Contents
- 1 Why is Wednesday called Wednesday in Addams family?
- 2 Is Wednesday autistic?
- 3 Why did Morticia call Wednesday?
- 4 Does Luz have ADHD?
- 5 Is Wednesday Addams a psychopath or sociopath?
- 6 What race is Morticia?
- 7 Is Addams Hispanic?
- 8 Why are The Addams Family so rich?
- 9 Is Wednesday based on Wednesday Addams?
- 10 What is Wednesday from The Addams Family supposed to be?
- 11 What is Wednesday Addams diagnosis?
- 12 Is Wednesday a real name?
Why is Wednesday called Wednesday in Addams family?
Origin – Addams Family members were unnamed in The New Yorker cartoons that first appeared in 1938. The character that would later be known as Wednesday Addams first appeared in the August 26, 1944, issue of The New Yorker in an illustration captioned, “Well, don’t come whining to me.
Go tell him you’ll poison him right back.” When the characters were adapted for the 1964 television series, Charles Addams named Wednesday based on the Monday’s Child nursery rhyme line: “Wednesday’s child is full of woe”. Actress and poet Joan Blake, an acquaintance of Charles Addams, offered the idea for the name.
Wednesday is the only daughter of Gomez and Morticia Addams and the sister of Pugsley Addams, Earlier adaptations depict her as the younger sibling, while later adaptations depict Wednesday as the elder Addams child.
What did Gomez call Wednesday?
This musical contains examples of: –
Actor Allusion : Morticia sings “You have to be in love with Death” in the German and Dutch version of “When You’re An Addams”. Elisabeth made Pia Douwes (Dutch Morticia) and Uwe Kröger (German Gomez) household names in the theatre scene, and it revolved around Death’s romantic pursuit of Sisi. Adapted Out : Cousin Itt, although he did come back in the touring version. Downplayed with Thing, who cameos a couple of times. Age Lift : Wednesday’s age is changed from a young girl to a teenager of eighteen. Affectionate Nickname : Gomez calls Morticia “Tish” and “Querida” note, and calls Wednesday “Paloma” note and “My Little Atilla”. Mortica calls him “Mon Cher” note, All-Knowing Singing Narrator : Fester. All Musicals Are Adaptations : Radio ads for the musical didn’t even have to mention the show’s name. It consisted of the famous theme song with an announcer saying “They’re coming to Broadway” and giving the info to order advance tickets. Amazingly Embarrassing Parents : “One Normal Night” shows Lucas and Wednesday both thinking this of their parents (for wildly different reasons) and trying to get them to not be embarrassing in front of the other’s family for one evening. Anything You Can Do, I Can Do Better : The whole point of Lucas and Wednesday’s “Crazier than You” duet. (Lucas actually proves he’s crazier by blindfolding her before she shoots the apple off his head; in the original Chicago production Wednesday actually says “Oh my god, you are crazier than me!”) Audience Participation : Reportedly when the play opens with the famous TV theme song, no one in the audience needs prompting to snap their fingers in time with the cast. Bad Liar : Gomez, when he is trying to hide the fact that Wednesday is engaged to Lucas from Morticia. Beware the Nice Ones : Morticia, in the original preview for the show, discovers Gomez and Alice dancing (she asked him for a lesson to spice up her marriage with Mal), and goes after her husband with a sword. Big Brother Bully : Wednesday was a gender-switched version. But in a typically Addamsish twist, Puglsey enjoyed it. The song “What if” had him confronting the horrible possibility that she might stop. Black Comedy Rape : Mal, the very uptight father of Wednesday’s boyfriend, loosens up and gets back together with his wife who he had been drifting apart from after being molested by a squid living in the Addams’ basement.
Averted in the Touring version: Mal simply watches Wednesday and Lucas reconcile their love and is encouraged by Fester to do the same with his wife.
Bouquet Toss : Not at a wedding, but in the final song, the ghost bride throws Wednesday her bouquet as she re-enters the family crypt with the other ancestors. It’s a cute moment that also symbolically resolves the question of whether or nor the latter’s engagement would continue to its logical conclusion.
The opening number, “When You’re an Addams” is sung to the audience, as are several others. While the rest of the action on stage freezes, Gomez sings to the audience, explaining that there are “Two Things” and “Three Things” he would never do. When he starts to sing that there are “Four Things”, Morticia turns out to be aware of what he is doing and tells him to stop. During “Full Disclosure”, Grandmama refers to the possibility of two 90-year-old “hotties” being in the audience. During “Death Is Just Around the Corner”, Morticia explains a bit of wordplay to the audience.
Morticia: Coroner. Get it? Death is just around the coroner. Changing Yourself For Love : Wednesday Addams changes from a sombre, unorthodox young woman who wears black to a cheerful, generic young woman who wears yellow for her love interest, a guy who is basically just the definition of generic. ◊ by Charles Addams. This however, makes it a bit misleading, as Wedensday is depicted in the poster to be a little girl, when she is actually an eighteen year old teenager in the musical proper. Creepy Family : The driving trope behind all the adaptations. Cultural Translation : The German version of “Pulled” has Wednesday saying Udo Jürgens’ greatest hits have got her pulled in a new direction, rather than Liberace’s. Deadpan Snarker : Lurch manages to be one without even speaking. Whenever someone tells him to hurry, he maintains his slow pace while swinging his arms as though he were running. Did You Just Romance Cthulhu? : Uncle Fester is in love with the moon of all things. (It’s the Addams Family, it doesn’t have to make sense. Although, given that it is the Addams Family, the moon could be alive for all we know!) Don’t Explain the Joke : Gomez, when discussing Alfonso the Enormous with Mr. Beineke. Gomez: Do I have to draw you a diagram? Everyone Has Standards : After Alice’s Acrimonium-induced confession about how miserable her life and marriage to Mal have become, even Gomez (and by extension the rest of the Addams Family) is left stunned by how grim and dark her story is. Expository Hairstyle Change : Used in the musical to signify that Wednesday’s grown up. Final Love Duet : “Let’s Live Before We Die” and the Tango de Amor led by Gomez and Morticia. Funny Foreigner : Gomez is clearly this while portrayed by Lane, who gives the character a “deliciously phony Spanish accent” (as described by a reviewer from the Associated Press). Genre Deconstruction : One of the more refreshing aspects of the play is seeing the Addams Family argue and be angry with each other. In past adaptations, conflicts were usually external and the family is always fully loving and accepting of one another. Here, Wednesday is unsure how to tell Morticia about her engagement and swears Gomez to secrecy, leaving Gomez torn between his wife and daughter, and Morticia spends much of the musical pissed at both of them for keeping secrets from her. Even the most loving, close-knit families aren’t always going to be on the same page.
