunger Games (2008), Catching Fire (2009), and Mockingjay (2010)—plus the prequel The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (2020), with over 100 million copies sold worldwide, featuring characters who embody themes of resistance against tyranny, media manipulation, and survival under coercion. Key figures include protagonists like Katniss Everdeen, a resourceful District 12 tribute who sparks rebellion, her allies such as Peeta Mellark and Haymitch Abernathy, and adversaries like President Coriolanus Snow, whose rule enforces the Games as retribution for a past uprising. The roster extends to supporting roles like district mentors, Capitol stylists, and fellow tributes, whose arcs in the books—and subsequent Lionsgate film adaptations—highlight individual agency amid systemic oppression, without reliance on unsubstantiated interpretive overlays from secondary analyses.

Principal Characters

Katniss Everdeen

Katniss Everdeen is the protagonist and first-person narrator of Suzanne Collins' The Hunger Games trilogy, consisting of The Hunger Games (2008), Catching Fire (2009), and Mockingjay (2010). She resides in the coal-mining District 12 of the dystopian nation of Panem, a 16-year-old girl of slim build with olive skin, straight black hair, and gray eyes, skilled in archery and survival foraging due to her history of illegal hunting in the woods beyond the district's boundary. Her father perished in a mine explosion four years prior, prompting her mother to fall into severe depression and leaving Katniss as the primary provider for her family, including her younger sister Primrose; this experience instilled in her a fierce independence, distrust of authority, and pragmatic focus on survival over sentimentality. During the reaping for the 74th Hunger Games on an unspecified date in the series' calendar, Katniss volunteers to replace her 12-year-old sister Primrose as the female tribute from District 12, marking the first such volunteer in the district's history. Paired with , the male tribute, she enters the arena where 24 tributes compete to the death; leveraging her hunting skills, she forms temporary alliances, notably with Rue from District 11, and ignites a spark of defiance by holding nightlock berries to her and Peeta's mouths, forcing the Gamemakers to declare them mutual victors to avoid a childless outcome. This act, broadcast nationwide, symbolizes resistance against the Capitol's oppressive rule, elevating her status as an unwitting icon of rebellion despite her initial reluctance to embrace any political role. In Catching Fire, Katniss and Peeta undertake a victory tour across Panem's , where suppressed unrest fueled by her berries stunt prompts President to threaten her family unless she quells the dissent. Selected for the 75th Hunger Games (Quarter Quell) as one of 24 veteran tributes, she again allies with Peeta and others like Finnick Odair, but rebels from intervene to extract her from the arena, revealing a coordinated uprising. Relocated to underground , a militarized survivor enclave, she grapples with post-traumatic stress, romantic tensions between Peeta (captured by the Capitol) and her hunting partner Gale Hawthorne, and coercion into becoming the ""—a propagandized symbol to rally districts against the Capitol. Throughout Mockingjay, Katniss leads symbolic operations, including propo videos and assaults on Capitol targets, but witnesses devastation such as the bombing death of Primrose, eroding her faith in District 13's leader Alma Coin. At the rebellion's climax following the Capitol's fall, she executes Coin instead of the wounded Snow, citing Coin's ruthless tactics—including the Prim bomb—as mirroring Capitol tyranny, leading to her trial, pardon, and return to a rebuilt District 12 with Peeta, where they raise children amid lingering psychological scars. Her arc underscores themes of coerced heroism, the manipulation of symbols in warfare, and the personal costs of defying authoritarian systems, with her decisions driven by immediate survival instincts rather than ideological fervor.

Peeta Mellark

is a central character in ' The Hunger Games trilogy, functioning as the and the male representing District 12 in the 74th annual Hunger Games alongside . As the youngest son of baker Mellark and his wife, Peeta grows up in relative comfort compared to many in the impoverished coal-mining district, assisting in the family bakery where he develops proficiency in , weightlifting flour sacks, and artistic icing techniques that later aid his skills in the arena. At age 16, Peeta's name is drawn in lottery, marking his entry into the deadly competition enforced by the Capitol. Physically described as having a medium with a stocky build, ashy falling in waves, and eyes, Peeta contrasts Katniss's wiry hunter physique, reflecting his background in manual labor rather than or . His personality emphasizes kindness, self-sacrifice, and verbal ; he harbors a long-held affection for Katniss stemming from childhood observations of her singing to her sister, which motivates his alliance with her during the Games and his strategic public declarations of love to secure sponsors and defy Capitol narratives. Unlike more combative tributes, Peeta avoids direct violence when possible, relying on alliances, hiding, and persuasive to navigate threats. In , Peeta joins Katniss in the 75th Hunger Games as a victor tribute, leveraging his charisma to expose Capitol hypocrisies through interviews and actions that fuel district unrest. Captured by the Capitol in , he endures via venom-induced "hijacking" that distorts his perceptions, temporarily turning him against allies, though he later recovers sufficiently to contribute to the rebellion's efforts. Post-war, Peeta relocates to District 12 with Katniss, resuming baking and painting while co-parenting their two children, embodying themes of healing and quiet resilience amid societal reconstruction. His family—parents and two brothers—perishes in the Capitol's bombing of District 12.

Gale Hawthorne

Gale Hawthorne is a primary character in ' The Hunger Games trilogy, residing in the impoverished Seam section of District 12 within the nation of Panem. Orphaned at age 14 following his father's death in a explosion—the same incident that claimed Katniss Everdeen's father—Gale becomes the primary provider for his mother, Hazelle, and three younger siblings: brothers and Vick, and sister Posy. He sustains his family through illegal hunting in the forbidden woods adjacent to the district, partnering with Katniss, whom he met at age 12 and with whom he shares a deep platonic bond marked by mutual reliance and unspoken romantic tension. Physically robust from years of survival activities, Gale possesses olive skin, straight black hair, and gray eyes identical to Katniss's, along with a temperament blending resourcefulness, loyalty, and simmering resentment toward the Capitol's oppressive regime. His hatred for Panem's rulers, whom he views as architects of systemic inequality, drives an innate rebelliousness that contrasts with Katniss's initial survival-focused . This manifests in early discussions of resistance, including hypothetical plans to flee or incite broader uprisings, though Gale prioritizes familial duty over immediate action until external events catalyze change. Throughout the trilogy, Gale evolves from a district-bound hunter to a in District 13's rebel forces after the destruction of District 12, devising military strategies such as double-bomb traps intended to target Capitol loyalists but resulting in unintended civilian deaths, including that of Primrose Everdeen. His unrequited affection for Katniss fuels jealousy toward , exacerbating emotional rifts, while his strategic underscores a willingness to employ ends-justify-means tactics in pursuit of overthrowing tyranny. Post-war, Gale relocates to District 2, working in the Capitol's ruins, symbolizing a pragmatic detachment from his revolutionary past.

Haymitch Abernathy

Haymitch Abernathy is the sole surviving victor from District 12 prior to the 74th Hunger Games, having triumphed in the 50th Hunger Games, known as the Second Quarter Quell, where the number of tributes was doubled to 48 contestants by two boys and two girls from each district. Selected as a male at age 16 after the initial required a replacement, Abernathy demonstrated strategic acumen in the arena by exploiting the environmental mechanics, ultimately defeating the final opponent—a District 1 —by maneuvering her axe throw into the force field at the arena's edge, causing fatal rebound trauma. Born in the Seam, District 12's impoverished coal-mining , Abernathy grew up with his mother, Willamae, and , Sid, following his father's death in a mine fire; the family's modest circumstances reflected the district's systemic deprivation under Panem's Capitol rule. His victory granted him residency in the affluent Victor's Village, but the Capitol retaliated against his unconventional win by executing his family and girlfriend, triggering chronic as a mechanism for survivor's guilt and trauma, which manifested in habitual intoxication and erratic during his decades as a mentor. As mentor for District 12's tributes in the 74th Hunger Games, Abernathy initially appears unreliable due to his drinking but proves instrumental in securing sponsor gifts for protagonists and through Capitol connections, leveraging his understanding of Games politics to advise on alliances and public image. In subsequent events, including the 75th Hunger Games and the rebellion chronicled in , he coordinates rebel strategies from , demonstrating sobriety under duress and tactical foresight, such as managing propaganda and supply lines, while grappling with personal losses that underscore his cynicism toward authority. His character embodies the psychological toll of the Games system, with physical traits in the source material including dark hair and gray Seam eyes, contrasting film portrayals.

Coriolanus Snow

serves as the primary antagonist in ' The Hunger Games trilogy, depicted as the long-reigning President of Panem who enforces authoritarian control over the Capitol and its outlying districts. His governance, established post-Dark Days rebellion, utilizes the annual Hunger Games—a compulsory event where two children from each district compete to the death on —as a mechanism for psychological subjugation and deterrence against . Snow's employs advanced , military enforcement, and resource disparities to perpetuate district dependence on the Capitol, ensuring compliance through demonstrated brutality rather than mere ideology. In the 2020 prequel novel The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes, Snow appears as the 18-year-old protagonist, a from a formerly elite Capitol family diminished by war's economic fallout. Selected as a mentor for the nascent 10th Hunger Games, he guides District 12 Lucy Gray Baird, innovating propaganda tactics like pre-Games interviews and sponsorship incentives to elevate her chances in the rudimentary arena lacking Capitol extravagance. His arc traces a shift from resource-driven pragmatism—navigating familial poverty and academic pressures—to calculated self-preservation, culminating in his ascent within Panem's power structures after the Games' outcome. Snow's character embodies unrelenting ambition tempered by paranoia, often manifesting in preemptive neutralization of rivals via subtle means, including poisons that align with his affinity for white roses, a floral emblem masking underlying decay. During the trilogy's events, spanning the 74th and 75th Hunger Games, he directly engages key figures like tribute , leveraging personal threats and orchestrated spectacles to quash emerging rebellions sparked by her defiance. His strategies prioritize perception management, such as framing uprisings as isolated anomalies, over wholesale extermination, reflecting a model rooted in sustained . By the series' conclusion amid the Second Rebellion, Snow's unravels, leading to his deposition.

