Lydia Hadley (played by Elizabeth Banks)
Lydia Hadley is the mother of Wendy and Peter and she is married to George. She feels useless because she realizes that the house is able to do everything better than she can. She is scared of the African veldt that the children put in the nursery but doesn’t want to take it away too soon because she feels bad for them. Lydia is the typical mom and Elizabeth Banks just seems like the perfect mom for any show. She has lots of experience playing the role of a mother and has children of her own so this will be no problem for her.
George Hadley (played by Jason Sudeikis)
George is the dad of Wendy and Peter. He owns a very fancy home and gives his children whatever they want. He does what he sees as best for his children but he ended up spoiling them rotten. He doesn’t punish his kids much but when he did they started to want to kill him. Although he tried to be a good dad, he failed and it cost him his life. Jason Sudeikis is good for this part because he looks the right age to have two ten year old children and he’s a very good actor. He has many devoted fans so he
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They are both very lazy yet independent ten year olds. Neither of them care for the rules or punishments their parents set and in the end purposely lead them to their death. Peter is the smarter one and Wendy kind of just follows him around and doesn’t talk much. She seems like his sidekick, always just following his lead. Even though they had a fun life, it wasn’t a healthy way to be living. Emma Rayne Lyle and Oakes Fegley are good for the part because they look like siblings and both look around ten years old. Their hair is a mixture between Jason Sudeikis and Elizabeth Banks which makes sense since they play as their children in the movie. Emma’s is a bit more blonde like Elizabeth and Oakes is a bit more brunette like Jason. Also they both have blue eyes like Elizabeth does so it’s
Gram was able to support and help Aubrey cope with the fact now her mother has left her and her dad
As she would be quoted several times saying, “treats make trouble,” her parenting style was a detrimental stepping stone in cognitive development of Wendy. While Violet is not a role model for Wendy, taking a glimpse of her life and taking a walk in her shoes solidifies the lessons her mother instilled from a very young age.
He is Wendy's biological father who is very careless and overall a free-spirited person, these two traits play a huge role in the way he parents. After 9/11 and Janet's passing, he really tries to make an effort to be a father figure like he is supposed to. He invites her to live with him and Carolyn in California. He lets
Wendy is a very special, because she is very patient and understanding. Danny Torrance is a very special five-year old child because he possesses the ability known as the shine. Danny is able to read the minds of
Bradbury uses spoiling Wendy and Peter to show they weren’t well-rounded, by emphasizing that they were over-indulged in materialistic wants. When parents Lydia and George were talking, Lydia explained, “They’re insufferable- let’s admit it. They come and go when they like; they treat us as if we were offspring. They’re spoiled and we’re spoiled.” The description of how the parents feel provides the reader with a better understanding that even the parents can no longer control Wendy and Peter’s disrespectful ways caused by their mistakes of spoiling the children. Bradbury establishes the kids as so over-indulged that even Lydia and George could not discipline the children if they put their minds to it. Towards the end of the story we see that not being able to
Merridy is supportive of her children by working at her job. Max and Jude also show support by helping Merridy watch the children while she is at work.
Since the parents used so much time in the technology, insight on the minds of the children are completely taken over by technology. Peter and Wendy against their parents because they believed the nursery was all they needed and killing them was right. Ray Bradbury points out several times that sometimes things people think may help actually have a negative impact on them. George believed that installing the nursery can help his children get
In the movie, Wendy appears to either be oblivious or intentionally avoiding the issue. Unfortunately, in both versions, Wendy is completely dependent on Jack Torrance financially. Wendy was never able to attend college and the only jobs are unskilled and don’t pay a livable wage. Wendy has seemed to conform to the mold as an amenable housewife. From the beginning, she knows that the Overlook will not be good for her family
Barrie expresses the core of his argument through the actions of the children and Peter himself. Throughout the play, the reader observes many instances of the children playing "grown-up." When Peter first brings Wendy to Never Land, we see Slightly, one of the Lost Boys, playing doctor (69-70). This shows a fundamental need to grow up and find your purpose or profession. In many of the different acts the reader also sees the children pretending to have a family. The best example of this is in pages 98-118. The Lost Boys and Wendy's creation of a family reflects not only the children's need for a family, but their need to grow up and create families of their own. In this scene, one of the Lost Boys, Michael, states his wish to grow up when he says "Wendy, I am too big for a cradle" (101). Even Peter, who claims he wants to "always be a little boy and to have fun" reveals that he once wanted to return to reality as well (113). On page 110, Peter says that after some time in
This is concept of not wanting to grow up is proved throughout the play multiple times. For instance, he talks with Wendy explaining that he ran away from home saying, “I want always to be a little boy and to have fun” (Barrie 15). At the end of the play Peter is terrified to even pretend to be the boy’s father. He says, “It is only pretend, isn’t is, that I am their father?” (Barrie 43). Then in the lines proceeding he still was questioning Wendy to make sure his role was just pretending because he does not want any characteristics or responsibilities a grown person has. Wendy, on-the-other hand, was not afraid to take on the motherly role of the children. She awakes in the house and the boys ask her to take on the mother role and she replies, “Very well then, I will do my best” (Barrie 32). The concepts of the play follow the relation that exists between children and adults where their worlds are exclusive mutually as they complement each other (Barrie and Alton 7). There exists a higher association between Wendy and adulthood which helps show her transformation. This proves Barrie’s play was created to showcase the bond between children as well as adults. This transformation for Wendy is interesting because she took on a mother role in a child-fantasy land that is supposed to be free of responsibility.
Peter and Wendy are the children of George and Lydia Hadley. They obey technology more than their parents. They spend more time with technology than their own parents. The also kill their own parents which shows such a little to no respect for them. Unlike normal families, the family fears the children. The parents suffer “horrible tantrums that makes he and
Throughout the first part of the book, Wendy is fine with being at Neverland and away from home. But slowly, she started to see something in her brothers. “What did disturb her at times was that John remembered his parents vaguely only, while Michael was quite willing to believe that she was really his mother.”(72; ch 7). The story goes on to explain how Wendy was a little scared by this, but she makes tests to refresh her brother's memory. Later, Wendy is telling a story to her children about coming home to their mother and everything is is happy and good. But Peter Pan is in the room listening and he tells his side of the story. “Long ago,” he said, “I thought like you that my mother would always keep the window open for me; so I stayed away for moons and moons, and then flew back; but the window was barred, for mother had forgotten all about me, and there was another little boy sleeping in my bed.”(106; ch 11). At that moment Wendy felt that their mother would forget them if they stayed as long as Peter had. This changed her because she realized that she needed to go home to her family and grow
Lydia and George have to face Peter and Wendy’s desires. Lydia and George both want the nursery to be locked and shut down forever, whereas Peter and Wendy want it to stay open and think there is nothing wrong with it.
have always yearned for a caretaker. Peter, seeing a demand, met it with bringing Wendy,
AMANDA WINGFIELD the mother. A little woman of great but confused vitality clinging frantically to another time and place. Her characterization must be carefully created, not copied from type. She is not paranoiac, but her life is