Ghostly Goals : The reason the Ancestors don’t go back to the afterlife after being summoned at the beginning is because they have to help Wednesday resolve her crisis. Biggest example: they create the storm that strands the Beinekes at the house. Grand Staircase Entrance : In the first act, Wednesday appears at the top of the stairs just after her “normal” fiance and his parents have arrived. Not exactly grand, but the “everyone stares” bit is played straight- because she’s wearing a yellow dress (identical to her normal outfit in all but color). The general reaction is one of horror rather than admiration, from everyone except her future in-laws; in a cut line from the Chicago preview, even her fiance Lucas tells her to “take that dress and burn it.” Gomez says she “look like a crime scene.” Happily Married : Unusually for Addams Family material, this play Double-subverts it with its B-plot: Gomez and Morticia start off this way (par for the course), but Wednesday asks Gomez to keep her engagement to Lucas a secret from Morticia, leading to Poor Communication Kills moments throughout the play, and eventually a fallout between the two. Then, shortly before the final number, Gomez 1: confronts Morticia about Parental Hypocrisy from when they first got married, and 2: invites her on a trip to Paris (a Brick Joke from an earlier moment), and the two make up.
The implication at the end of the play is that both Mal and Alice and Wednesday and Lucas will end up the same.
“I Am Becoming” Song : Wednesday sings about how love is changing her in “Pulled” Improbable Aiming Skills : Wednesday manages to shoot an apple off Lucas’ head with a crossbow. While blindfolded. Some productions justify this by having the ancestors help her.
- Improv : In “One Normal Night” the last line to Fester’s first verse can vary wildly from production to production.
- On the original Broadway cast album, it ends ” Were you folks right for the mezzanine? “.
- The script lists that version, as well as the alternate line “Was rehab right for Charlie Sheen?” Local productions usually replace this line with a pop-culture reference to whatever’s current at the moment, provided it keeps the “een” rhyme scheme going – some adaptations break the “een” rhyme scheme to take pot-shots at an acceptable target – one adaption on Youtube has “was Donald Trump right for the Presidency?” Invisible to Normals : The chorus of ancestral Addams ghosts can only be seen by the family.
This leads to some amusing situations; for example, near the end Wednesday catches a bouquet thrown to her by the deceased bride ancestor, much to Lucas’ confusion. note Laughing at Your Own Jokes : Gomez, when he first meets the Beinekes. Gomez: I go too far.
In the first act, Morticia expects Wednesday to follow in her footsteps by having “lots of boys” before settling down and getting married. In the second act, Gomez reminds Mortica that she hid her engagement from her mother the same way that Wednesday hid her engagement from Morticia.
List Song : “Pulled” becomes this towards the end. “Puppy dogs with droopy faces, Unicorns with dancing mice, Sunrise in wide open spaces, Disney World, I’ll go there twice!.” Mortality Grey Area : Alluded to as Gomez says that he will invite every family member to his reunion: living, dead (via necromancy) and “undecided”.
- The Musical : Starring Max Bialystock and Lilith Sternin as Gomez and Morticia.
- Musical Exposition : “When You’re an Addams” introduces the family and its members to the audience.
- Musicalis Interruptus : Gomez has previously sung that there are “Two Things” and “Three Things” he would never do (lie to his wife, lie to his daughter, or tell the truth to either one.) Right when he’s about to add “Four Things”, Morticia stops him.
Mythology Gag : The Chicago tryouts contained a scene where the Addams recreate the TV show’s famous intro, complete with the original theme song (snapping included). While the scene was cut out of subsequent productions, the theme song was kept for the overture.
- Not So Similar : In “One Normal Night”, while Wednesday and Lucas both want their respective parents to leave a good impression on each other, the details of their requests couldn’t be more different.
- Lucas: Just be respectable, don’t make an odd remark Wednesday: Keep undetectable our passion for the dark O.O.C.
Is Serious Business :
Alice Beineke’s solo, “Waiting”. Morticia’s response to overhearing Wednesday’s words in “Pulled”. “Puppy dogs? Disney World? She’s in no state to entertain guests.”
One Normal Night : One of the best-known songs from this play is the Trope Namer, In it, Wednesday and Lucas beg to their respective parents for. well, guess. Opening Chorus : “When You’re an Addams”, which features every non-Beineke cast member. Open Secret : The musical is officially based on the old New Yorker comic strip, but it blatantly draws inspiration from later adaptations, such as making Fester and Gomez brothers and having Wednesday be a young woman rather than a little girl.
Parental Love Song : “Happy Sad” by Gomez to Wednesday. Potty Failure : Grandma wets herself during the dinner, but rather than being embarrassed about it, she just announces it to the whole table. Punny Name : The Beineke parents, Mal and Alice, together are Malice. Retcon : In The Musical, Wednesday is a young woman while Pugsley is barely in his teens.
Additionally, Wednesday gets her looks from her dad. In the TV show Wednesday was the younger child and looked like Morticia. Related in the Adaptation :
The different incarnations of the franchise have varied on whether Grandmama is Gomez’s mother or Morticia’s. The musical lampshades the issue by having both of them unsure whose mother she is, with the implication that she isn’t related to either of them and is just mooching off them. Morticia: When your mother moved in, it was supposed to be for two weeks. The weeks turn into months. It’s been 12 years now and she’s still up there! Unwanted, mocked, tolerated! Smoking weed in the attic. Well, I’m not going to end up like your mother! Gomez: My mother? I thought she was your mother! Beat No, seriously. Fester was originally Morticia’s uncle in the comic strip and the original TV series. The musical takes a cue from the 90’s movies by making him Gomez’s brother (despite not sharing Gomez’s Spanish mannerisms).
Rite of Passage : “Clandango,” the original opening from the Chicago preview version, involves a family ritual centered around Wednesday’s 18th birthday. Set Switch Song : A few of Fester’s songs are sung in front of the curtain, allowing the set to be changed for the next scene.
She Is All Grown Up : While now 18-year-old Wednesday still wears a variation of her usual dress, the story centers around the family reacting to her becoming independent when they meet her fiancé and his family. The Singing Mute : Lurch sticks with his canon dialect of only grunting until the final number, when he sings his first ever words.
Speaking Like Totally Teen : Lucas tries to do it to look cool to Pugsley. It obviously fails. Lucas: Yo, it’s tha Pugsta! Whaddup, lil’ man? Pugsley: Are you trying to be cool? Stepford Smiler : Alice Beineke keeps all her desires and frustrations bottled up and maintains a happy suburban housewife facade.
- She finally snaps with her showstopper number “Waiting” when she drinks Grandmama’s potion.
- Stereo Fibbing : Gomez, Wednesday, and Lucas all give different answers when Morticia asks what they’re talking about, because they don’t want to tell her that Wednesday and Lucas are engaged.