Primrose Everdeen

Primrose Everdeen, often called Prim, is the younger sister of the trilogy's protagonist, , in ' The Hunger Games series. Introduced as a 12-year-old girl living in District 12's Seam, Prim possesses light blonde hair and blue eyes, traits inherited from her mother and uncommon among the coal miners' descendants in her community. Her gentle demeanor contrasts sharply with Katniss's survivalist toughness; Prim is portrayed as innocent, kind-hearted, and averse to violence, with a strong affinity for animals, including her pet cat Buttercup and a goat named that Katniss barters for to support the family. During for the 74th Hunger Games, Prim's name is drawn as the female tribute from District 12, marking her first year of eligibility at ; this event compels Katniss to volunteer in her place, setting the series' central conflict in motion. Following Katniss's victory, Prim relocates with her mother to the Victor's Village, where she begins developing an interest in and healing, reflecting her compassionate nature and aptitude for caregiving. By the time of the rebellion in , Prim, now approximately 14 years old, joins District 13's medical corps, training as a despite her youth. Prim's arc culminates in her death during the assault on the Capitol, where she rushes to aid injured children lured by deceptive parachutes containing explosives; a secondary wave of bombs, designed to target rescuers, detonates amid the medics and civilians, killing her instantly as Katniss witnesses the event. This tactic, involving hovercraft-dropped munitions that mimic Capitol aid drops, underscores the rebellion's brutal strategies, with designs attributable to innovations like those contributed by Gale Hawthorne, though ultimate responsibility remains with District 13's leadership under President Alma Coin. Her loss profoundly impacts Katniss, symbolizing the war's indiscriminate toll on innocence and fueling the narrative's exploration of moral ambiguity in conflict.

Characters from Prequel Hunger Games

Tributes and Participants in the 10th Hunger Games

The 10th Hunger Games represented an early iteration of competition, conducted approximately 40 years prior to the 74th Games, with 24 tributes—two per , aged between 12 and 18—competing for survival in a rudimentary consisting of a central open field encircled by Capitol grandstands. This edition pioneered the mentor program, pairing each tribute with a Capitol academy senior responsible for devising strategies, securing sponsorship gifts via viewer donations, and elevating the spectacle to sustain public apathy toward ' subjugation. Tributes arrived unarmed, relying on initial sponsor parachutes for weapons like axes, swords, or bows, while environmental factors such as initial scarcity of food and water, followed by flooding rains on day three, exacerbated attrition through dehydration, infection, and hypothermia. Participants beyond the tributes included the mentors, whose involvement introduced personal stakes and ethical dilemmas, as students like navigated alliances with peers and covert rule-bending to aid their charges. The Games unfolded over several days, with early chaos yielding to tentative alliances among weaker tributes, particularly those from outer districts lacking training; combat favored the physically robust initially, but endurance and adaptability proved decisive for later survivors. Ultimately, 23 tributes perished from direct kills, pre-Games illnesses, or arena hazards, crowning a District 12 female as victor through a combination of performative charisma securing gifts and opportunistic eliminations.
DistrictMale TributeFemale TributeMentor Examples
1UnnamedUnnamedAssigned to elite students
2MarcusUnnamed Plinth
7TreechLaminaAssigned to academy seniors
11Dill (died pre-Games from illness)WoveyAssigned to academy seniors
12Jessup DiggsLucy Gray Baird
Unnamed tributes from Districts 1–6, 8–10 dominated early kills as Careers, while outer district participants emphasized evasion and scavenging.

Lucy Gray Baird

Lucy Gray Baird is the female tribute representing District 12 in the 10th Hunger Games, depicted in ' 2020 prequel novel The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes. As a member of the Covey—a nomadic group of musicians originating from regions north of the districts who settled in District 12's Seam—she possesses exceptional performative talents, including singing and guitar playing, which distinguish her from typical tributes. Born to unnamed Covey parents shortly before the District rebellion approximately a decade earlier, she grows up in a large family with multiple siblings, adhering to the Covey's traditions of music-making and communal storytelling as survival mechanisms in the impoverished coal-mining district. During the reaping ceremony, Baird defiantly places a snake down the blouse of rival Lipp, prompting Mayor Lipp to strike her before she ascends the stage, an act underscoring her bold and resourceful personality. Assigned as a mentee to student —who views her initially as a low-status —she captivates Capitol audiences through public performances, such as singing at the zoo enclosure and during the tribute parade, leveraging her Covey heritage to generate sponsorships and sympathy. In the arena, she forms a temporary alliance with fellow Wovey, employs strategy by hiding and using environmental elements, and survives a critical attack by multicolored snake muttations that notably spare her while targeting others, enabling her to outlast competitors and secure victory. Post-victory, Baird returns to District 12 with , who deserts the Peacekeepers to join her, developing a romantic involvement marked by shared songs like "The Hanging Tree," which later influences District 12's cultural repertoire. Tensions escalate due to 's growing and attempts, culminating in Baird fleeing into the wilderness after wounding him; her ultimate fate remains ambiguous, with Snow presuming her death but no body recovered, fueling speculation of escape or survival among the Covey.

Jessup Diggs

Jessup Diggs serves as the male tribute from District 12 in the 10th Hunger Games, featured in ' 2020 novel The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes. As district partner to female tribute Baird, he is selected at and transported to the Capitol, where his physical attributes initially position him as an unexpected favorite among bettors due to his stout build and evident strength. Mentored by Lysistrata Vickers, a University of Panem student who later defends his humanity against dehumanizing comparisons by faculty, Jessup demonstrates loyalty by shielding her from debris during a bombing of the arena on the Games' opening day. Prior to the arena entry, Jessup's condition deteriorates from after arrival in the Capitol, where tributes receive inadequate sustenance compared to their district norms. While held at the Capitol Zoo, he sustains a bite from a , contracting that progresses into severe hallucinations and aggression during the Games. In a hallucinatory episode, he attacks but ultimately perishes from dehydration exacerbated by his illness; his mentor's attempt to aid survival by deploying water via drones instead triggers panic, as the -induced hydrophobia causes him to flee and succumb to injuries. In the 2023 film adaptation directed by , Jessup—portrayed by Nick Benson—undergoes alterations, including contraction during the train journey rather than at the zoo, and his death results from injuries sustained in a fall prompted by arena drones rather than and hallucinations alone. These changes condense the narrative while preserving his role as a protective figure who teams with early in the competition. Jessup's arc underscores themes of tributes' vulnerability to Capitol-engineered perils beyond combat, with his mentor's intervention highlighting ethical dilemmas in mentorship dynamics.

Minor 10th Hunger Games tributes

The minor tributes in the 10th Hunger Games, as depicted in ' novel The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes, included one male and one female representative from each of 1 through 11, with several eliminated prior to the arena phase due to bombings, illnesses, or confrontations.
DistrictMale TributeFateFemale TributeFate
1FacetShot by Peacekeepers while attempting escape after arena bombingVelvereenShot by Peacekeepers while attempting escape after arena bombing
2MarcusKilled by Lamina with an axe to end his suffering after recaptureSabynShot by Peacekeepers while attempting escape after arena bombing
3CircKilled by poisonous snake muttationsTesleeKilled by Treech with an axe after using repurposed drones
4MizzenKnocked off beam and killed by Teslee's dronesDied sixth from poisonous snakes after alliance betrayals
5HyDied from attack due to pre-Games conditionsSolKilled by with a on day one
6Killed in pre-Games arena bombingGinneeKilled in pre-Games arena bombing after joint performance
7TreechKilled on final day by using a snake muttationLaminaKilled by alliance of , Tanner, and Mizzen
8BobbinKilled by with a plank outside arenaWoveyDied from rat poison in water supplied by
9PanloDied from injuries sustained in rebel bombingSheafDied from injuries sustained in rebel bombing
10TannerThroat slit by Mizzen during alliance betrayalBrandyShot by Peacekeepers after killing mentor Crane
11Killed in finals by after arranging tribute bodies in rowsSuccumbed early due to and frailty
These tributes' fates underscored the experimental nature of the 10th Games, including pre-arena deaths and muttations like snakes, with nine total pre-Games fatalities from bombings and other incidents.

Tributes and Participants in the 50th Hunger Games

The 50th Hunger Games, also known as the Second Quarter Quell, deviated from standard procedure by reaping four tributes—two males and two females—from each district's pool of prior , yielding 48 competitors in total. This alteration commemorated the Dark Days of , underscoring that two district rebels died for every Capitol casualty, thereby intensifying the Games' spectacle and risk. Haymitch Abernathy, aged 16 from District 12, emerged as the sole victor by leveraging the arena's perimeter force field: in the final confrontation, he hurled an axe toward the boundary, which ricocheted back to fatally strike his opponent, a maneuver the Capitol deemed an act of cunning bordering on subversion. The arena encompassed a deceptively idyllic of meadows, woodlands, and a towering snow-capped mountain, punctuated by streams and vibrant flora that concealed poisons lethal to the unwary. Environmental hazards included drinkable rainwater as the sole safe hydration source, treacherous force fields encircling the perimeter, and muttations such as iridescent birds whose melodic calls lured tributes into fatal ambushes. With twice the usual entrants, early bloodbaths depleted numbers rapidly, favoring strategic alliances among experienced victors while exposing vulnerabilities in supply acquisition and navigation; the Games concluded after prolonged attrition, highlighting the victors' prior acumen. Among documented participants, Maysilee Donner of District 12 formed an early pact with Abernathy, advancing deep into the competition before parting to pursue provisions; she succumbed to the muttation birds' assault, marking one of the final eliminations. The expanded roster in ' Sunrise on the Reaping elucidates further tributes' fates, including early casualties and district-specific dynamics, though primary accounts from the original trilogy emphasize the Quell's punitive symbolism and Abernathy's improbable triumph amid doubled lethality.

Maysilee Donner

Maysilee Donner was the female from District 12 in the 50th Hunger Games, the Second Quarter Quell held in an unspecified year prior to the 74th Games, where the number of tributes was doubled to 48 to commemorate the anniversary of the districts' defeat in the . As a merchant-class resident of the district's Seam-adjacent town, she possessed blonde hair typical of her socioeconomic group and entered the arena equipped with a loaded with poisoned , which she used effectively against opponents. Her participation is referenced in , where Haymitch Abernathy recounts her alliance with him, and expanded in Sunrise on the Reaping, portraying her as a 16-year-old defiant against Capitol . Donner allied early with fellow District 12 tribute Haymitch Abernathy, suggesting mutual survival strategy over district rivalry, and the pair advanced to among the final tributes by leveraging the arena's resources and her weapon's lethality. She wore a gold mockingjay pin into the Games, originally hers, which passed through family to her niece Madge Undersee—twin sister Merrilee's daughter with Mayor Undersee—and later to Katniss Everdeen, symbolizing subtle rebellion. The alliance fractured near the end when Donner fled toward the arena's hills to evade pursuing Careers, only to encounter a flock of engineered muttation birds that attacked her, ripping out her throat; Abernathy, watching from afar, heard her final screams but could not intervene. She placed fifth overall, her death underscoring the Gamemakers' manipulative interventions via mutts to heighten spectacle.

