Saturday, April 14, 2012

Marie Marsh: The Mystery Woman

If you go to the Special Features and then the Deleted Scenes, you might see where in the original Chapter 1 the character of Marie Marsh appears at a diner where Emma and Becky are eating.  Sadly that scene got cut, so now you only see Marie at one scene near the end in the nursing home and then in the epilogue.

My hope in the diner scene was to introduce Marie early so she doesn't come so much out of left field.  But maybe surprise is better?  Anyway, the whole point of including Marie at all is because she has a pivotal role to play in the sequel.  What role is that?  I can't say because I don't want to spoil it.

The evolution of Marie's character began with the first draft of what would be known as A Hero's Journey.  I was thinking one day and somewhere I got the idea for a character who has this weird ability to see into people's souls and pry out all their dirty secrets or see their inner goodness.  Not  through telepathy like a psychic.  The gift is actually in her left eye, which is really pale blue while her other is a normal brown.  This "special" eye lets her see into the past. When she turns it on a person she can see their life story.  If she turns it on an inanimate object she can see the history of that object.  There was a joke in I think the second draft of the story where Marie looks at Alex the mastodon in the Plaine Museum and tells Emma that the mastodon is really a girl.

I worked Marie into the first draft as first a clerk for the city.  Then later came the idea to put her in the nursing home with Aunt Gladys, where Marie's strange ability allows her to see through Gladys's dementia and steady her mind.  Then came the rest of Marie's backstory that has her go from an orphanage to a mental hospital.  In the deleted scene Marie was working at the diner after being released to a halfway house, but then she was fired from that job for making people nervous, after which she got the job at the nursing home.

Anyway, as a preview for the next story, I don't really like to call her a villain.  She does some bad things, but only with good intentions.  You might have an idea of what her intentions are from reading the epilogue.  She's more a pawn in someone else's evil scheme.  You'll have to wait and find out if she comes to her senses.

(Fun Fact:  You'll probably be glad to know there are no more alliterative names to cover in these posts.)

N is for Northwestern Bound:  Emma's College Years

9 comments:

stephen Hayes said...

I can understand why you don't call her a villain if her intentions are good.

Michael Offutt, Phantom Reader said...

I've read on numerous blogs that writers hate villains that are completely evil. So she's in good company if she is doing things that she believes are good but just turn out bad for everyone else. I'm sure that Hitler felt the same way. He probably thought, "I'm doing this with the best intentions to make Germany a great power and to give the Germans respect!" but it just didn't end up that way (as history has proven).

klahanie said...

Well done and thanks for sharing. Most importantly, no more alliterative names on offer. You have fun with this amazing alphabet challenge....

Sarah Tokeley said...

Marie sounds like a really interesting characters. Many of us have done things with the best of intentions, only to have them go horribly wrong. (Or maybe that's just me).

Rusty Carl said...

Lots of heroes start out as pawns in someone else's mechanizations - she looks nice in her picture.

Roland D. Yeomans said...

A different color eye that allows her to see into the past. How cool. I vote for having her come to her senses. Sorta like Xena, always haunted by past mistakes. Thanks for visiting and following my blog, Roland

Inger said...

An interesting character -- those eyes. Thanks for following my blog, I just signed up to follow yours.

Karen Elizabeth Brown said...

Hey! I like your character with the blue eye! I have blue eyes - does that mean I get to see into everything and everyone too? I wish! That'd be cool, for a while anyway. Good character!

Thanks for visiting me blog! I'm going to be back!

Julie Daines said...

It's sad how many wonderful people get cut in the editing process. I like the caricature sketch, cool!

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