- Suddenly Speaking : After uttering only incomprehensible moans and grunts for the entire show, Lurch sings perfectly clearly in the finale, “Move Toward the Darkness”.
Summon Backup Dancers : The Ancestors serve as this. Alice: What’s that one? Morticia: The dance routine. Tempting Fate : “It’s just a simple dinner. What could go wrong?” Truth-Telling Session : The Act I finale, “Full Disclosure,” is one of these gone horribly wrong.
- Unspoken Plan Guarantee : In the tour version, Wednesday explicitly states that her plan to get the two families’ blessing is that there is no plan.
- Well, This Is Not That Trope : When Mal asks about The Game.
- Gomez: Did you ever play Charades? Mal: Yeah.
- Gomez: Well, it’s nothing like that.
- Where Did We Go Wrong? : Gomez and Morticia sing a song with this very title over Wednesday suddenly becoming normal.
White Sheep : Wednesday believes she’s losing some of her dark impulses after falling in love with a normal boy, much to her family’s dismay. William Telling : Wednesday does this to Lucas, as a test of his love for her. He ups the ante by removing his improvised tie-blindfold and blindfolding her instead.
Fortunately, she doesn’t.
Is Wednesday autistic?
Netflix’s Wednesday Addams Probably Meets the Diagnostic Criteria for Autism. Here’s Why That’s So Important. Netflix’s quirky murder mystery Wednesday has been a hit with viewers. Not only are its offbeat humor and deliciously macabre details resonating with its ever-growing audience, but so is the show’s central theme: embracing differences. The titular character, Wednesday, grows throughout the season; most notably, she makes friends that love her for her, including her flat affect and self-expressed struggles with emotions.
- Though Wednesday is not explicitly identified as autistic in the show, many have the character’s behavior as that she is autistic.
- Let’s take a moment to put ourselves in the shoes of another character on the show, therapist Dr.
- Inbott, and go over how the for autism spectrum disorder (ASD) are outlined in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders,
One diagnostic category for ASD involves “restricted, repetitive behaviors.” Wednesday adheres to a strict schedule when writing her novel, even initially declining to participate in the Poe Cup over concerns that it would cut into her allotted writing time.
- In addition to writing, many of Wednesday’s hobbies and preoccupations, such as taxidermy or torture devices, could be called hyperfixations due to their specificity and how intensely she is fixated on them.
- The same could be said for how doggedly she pursues the murder investigation at the show’s heart, down to even making a large poster board of well-labeled evidence.
Wednesday also appears to have hyperreactivity to sensory input, another diagnostic category. She says she is “allergic” to color and reacts to bright colors with disgust or, sometimes, headaches (a common symptom of sensory overload). This adverse response to specific sensory stimuli is a hallmark of autism and would explain why Wednesday’s aversion to color goes beyond simple dislike and causes a physical reaction.
Wednesday is uncomfortable with change and transitions. She resists acclimating to Nevermore, even when invited to participate in several activities. Changes that a neurotypical person might take in stride — like meeting a new roommate or a coffee shop only having drip available — seem to bother Wednesday quite a bit (even though the bother never shows on her face).
Another diagnostic category is “persistent difficulties in the social use of verbal and nonverbal communication.” Wednesday has an abnormal social approach, as evidenced by her markedly blunted affect and the stilted way she interacts with her peers on the show.
She also displays difficulty in understanding and maintaining her relationships. Over episodes 6 and 7, Wednesday even puts her friends Enid and Tyler in danger by taking them to explore the Gates mansion. Enid is understandably upset that her friend would risk her safety, but Wednesday doesn’t seem to understand the impact of her actions and is confused as to why Enid packs her things to leave their shared room.
When Enid points out that they all could have died, saying that she feels like Wednesday doesn’t value her as a friend, Wednesday’s response is, “But we didn’t.” Many would consider this an atypical response, as it lacks the appropriate reassurance and does not address the root of the issue — that Enid feels like Wednesday is using her without regard for her well-being.
Wednesday also does not display typical nonverbal communication. Her body language is stiff, and she communicates very little information through microexpressions (although the perceptive viewer will notice that Jenna Ortega, the actor playing Wednesday, is a master at showing complex emotion in the barest twitches of her face).
Of course, when diagnosing a real person with a neurodevelopmental disorder, practitioners require more information than just observation. This might include information about Wednesday’s childhood and development, as well as whether her symptoms are causing her distress and in what way.
Wednesday Addams is a fictional character, which raises the question: Why is it significant that a character displays these behaviors? There has been little positive representation of neurodivergent people in the media and even less of autistic women (or autistics of other non-male gender identities).
The little neurodivergent representation currently available in the media is often far from flattering. Characters such as Sheldon Cooper are overbearing and unpleasant to be around. Savant characters such as Raymond in Rain Man are portrayed as tragic or pitiable figures, saved from being totally useless only by one defining skill.
- This representation (or lack thereof) parallels the disturbing on and acceptance of autistic people assigned female at birth in real life.
- While Wednesday is not explicitly autistic, she is certainly neurodivergent-coded and many autistics, including me, relate to her.
- She is sharp and talented.
- Her many skills, including writing, playing the cello, fencing, postmortem examination, and archery, also give her character depth and texture — something that is frequently missing from neurodiverse characters.
As the main character, she is set up for the audience to like and relate to, both things not often afforded to autistic people in real life. Beyond providing much-needed representation, though, Wednesday also represents the gold standard for how autistic people deserve to be treated.
At the end of the season, Wednesday has not significantly altered her affect, hobbies, or mannerisms to fit in better with her peers. The lessons she learns about being a better friend and about social connectedness do not lead her to change herself nor to doubt her own uniqueness. It is also important to note that no one treats Wednesday as incapable or impotent because of her social difference.
Her friends are impressed by her and continue to accept her for who she is, often going to great lengths to accommodate her and relate to her in a way that makes her comfortable. In showing all this, Wednesday models healthy neurodivergent-neurotypical relationships, perhaps influencing how neurotypical viewers will interact with the neurodivergent people in their lives — mainly with kindness, acceptance, and unconditional faith in their proficiencies.
Why did Morticia call Wednesday?
9 December 2022, 17:31 The lowdown on Wednesday’s name. Picture: Netflix Why does Wednesday have such a unique name? Here’s the lowdown behind the name of the iconic character. It’s safe to say that we all binged through Wednesday in record time, the Netflix spin-off of the iconic Addams Family franchise has certainly become a pop culture moment! Naturally, viewers have been asking more and more questions about the titular character portrayed by Jenna Ortega, with many wondering why the dreary Addams member has such a unique name. Wednesday Addams dances in show promo Wednesday is known as a ‘woeful’ character. Picture: Netflix Wednesday is named after the nursery rhyme commonly referred to as ‘Monday’s Child’ – and it’s from the 1800s! Interestingly, this is actually a reference to how the original Addams Family creator titled the character.