Lenore Dove

Lenore Dove Baird is a resident of District 12 featured in Sunrise on the Reaping, the prequel novel by Suzanne Collins centered on the 50th Hunger Games, also known as the Second Quarter Quell. She serves as the girlfriend of Haymitch Abernathy, the District 12 male tribute who ultimately wins the Games. As a 16-year-old with ties to the Covey—a nomadic, music-oriented group with historical roots in District 12—Lenore influences Haymitch through her worldview, blending Seam pragmatism with Covey traditions. Her surname Baird connects her to the lineage of Lucy Gray Baird, a victor from the 10th Hunger Games, though the exact familial relation remains unspecified in the text. On the day of , Lenore converses with Haymitch, challenging fatalistic thinking prevalent in the district by asserting that change is possible and that individuals can control their attitude toward circumstances. She recounts reading a passage emphasizing attitude as the one controllable element in dire situations, advice that shapes Haymitch's mindset amid the impending Games. This interaction highlights her role as a supportive yet defiant figure, urging resistance against perceived inevitability under Capitol rule. Lenore's Covey heritage manifests in her speech and perspectives, which overlay Haymitch's Seam background, contributing to his narrative voice in the novel's structure. Born in after her mother's death in , she embodies a blend of resilience and cultural continuity in District 12's . While not a herself, her proximity to events positions her as a key participant in the pre-Games tensions, including efforts to console families affected by losses to Peacekeepers. Her character underscores themes of personal agency and subtle rebellion in Panem's oppressive system.

Louella McCoy

Louella McCoy served as one of the two female tributes representing District 12 in the 50th Hunger Games, the Second Quarter Quell held in 37 ADD, which featured double the standard number of tributes per district. Selected during overseen by Capitol escort Drusilla Sickle, McCoy hailed from the Seam section of District 12, residing in a large working-class family just three doors from future victor Haymitch Abernathy. At approximately 13 years old, she was described as underfed yet resilient, with physical traits including , dark hair, and gray eyes, marking her as a potential ally for Abernathy early in the pre-Games preparations. McCoy perished during the tribute parade in the Capitol, killed in a chaotic accident when a rogue firework detonated prematurely, causing chariots to collide and veer off course in a fiery crash that claimed multiple lives. Her death prompted the Capitol to deploy a surgically altered , Lou Lou from District 11, to conceal the incident and maintain spectacle continuity.

Wyatt Callow

Wyatt Callow was a male tribute from District 12 selected for the 50th Hunger Games, the Second Quarter Quell, in which each district supplied four tributes—two male and two female—to yield 48 competitors. During the District 12 , his name was drawn as the second male after Woodbine Chance's selection prompted the latter's failed escape attempt and execution by Peacekeepers. Alongside fellow District 12 tributes Haymitch Abernathy and Maysilee Donner, Callow underwent pre-Games preparations in the Capitol, where he formed a close bond with Abernathy. In the arena's opening , Callow positioned himself to protect female Louella McCoy from attack, an act defying the bitter feud between their families—mirroring historical Appalachian rivalries like the Hatfields and McCoys—despite limited prior acquaintance with her. He was swiftly killed by Panache Barker, a District 1 , who decapitated him with a strike. Callow's early elimination underscored the high mortality in the Quell's chaotic start, with his sacrifice highlighting rare instances of district solidarity amid survival pressures. In the 2026 film adaptation The Hunger Games: Sunrise on the Reaping, he is portrayed by Ben Wang.

Ampert Latier

Ampert Latier was a male tribute representing District 3 in the 50th Hunger Games, the Second Quarter Quell held in 37 ADD, which required each district to provide four tributes instead of two. As the son of Beetee Latier, a District 3 resident skilled in electronics who later became a victor and rebel ally, Ampert received mentorship from his father, appointed specifically for the Games. He formed an alliance with Haymitch Abernathy of District 12, Maysilee Donner of District 12, Louella McCoy of District 12, and Wyatt Callow of District 7, contributing to a plan involving explosives near the arena's edge. Latier perished during the Games, handing Abernathy a in his final act amid the chaos of muttations and arena hazards, believing their strategy had succeeded.

Minor 50th Hunger Games tributes

Silka Sharp, a female tribute from District 1, was a prominent member of the Career pack in the 50th Hunger Games, allying with other strong competitors like Maritte and surviving until the final stages before being killed by muttations, placing second overall. Wellie, the male tribute from District 6, formed a temporary alliance with victor Haymitch Abernathy and reached the top three, only to be slain by mutt birds shortly before the finale. Other minor tributes included Barker, the male from 1, who participated in early bloodbaths but did not advance far; Alpheus, a 2 male killed amid the arena's volcanic eruption alongside several others; and Camilla, his 2 female counterpart, who contributed to the initial Career dominance. Coil from 3 perished in the same eruption event, which claimed 12 lives including multiple Careers and outlying district fighters. These tributes, drawn from the expanded of four per district, filled out the 48 competitors, with most eliminated in the poisonous arena's environmental hazards, mutt attacks, or inter-tribute combat as detailed in ' Sunrise on the Reaping.

Tributes from the 74th Hunger Games

Career Tributes

The Career Tributes in the 74th Hunger Games were the volunteer competitors from Districts 1 and 2, renowned for their lifelong training in combat, weaponry, and survival tactics within specialized academies. These districts produced tributes like Marvel and Glimmer from District 1, and Cato and Clove from District 2, who entered the arena with superior physical conditioning and skills that positioned them as early favorites among Gamemakers and spectators. Unlike tributes from outlying districts, Careers often viewed the Games as an opportunity for glory, volunteering eagerly and displaying ruthless efficiency from the outset. Forming a tight-knit dubbed the "pack," the Tributes dominated the at the , securing the majority of weapons, food, and supplies while systematically hunting less-prepared opponents. This group initially included the male tribute from District 4, reflecting occasional expansion to Districts 3 or 4 for added numbers, though the core remained the Districts 1 and 2 representatives. Their strategy emphasized overwhelming force and territorial control around the , but internal tensions and external threats from inventive tributes like ultimately fractured the pack, leading to their sequential eliminations.

Marvel

Marvel is the male tribute from District 1 who competes in the 74th Hunger Games, portrayed as a highly trained participant skilled in spear-throwing. As a resident of the wealthy District 1, which produces luxury goods for the Capitol, he exemplifies the advantages of districts through rigorous pre-Games training that emphasizes combat proficiency and physical conditioning. His alliance with fellow Careers—Glimmer from District 1, and Cato and from District 2—allows initial dominance in the arena, including securing supplies from the during the . During the Games, Marvel demonstrates lethal accuracy by throwing a spear that fatally wounds Rue, the young tribute from 11 allied with , after Rue becomes ensnared in a trap set by the Careers. This act prompts Katniss to retaliate immediately, shooting Marvel through the neck with an while he stands over Rue's body. Attempting to extract the , Marvel collapses and dies from the injury, marking his elimination before the final stages of the competition. Katniss later learns his name, Marvel, during her Victory Tour in the subsequent year, reflecting the Capitol's practice of honoring fallen tributes by name in post-Games ceremonies. In the film adaptation directed by , Marvel is portrayed by actor , who depicts him as a physically imposing contributing to the pack's early aggression. His death scene aligns closely with the , emphasizing the incident with Rue and Katniss's vengeful response.

Glimmer

Glimmer serves as the female from District 1 in the 74th Hunger Games, participating alongside her district partner Marvel as part of the allied pack comprising tributes from Districts 1, 2, and 4. , observing from afar, internally remarks on her name as emblematic of the ostentatious naming conventions in District 1, quoting, "Glimmer, I hear someone call her—ugh, the names the people in District 1 give their children are so ridiculous." As a trained from youth in combat and survival, Glimmer exhibits physical attractiveness noted in accounts of the games, aligning with the polished demeanor of her district's luxury-focused tributes. During the games, Glimmer contributes to the Career strategy of stockpiling supplies at the and hunting weaker tributes, but she perishes early when Katniss, guided by Rue's intelligence, severs a branch holding a tracker jacker nest, releasing the genetically modified wasps onto the pack's camp. The venomous stings overwhelm her, causing hallucinations, convulsions, and death, with Katniss later retrieving Glimmer's bow and arrows from her distorted corpse amid the swarm's chaos. This incident marks one of the first major disruptions to the Careers' dominance, highlighting the arena's engineered hazards over pure combat prowess.

Cato

Cato serves as the male from 2 in the 74th Hunger Games, portrayed in ' 2008 novel . Originating from a Career district specializing in masonry and weaponry production, he undergoes lifelong training in and tactics designed to prepare participants for the annual event. Physically imposing and short-tempered, Cato exhibits predatory aggression, leading the alliance of Career tributes from 1, 2, and 4 in systematic hunts against non-Career competitors. His actions include direct kills, such as snapping the neck of the District 3 male tribute during late-game confrontations, underscoring his reliance on brute strength and hand-to-hand proficiency. As the Games progress and the Career pack fractures due to betrayals and external interventions like tracker jacker attacks, Cato emerges as a primary to protagonists and . In the finale atop the , muttations—wolf-like creatures engineered by Capitol game makers—maul his unarmored limbs despite his protecting vital areas, leaving him in prolonged agony. Katniss delivers a fatal arrow to his neck at close range, motivated by pity to hasten his death amid the beasts' assault.

Clove

Clove serves as the female tribute from District 2 in the 74th Hunger Games, aligning with the tributes from 1, 2, 4, and occasionally 3, who train lifelong for the arena to ensure Capitol-favored victors. Despite her youthful appearance resembling a "little girl," she exhibits exceptional strength and sadistic aggression, pinning down and taunting during encounters. Her weapon of choice is the knife, with demonstrated accuracy in throwing and close combat, contributing to the Careers' dominance in the early games. In the bloodbath at the , Clove wounds Katniss by slashing her forehead with a knife, marking one of the protagonist's initial injuries. Later, isolated from the pack, she ambushes Katniss near water, boasting of killing a and threatening to torture her slowly, but Thresh intervenes, slamming a rock into Clove's temple and killing her instantly to avenge Rue's death. In her final moments, Clove cries out for Cato, her District 2 counterpart, underscoring the emotional bonds within the Career alliance despite their ruthless training.

