Friday, August 19, 2011

WOMEN OF HORROR: MAMA'S GOT FANGS FEAT. PAM RAVENSCROFT & SOPHIE-ANNE LECLERQ

SPOILER ALERT! 

Pam Ravenscroft


Savvy, ruthless, cold-hearted, humorous and ravishing! Pam Ravenscroft is my absolute favorite vampire portrayed in The Southern Vampire Mysteries and True Blood. No one beats her sense of humor or her (lack of) fashion sense!
  
"I don't know what it is about me that makes people think I want to hear their problems. Maybe I smile too much. Maybe I wear too much pink. But please remember I can rip your throat out if I need to. And also know that I am not a hooker. That was a long, long time ago."
―Pam

1. Her humor
I just love her morbid sense of humor and the lethal charm to it. She seems to be the only main vampire character who's actually able to be subjected to humor. Eric's just too dumb to get the jokes, and Bill's too serious to even bother to offer a smile. Pam's bluntness and apathetic appearances are entertaining without her even trying. When she does try to joke (or threat); she does it with a lethal sarcasm that scares the shit out of most human. It's priceless.

"You fucking cunt, I'm gonna shove my fist up your ass and us you as a hand warmer!"
- Pam

2. Her dislike for humans (but sexual interest in them)
Pam's dislike for humans (and especially kids) makes her interactions with them so much more entertaining. Since she wasn't very attached to her own human life and willingly accepted the offer of immortality, it seems that she despises humans for the simple reason that she sees their lives as unnecessary and finally feels alive being a vampire (the same with Baby Vamp Jessica, thumbs up!).

Like most vampires she strongly believes her kind to be superior to their human counterparts and is somewhat apathetic to the concerns of humans. This makes her struggle to understand the intentions and feelings of Sookie (who's human) so entertaining and hilarious to follow. And though Pam has a hard time making friends with either race, or sex, she has no difficulties connecting sexually with either of them. More of that on True Blood, thank you!

3. Her (lack of) fashion sense
Who would have thought that vampires like dressing in pink plush!? Well, apparently they do. And no one can carry a pink plush suit with matching shoes and makeup better than Pam. In the beginning of The Southern Vampire Mysteries Pam reveals to Sookie that she hates putting on black leather, but she does it during her working hours at Fangtasia 'cause it's what the fang bangers anticipate and want. Otherwise it's the pink full-body suit that's on!

Even her coffin's quilted in pink with cream- and pastel-colored lace edges!


Sophie-Anne LeClerq
Louisiana queen Sophie-Anne LeClerq features in The Southern Vampire Mysteries series as well as the HBO show True Blood as the 500 year old vampire who still carries childish mannerisms and is probably suffering from some kind of attention disorder. This is just what makes her one of my favorites amongst Charlaine Harris' supes.

True Blood vs. The Southern Vampire Mysteries
What I love about the novels is that they first of all tell so much more on Sophie-Anne LeClerq than True Blood. In the show she was offed on the first episode of the fourth season, leaving the throne empty for none other than Vampire Bill. We all know that the Queen's been struggling with the IRS, being indebted for the years pre the Great Revelation and struggling to save as much of her wealth and property as possible. Whether it's by (tv-show style) illegally selling V and then finally resorting to marry the charming, but lethal, Mississippi King Russell Edgington, or by marrying the Arkansas King Peter Threadgill (novel style), we've come to known Sophie-Anne as a very powerful and survival instinctive young woman.


"Hell hath no fury like a vampire queen broke."
- Sophie-Anne

The difference between the two displays of this female vampire is that one of them takes the time to reach inside her character, and one only has the time to scratch the surface.
 
1. The personality disorder
It becomes very evident, in both the novels and the show, that Sophie-Anne suffers from some type of personality disorder. Which I just love. She is the typical example of a self-indulgent, attention seeking woman, used to having her ways. I love the way her instability and her contrasted mentality is described; her rambling, the abrupt changing of subjects, her hyper-focus on games and her impatience with uninteresting matters, and her lability which always seems to be on the verge of a breakdown. She reminds me of any 16 year old (human) girl, trying to balance on the thin line between her childhood and her womanhood.


"She's as mad as a monkey on a trike and she has been for centuries! "
Talbot on Sophie-Anne, the "Delightful Eccentric"

A trait of hers that is actually never fully displayed in True Blood. In Definitely Dead (#6 of the Southern Vampire Mysteries) we got acquainted with Sophie-Anne's (born Judith) abusive and tragic background, followed by the short story on how she was turned. This episode (both the historic memories but also the fact that Sophie-Anne sat down and took the time to even bother telling Sookie this) gave some depth to her otherwise rather stone cold appearances. Perhaps it's due to her early turning, but her attention disorder (which is not hard to guess where it's coming from when you know her story) and ADD personality never seemed to succumb to her new nature.

2. Regal and respectful
Queen Sophie-Anne possesses a very powerful and calculating mind. And although she's not as malicious and cunning as her state reigning neighbors, she still planned on how to use Sookie's gift (whether it's her fairie blood or her telepathy) to her greatest advantage. She only indulges in matters that further suit her own needs. Everything else is irrelevant. And that's probably what people tend to forget about her; that underneath that childlike, porcelain exterior is a selfish and ruthless being that should be treated accordingly.

3. The envy of humans
Although Sophie-Anne indulges in various entertainments and games with the human companions that she keeps at her mansion, her envy of the human race is never really portrayed in True Blood. With her mansion's day room with the green house, the pool and the light setting resembling daylight, it's evident that she has a longing for the outdoors and the sunlight. And the fact is that she might miss her own human life (or rather the opportunity of having a human life) so much that she values human life more than most other vampires presented. Her decision in keeping her consort Hadley human in the show might be, by most viewers, seen as a sign of dominance but it could also be seen as a sign that Sophie-Anne values the human life so much that she refuses to turn Hadley, despite that the choice means that she will lose her much sooner.

4. The maternal counterpart
The last thing you would call Sophie-Anne is maternal. As mentioned; she only does what suits her needs. But as ruthless as she might be, a 500 year old vampire would not stand a chance going up to some of the slightly older gentlemen. As a solution to this Sophie-Ann surrounds herself with a group of consorts, including her second in command Andre Paul, as well as the bodyguards Wybert and Siegbert. As we're learned in Definitely Dead these are her Children who she's able to keep with her and communicate with on a telepathic level. Though this doesn't make her into a biological or conventional mother, it still shows a maternal counterpart to this self-indulgent child, which unfortunately never had the chance to be displayed in True Blood.


Since Sophie-Anne LeClerq already has been eliminated from True Blood, I still hope for a last encounter in one of the coming books. I've only read the first eight of the Sookie Stackhouse novels so I'm still keeping my fingers crossed that the Queen'll survive the bombing in Rhodes and do a ravishing comeback!

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