In the first episode, Morticia enrolled Wednesday in Nevermore Academy and spoke about the inspiration behind her daughter’s name to Principal Larissa Weems. The Netlfix series’ central character takes her name from the third line of the song, it goes: ” Wednesday’s child is full of woe.” Viewers know that she is pretty woeful, so it makes sense! The original creator and illustrator of the Addams Family cartoons, Charles Addams, decided to name Wednesday after the poem after the character was originally nameless.
So the explanation rings true both in fiction and reality! You can read the full nursery rhyme below! Morticia explains her daughter’s name in the show. Picture: Netflix Wednesday is named after an old nursery rhyme. Picture: Netflix Monday’s child is fair of face, Tuesday’s child is full of grace Wednesday’s child is full of woe Thursday’s child has far to go Friday’s child is loving and giving Saturday’s child works hard for a living And the child born on the Sabbath day Is bonny and blithe, good and gay > Here Are All The Ways You Can Listen To Capital
What language does Morticia speak?
The Addams Family are famous for being creepy and kooky, but they’re also great role models for building self-confidence. Ok, some of you might not know who the Addams Family are, but you should! There is the original 1960s TV series as well as a couple of movies that can probably be found on one of the streaming services.
Play with trains. Gomez understood that play time is important for both children and adults. It’s cool to hold onto your train set or work on your yo-yo tricks even when you’re grown up. Pursue your own interests. Both Gomez and Morticia used their free time to become more accomplished. You may want to raise roses instead of carnivorous plants. Study languages. Morticia was best known for speaking French, but the happy couple could express themselves in many languages. Sometimes they’d converse in Yiddish, Spanish, or Italian. Expand your vocabulary so you’ll have the right word for any occasion. Keep romance alive. The chemistry between Gomez and Morticia was a big part of the appeal. A loving family provides a strong foundation for happiness and success.
Confidence Lessons from the Other Characters
Bond with your siblings. Wednesday and Pugsley could always count on each other. They kept each other safe even when they were playing with dynamite and spiders. Feel comfortable with your size. People sometimes worry about being smaller or bigger than average. Lurch the butler was one of the family despite being almost seven feet tall. He also excelled at his job by instantly producing whatever the family needed. Enjoy your life. Cousin Itt was covered with hair and had a squeaky voice, but that didn’t stop him from being a charmer. Real beauty comes from within. Recognize that you are complete. For a creature who was a disembodied hand, Thing led a remarkably full life. He could walk on his fingers or communicate in Morse code. Remember that when you feel limited. Stay young at heart. Grandmama and Uncle Fester were two feisty seniors. You may want to take a pass on wresting alligators, but you can still enjoy outdoor sports and time with your friends. Light up a room. Speaking of Uncle Fester, who could forget his light bulb trick? Generate your own energy by tackling challenging projects and teaming up with others.
Confidence Lessons from the Whole Family
Follow your own fashion sense. Develop your personal style. Wear clothes and accessories that you like. Make your house a home. Create an environment that is comfortable and enjoyable for you and your family. Consult others for ideas but adapt them to your own lifestyle and preferences. Welcome guests. People were always dropping in on the Addams Family and often trying to rush away just as quickly. At the same time, the family always managed to remain hospitable. Treat your guests warmly even if they’re beatniks or truant officers. If you feel sure of yourself, you can be tolerant of any opposition and open to different points of view. Know your own worth. Today, the Addams Family is more beloved than ever as an example of a healthy and happy family. Assess whether the criticism you receive is valid. If you sincerely believe you’re on the right course, you may still be headed for success.
Let Addams Family values into your heart. Have the confidence to be true to yourself even if you have the only house on the block with a bed of nails and a two-headed sea turtle. You’ll get more out of life and your increased confidence will lead the way to success. Be you! Be Fearless in your confidence!
Is Gomez Addams Italian or Spanish?
Personality – Husband to Morticia (if indeed they are married at all), a crafty schemer, but also a jolly man in his own way, though sometimes misguided, sentimental and often puckish — optimistic, he is in full enthusiasm for his dreadful plots,
Is sometimes seen in a rather formal dressing gown, the only one who smokes. — Charles Addams Like the other members of the family, Gomez’s personality became largely codified by the television series. He is depicted as being of Castilian extraction and Spanish ancestry, which was first brought up in “Art and the Addams Family” on December 18, 1964; in the episode, Gomez says his “ancestral land” is Spain and Morticia refers to him as a “mad Castilian.” John Astin had long sessions with Addams and series producer David Levy, who gave him free rein in developing the character.
Enlarging on Addams’ description of Gomez as a Latin lover type, Astin suggested the eye-rolling, pencil moustache, and ardent devotion to Morticia. In the Addams cartoons and the television shows, Gomez wore a necktie to his chalk-stripe suit, though in the films, Gomez wears a bow tie and also wears a wide variety of extravagant clothing.
- He spends $1000 per month on cigars, and he is an accomplished juggler and knife-thrower,
- He loves crashing toy trains and diving for crabs on Halloween.
- When he wishes to know the time he will pull a pocket watch from the breast pocket of his coat (the chain is attached to the lapel) while simultaneously checking a wrist watch.
Gomez is an athletic, acrobatic, and eccentric multi-billionaire. Though an extremely successful businessman, having acquired much of his wealth through inheritance and investments, he has little regard for money and will casually spend thousands of dollars on any whimsical endeavor.
Gomez’s investments are guided more by whimsy than strategy, yet luck rarely fails him. Gomez owns businesses around the world, including a swamp, bought for “scenic value”, crocodile farm, a buzzard farm, a salt mine, a tombstone factory, a uranium mine, and many others. In Forbes 2007 “Fictional 15” list of the richest fictional characters, he was ranked #12 with a net worth of $2.5 billion.
As a young man, Gomez was, per flashback in “Morticia’s Romance”, a perennially sickly youth, gaining perfect health only after meeting Morticia. He nevertheless studied law (voted “Most Likely Never to Pass the Bar”) and is quite proud his law class voted him “Least Likely to Succeed”; and although he rarely practices, he takes an absurd delight in losing cases, boasting of having put many criminals behind bars while acting as their defense attorney, claiming that he “never sent an innocent man to jail”; this is somewhat contradicted in the episode “The Addams Family Goes to Court”, where it is noted that while Gomez has never won a case, he has never lost one either.
- This backstory, while not mentioned directly, is recalled in The Addams Family, when Gomez announces he will serve as his own attorney, only to lose the case.
- In The New Addams Family, Gomez had also studied medicine.