Non-Career Tributes

Non-career tributes in the 74th Hunger Games represented Districts 3 through 12 and generally lacked the intensive pre-Games training afforded to those from Career districts. These competitors often drew on district-specific survival skills, such as foraging or agility, rather than combat prowess, leading to strategies focused on evasion and opportunism over direct aggression. Among them, Foxface from District 5, Thresh from District 11, and Rue from District 11 stood out for their interactions with protagonist Katniss Everdeen and their impacts on the Games' dynamics. Foxface, the unnamed female from District 5, earned her nickname from Katniss due to her sharp features, , and sly demeanor resembling a fox. She excelled in stealth and intellect, avoiding alliances and confrontations while pilfering food from the tributes' stockpile undetected on multiple occasions. During training, she scored a 5, reflecting her non-combative approach, yet she reached fourth place by outlasting most competitors through cunning observation rather than kills. Her death resulted from ingesting nightlock berries scavenged from Peeta Mellark's discarded pile; unaware of their toxicity despite Peeta's non-consumption, she succumbed quickly to poisoning. Thresh, the male from District 11, was depicted as exceptionally large, muscular, and strong, with a score of 9 that intimidated other tributes. He operated solo, rejecting overtures from the pack, and focused on harvesting arena resources independently. Thresh spared Katniss after discovering her beside Rue's body, honoring a district debt by allowing her to escape unharmed. In retaliation for Rue's death, he ambushed and killed by smashing her skull against a tree trunk. Thresh placed fifth after Cato hunted him down and slit his throat in the vicinity during the late Games. Rue, the 12-year-old female from District 11, was small, bird-like in agility, and skilled at navigating treetops to evade pursuers, drawing parallels to Katniss's sister Primrose. With a training score of 7, she allied early with Katniss, providing insider knowledge of tracker jacker nests and aiding in the minefield explosion that destroyed the Careers' supplies. Rue's role emphasized vulnerability amid brutality; she was impaled by Marvel's spear while distracting him to protect Katniss, prompting Katniss to end her suffering with an arrow and adorn her body with wildflowers as a defiant . This act elicited rare public sympathy, including a loaf of bread sent from District 11—the first such gift between districts—and foreshadowed unrest. Rue finished seventh.

Foxface

Foxface is the alias assigned by to the female tribute representing District 5 in the 74th Hunger Games, reflecting her cunning, elusive nature akin to a fox. Her true name remains undisclosed in the source material. Physically, she possesses sleek and amber eyes, contributing to her sharp-featured, animalistic appearance. Unlike Career tributes from Districts 1, 2, and 4, who rely on combat prowess, Foxface demonstrates intelligence by steering clear of direct engagements, instead foraging and scavenging resources such as food rations from the abandoned supplies of eliminated Careers. This stealthy approach allows her to endure longer than many combatants, prioritizing survival through observation and minimal risk over aggression. Foxface perishes from consuming nightlock berries, a toxic variety she gathers under the mistaken assumption of their edibility, having seen collect similar berries without eating them himself. The berries induce rapid fatality, underscoring the perils of indirect threats in the arena beyond interpersonal violence. While some interpretations among readers suggest intentional self-termination to evade inevitable suffering against stronger opponents, the canonical account frames the incident as inadvertent poisoning driven by hunger and flawed deduction.

Thresh

Thresh is the male tribute representing District 11 in the 74th Hunger Games, depicted as a massive, powerful, and intimidating figure who largely operates in isolation throughout the arena. From an agricultural district focused on crops like grains and , Thresh demonstrates exceptional physical strength, earning a private training score of 9 from the Gamemakers, signaling his potential as a formidable competitor without formal preparation. Following the death of his partner Rue at the hands of Marvel from 1, Thresh encounters as she mourns Rue by singing to her. Recognizing Katniss's protective role toward Rue akin to his own oversight of the younger , Thresh spares Katniss's life and warns her to leave his territory, establishing a brief, unspoken . In vengeance for Rue's killing, he intervenes during Clove's attack on Katniss at a stream, seizing and slamming Clove's head repeatedly against a tree trunk until her death, an act broadcast arena-wide that underscores his raw brutality and independence from the pack. Thresh later perishes when Cato, the 2 , hunts him down near the and kills him, as referenced in Katniss's later reflections on the Games' chain of violence.

Rue

Rue is the twelve-year-old female tribute representing District 11 in the 74th Hunger Games. Physically small and nimble, she demonstrates skills in tree-climbing, plant identification, and accurate use of a during training, earning a score of 7 from the Gamemakers. These abilities stem from her background in District 11's agriculture, where she works in orchards and evades predatory birds with thrown rocks. After the tracker jacker attack orchestrated by Katniss Everdeen, Rue approaches her, drawn by the pin symbolizing District 12, and forms a genuine based on mutual trust and shared vulnerabilities. Together, they devise a plan to destroy the Careers' supply pile by exploiting a hidden minefield, with Rue signaling the location using mockingjay whistles to mimic Katniss's earlier tune. This collaboration highlights Rue's resourcefulness and loyalty, contrasting the predatory alliances of Career tributes. Rue's death occurs when Marvel, the male tribute from District 1, impales her with a during an attempt to aid Katniss. As she dies, Katniss sings a from Rue's home district, then adorns her body with wildflowers as a defiant gesture against the Capitol, prompting District 11 to send Katniss a loaf of in —the first inter-district gift in the Games. Rue's passing intensifies Katniss's hatred for the Capitol's cruelty and underscores the human cost of the s' exploitation.

Tributes from the 75th Hunger Games

Victors and Allies

The reaped for the Third Quarter Quell, the 75th Hunger Games held in 3765 After the Dark Days, included select individuals who formed a pivotal alliance with and to advance a covert against the Capitol. This group, orchestrated by mentor Haymitch Abernathy, prioritized Katniss's survival to leverage her symbolic role as the . Key members encompassed Finnick Odair and Mags Flanagan from District 4, known for aquatic skills; from District 3, an inventor specializing in and wire-based traps; and Johanna Mason from District 7, a with axe proficiency and aggressive tactics. The alliance dynamics emphasized mutual protection amid the clock-shaped arena's timed hazards, such as poisonous fog and blood rain, with members contributing unique strengths: Odair's trident combat and charisma for sponsorships, Latier's technical innovations like electrifying the force field, Mason's ferocity in combat, and Flanagan's supportive role despite her age-related impairments from a prior stroke. Wiress, Latier's District 3 counterpart, briefly joined before her death but provided critical insights into the arena's design by repeatedly muttering "tick-tock." The group's cohesion fractured under attacks from Careers like Brutus and Enobaria, yet enabled partial escape via rebel extraction on the third day, averting a formal victor declaration.

Finnick Odair

Finnick Odair is a fictional character in ' The Hunger Games series, introduced in . Hailing from District 4, a coastal region specializing in , he won the 65th Hunger Games at age 14, marking him as the youngest victor in Panem's history. As a from a district known for producing strong swimmers and net-makers, Odair benefited from rigorous pre-Games training and used his youthful appeal to attract sponsors, who provided a essential to his survival strategy of direct combat and trap-setting. Post-victory, Odair's striking appearance—featuring bronze hair, sea-green eyes, and a muscular build honed by District 4 labor—made him a Capitol favorite, leading to coerced intimate relationships with patrons in exchange for gifts and influence, a fate shared by many attractive victors. Mentored by fellow District 4 victor Mags Flanagan, he later mentored Annie Cresta, winner of the 70th Hunger Games, developing a deep romantic bond with her that endured despite her mental trauma from the arena. In the 75th Hunger Games, or Third Quarter Quell, which reaped all living victors, the 24-year-old Odair allied with , , and others from Districts 3, 4, 7, and 11 to oppose the Careers. His proficiency with spears and knots proved vital in navigating the aquatic arena, including clock-like hazards, though the alliance fractured amid betrayals and extractions by rebels. Odair joined the District 13-led rebellion in , marrying Cresta before participating in the Capitol assault as part of Squad 451. He perished during the mission to reach President Snow, overwhelmed by lizard-like muttations in the sewers, leaving behind his pregnant wife, who later gave birth to their son. His underscored the rebellion's brutal costs, with Odair's final acts prioritizing comrades' escape over his own survival.

Beetee Latier

Beetee Latier is a victor from District 3, the technology-focused region of Panem, who competes in the 75th Hunger Games as part of the Third Quarter Quell, where past victors are reaped. He previously won an earlier Hunger Games through superior intellect and inventive strategies rather than physical prowess, earning him a reputation as an eccentric genius specializing in and . In the arena, Beetee allies with , Finnick Odair, Johanna Mason, and his district partner Wiress, focusing on non-combative tactics to exploit the environment. During the 75th Games, Beetee devises a plan to harness the arena's periodic lightning strikes by stringing a wire from a tree to the saltwater beach, aiming to electrocute pursuers and create an escape route for the alliance. The scheme partially succeeds but leads to chaos when the wire shorts, injuring Beetee and contributing to the arena's destruction by rebel forces. Rescued and relocated to District 13, he sustains permanent injuries requiring mobility aids and shifts to supporting the rebellion's technological efforts. In Mockingjay, Beetee serves as a key inventor for the rebels, customizing weapons such as a specialized for Katniss and developing hacks like the Holo projection disruptor used against Capitol broadcasts. He proposes military tactics, including sequential bombing patterns to maximize civilian casualties in the Capitol, reflecting a calculated approach to warfare despite his initial non-violent inclinations. His contributions underscore District 3's expertise in , aiding and assault operations against the Capitol.

Johanna Mason

Johanna Mason is the female victor from District 7, representing the lumber industry, who won the 71st Hunger Games at age 17 by pretending to be weak and helpless to draw opponents within striking distance, then using axes to eliminate them. As the only living female victor from her district by the time of the 75th Hunger Games, she was reaped for the Third Quarter Quell, which required tributes to be drawn exclusively from existing victors. In the Quarter Quell arena, Johanna demonstrates aggressive combat skills and strategic cunning, allying with , Beetee Latier, and Finnick Odair while rescuing Wiress from attacking Careers and navigating the clock-shaped jungle hazards. Her brash, profane demeanor masks deeper motivations tied to against the Capitol, as she later reveals her hatred for the regime stems from the murder of her family by President Snow following her victory. Captured during the arena extraction, Johanna endures severe torture in the Capitol, including and , which leaves her with and physical effects such as impaired hair regrowth, rendering her bald by the series' end. She joins the District 13-based rebellion, participating in operations against the Capitol despite her vulnerabilities.

Mags Flanagan

Mags Flanagan is a victor from District 4 in ' The Hunger Games , debuting in as the elderly female selected for the 75th Hunger Games, the Third Quarter Quell limited to past . She volunteered in place of Annie Cresta, a mentally unstable victor and Finnick Odair's district partner, to enable Finnick's participation in the . At approximately 80 years old, Mags suffered from the effects of a that impaired her speech to grunts and gestures, and she required Finnick's assistance to walk due to physical frailty. Despite her age and limitations, she demonstrated resourcefulness during training by crafting a fishhook from a piece of wood, showcasing survival skills honed from her earlier victory in the 11th Hunger Games, where she emerged as District 4's first known winner at age 16. In the arena, Mags allied with Finnick, Katniss Everdeen, and Peeta Mellark. When confronted by a deadly poisonous fog that blistered skin on contact, the group's pace slowed due to Mags' mobility issues, prompting her to kiss Finnick farewell and deliberately walk into the fog, sacrificing herself to allow the others to flee via a faster path across a tree branch. Her act of selflessness preserved key figures in the emerging rebellion against the Capitol, underscoring themes of intergenerational solidarity among victors.

