Mother (Vincent and the Doctor): Difference between revisions

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|actor = [[Chrissie Cotterill]]
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A '''mother''' was the mother of a young woman who became a victim of a [[Krafayis]] in Provence, [[1890]].  
This '''mother''' was the mother of a young woman who became a victim of a [[Krafayis]] in Provence, [[1890]].


==Biography==
==Biography==
When [[Eleventh Doctor|the Doctor]], [[Amy Pond]] and [[Vincent van Gogh]] arrived, the mother felt Vincent was at hand to her daughter's death and called him a "madman" and blamed his madness for the death. She immediately told him to leave while she and other onlookers threw items at him, the Doctor and Amy, thus making them leave. Later on, on their way to a Church, Vincent, the Doctor and Amy encountered the mother again, who was walking alongside the coffin of her daughter. On top of the coffin were some sunflowers, a flower that would in the future become synonymous with Vincent van Gogh.
When [[Eleventh Doctor|the Doctor]], [[Amy Pond]] and [[Vincent van Gogh]] arrived, the mother saw Vincent was at hand to her daughter's death, called him a "madman" and blamed his madness for the death. She shouted for him to leave while she and other onlookers threw items at him, the Doctor and Amy. Later, on their way to a Church, Vincent, the Doctor and Amy encountered the mother again as she was walking alongside the coffin of her daughter. On top of the coffin were some sunflowers, a flower that would in the future become synonymous with Vincent van Gogh.
[[Category:19th century individuals]]
[[Category:19th century individuals]]
[[Category:human parents]]
[[Category:human parents]]
[[Category:humans with unknown names]]
[[Category:humans with unknown names]]

Revision as of 14:27, 20 July 2011

This mother was the mother of a young woman who became a victim of a Krafayis in Provence, 1890.

Biography

When the Doctor, Amy Pond and Vincent van Gogh arrived, the mother saw Vincent was at hand to her daughter's death, called him a "madman" and blamed his madness for the death. She shouted for him to leave while she and other onlookers threw items at him, the Doctor and Amy. Later, on their way to a Church, Vincent, the Doctor and Amy encountered the mother again as she was walking alongside the coffin of her daughter. On top of the coffin were some sunflowers, a flower that would in the future become synonymous with Vincent van Gogh.