- Gomez has offered contradictory views on work; in one episode, he claims that, although his family was wealthy even in his childhood, he nonetheless performed odd jobs and “scrimped and saved kopeks”, which he considered character building.
When his son Pugsley decided to find a job, however, Gomez was horrified, claiming that “No Addams has worked in 300 years!” In the 1991 animated series, Gomez deliberately tried to fail at something, anything, only to realize in the end of the episode that he is only a failure in failure.
Why does Wednesday Addams not blink?
7 December 2022, 11:42 The real reason Wednesday Addams doesn’t blink. Picture: Netflix Wednesday actress Jenna Ortega revealed why her character doesn’t blink in the new Netflix series. Wednesday on Netflix has taken over all of our lives – and it seems it was the same for actress Jenna Ortega after revealing she was laser-focused on not blinking during scenes.
Since obviously there’s so much to focus on in the Tim Burton-produced new take on The Addams Family, we wouldn’t be surprised if you didn’t notice Wednesday’s 24/7 strictly open eyes, but now we can’t un-see it! An intense stare is part of the Wednesday Addams makeup so it makes sense that blinking would totally ruin the intensity.
What Song Is Wednesday Addams Dancing To? Wednesday Cast’s Real Ages Vs Their Nevermore Character Ages Jenna Ortega and Wednesday cast react to her dance scene Wednesday Addams’ character in the new Netflix series doesn’t blink. Picture: Netflix The idea came about after they tried one take where Jenna didn’t blink, and it left Tim Burton inspired. Netflix’s official account on Twitter revealed: “After trying one take where she didn’t blink, Tim Burton was so enamoured with the result he told Jenna Ortega not to blink anymore when playing Wednesday.
- So she didn’t.” Jenna opened up about the unique character trait, telling the TODAY show: ” doesn’t blink.
- Likes it when I tilt my chin down and look through my eyebrows, kind of like a Kubrick stare, and then I relax all the muscles in my face.” After trying one take where she didn’t blink, Tim Burton was so enamored with the result he told Jenna Ortega not to blink anymore when playing Wednesday.
So she didn’t. pic.twitter.com/h5Ver9oozC — Netflix (@netflix) November 28, 2022 Jenna Ortega said she was focused on not blinking during takes. Picture: Netflix Wednesday’s intense star is a key part of her character. Picture: Netflix She admitted that it wasn’t as easy as it looked, revealing she “got kinda annoying about it on set”. Jenna even said that she “would have to restart a take if I started, because sometimes you start crying”. ” Romanian winter, there was all this wind in my face. I learned to blink on other people’s lines,” added the 20-year-old actress. We’ve never seen a more dedicated Wednesday! > Here Are All The Ways You Can Listen To Capital
Does Luz have ADHD?
The Owl House And The Importance Of Embracing Neurodivergent Characters has become a bastion of representation for so many since it burst onto the scene in 2020. It depicts myriad queer characters in and, providing an experience for young viewers to confide in and potentially find themselves throughout Luz Noceda’s adventures in The Boiling Isles.
- While its queer themes are undeniably groundbreaking, there’s also brilliance to be found in how the show embraces people who are simply built a little different.
- Appearing as a guest on and ‘ weekly recap show, creator Dana Terrace touched on how The Owl House has always aimed to focus on characters who look, feel, and act a little different to those firmly in the norm, giving them a space to shine and be who they are without societal systems seeking to constantly hold them down.
From the opening episode it’s been clear that protagonist Luz Noceda exists in a world that doesn’t necessarily agree with who she is. The first scene has her being scolded for causing trouble at school and failing to focus on her work. She much prefers to get lost in her own world, or focus on interests that aren’t forced upon her in ways that perhaps her mind just isn’t able to accommodate. This leads to her literally being sent to a camp that seeks to place young people back inside a figurative box, having them abide by societal conventions and stop causing trouble for those around them. While it is never explicitly stated that Luz has been diagnosed with any form of mental illness, the neurodivergent coding is abundantly clear.
- Her obsession with magic, witches, and adorable fiction surrounding a magical realm is a hyperfixation for Luz, and one that somehow becomes a reality as she travels to The Boiling Isles and has insecurities that once held her back embraced as she grows into a better person.
- But even in The Boiling Isles she is an outcast, unable to perform magic by normal means and having to make use of glyphs that have long been considered archaic.
Even with these newfound obstacles she shines, finding confidence in new friends and family that encourage her to push forward and be herself in spite of whatever ails her. The Owl House could have taken the easy route and abandoned its neurodivergent coding as the fantasy world was introduced, transforming Luz from a character who clearly exhibits symptoms of ADHD and morphing her into an untouchable heroine. Credit: Disney We see her falter when things don’t immediately go her way, or unexpected responsibilities surface such as the consequences of abandoning her mother back on Earth. Luz is never treated as a bad person, and her neurodivergent attributes aren’t once seen as a character flaw or something to be ashamed of.
If anything it makes her a more lovable heroine, able to dish out compliments and find empathy in the majority of situations even if her exuberance often proves overwhelming and gets those around her in trouble. She always, always wants to do the right thing, because for the first time in her life she feels confident enough to make a difference.
Young viewers with similar feelings can see themselves in Luz, even if they don’t have the official labels to nail down exactly what it is to be neurodivergent and be recognised in a way that isn’t drenched in harmful stereotypes or a lack of compassion.
Luz struggles at Hexside when she’s enrolled as a student and expected to perform at a similar level to her peers. Not content with focusing on a single form of magic and restricting herself to a style of learning that will only hold her back. Thus, she’s thrown in with a bunch of other fellow undesirables and expected to sit in isolation while the normal witchlings better themselves.
To me this feels like a clear thematic exploration of how those in the real world who dare present differently or suffer from conditions outside their control are so often othered, or seen as lesser by a society that still has a long way to go when it comes to accepting and dealing with mental illnesses in productive and beneficial ways. The Owl House is filled with characters who can represent certain conditions, while its cast also accounts for different identities, orientations, body types, ethnicities and so much more. Its diversity means something, and never once holds itself back from shouting from the rooftops about how much representation like this means to those on the other side.
Those with ADHD can often be seen as not caring about something, or almost wistful in the face of education or responsibility because their mind isn’t able to focus or comprehend the nature of certain things. People like this aren’t lesser, they aren’t troublemakers, they simply operate in a way that deviates from the status quo and is thus viewed as problematic.
Luz Noceda isn’t careless, if anything she believes in things too much and wants to do her very best, but might go about in a way that is very much outside the box. The Owl House never definitively states the neurodivergence of its characters, but it doesn’t need to. The subtext being applied by viewers and reinforced by its creators proves that this show wants to stand for something, and has helped make the world a better place for those who don’t feel heard or listened to in their own lives.
Is Wednesday Addams a psychopath or sociopath?