Antagonistic Tributes

The antagonistic tributes in the 75th Hunger Games, also known as the Third Quarter Quell, were the victors reaped from Districts 1 and 2 who allied as a pack to systematically eliminate other competitors, including those aligned with the emerging led by figures like Finnick Odair and Beetee Latier. These tributes— and Cashmere from District 1, and Brutus and Enobaria from District 2—leveraged their training, physical prowess, and prior Games experience to dominate early confrontations, contributing to the deaths of multiple victors during the initial and subsequent arena skirmishes. Their aggressive tactics and loyalty to the Capitol's system positioned them in direct opposition to protagonists and , embodying the brutal efficiency of Career districts in perpetuating the Games' spectacle. Unlike non-Career victors who formed protective alliances, this group prioritized offensive kills, such as Gloss's slitting of an unnamed tribute's throat at the , underscoring their role as primary threats until dismantled by counter-strategies like the rebel wire trap.

Enobaria

Enobaria served as the female from District 2 in the 75th Hunger Games, also known as the Third Quarter Quell, volunteering as a previous victor. She earned her initial victory in the 62nd Hunger Games by killing a tribute in , ripping open their throat with her teeth. After this triumph, she modified her teeth by filing them into fang-like points and inlaying them with gold, a cosmetic alteration that emphasized her brutal fighting style and intimidated opponents. In the Quarter Quell arena, Enobaria aligned with the Career pack, including her District 2 counterpart Brutus, , and Cashmere from District 1, targeting weaker tributes early in the competition. This alliance facilitated aggressive assaults, contributing to the deaths of multiple victors amid the clock-trapped island environment. She evaded elimination until the arena's extraction phase, where Capitol forces captured her along with and Johanna Mason via hovercraft. Following her capture, Enobaria was held by the Capitol during the escalating rebellion. In the events of Mockingjay, rebel leader Alma Coin granted her immunity as part of negotiations involving Katniss Everdeen's role as the Mockingjay, sparing her from execution. After District 2's military stronghold was overtaken by rebels on March 20 in the timeline of the uprising, Enobaria sided with the victors who integrated into the post-Capitol order and returned to her district.

Other 75th Hunger Games tributes

, the male tribute from 1 and victor of the 63rd Hunger Games, and his sister Cashmere, the female tribute from the same district and victor of the 64th Hunger Games, formed part of the alongside District 2's Brutus and Enobaria. Known for their expertise with knives and familial coordination, and Cashmere demonstrated high combat efficiency during training, earning scores of 10. Brutus, the male tribute from District 2 and a prior victor from an unspecified Games in his mid-40s, complemented the pack with his and ruthless tactics, also scoring a 10 in training. The group, adhering to Career traditions of early alliance and predation, eliminated several tributes, including District 8's , and launched a major assault on Katniss Everdeen's rebel-aligned group at the beach. During the beach confrontation, killed Wiress from District 3 by slitting her throat, while the pack's attacks forced the alliance to scatter. Brutus later slew from District 11, inciting to kill Brutus in a subsequent rage-fueled clash. Johanna Mason dispatched both and Cashmere with her axe in the melee, effectively breaking the Career pack. This alliance accounted for a significant portion of the Games' early kills, embodying the Capitol-favored strategy of dominance through superior training and weaponry.

Other Notable Tributes

Annie Cresta

Annie Cresta is a victor from District 4 who triumphed in the 70th Hunger Games at age 18. During her Games, the arena flooded after a broke, enabling her to leverage District 4's emphasis on aquatic skills to outlast other tributes by swimming to safety as the sole survivor. However, she endured profound trauma from witnessing the of her unnamed district partner, resulting in lasting mental instability characterized by fragility and episodes of distress. Mentored by Finnick Odair, another District 4 victor from the 65th Hunger Games, Cresta formed a deep romantic bond with him that endured despite the Capitol's exploitation of victors. Finnick frequently referenced her in , describing her as his true love amid his coerced persona, and protected her from public scrutiny due to her condition. The pair married prior to the events of . In , Cresta was captured by Capitol forces following the Quarter Quell and held alongside other victors like and Johanna Mason. Rebels rescued her during their assault on the Capitol, though Finnick perished in the process. Pregnant at the time of his death, she later gave birth to their son, whom she raised in District 4 after the Panem revolution, embodying resilience amid personal loss.

Titus

Titus is a male tribute from District 6 who participated in an unspecified Hunger Games occurring a few years before the 74th edition. In that arena, described as a frozen wasteland, Titus descended into savagery amid extreme conditions, killing fellow tributes and resorting to by consuming their bodies. The Gamemakers intervened by stunning him with electric guns to halt his actions and retrieve the victims' remains, after which he was returned to the Capitol. Subsequently, Titus developed a profound to morphling, the pain-numbing drug prevalent in District 6, leading to his confinement in a Capitol treatment ward. Finnick Odair recounts these events in to illustrate the psychological toll of the arena on participants. His infamous behavior underscores the brutal desperation induced by the Games' environments and the Capitol's tolerance for spectacle over humanity.

Additional tributes from unspecified games

The unnamed male tribute from District 8 participated in an unspecified edition of the Hunger Games alongside from District 6. Severely injured during the competition, he was partially devoured by while still alive; after succumbing to his wounds, proceeded to mutilate and consume portions of his own body in grief or madness before muttations terminated him. Johanna Mason relays this account to during preparations for the 75th Hunger Games, emphasizing the arena's capacity to induce profound psychological breakdown among participants.

Capitol Figures

Government and Game Officials

Seneca Crane served as the Head Gamemaker for the 74th Hunger Games, responsible for designing the arena's environmental hazards and announcing mid-game rule changes to heighten spectacle. Amid public demand for drama, Crane permitted two victors from the same district, enabling Katniss Everdeen and Peeta Mellark's survival strategy with nightlock berries, but revoked the rule shortly after, prompting President Coriolanus Snow to execute him—likely by locking him in a room with the poisonous berries as a warning. Plutarch Heavensbee replaced Seneca Crane as Head Gamemaker for the 75th Hunger Games, the Third Quarter Quell featuring past victors, where he manipulated arena conditions including a climactic to aid rebel objectives. From a prominent Capitol family, Heavensbee covertly led District 13's rebellion, smuggling out via an underground hovercraft and later serving as Secretary of Communications in the provisional government post-Snow's regime. Volumnia Gaul, dean of the University of Panem's weapons laboratory, acted as Head Gamemaker for the 10th Hunger Games and pioneered muttations—genetically engineered creatures for warfare and arena threats—viewing as inherently predatory and the Games as a tool for enforcing Capitol dominance through engineered terror. She mentored , influencing his rise by emphasizing control via fear and genetic selection, while experimenting with compactable snakes and other biological weapons during the post-Dark Days reconstruction. Casca Highbottom, Dean of the Capitol Academy, devised the Hunger Games' core concept as a morbid jest while under the influence of morphling, submitting it anonymously to punish District 12 after a slight from Snow's father during university days, thereby shaping the annual reaping of children as district retribution. Resentful toward young , Highbottom administered the mentor program for the 10th Games with deliberate cruelty, grading participants harshly and dosing himself with morphling to cope, until Snow orchestrated his death via a laced of the drug.

Seneca Crane

Seneca Crane was the Head responsible for overseeing the 74th Hunger Games, the annual event in which tributes from of Panem compete to the death for the Capitol's entertainment. In this role, he coordinated gameplay, deployed arena obstacles such as muttations and environmental hazards, and adjusted conditions to heighten spectacle and viewer engagement, including introducing fireballs and tracker jacker nests early in the competition. His decisions shaped the arena's dangers, aiming to produce a decisive victor while maintaining public interest through dramatic interventions. During the Games' climax, Crane permitted and , the remaining tributes from District 12, to both survive by consuming nightlock berries, effectively nullifying the rule mandating a single winner after their threatened double garnered widespread sympathy and disrupted Capitol control. This allowance defied President Snow's expectations, as it undermined the event's purpose of reinforcing district subjugation through spectacle. Following the Games, Snow executed Crane for this perceived , with the method implied to involve coerced —either by or in a room stocked only with poisonous berries—ensuring the Head Gamemaker bore public blame for the rule deviation. Crane's successor, Heavensbee, later referenced his death to the new Gamemakers as a warning during the 75th Hunger Games Quarter Quell, underscoring Snow's intolerance for deviations that could incite rebellion. In the film adaptation of (2012), actor portrayed Crane, depicting his execution explicitly as hanging, though the books leave the precise details ambiguous to emphasize Capitol ruthlessness.

Plutarch Heavensbee

Plutarch Heavensbee is a fictional character in ' The Hunger Games trilogy, introduced in (2009) as the Head Gamemaker for the 75th Hunger Games, also known as the Third Quarter Quell. He replaces Seneca Crane, who was executed by President following the 74th Games. Heavensbee designs the Quell's arena, which features a clock-like structure dividing the day into hourly hazards, including , , and monkey muttations, to heighten the spectacle and manipulate tributes. Beneath his role in the Capitol's oppressive system, Heavensbee operates as a covert rebel allied with District 13's underground resistance. He subtly signals his sympathies to during a post-Games celebration by revealing a gold watch engraved with a that appears and disappears at noon, hinting at the rebellion's coordinated uprising. This act underscores his strategic deception, positioning him as a who exploits his Gamemaker authority to the Capitol from within. In (2010), Heavensbee relocates to after the Quell's arena destruction, emerging as a primary organizer of Capitol-based rebels and a commander in the war effort against Snow's regime. He participates in key propositions, including negotiating Katniss's role as the Mockingjay symbol, and later expresses frustration during debates over post-victory governance, throwing up his hands in exasperation at stalled decisions. His background includes prior interactions with victors like Haymitch Abernathy, whom he knew from earlier Games, reflecting his long-term cultivation of rebel networks. Heavensbee is portrayed by in the film adaptations : Catching Fire (2013) and : Mockingjay – Part 1 (2014), with Hoffman's scenes completed before his death in 2014; the character's arc concludes without him in Mockingjay – Part 2 (2015).

Volumnia Gaul

Volumnia Gaul, commonly referred to as Dr. Gaul, serves as the Head Gamemaker for the 10th Hunger Games and dean of the Capitol's , overseeing the event's innovations during the post-Dark Days recovery period. She acts as a mentor to young , selected as a tribute mentor, guiding him in strategies that emphasize psychological manipulation and spectacle to captivate Capitol audiences and deter district rebellion. Dr. Gaul experiments with genetic mutations, including venomous snakes deployed as arena weapons against tributes like Clemensia , reflecting her role in the Capitol's weapons laboratory. A proponent of authoritarian control, Dr. Gaul espouses the view that humans are innately violent and require subjugation through fear, a philosophy she applies to refine the as a tool for Panem's stability. Her influence extends to advocating for mentor incentives and broadcast enhancements, such as live arena feeds, to boost public engagement during the 10th Games held circa 10 years after the Dark Days War. Portrayed as cruel yet inventive, she prioritizes the Games' evolution into a sustainable spectacle, clashing with figures like Dean Casca Highbottom over ethical boundaries in tribute treatment.

