Damsel in distress
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The damsel in distress is a popular stock character in fiction. It is a female who has been put into a dangerous situation by an outside force and require assistance to get out of it. Specifics of the female, the outside force, the situation and the "rescuer" often vary, but the following quote is a good example:
- :"... A bad gunslinger called Salty Sam was chasin' poor Sweet Sue
- :"He trapped her in the old sawmill and said with an evil laugh,
- :"If you don't give me the deed to your ranch''
- :"I'll saw you all in half!
- :"And then he grabbed her (and then)
- :"He tied her up (and then)
- :"He turned on the bandsaw (and then, and then...!) ..."
- ::::::—Along Came Jones, by The Coasters
The damsel in distress is a staple character of Gothic literature, where she is typically incarcerated in a castle or monastery and menaced by a sadistic nobleman, or members of the religious orders. Early examples in this genre include Isabella in Horace Walpole's The Castle of Otranto, Emily in Anne Radcliffe's The Mysteries of Udolpho and Antonia in Matthew Lewis's The Monk. The perils faced by this Gothic heroine were taken to an extreme by the Marquis de Sade in Justine, who, arguably, exposed the pornographic subtext which lay behind the damsel in distress scenario.
Damsels in distress are not used nearly as often as they were previously, and current depictions of the stock character usually play the role as camp, although video games still feature the occasional old-style damsel. The stock character did undergo a revival of sorts in Halloween, Friday the 13th, and other slasher films of the 1980s. Here, though, the stock character was played with a twist: there were several young women characters, most of whom were killed by the serial killer villain, but one survived to defeat him. The young woman survivor herself became a stock character, the Final Girl, embodied in characters such as Ellen Ripley in the Alien series. Sarah Connor, a damsel in distress in The Terminator, became the effective survivor type in .
Damsel in Distress is the title of a book by P. G. Wodehouse and a motion picture that starred Fred Astaire.
Notable damsels in distress
Mythology and Fairy Tales
- Andromeda
- Hesione
- Cassandra
- Rapunzel
- Princess Aurora in Sleeping Beauty
- Snow White
- The Lady of Shalott
- Fantine and Eponine in Les Miserables
- Gilda in Rigoletto
- La Llorona
- Aïda in Aïda
- Manon in Manon Lescaut and Manon
- Floria Tosca in Tosca
- Cio-Cio-San (Butterfly) in Madame Butterfly
- Liù in Turandot
- Sweet Gwendoline
Novels
- Jane Porter Clayton in the Tarzan books by Edgar Rice Burroughs
- There is usually at least one damsel in distress per chapter in the classic chivalry epic Amadis of Gaul
- Y.T. from the Neal Stephenson novel Snow Crash; However, Y.T. was not the stereotypical damsel-in-distress, as she possessed a weapon concealed in her vagina.
- Nancy Bolt
- Penélopê in the Odyssey (Homer's epic poem)
- Many of the heroines from Henry Fielding's The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling
- Christine Daaé in The Phantom of the Opera
- Wendy Darling in Peter Pan
Movies
- Ann Darrow from King Kong
- Mary Jane Watson from Spider-Man movies was put into peril 3 times in the first of the Spider-Man films including being trapped on a collapsing balcony 30 some story's above the ground, mugged by four men in an alley, and placed atop the Queensboro Bridge and then dropped from it by the Green Goblin. In the 2nd film she was less of a damsel in distress, up until the climax where Doctor Octopus snatches her away from Peter Parker, and chains her in a pier where she is almost incinerated by a fusion reactor.
- Lois Lane from Superman movies
- The Perils of Pauline
- Princess Fiona in Shrek (rather a spoof)
- Jane Parker in the Tarzan movies (based on Jane Porter Clayton)
- Meg in Disney's Hercules movie
- Satine from Moulin Rouge
- Regina Lampert in Charade
- "Octopussy" from Octopussy
- Dominique Derval from Thunderball
- Honey Ryder from Dr. No
- Tiffany Case from Diamonds Are Forever
- Teresa Di Vicenzo from On Her Majesty's Secret Service
- Anya Amasova from The Spy Who Loved Me
- Kara Milovy from The Living Daylights
- Miss Mary Goodnight from The Man with the Golden Gun
- Tatiana Romanova from From Russia with Love
- Princess Leia Organa from Star Wars (only in A New Hope)
- Ciaran Madden's character as Lynette in Gawain and the Green Knight
- Dr. Christmas Jones from The World Is Not Enough
- Natalya Fyodorovna Simonova from GoldenEye
- Stacey Sutton from A View to a Kill
- Marion Ravenwood from Raiders of the Lost Ark
- Willie Scott from Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom
- Solitaire from Live and Let Die
- Dana Tasker from True Lies
- Maria from Metropolis
Animation
- Aelita from Code Lyoko is often the target of Xana's schemes, and must be rescued by the three primary warriors that usually come to Lyoko: Odd, Ulrich, and Yumi
- Penelope Pitstop (Penélope Glamour in Spanish)
- April O'Neil from the old Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles cartoon
- Nell Fenwick in the Dudley Do-Right cartoons
- Akane Tendo in some Ranma ½ episodes and the first two movies, though the other girls also have some Damsel in Distress elements (see the "Nihao My Concubine" movie where ALL the girls were kidnapped.
- Kagome Higurashi in InuYasha
- Ai Amano in Video Girl Ai
- Ruriko Ikusawa in Gate Keepers
- Sweet Polly Purebred from Underdog
- Sakura Kinomoto from Tsubasa Chronicle
- Daphne Blake in various episodes of the Scooby Doo cartoon series
Comics
- Mary Jane Watson from Spider-Man
- Lois Lane from Superman
- Olive Oyl from Popeye
Video games
- Pauline in the Donkey Kong arcade game
- Princess Peach (Princess Toadstool) and Princess Daisy in the Mario franchise
- Amy Rose and Cream the Rabbit in the Sonic the Hedgehog franchise
- Princess Sherry in "Rocket Knight Adventures"
- Ninian the Dancer in the pre-Valor arcs of Eliwood or Hector Mode in .
- Elaine Marley in the first and third Monkey Island titles
- Krystal in Star Fox Adventures
- Coco Bandicoot from Crash Bandicoot
- Tooty Bear from the Banjo-Kazooie series.
- Rachel in Time Crisis
- Leila Blitz in Rolling Thunder
- Irene Lew in Ninja Gaiden
- Sandy in Maniac Mansion
- Emily in
- Princess Zelda in the Legend of Zelda series.
- Ashley Graham in Resident Evil 4
- In her own words: Mona Sax in Max Payne 2
- Rosa, the white mage of Final Fantasy IV. (Although only in the game story and not so much in actual game play.)
- Aeris Gainsborough of Final Fantasy VII, during some early parts of the game story.
- Rosie Velasco in
- Princess Yukihime in Onimusha
- Sara Trantoul in Castlevania- Lament of Innocence
- Yuri Sakazaki in Art of Fighting (only in the first game of the series; later she joins the active fights)
- Yuki/Princess Kushinada in The King of Fighters
- Manon Du Champs in
- Jessica Haggar in Final Fight (only in the first game of the series)
- Marian Kelly in Double Dragon
- Mono in Shadow of the Colossus
- Yuna in Final Fantasy X
- Kairi in Kingdom Hearts
- Jody Summer in the F-Zero series
- Emma Frost in
- Polaris in
- Yumemaru in Onimusha
- Lady Yodo in
See also
- Princess and dragon
- Feminist film theory
- Final girl
- Femme fatale
- Pearl White
- Ingenue
- Scream queen
- Computer games Damsels in distress
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