Additionally, Wednesday displays some characteristics of psychopathy, such as a lack of remorse and a tendency towards impulsive behavior. In the opening scene, we get our first glimpse of her psychopathic behavior when Wednesday discovers her brother is being bullied.
Does Wednesday Addams have PTSD?
2. Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder – While Wednesday’s introverted nature can be one reason for her social resentment, her past experiences point toward unresolved post-traumatic stress disorder. While Wednesday comes from a loving family, in several episodes, it is shown that she had been bullied from an early age by her classmates.
Why was Wednesday cancelled?
Wednesday is not canceled – Don’t stress, Wednesday fans! There is currently no evidence that the series will be pulled from Netflix. In fact, Amazon stated that they don’t intend to make MGM content exclusive to their streaming platform, which means it’s likely that we can still look forward to watching season 2 on Netflix—along with these other,
Why is Pugsley Addams named Pugsley?
When the characters were given names for the television series, he was originally going to be called ‘Pubert’ (a derivation of the word puberty, possibly a reflection of his age, which has consistently remained either 12, 13, or 14, making him a young teenager) but it was rejected as it sounded too sexual, and the name
What species is Wednesday Addams?
Warning! This article contains Spoilers for Wednesday season 1!Wednesday’s Nevermore Academy is home to many powerful supernatural species, but one group of outcasts is stronger than the rest. Throughout Wednesday season 1, the title character’s time at Nevermore Academy sees her introduced to new species, some of which are dangerous and mysterious.
The various outcast species at Nevermore Academy include psychics (like Wednesday and Xavier), werewolves (like Enid ), sirens (like Bianca), gorgons (like Ajax ), shapeshifters (like Larissa Weems), vampires (like Yoko), a curious faceless species, and Hydes (like Tyler), although the latter group has been banned from the school for 30 years.
While Wednesday’s focus on psychics suggests they’re an incredibly powerful group, they’re not the strongest outcast species at Nevermore Academy. The same goes for the dangerous, violent, and unpredictable Hydes, as their physical strength appears to be their only key power.
12/3/2022by Jordan Williams ScreenRant.com
What race is Morticia?
Wednesday Addams does not want to play with you. In fact, she just might want to kill you. At least, that’s what her strange, unwelcoming demeanor would lead you to believe. The youngest child of the Addams’s family (depending on which version you watch, of course), Wednesday is a darkly precocious girl.
- Instantly recognizable in her black dress with a white swallowtail collar and her pair of tightly braided black pigtails, she is a picturesque symbol of nonconformity.
- Wednesday made her first official appearance in a cartoon in the August 26, 1944, issue of The New Yorker, where she appeared as the unnamed daughter of a macabre but family-oriented mother who never seems too concerned that her children are more interested in guillotines than going to the park to play.
Eventually, she was given the name “Wednesday” by her creator Charles “Chas” Addams, who, according to H. Kevin Miserocchi’s book, The Addams Family: An Evilution, got the name from a popular nursery rhyme meant to predict a child’s sensibility based on what day of the week they were born on.
A Wednesday baby was to be a child “full of woe,” and what better a name for the little girl in his cartoons who, as stated in Miserocchi’s book, Addams himself described as “a solemn child,” and who also had a sixth toe on one of her feet? Today, thanks to Christina Ricci’s darkly comic portrayal of Wednesday in the two ’90s films The Addams Family and Addams Family Values, Wednesday is now synonymous with darkness, and her character appeals to those who share her bleak outlook on life and her can’t-be-bothered attitude.
But regardless of what version of Wednesday you look at, her character has always had a strong handhold on idiosyncrasy. Being weird is the thing that separates her from her peers, and because of that, she has remained within the cultural dialogue in part because the outcast as a concept has persisted throughout decades.
- The weird girl in film and literature is often associated with a specific type of social outcast.
- Usually these women are depicted as callously hostile and, according to society’s standards, largely undateable.
- They are loners with strange habits and even stranger ways of dressing, and they exist in worlds where makeup and fashion trends never cross their minds.
Characters like Daria Morgenstern and her best friend Jane Lane or the angst-driven mascot-turned-comic-character Emily the Strange easily fit into the outcast category, and Wednesday feels right at home among their straight-faced dispositions and love of Sylvia Plath and platform Dr.
- Martens. However, Wednesday’s strangeness always goes one step further.
- While Daria might joke about murdering her enemies, Wednesday will actually try to do it.
- In that way, she is perhaps more closely aligned with modern female outcasts like Stranger Things ‘s El; however, even El experiences moments of fear and self-doubt, whereas Wednesday rarely ever does.
Her unamused facade is not just for show. The weird girl in film and literature is often associated with a specific type of social outcast. In the new Netflix show Wednesday, the character of Wednesday Addams has been reinvented for a modern audience, but her strangeness remains faithfully intact.
Expertly portrayed by Jenna Ortega, this Wednesday finds herself sent to a boarding school for literal outcasts. The students of Nevermore Academy are mythically diverse, encompassing everything from werewolves to sirens to vampires, and though they intermingle with regular society, their unique powers and abilities mark them as different among what they refer to as the “normies.” At first glance, it seems as if Wednesday is going to be right at home among what some might deem the monsters of society; however, the brilliance of Wednesday is that even among the outcasts, Wednesday is still strange, a point that’s made dramatically clear through her outfits on the show.
Out of all the students at Nevermore, Wednesday is the only one who wears a variant of the school uniform. While everyone else sports royal blue and black stripes, it’s all black for Wednesday. She is the ultimate outcast, then, forever resisting categorization no matter what social circle she finds herself in.
One of the most striking things about Wednesday is that Ortega—who is of Mexican and Puerto Rican descent—is the first iteration of the character to truly touch on Wednesday’s Latina roots. There has been speculation that the Addams family has Latinx origins originating with Gomez, but Wednesday is the first depiction that truly leans into this idea.
Because her mother, Morticia, is typically portrayed as white—Catherine Zeta-Jones, who plays Morticia in the show, is of Welsh and Irish Catholic descent—Wednesday can be seen as a mixed-race individual, Her knack for always being the outcast even among outcasts suddenly makes sense.
- Though I have a Japanese American mother and a German father, my face looks wholly Asian even though 50 percent of it is dominated by whiteness.
- This means that I rarely have the benefit of blending in among other Asian faces, but when I am in a crowd of white people, there is also no way for me to hide the fact that I am mixed-race.
Like Wednesday, my jet-black hair and olive skin tone give me away the minute I walk into certain rooms, but also like Wednesday, I have learned to embrace this part of myself, choosing to lean into my inherent ambiguity rather than shy away from it.