Casca Highbottom

Casca Highbottom serves as the Dean of Students at the Capitol Academy, the elite training institution for Panem's future leaders, during the events of the 10th Hunger Games as depicted in Suzanne Collins's 2020 novel The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes. In this capacity, he oversees the inaugural mentorship program for the Games, assigning senior students, including , to guide tributes from the districts. Highbottom is characterized as irascible and unpleasant, often appearing disheveled and reliant on morphling, a powerful painkiller, which contributes to his erratic behavior and underlying bitterness toward the Capitol's elite. Highbottom is publicly credited with inventing the , a concept he developed unintentionally as a late-night academic exercise during his university studies alongside Crassus Snow, Coriolanus's father. Intended as a hypothetical proposal to quell district rebellions through and spectacle, the idea was later realized by the Capitol government following the Dark Days uprising, with Crassus claiming primary authorship, leaving Highbottom resentful and viewing the Games as a perversion of his original intent. This history fuels his antagonism toward the Snow family, whom he holds responsible for transforming the simulation into a deadly annual event; he mentors Coriolanus with deliberate cruelty, using the assignment to settle old scores. Throughout the narrative, Highbottom expresses private regret over the Games' implementation, decrying them as morally corrosive to both victors and spectators, yet he remains complicit in their administration as dean. His arc culminates in death by poisoning, administered via drugs laced with a , an act traced to Coriolanus Snow's orchestration to silence Highbottom's accusations of cheating in the Games. In the 2023 directed by , Highbottom is portrayed by , emphasizing his physical frailty and intellectual torment.

Media and Entertainment

Caesar Flickerman

Caesar Flickerman functions as the master of ceremonies for the Hunger Games, hosting pre-game interviews with tributes and providing live commentary during the arena events broadcast to Panem. His role emphasizes entertainment value, drawing out dramatic narratives from participants to captivate Capitol audiences. In The Hunger Games, he is described as having hosted interviews for 24 years, maintaining a consistent appearance of white makeup and hairstyle, with annual variations only in the colors of his hair, eyelids, and lips.

Effie Trinket

Effie Trinket acts as the official escort for District 12 tributes, overseeing their transport to the Capitol, coordination with stylists, and public presentations during the pre-Games events. She embodies Capitol superficiality through her exaggerated manners, frequent wardrobe changes including colorful wigs often in blonde or pink, and unwavering optimism toward the Games' proceedings. Initially dismissive of District 12's , Effie later demonstrates limited adaptability by assisting rebel efforts in , though her primary allegiance remains tied to Capitol protocols.

Caesar Flickerman

Caesar Flickerman functions as the flamboyant for the Capitol's annual Hunger Games broadcasts, primarily conducting pre-game interviews with tributes to build audience engagement and highlight their stories. He has emceed these events for over forty years by the time of the 74th Hunger Games, a tenure that underscores the entrenched spectacle of Panem's ritualized violence. Of average height and build, Flickerman distinguishes himself through annual cosmetic transformations, changing the hues of his hair, eyelids, and lips to match each Games' theme, such as turquoise accents during the 74th edition. His father, Lucretius "Lucky" Flickerman, originated the hosting role during the 10th Hunger Games, establishing the family legacy in Capitol entertainment. Flickerman appears across the trilogy, facilitating key interactions like the joint interview of Katniss Everdeen and Peeta Mellark after their victory in the 74th Games, where he deftly steers narratives to favor Capitol interests. In the 75th Quarter Quell, he continues commentary amid escalating rebellion signals. By Mockingjay, he broadcasts pro-Capitol propaganda from the besieged Capitol, interviewing captives like Peeta to demoralize rebels; his post-rebellion fate remains unstated in the novels, though reports attribute to author Suzanne Collins a 2011 confirmation of his survival due to non-involvement in direct atrocities. In film adaptations directed by and , portrays Flickerman, emphasizing his charismatic yet obsequious demeanor in scenes spanning (2012), (2013), and Parts 1 and 2 (2014–2015). A film, (2026), casts in the role for an earlier era.

Effie Trinket

Effie Trinket serves as the Capitol-appointed escort for District 12 tributes in the , responsible for overseeing ceremony, transporting victors-to-be to the Capitol, and guiding them through pre-Games protocols such as training, interviews, and sponsor cultivation. Her duties emphasize presentation and adherence to Capitol etiquette, reflecting the regime's emphasis on spectacle over district realities. Physically, Effie is depicted with a tall, brightly colored wig—often pink—and ostentatious clothing that underscores Capitol extravagance, contrasting sharply with 12's austerity. Personality-wise, she prioritizes propriety, cheerfulness, and optimism, frequently invoking her "May the odds be ever in your favor" during reapings and events, which masks underlying detachment from the tributes' suffering. Initially portrayed as somewhat naive or self-absorbed, focused on career advancement and social norms, she gradually exhibits attachment to specific tributes like and , hinting at limited personal growth amid systemic indoctrination. In the 74th Hunger Games, conducts in District 12, selecting Primrose Everdeen before Katniss volunteers, and later escorts Katniss and Peeta to the Capitol for styling, parades, and training sessions. She complains about District 12's lack of victors in prior decades, viewing it as a professional embarrassment, yet invests effort in coaching the pair for sponsor appeal. Her role diminishes in later installments, but she reappears briefly in captivity during the , cooperating under duress to aid efforts before aligning tenuously with rebel objectives. In film adaptations directed by and , is portrayed by , whose performance amplifies her eccentric traits for visual impact while retaining core book elements like her escort functions and evolving rapport with protagonists. This expansion includes additional scenes emphasizing her Capitol loyalty tested by events, diverging slightly from the novels' more restrained to heighten dramatic tension.

Stylists and Support

Stylists in Panem are Capitol professionals assigned to tributes, tasked with creating visually striking costumes and personas to captivate audiences during pre-Games events like the and interviews, thereby increasing chances of sponsor gifts. Their prep teams handle intensive grooming, including hair, makeup, and body treatments, often causing discomfort to tributes unaccustomed to Capitol beauty standards. These roles emphasize over tribute welfare, reflecting the Capitol's commodification of the Games.

Cinna

Cinna is the stylist for District 12 tributes and in the 74th Hunger Games, marking his debut in the profession after requesting the assignment despite the district's low prestige. He devises the "Girl on Fire" ensemble for Katniss's entry, featuring a black unitard adorned with flickering synthetic flames that ignite without burning the wearer, propelling her into the public eye. In , Cinna crafts a wedding gown that transforms into a symbol during Katniss's interview, signaling subtle rebellion against the Capitol; he is subsequently beaten to death by Peacekeepers in the launch room before the Quarter Quell arena. Cinna's empathy toward tributes distinguishes him from typical stylists, as he forgoes excessive alterations and builds trust with Katniss through quiet solidarity.

Prep team

Katniss Everdeen's prep team comprises Flavius, Octavia, and Venia, Capitol natives who subject her to exhaustive pre-Games preparations such as full-body waxing, skin scrubbing, and elaborate hairstyling, viewing district hygiene as barbaric. Flavius oversees the process with enthusiasm for Capitol trends, while Venia, distinguished by her blue hair and gold tattoos, and Octavia contribute to the team's fixation on perfection, often ignoring Katniss's pain. In Mockingjay, the trio is arrested by Capitol forces for perceived disloyalty after the Quarter Quell escape; upon rescue in District 13, they appear severely malnourished and unkempt, evoking unexpected pity from Katniss despite their earlier cultural detachment. Their portrayal underscores the prep team's shallow, fashion-obsessed worldview, yet highlights the human cost of Capitol oppression extending to its own citizens.

Minor Capitol characters

Tigris Snow, a former Hunger Games stylist fired for unconventional designs, operates a fur-trimming shop in the Capitol's Avenue of Tributes by the time of the rebellion in Mockingjay. She aids Katniss and the rebels by providing shelter and disguises, driven by disillusionment with the Games' excesses, including her relative Snow's role in their origins. Other stylists remain largely unnamed in the narrative, serving as background figures who prioritize spectacle, such as those crafting opulent District 1 and 2 tributes' appearances to evoke pack dominance. These minor roles illustrate the broader Capitol machinery of aesthetic manipulation, where individual agency varies but collective function reinforces the regime's entertainment apparatus.

Cinna

Cinna serves as the head stylist for and during the 74th Hunger Games, marking his debut in the role as a relatively inexperienced Capitol citizen assigned to the underrepresented District 12 tributes. He designs Katniss's signature "Girl on Fire" parade costume, featuring a black symbolizing District 12's heritage, overlaid with a synthetic fiery cape that ignites via artificial flames, which propels her into the public eye and secures early sponsor attention. Unlike typical flamboyant Capitol stylists, Cinna adopts a subdued appearance with simple black clothing, cropped dark hair, and gold accentuating his green eyes, fostering an immediate trust with Katniss through his genuine demeanor and . In the lead-up to the 75th Hunger Games (Quarter Quell), Cinna continues styling Katniss, creating a black gown that transforms into a emblem when unwrapped, deliberately amplifying her symbolic role in the burgeoning rebellion against the Capitol. Secretly aligned with District 13's rebel forces, he provides Katniss with a subtle reminder of her alliance via a woven token during preparations, but Peacekeepers arrest and torture him moments before her arena entry, resulting in his death and galvanizing her resolve. In the film adaptations directed by and , portrays Cinna, emphasizing his quiet defiance and mentorship.

Prep team

The prep team assigned to Katniss Everdeen comprises Flavius, Octavia, and Venia, Capitol specialists who support stylist Cinna by performing intensive grooming procedures on tributes, including scrubbing skin, removing body hair through waxing, polishing nails, and applying makeup and hairstyling to align with extravagant Capitol aesthetics. These preparations occur prior to televised interviews, chariot parades, and arena entry, transforming district youths into polished spectacles for the Games audience. Katniss initially views them as shallow and oblivious to Panem's district hardships, exemplified by their fixation on her unmanicured body hair and dirty nails as personal affronts rather than symptoms of poverty. Flavius, the male head prepper, coordinates the team's efforts and reacts with distress to Katniss's initial unkempt state during her first Games preparation, later resuming duties for the 75th Hunger Games Quarter Quell in . Octavia, characterized by her plump build, assists in these routines while voicing dismay over the tribute's lack of refinement. Venia complements the group by handling similar tasks, contributing to the overall beautification despite the team's limited understanding of district realities. Following the arena's destruction in the Quarter Quell, the prep team faces arrest alongside escort Trinket, reflecting Capitol reprisals against Games personnel linked to the rebellion. In Mockingjay, rebels seize them as captives; upon Katniss's encounter in the underground complex, she finds them psychologically shattered from interrogation and deprivation, prompting her to authorize minimal grooming sessions out of reluctant compassion, as they pose no threat and exhibit genuine fear rather than ideological commitment. This shift underscores their vulnerability as non-combatant Capitol civilians, detached from the regime's core power structures yet ensnared by the war's fallout.

