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Winnifred[a] "Wendy" Torrance is a fictional character and protagonist of the 1977 horror novel The Shining by the American writer Stephen King. She also appears in the prologue of Doctor Sleep, a 2013 sequel to The Shining.
Unlike Jack Torrance, little of Wendy's background is revealed in the novel. A bad relationship with her emotionally abusive mother is mentioned.[1] In the film version, the character is much less nuanced than in the book and in the miniseries (written by King himself), where she appears as a "central" character,[2] leading to some critics to refer to the character as "two different versions of Wendy Torrance".[3] Stephen King has often stated that Wendy's submissiveness is one of the main reasons for his aversion to Kubrick's film.[4] Writer Chelsea Quinn Yarbro also criticized Wendy's "weakness" as portrayed in the novel, attributing it to King's general inability to paint convincing female characters.[5]
Other critics have spoken of the novel's Wendy as a "modern Gothic heroine",[6] although not stereotyped.[7]
The Shining (2016) – opera, portrayed by Kelly Kaduce
The Shining
Novel
The book Characters in 20th-century Literature wrote, "Wendy Torrance is a traditional wife and mother whose energies focus on the safety of her child. Although she is primarily concerned about the physical damage Jack might do to Danny, she knows that certain elements in her own upbringing may affect her performance as a mother—notably the influence of her own resentful, highly critical mother."[8]
Film
In an interview with Roger Ebert, Duvall described working with Stanley Kubrick as "almost unbearable" and said that despite all of the stress she endured during the extensive shoot, her performance was overshadowed by the fame of Kubrick, stating, "After I made The Shining, all that work, hardly anyone even criticized my performance in it, even to mention it, it seemed like. The reviews were all about Kubrick, like I wasn't there..."
In A Cinema of Loneliness, Robert Phillip Kolker[9] states, "On the generic level, Wendy is a stereotyped horror-film character, both the instigator and the object of the monster's rage. But she transcends her generic role, protects herself, and destroys the monster. Wendy assumes the "masculine" role in a wonderful symbolic gesture... Getting up to go to Jack, she moves to the rear of the frame and silently, so far back in the composition that it takes some attention to notice it, picks up a baseball bat, with which she will beat down her violent husband. The figure oppressed by the phallus steals it in order to control it. Later, when Jack attempts to smash his way into the bathroom where Wendy and Danny are hiding, she stabs his hand with a large knife, an act of displaced castration that further reduces Jack's potency and threat. The patriarch is hurt with his own weapons, diminished by an acting out on him of his own worst fear of losing his power. Wendy becomes a prototype for the "final girl" who Carol Clover recognizes as the saving figure in contemporary horror".
King, who dislikes Kubrick's film, criticized the way Wendy was adapted, calling her "one of the most misogynistic characters ever put on film."[10] In American Nightmares: The Haunted House Formula in American Popular Fiction, Dale Bailey[11] calls the novel version of the character a "modernized gothic heroine".
^Bailey, Dale (2011). American Nightmares: The Haunted House Formula in American Popular Fiction. University of Wisconsin Pres. ISBN9780299268732.
Further reading
Jackie Eller, Wendy Torrance, One of King's Women: A Typology of King's Female Characters, in Tony Magistrale, The Shining Reader, Mercer Island, Starmont House, 1991