However, growing up, this wasn’t always the case. As a middle schooler interacting with my peers at school, my whiteness went largely unnoticed, and my role among my friends always tilted more toward the outcast sidekick than the main character. At the time, I needed a way to parse through the difficult and often-racist encounters with my peers—I was sometimes asked to impersonate the Welch’s Grape Juice girl simply because we were both Asian.
I needed to find something or someone that both vindicated me and helped me find a release for the low-level anger I quietly felt every time a boy I liked ended up dating one of my white friends instead. However, my lexicon of female role models was sorely lacking back then, with Wednesday Addams and her canonical wit going largely undiscovered by me.
- To be clear, it is not that I was never chosen as the desirable girl that irritated me but rather that there was even a type of societally appropriate desirable girl in the first place.
- If I had known there was a weird-girl alternative to the makeup and the Abercrombie & Fitch jeans and that the idea of teenage girls that I was being sold through magazines and cleverly targeted advertisements was nothing more than a bankrupt, white-centric idea of womanhood designed solely for the pleasures of men, well, maybe I would have gotten angry a lot sooner.
* In the recent show, Wednesday has been given two distinct love interests. While the Addams family is not averse to romance—Morticia and Gomez can famously hardly keep their hands off of each other, and Wednesday has a crush on the asthmatic camper, Joel Glicker, in Addams Family Values— it is strange to see her caught in the middle of a love triangle here.
However, by the end of the season, Wednesday remains single, and though she does briefly date one of the boys interested in her, a boyfriend is never really the main thing on her mind. A lot can be said about this choice to make teenage romance a part of the new show, but perhaps the most important thing to glean from it all is that even if Wednesday inverts the trope of the desirable popular girl to become the desirable weird girl, she ultimately doesn’t need one of them to feel complete.
When it comes to romance, her instinct to stay true to herself vastly outweighs everything else. Desirability doesn’t get in the way of her feminism because for Wednesday, it’s not about being desired. * Instead of focusing on relationships and desirability, throughout her evolution we’ve seen that Wednesday has often been an advocate for those she views as being societally oppressed.
In the very first episode of the ’60s TV show, a distraught Wednesday comes home from school crying because her teacher read a story to them in which a dragon was slayed by a knight. She sobs on her bed over the thought of someone killing the misunderstood creature while Morticia and Gomez console her.
The ’90s films have perhaps the most memorable display of social resistance in Wednesday’s now-iconic takedown of Thanksgiving during her summer camp’s end-of-season play meant to celebrate the holiday. Forced to dress in a culturally insensitive Native American costume, she goes off script, telling the pilgrims.
We cannot break bread with you. You have taken the land which is rightfully ours.” Desirability doesn’t get in the way of her feminism because for Wednesday, it’s not about being desired. In Wednesday, this socially conscious streak continues as we see Wednesday first get expelled from her school for standing up to her brother’s bullies by performing a stint that ultimately causes one of the popular water polo players to lose a testicle to ravenous piranhas.
She then embarks on an episodes-long crusade against the headmaster of Nevermore (who she views as untrustworthy) and the local sheriff (who wrongfully accuses Wednesday’s father of killing a man years ago) as she attempts to solve a series of mysterious and violent murders that have been occurring in town.
The students she befriends are typically the outcasts among the outcasts—her roommate Enid is a werewolf who has yet to actually make the first transition—and she makes a conscious decision to reject joining secret societies. In fact, much of her quest to uncover the rogue murderer revolves around Wednesday receiving messages from her ancestor, Goody Addams, a Latina psychic from the Puritan era who witnessed her mother and the other people in her village get burned alive by an evil white male forefather, intent on ridding the village of everyone he deemed to be an outcast.
* What’s enticing about Wednesday is that just like me, she straddles the line between whiteness and another ethnicity, but her mixed-race roots are not the defining trait of her character. Instead, it is her no-bullshit approach to the world that dominates her personality as it creates space for even the most outsider-y of outsiders to find solace.
She becomes a multiracial feminist icon without allowing the multiracial and feminist aspects to solely define her. In short, she is a whole person instead of just a social symbol. This is freeing to me as someone who has grown up deeply aware of my dual ethnicities and female body. Wednesday offers up an alternative to the self-conscious tension that always seems to be at the forefront of every single one of my interactions; however, growing up, I did not have the privilege of being introduced to Wednesday Addams until the ’90s had passed me by.
Instead, I spent that decade largely enmeshed with other decidedly feminist heroines like Louise Fitzhugh’s Harriet M. Welsch and Sammy Keyes from Wendelin Van Draanen’s book series of the same name. However, while both of these ladies had edge, I’d be lying if I said a part of me didn’t long for a role model who was even darker and more dangerous.
- Often, when people ask me what my ethnicity is, what they are really looking for is a way to define me that makes sense to them.
- Because I am mixed-race, I resist categorization, and this puzzles people.
- Perhaps it makes them uncomfortable, the not knowing, and for that reason alone I mourn the fact that I only came to Wednesday later in life.
Her darkness exudes mystery, and those around her are always unable to place her into specific boxes, but Wednesday never seems troubled by this. Instead, she almost seems pleased. In Wednesday, she even goes so far as to say, “I act as if I don’t care if people don’t like me.
- But deep down,
- I secretly enjoy it.” Her differences bring her delight.
- In many ways, Wednesday, in all her various iterations, has always represented a rejection of the status quo, but that outsider mentality is thrown front and center in the new show.
- For starters, the decision to create a series that revolves solely around the character of Wednesday Addams and in which the rest of her spooky-ooky family exist solely in the background is a great way to commit to the singular peculiarity of her character.
Because even within her own family unit, Wednesday is the strangest of them all. She’s the dark nucleus of the Addams family, seemingly void of emotion and intent on seeking revenge. As a main character, then, she becomes the perfect example of unconventionality and, through an ironic twist of fate, is able to highlight for us all the ways in which we can learn to embrace our own inner outcasts.
Is Addams Hispanic?
Are The Addams Family Confirmed to Be Hispanic? – United Artists Releasing Yes, they are! It was first brought up in “Art and the Addams Family,” aired on December 18th, 1964. Gomez is depicted in this episode as someone of Castilian extraction and Spanish ancestry. Though it is not mentioned again elsewhere, this little moment provides a basis for the Addams family being seen as Hispanic in the modern day.
Why are Morticia’s eyes always lit?
