The Woman in White: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Evil Uncle]]: Fosco ''is'' married to Laura's aunt.
* [[Evil Uncle]]: Fosco ''is'' married to Laura's aunt.
* [[Genre Savvy]]: Walter.
* [[Genre Savvy]]: Walter.
** When he goes to share what he's learned with Fosco, he takes precautions so that, when he's asked "[[Have You Told Anyone Else]]?", he can assure Fosco that he ''has'', and killing him would therefore not solve anything.
** When he goes to share what he's learned with Fosco, he takes precautions so that, when he's asked "[[Have You Told Anyone Else?]]?", he can assure Fosco that he ''has'', and killing him would therefore not solve anything.
** He happily makes a deal with Fosco that will get him what he wants but allow the latter to escape from the law scot-free because Walter assumes [[Karmic Death|karma will punish him anyway]].
** He happily makes a deal with Fosco that will get him what he wants but allow the latter to escape from the law scot-free because Walter assumes [[Karmic Death|karma will punish him anyway]].
* [[Girls With Moustaches]]: [[Butter Face|Marian Halcombe]].
* [[Girls With Moustaches]]: [[Butter Face|Marian Halcombe]].
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* [[Villainous Glutton]]: Fosco.
* [[Villainous Glutton]]: Fosco.
* [[Woman in White]]: Arguably, the [[Trope Namer]].
* [[Woman in White]]: Arguably, the [[Trope Namer]].
* [[Worthy Opponent]]: Marian Halcombe to Count Fosco. Cue rambling about how intelligent/courageous/perfect she is and how [[We Can Rule Together|they could rule together]] under different circumstances (if he wasn't married, and he wasn't trying to get her sister's fortune, for starters). But one has to wonder what part of this comes from pure, candid, objective esteem, independent of the fact that the old goat is [[I Love You Because I Can't Control You|in love with her]]. At least in two occasions when [[I Have You Now My Pretty|she could have been owned by him]], he just lets her off.
* [[Worthy Opponent]]: Marian Halcombe to Count Fosco. Cue rambling about how intelligent/courageous/perfect she is and how [[We Can Rule Together|they could rule together]] under different circumstances (if he wasn't married, and he wasn't trying to get her sister's fortune, for starters). But one has to wonder what part of this comes from pure, candid, objective esteem, independent of the fact that the old goat is [[I Love You Because I Can't Control You|in love with her]]. At least in two occasions when [[I Have You Now, My Pretty|she could have been owned by him]], he just lets her off.
* [[Writers Cannot Do Math]]: Collins got annoyed by reviewers who nitpicked about mistakes in dating, which he later fixed in a future edition. He consoled himself by thinking that [[The Zeroth Law of Trope Examples|Shakespeare was guilty of the same thing]].
* [[Writers Cannot Do Math]]: Collins got annoyed by reviewers who nitpicked about mistakes in dating, which he later fixed in a future edition. He consoled himself by thinking that [[The Zeroth Law of Trope Examples|Shakespeare was guilty of the same thing]].
* [[You Got Spunk]]: Marian, in Fosco's opinion. And he ''likes'' spunk.
* [[You Got Spunk]]: Marian, in Fosco's opinion. And he ''likes'' spunk.

Revision as of 08:15, 9 January 2014

Serialised Victorian novel written by Wilkie Collins.

Walter Hartright, a young drawing master from Victorian London, gets a job teaching art to two young women, half-sisters Marian Halcombe and Laura Fairlie, at Limmeridge house in Cumberland. He soon is tangled in a web of dastardly deeds involving an Arranged Marriage and a Mysterious Waif in the form of escaped mental patient Anne Catherick.

The book is often considered the first Victorian sensation novel, and has been adapted into a play, several films and an Andrew Lloyd Webber musical.


The novel provides examples of:


The musical adaptation provides examples of: