Difference between revisions of "Iolanthe"
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| style="font-family: Gabriola, serif; font-size: 26pt; font-weight:bold; font-variant: small-caps; color: #009933; text-align: left; border-bottom: 2px solid black" | CHARACTER BIOGRAPHY | | style="font-family: Gabriola, serif; font-size: 26pt; font-weight:bold; font-variant: small-caps; color: #009933; text-align: left; border-bottom: 2px solid black" | CHARACTER BIOGRAPHY | ||
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− | | | + | | [[image:dryad012.jpg|250px|left]]Technically, Iolanthe is many thousands of years old, like all Inanimae, as she came into being at the start of the Mythic Age. Her current age is how long it has been since she last awoke from her ages-old sleep. Like most Inanimae, she fell into slumber when the Mythic Age came to an end, but she was not dead. She has woken up periodically down the millenia, but usually for relatively short periods. This is the longest single period of time she has been awake. She has managed to balance her glamour and banality, so far, so returning to sleep is not required. Sooner or later, she will have to return to an Anchor for a few centuries, but hopefully that time is still some way off. |
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+ | Since she awoke in the 19th Century, she has spent most of her time traveling, stopping in a place for a year or two, then moving on again, as wanderlust took hold. She has an insatiable curiosity for the world, especially now it has been so changed by technology and science. This may be her undoing, as such things are magnets for banality. | ||
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+ | During her travels, she has been to many interesting places. She was at the opening of the Great Exhibition in 1851. In the 1880s, still in London, she was muse to W.S. Gilbert, who even wrote an operetta with her name in her honour. She saw the Paris of the 1890s, Berlin in the 1920s, and the horrors of the two world wars, which convinced her that humanity needed kindness, not more harsh treatment. It has forever coloured her world view, and she is firmly entrenched in her Seelie nature. | ||
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+ | She visited Australia in the 1950s, and spent the latter part of the decade in New York. To her, it was bliss. She spent the Summer of Love in Haight-Ashbury, totally revelling in the freedom, drugs, sex, and music. The 1970s saw her back in Europe, where she took up residence in Amsterdam for several years, and where she became a well-know character in the red light district. Not for her sexual wiles, but for her singing. She was a guest singer on albums for several artists, especially those of a more prog rock type. She toured with Led Zeppelin and Pink Floyd, part of their entourage. In the latter part of the decade, she was to be found in London, hanging out with the rebel icons, and sharing a flat with Vivienne Westwood and Jordan Mooney for a year. | ||
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+ | The 1980s came, and she became a devoted New Romantic, like many of the post-punk crowd did. But as London became the centre of the capitalist, screw everything except money, mentality, she became disillusioned, and felt banality swamping her. She left. Stopping off in Ibiza for a while, she headed back to Australia, and spent some time in Adelaide. She moved on from there, and traveled South America for several years. | ||
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+ | For the past twenty years, she has traveled across the Orient, and back across Europe, and finally she returned to North America, and hitch hiked her way all across the continent. Finally, she arrived back on the West Coast, intrigued to see what changes have occured in the past fifty years. | ||
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+ | It is surprising that, with all this travel, that she speaks no human language, other than English. She has always said that she never felt the need, and when she needed to learn anything, she asked the birds. | ||
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+ | She is a dryad. She probably means that quite literally. | ||
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| style="font-family: Gabriola, serif; font-size:16pt; font-variant: small-caps" | Age | | style="font-family: Gabriola, serif; font-size:16pt; font-variant: small-caps" | Age | ||
− | | 188 | + | | 188 (See Biography) |
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| style="font-family: Gabriola, serif; font-size:16pt; font-variant: small-caps" | Occupation | | style="font-family: Gabriola, serif; font-size:16pt; font-variant: small-caps" | Occupation |