Minor Capitol characters

Atala functions as the head trainer for tributes in the Capitol's training facility during the 74th Hunger Games, orienting participants to survival stations including camouflage, knot-tying, and weapons handling while emphasizing arena hazards. Tigris Snow, cousin to President and a former stylist for early Hunger Games editions, operates a dilapidated furrier shop in the Capitol's Avenue of Tributes by the time of the Second Rebellion. She harbors evident resentment toward Snow, stemming from familial and societal shifts, and assists rebel Squad 451—including —by offering disguises, weapons, and temporary refuge during their infiltration of the Capitol in . Portia serves as the stylist for Peeta Mellark in the 74th and 75th Hunger Games, collaborating with Cinna on thematic designs such as coal motifs for District 12 tributes; she is executed by the Capitol following the Quarter Quell announcement for perceived involvement in rebel sympathies.

District 12 Residents

Everdeen Family

The Everdeen family, residents of the Seam in District 12, consists of Asterid Everdeen (née March), her husband Burdock Everdeen, and their daughters Katniss Everdeen and Primrose Everdeen. Burdock, a coal miner with ancestral ties to the nomadic Covey musicians via his mother's side, perished in a mine explosion approximately five years prior to the 74th Hunger Games, leaving the family in poverty and prompting Katniss to become the primary provider through hunting and gathering. Asterid, trained as a healer and apothecary, struggled with severe depression following her husband's death, rendering her initially unable to contribute substantively to the household until later interventions during the rebellion. The family's resilience amid District 12's hardships underscores themes of survival and quiet defiance against Capitol oppression, with Burdock noted for his loyalty as a friend to mentor Haymitch Abernathy during the latter's post-victory decline.

Asterid Everdeen

Asterid Everdeen (née March) is the mother of and Primrose Everdeen, as well as the widow of Burdock Everdeen, a coal miner who died in a District 12 mine explosion approximately eight years before the 74th Hunger Games. Her name and maiden name were revealed in Suzanne Collins's 2025 novel Sunrise on the Reaping, which provides backstory on District 12 residents during the 50th Hunger Games. Prior to her husband's death, Asterid lived a relatively stable life in the Seam, but his loss led to a period of severe depression that left her daughters to fend for themselves through and foraging. Asterid worked as a healer, utilizing knowledge of and remedies, which she later passed on to Katniss; this expertise stemmed from her employment at the District 12 . In Sunrise on the Reaping, she is shown supplying Haymitch Abernathy with syrup to cope with his post-traumatic stress from winning the 50th Hunger Games, highlighting her role in the community's informal support networks. Her friendship with Maysilee Donner, a in the same Quarter Quell, underscores connections among District 12 families, though Asterid herself avoided direct involvement in the Games . Following the explosion, Asterid's deteriorated, manifesting in catatonic episodes that Katniss described as abandonment, forcing the elder daughter to assume primary caregiving responsibilities for Prim. Recovery came gradually through her healing practice and the family's relocation to Victor's Village after Katniss's victory in the 74th Hunger Games, where Asterid contributed to medical efforts during the rebellion against the Capitol.

Burdock Everdeen

Burdock Everdeen is the father of Katniss Everdeen and Primrose Everdeen, and husband of Asterid March Everdeen, in Suzanne Collins' The Hunger Games series. A Seam resident of District 12, he supported his family through coal mining and illegal hunting in the nearby woods. Burdock perished in a mine explosion five years before the 74th Hunger Games, an event that plunged his widow and daughters into severe poverty and prompted Katniss to become the family's primary provider through poaching. He instructed Katniss from a young age in archery, bow-making, foraging for edible plants, and woodland navigation—skills she later relied on during the arena. In the prequel Sunrise on the Reaping, set amid the 50th , Burdock appears as a 14- or 15-year-old best friend to Haymitch Abernathy, earning the nickname "Burdie" from him; the novel also establishes his Covey ancestry and early courtship of Asterid, a healer at the District 12 . Fan theories speculate the mine blast may have resulted from linked to nascent rather than negligence, though canonical accounts describe it as a standard industrial accident amid Capitol disregard for miner safety.

Abernathy Family

The Abernathy family resides in the Seam of District 12, embodying the district's -mining underclass. The family consists of widowed mother Willamae Abernathy and her two sons, Haymitch (the elder) and Sid (the younger). Willamae married young and lost her husband to a coal mine fire, after which she single-handedly supported her boys through labor-intensive work and scavenging, amid the chronic poverty and food shortages plaguing the district. Haymitch, at age 16, is reaped as the male tribute for the 50th Hunger Games (the Second Quarter Quell), where he outsmarts the Capitol by exploiting the arena's force field to secure victory—the first District 12 win in decades. In reprisal for Haymitch's defiance, which embarrasses the Gamemakers, Capitol peacekeepers execute Willamae and 10-year-old Sid—along with Haymitch's girlfriend—by burning their home, leaving him isolated and fueling his descent into . This event underscores the Capitol's punitive control over victors, transforming familial bonds into liabilities for . The family's fate highlights District 12's vulnerability, where personal triumphs invite collective retribution.

Sid Abernathy

Sid Abernathy is the younger brother of Haymitch Abernathy, a resident of District 12's Seam, the poorest section of the coal-mining district. He and Haymitch were raised by their widowed mother, Willamae, following their father's death in a mining accident. At age 10 during the 50th Hunger Games in 50 ADD—also known as the Second Quarter Quell—Sid shared a close bond with his brother, evident in Haymitch's farewell conversation with him before departing for the Capitol, where Sid expressed fascination with the stars. After Haymitch's victory, achieved by exploiting a rule change on force fields to outmaneuver the Gamemakers and expose Capitol incompetence on live broadcast, President retaliated by ordering the execution of Haymitch's entire family. Sid was killed in this purge, alongside his mother and other relatives, as a means to punish Haymitch and deter future defiance from victors. This event contributed to Haymitch's descent into and isolation in subsequent years.

Willamae Abernathy

Willamae Abernathy, referred to as "Ma" by her , serves as the mother of Haymitch Abernathy and his Sid in Sunrise on the Reaping. She raised her sons alone in the Seam, District 12's poorest region, after her husband's death, managing daily survival through labor-intensive tasks amid widespread deprivation. Portrayed as stern yet devoted, Willamae enforced household chores on Haymitch, including responsibilities tied to day coinciding with his sixteenth birthday. Following Haymitch's win in the 50th Hunger Games—achieved by exploiting the arena's force field to defy Capitol expectations—President ordered the execution of Haymitch's entire , including Willamae, to punish his of the and deter future .

Other Residents

Madge Undersee serves as the daughter of District 12's , residing in the merchant section with relative privilege compared to Seam families. She shares a subdued companionship with , often sitting with her at school lunches despite social divides, and gifts Katniss the gold pin—originally belonging to her aunt Maysilee Donner, a 50th Hunger Games —prior to the 74th ceremony on July 6 in an unspecified year. Delly Cartwright, a cheerful teenager from District 12's merchant area, maintains a close friendship with from childhood play and attends the same school as Katniss, where her optimistic demeanor contrasts the general hardship. Described with blonde hair and a slightly chubby build, she appears at and later aids in Peeta's psychological recovery in by evoking positive pre-Games memories during the rebellion phase post-74th Games. Greasy Sae operates as a bony elderly in the Hob, District 12's , renowned for grinding diverse ingredients—including wild dog—into stews for sale, demonstrating resourcefulness amid scarcity. Following the bombing of District 12 after the 75th Hunger Games Quarter Quell, she relocates to , where she cares for Katniss's mother and circulates rumors supporting the symbol to foster rebellion sentiment. Buttercup functions as Primrose Everdeen's mangy yellow tomcat, acquired as a stray and cherished by Prim despite his aggressive temperament toward humans, including repeated attempts to kill him by Katniss due to his vermin-hunting inefficacy and burdensome upkeep. Transported to during evacuation, he survives the war and appears in the series epilogue, underscoring themes of reluctant familial bonds in post-rebellion District 12. Minor District 12 characters encompass figures such as , who oversees local governance and conducts ceremonies, and various unnamed Hob traders or schoolmates who populate the district's coal-mining and merchant communities, providing backdrop to daily survival dynamics without central narrative roles.

Madge Undersee

Madge Undersee is the daughter of District 12's and a classmate of , characterized as quiet and subdued, traits that draw her to the similarly reserved Katniss, making her the only student who regularly sits with Katniss at lunch despite class differences between the mayor's family and Katniss's from the impoverished Seam. Physically described with fair skin and wavy blonde hair, Madge hails from relative privilege in District 12, yet demonstrates sympathy toward poorer residents, as evidenced by her resentment toward Gale Hawthorne's class-based hostility toward her. In , Madge plays a pivotal role by gifting Katniss a mockingjay pin as a token for the arena, an heirloom originally belonging to her Maysilee Donner, who perished in the 50th Hunger Games; this pin later evolves into the central symbol of rebellion against the Capitol. Her act underscores underlying class tensions in District 12, where criticizes Madge's exemption from entries due to her status—his name entered six times by age 12 compared to her none—highlighting the Capitol's divide-and-conquer strategy to suppress district unity. Madge reappears briefly in with a bruise on her cheek, sustained when Peacekeepers beat her during an attempt to protect her mother from , further illustrating her willingness to challenge authority on behalf of others. In , she is confirmed deceased, killed in the Capitol's bombing of District 12, with her father conveying the news via a letter delivered to Katniss in , marking the loss of a potential cross-class ally in the uprising.

Delly Cartwright

Delly Cartwright is a minor character in Suzanne Collins's trilogy, residing in the merchant sector of District 12. She is depicted as a childhood friend of , sharing school experiences and positive recollections from their youth that contrast with the seam residents' hardships. In , briefly recalls her as a "pasty-faced, lumpy girl with yellowish hair," highlighting class distinctions between merchants and seams. Cartwright first appears on-page in Mockingjay, having survived the Capitol's bombing of District 12 alongside her unnamed brother; her parents perish in the attack. Relocated to , she is estimated to be aged 16–18, with long blond hair, and maintains a cheerful demeanor amid trauma. Her primary role involves aiding Peeta's psychological recovery from Capitol hijacking, which implanted false memories portraying Katniss as a threat. By recounting authentic, affectionate shared history—such as playing in District 12's streets—Cartwright helps Peeta distinguish reality from , gradually restoring his trust in genuine relationships. This intervention underscores themes of memory's fragility and communal support in rebuilding fractured psyches. Cartwright's character, omitted from film adaptations, emphasizes subtle interpersonal dynamics in District 12's social fabric, where merchant optimism provides counterpoints to prevailing despair. No further details emerge post-Mockingjay, limiting her to a supportive, function.