(1993) – Trivia – IMDb Jump to Cameo (10) Director Cameo (1) Adding more than just make-up to the character, Morticia Addams is always lit separately from everyone else in a scene. Her lighting always consists of one beam of light across her eyes that gradually fades outward to enhance her classic look. Christina Ricci said the stupidest question she was ever asked during an interview was while promoting this film. She said, “When I was 13, one woman asked me if I’d gone through puberty yet, and if I had gotten my period. And of course, me being a little smartass, I was like, ‘No, I’m going through menopause.’ But still that sticks with me. I was like, ‘I’m 13, you’re asking me about my period?’ Fortunately, I come from a very sarcastic family, so that’s usually how I deal with it.” The baby’s name, Pubert, was the name originally suggested (and rejected) for Pugsley by when he was asked by the producers of to name the hitherto unnamed characters in his cartoons. Final film of released before he tragically died on October 24, 1994 at the age of 54. was released two months posthumously. Wednesday and Pugsley’s old-fashioned swimsuits are Victorian styles, circa the late 1800s to early 1900s (Victorian era). In fact, throughout the film, numerous references and styles from the Victorian era are seen in the Addams household. The modest black clothes, towering house and the decor are all from the Victorian and Edwardian era. The family has very few modern items or fixtures in the household (we see Debbie watching television). : Joel Glicker’s father. Suggest an edit or add missing content What is the streaming release date of (1993) in Canada? You have no recently viewed pages : (1993) – Trivia – IMDb
What creature is Morticia Addams?
Background – Morticia is the wife of Gomez Addams and mother of Wednesday, Pugsley and Pubert Addams. The character originated in the Charles Addams cartoons for The New Yorker magazine in the 1930s. In the cartoons, none of the family members had names.
- When the characters were adapted to the 1964 television series, Charles Addams’ selection of her name was inspired by ” mortician “.
- Morticia’s maiden name is “Frump” and she has an older sister named Ophelia (also played by Carolyn Jones in the original TV series).
- In the television series, her mother is Hester Frump (played by Margaret Hamilton ).
Her mother-in-law is Grandmama Addams, In the 1990s Addams Family films, familial relationships are changed for the characters of Grandmama and Fester. Grandmama is actually Morticia’s mother, not Gomez’s, while Fester is Gomez’s brother, not Morticia’s uncle.
- The real head of the family,
- Low-voiced, incisive and subtle, smiles are rare.ruined beauty,
- Contemptuous and original and with fierce family loyalty,
- Even in disposition, muted, witty, sometimes deadly,
- Given to low-keyed rhapsodies about her garden of deadly nightshade, henbane and dwarf’s hair,
— Charles Addams Morticia is slim, with extremely pale skin and long flowing straight black hair. She commonly wears black hobble dresses to match her hair, tightly form fitting, with a fringe of octopus-like cloth “tentacles” at the lower hem. According to Wednesday, Morticia applies baking powder to her face instead of actual makeup.
In each episode, she easily allures her husband Gomez by speaking French (or any other foreign language for that matter). Morticia is musically inclined, and is often seen freely strumming a Japanese shamisen, She frequently enjoys cutting the buds off of roses, which she discards (keeping only the stems), likes cutting out paper dolls with three heads and making sweaters with three arms, collecting the mail from the hand-in-the-box Thing, and cooking unusual concoctions for her husband, including eye of newt.
Her personal pet is Cleopatra, a fictitious breed of carnivorous plant called an African Strangler, to which she feeds hamburgers and various other meats. She is described as a witch, In one episode, she wears a black pointed hat, Her family tree can be traced back to Salem, Massachusetts, and witchcraft is also implied at times in the television series.
Why are The Addams Family so rich?
#12 Addams, Gomez This article is more than 10 years old.
- © Everett Collection
- Net Worth: $2.0 billion
- Source: Inheritance, Investing
- Age: 51
- Marital Status: Married
Hometown: Westfield, N.J. Education: Astin School of Law, J.D. Descendant of Castilian royalty and British aristocrats owes fortune to quirky-and lucky-investment style: bought a swamp for “scenic value,” subsequently discovered massive oil deposit underneath; purchased mummified hand at flea market, later determined to be priceless remains of Egyptian pharaoh.
- Extensive holdings include insurance company, salt mine, tombstone factory, buzzard farm.
- Nown for eccentric behavior, including affinity for sword fighting, Halloween tradition of bobbing for live crabs.
- Doesn’t like to write checks for odd amounts; always rounds up.
- Passionate collector of toy trains: once bought a railroad simply so he could crash real steam engines.
Reportedly spends a thousand dollars a week on cigars. New member. – David M. Ewalt
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: #12 Addams, Gomez
How did Gomez meet Morticia?
How Morticia and Gomez’s Meeting Differs in Other Versions – “Morticia’s Romance” would in many ways be the more iconic version of how the Addams Family truly came to be, with the storyline even being remade in the 1998 series The New Addams Family, Later episodes of the original show would somewhat contradict “Morticia’s Romance,” making mention of the love notes that Gomez supposedly sent to Morticia when they were courting.
Given that the episode showcasing their betrothal gave no such time for a courtship, it’s likely an example of an attempt at humor, even at the expense of continuity. In the ‘1990s Addams Family movies, Morticia and Gomez met each other at a funeral, with the latter’s morose sense of flirtation noting that his future bride was so beautiful that it distracted from the sight of the corpse.
The new series Wednesday, however, makes it clear that a young Gomez and Morticia met at Nevermore Academy. This school is a haven for misfits and outcasts, and it’s where the couple’s daughter would later attend school. No matter how it was that the two met, Morticia and Gomez are a disturbingly healthy example of a great marriage, showing that even the coldest, blackest hearts can beat for another.
Is Wednesday based on Wednesday Addams?
Wednesday is an American comedy horror television series based on the character Wednesday Addams by Charles Addams.
What is Wednesday from The Addams Family supposed to be?
Is Wednesday a witch? – Despite the fact she has psychic abilities, Wednesday is not a witch and is born to human parents. Although she does have a witch as an ancestor, Wednesday herself appears to only have been an ‘outcast’ in Nevermore due to her clairvoyance, which comes from her mum, Morticia. Wednesday has never previously had powers in past Addams Family portrayals. Picture: Netflix
What is Wednesday Addams diagnosis?
3. Narcissistic Disorder And Anti-Social Personality Disorder – The above-mentioned incident where Wednesday released piranhas in the swimming pool can also point toward anti-social personality disorder and narcissistic disorder. Wednesday shows narcissistic personality traits when she feels that she is better than others and is the smartest person in any room.
- Contrary to this, she does not constantly crave attention, which makes the diagnosis unclear.
- A better explanation of her behaviors comes in the form of anti-social personality disorder.
- Her lack of empathy toward the boys in the swimming pool and complete disregard for societal rules are traits of anti-social personality disorders.
Read more: Mental Health Lessons One Shouldn’t Miss From Star Wars
Is Wednesday a real name?
Wednesday – Baby Name Meaning, Origin, and Popularity The name Wednesday is girl’s name of English origin meaning “Woden’s day”. Name made famous by the macabre character Wednesday – middle name: Friday – Addams is taken from the name of the day dedicated to the Anglo-Saxon god Woden, who relates to Mercury.