Greasy Sae

Greasy Sae is a minor character in Suzanne Collins's trilogy, depicted as a operating a stall in the Hob, District 12's , where she prepares and sells bowls of soup using ingredients such as , entrails, and foraged items like tree bark. She frequently purchases hunted meat, including squirrels and other game, from and Gale Hawthorne, facilitating their trade of illegal goods outside official Peacekeeper oversight. Described as a bony old woman with a gruff demeanor tempered by practical wisdom, Greasy Sae demonstrates resourcefulness in her cooking, adapting limited District 12 rations into sustaining meals during harsh winters. In , she engages directly with characters like , urging him not to delay his obligations while retrieving her bowl, and comments on Gale Hawthorne's visits to Katniss. Her stall serves as a social hub in the Hob, underscoring the underground economy's role in community survival amid Capitol restrictions. Following the bombing of District 12 in Mockingjay, Greasy Sae evacuates to , where she integrates into the communal kitchens, critiquing the local cooks' lack of imagination while handling meat preparations. Her transition highlights the displacement of District 12 survivors and their contributions to 's regimented operations, though her role remains peripheral to the central rebellion narrative.

Buttercup

Buttercup is the pet owned by Primrose Everdeen in ' The Hunger Games trilogy. He is depicted as an exceptionally unattractive feline with a smashed-in nose, half of one ear missing, muddy-yellow fur, and eyes the color of rotting squash, earning descriptions as the "world's ugliest cat." Despite his unappealing appearance and aggressive temperament, Buttercup provides limited practical value by occasionally hunting vermin around the Everdeen household in District 12. Katniss Everdeen harbors a strong dislike for Buttercup from the outset, viewing him as a burdensome mouth to feed in their resource-scarce environment and contemplating his disposal on multiple occasions, though she ultimately spares him to avoid distressing Prim. Following the Capitol's bombing of District 12 at the conclusion of , Buttercup survives the catastrophe independently, later reuniting with Katniss in the ruins during . Their shared ordeal fosters a tentative bond, underscored by moments of mutual dependence as Katniss scavenges for survival, with Buttercup appearing half-starved yet resilient. This endurance positions him as one of the few non-human survivors of the district's destruction.

Minor District 12 characters

Ripper operates a stall in the Hob, District 12's , where she sells and wild dog meat to locals and Peacekeepers alike. Described as a one-armed , she embodies the district's underground economy, trading in illegal goods despite Capitol prohibitions. Her interactions highlight the Hob's role as a vital, albeit illicit, hub for District 12 residents supplementing meager rations. Cray functions as the Head Peacekeeper of District 12 prior to the 75th Hunger Games, characterized by relative laxity compared to his successor. He frequents the Hob for alcohol purchases, tolerating minor infractions in exchange for personal vices, which contributes to his eventual death in a fight over a . This leniency reflects a pragmatic, if corrupt, approach to enforcing Capitol rule in the impoverished district. Romulus Thread succeeds Cray as Head Peacekeeper, imposing martial law, curfews, and heightened aggression following the unrest after the 74th Hunger Games victors' return. Transferred from elsewhere, likely a career enforcer, he escalates surveillance and punishments, including public whippings, to suppress perceived rebellion, underscoring Capitol efforts to tighten control over District 12.

District 13 Residents

Leadership

District 13 operates under a highly militarized government structure, with centralized authority vested in President Alma Coin, who directs the district's resources and strategy during the Second Rebellion against the Capitol. This leadership emphasizes discipline, resource rationing, and propaganda efforts, including the deployment of Katniss Everdeen as the Mockingjay symbol to rally support across districts. Coin's administration maintains strict protocols, such as scheduled activities and medical protocols, reflecting the district's survivalist ethos after its supposed destruction in the earlier rebellion. Supporting is a cadre of military officers, including Boggs, her second-in-command and head of security, who oversees tactical operations and personnel assignments, such as leading Squad 451 in high-risk missions into the Capitol. Boggs exemplifies the chain of command's focus on operational efficiency, often serving as a liaison between leadership and field units while expressing reservations about unchecked within the . This hierarchy prioritizes rebellion objectives over individual freedoms, enabling to function as the rebellion's de facto headquarters with advanced weaponry and nuclear capabilities.

President Alma Coin

President Alma Coin serves as the president of District 13 in ' Mockingjay, the third novel in trilogy published in 2010. She leads the district's underground military and civilian operations, positioning District 13 as the primary force behind the rebellion against the Capitol. Approximately 50 years old, Coin is depicted with straight gray hair reaching her shoulders and pale gray eyes, embodying a composed and authoritative demeanor. Throughout the narrative, Coin strategically allies with , leveraging her as the Mockingjay symbol to propagate rebellion footage and inspire uprisings across the districts. She enforces rigid protocols in , including scheduled routines and suppression of dissent, mirroring authoritarian controls while framing them as necessary for survival and victory. Coin collaborates on key assaults, such as the propaganda unit's missions, but prioritizes 's long-term dominance in post-war Panem. Coin's leadership reveals ambitions extending beyond liberation; she proposes a final Hunger Games using children of Capitol elites as tributes, ostensibly for symbolic retribution, which gains tentative approval from victors like Johanna Mason and Enobaria but is rejected by Haymitch Abernathy and ultimately Katniss. This plan underscores her willingness to perpetuate cycles of violence for political consolidation, akin to President Snow's tactics. In the novel's climax, following the Capitol's capture, Katniss shoots dead during President Snow's , fulfilling a concealed bargain to avert the proposed games and prevent 's rise as a new .

Boggs

Boggs serves as a and head of security in District 13's military under President Alma Coin in ' Mockingjay. He is assigned as one of Katniss Everdeen's primary bodyguards upon her designation as the , the rebellion's symbolic leader, reflecting his role in Coin's inner circle despite initial perceptions of him as a loyal enforcer. Described as principled and protective toward Katniss, Boggs demonstrates restraint compared to more aggressive rebels, prioritizing her safety and providing candid counsel amid District 13's manipulative strategies. During the ground assault on the Capitol, Boggs leads the elite Star Squad, tasked with escorting Katniss to film footage while navigating booby-trapped streets rigged with lethal "pods." He identifies mislabeled hazards, but triggers an explosive pod that severs both legs, inflicting fatal injuries. In his final moments, Boggs transfers command of the squad's holographic map device—the Holo—to Katniss via biometric override, urges her to evade capture or death without him, and warns her against trusting anyone, underscoring his foresight into the rebellion's internal fractures. In the film adaptation The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2 (2015), Boggs is portrayed by actor .

Minor District 13 characters

Jackson was a and soldier native to , assigned to Squad 451 as second-in-command under Boggs during the rebellion's propaganda and assault operations against the Capitol. She participated in frontline missions, including the infiltration of the Capitol's tunnels, where she was killed by genetically engineered lizard mutts. Leeg 1 and Leeg 2 were sisters and sharpshooter soldiers from , serving in Katniss Everdeen's Squad 451 to produce rebel propaganda footage and engage in combat. Leeg 2 became the squad's first casualty during the Capitol incursion, dying from injuries inflicted by lizard mutts in the sewers. Leeg 1 survived longer but was terminated by President Coin's orders after the squad's mission deviated, reflecting 's strict command protocols. Mitchell was a from in Squad 451, distinguished by his exceptional marksmanship and taciturn demeanor; he could accurately shoot targets at long range with minimal communication. He died in the Capitol sewers from attacks by mutts during the squad's advance. Homes, like Mitchell, was an older, reserved originating from and assigned to Squad 451 for his reliable shooting skills, contributing to the unit's combat effectiveness in rebel operations. He was killed alongside other squad members by muttations in the Capitol's underground passages. Dr. Aurelius served as a in , specializing in treating psychological trauma from Capitol conditioning and war experiences; he attended to post-rescue, using methodical, patient approaches to address hijacked memories and behaviors.

Residents of Other Districts

District 2 Figures

Cato and represented District 2 as the male and female tributes, respectively, in the 74th Hunger Games. Cato, a physically imposing trained from youth, led the alliance of tributes from Districts 1, 2, and 4, personally killing at least three opponents, including the District 8 female and District 11 male. His aggressive style and swordsmanship made him a dominant force until he was severely injured by muttations and mercy-killed by with an arrow to end his suffering. Clove, Cato's smaller but agile partner, specialized in knives, nearly killing Katniss during a confrontation at the and mocking her over Rue's death; she was killed by Thresh, who crushed her skull with a rock in retaliation for her role in his district partner's death. Enobaria, victor of the 62nd Hunger Games, originated from District 2 and gained notoriety for disemboweling an opponent with her teeth, leading to Capitol-approved modifications that sharpened them into fangs. As the female tribute for the 75th Hunger Games (Third Quarter Quell), she allied with fellow Careers, demonstrated combat skill by wounding Finnick Odair, and survived the arena until extraction by ; captured by Capitol forces, she was later exchanged in a prisoner deal and opposed President Coin's proposal for a new Hunger Games with Capitol children during Snow's trial. Brutus, a prior victor from an unspecified Games (likely the 46th, given his age in his forties), volunteered as 2's male tribute for the 75th Hunger Games, showcasing eagerness to return to the arena. He killed of 11 early in the competition and collaborated with Enobaria in Career tactics before struck him fatally with a during the chaos. Lyme, another 2 victor, commanded rebel operations in her home district during the Second Rebellion, leveraging her status to undermine Capitol loyalty despite the area's strong pro-Capitol sentiment. She coordinated assaults on key facilities like the Nut but was killed in Capitol counter-bombings alongside other fighters.

District 8 Figures

Bonnie is a young resident of District 8, depicted in as a factory worker roughly the same age as protagonist . Alongside , she escapes District 8 amid the uprising against the Capitol, traveling through the woods near District 12 in search of District 13. Bonnie's appearance, marked by short hair and simple clothing, reflects the harsh industrial conditions of her textile-producing district. Twill serves as Bonnie's mentor and fellow escapee from District 8 in . An adult woman, possibly in her thirties, she works in the same factory and explains to Katniss the symbolic use of the pin during the . expresses determination to reach , asserting its existence based on observed signs like smoke plumes, though their journey's outcome remains unresolved in the narrative. Commander Paylor leads the rebel forces in District 8 during the second uprising in Mockingjay. As a resourceful and battle-hardened young commander, she oversees operations amid relentless Capitol bombings that devastate the district's textile factories. Paylor coordinates ground defenses and evacuations, demonstrating tactical acumen in guerrilla warfare against aerial assaults. Following the war's conclusion and the assassination of President Alma Coin, Paylor is elected as Panem's new president, prioritizing equitable reconstruction.

References

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