Difference between revisions of "Eva Fisch"
(→Details) |
(→Details) |
||
(6 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 12: | Line 12: | ||
=Tropes= | =Tropes= | ||
− | [https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/CoolOldLady Cool Old Lady] | + | [https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/CoolOldLady Cool Old Lady]; [https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/IndignantSlap Indignant Slap] |
=Details= | =Details= | ||
<p>Eva Katharina née Fisch was born in 1812 in [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bad_Sch%C3%B6nborn Mingolsheim], [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baden Baden]. Even as a child, she had a defiant, fiery streak in her. In 1832 she married Johannes Walz, a successful local tradesman, and bore him a total of 14 children before he died on 16 Sep 1845. After the "[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Revolutions_of_1848 Badian Revolution]," she decided she'd had enough of the Old World and its political chaos, and in Mar-Apr 1851 she emigrated with her still living eight children (six had already died) to Lancaster, Pennsylvania. The family moved to Minnesota several years later.</p> | <p>Eva Katharina née Fisch was born in 1812 in [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bad_Sch%C3%B6nborn Mingolsheim], [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baden Baden]. Even as a child, she had a defiant, fiery streak in her. In 1832 she married Johannes Walz, a successful local tradesman, and bore him a total of 14 children before he died on 16 Sep 1845. After the "[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Revolutions_of_1848 Badian Revolution]," she decided she'd had enough of the Old World and its political chaos, and in Mar-Apr 1851 she emigrated with her still living eight children (six had already died) to Lancaster, Pennsylvania. The family moved to Minnesota several years later.</p> | ||
− | <p>She found the American spirit suited her. She operated a number of different enterprises over the decades, increasing in scope and independence as her children grew and eventually left home for enterprises of their own, out West. But when the Civil War erupted, she stayed well out of it, fearing a return to the chaos of her early | + | <p>She found the American spirit suited her. She operated a number of different enterprises over the decades, increasing in scope and independence as her children grew and eventually left home for enterprises of their own, out West. But when the Civil War erupted, she stayed well out of it, fearing a return to the chaos of her early years—though her neighbors knew better than to challenge her "aggressive neutrality" (to her face, at least). Even so, some of her children defied her wishes by enlisting, most-notably, her youngest son [[Albert Walz|Albert]], who made a name for himself in the Union Army as a scout.</p> |
<p>After 60, she figured she had at least one good venture left in her before old age finally caught her up, and she moved out West herself, to be closer to her children and grandchildren. Albert had written of a place in the San Juan Mountains of Southwest Colorado that reminded him, somehow, of the place they had left behind in Germany (he was only eight years old when they left), and she decided to go there and start a ''[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gasthaus gasthaus]''—and maybe bring the family together again. These boom-towns would surely see a lot of visitors needing a place to stay. Since her arrival in [[:Category:Babylon|Babylon]] in Apr 1877, she's been scouting out potential locations and attempting to organize capital, though she's come to realize the town seems to have lost its boom…</p> | <p>After 60, she figured she had at least one good venture left in her before old age finally caught her up, and she moved out West herself, to be closer to her children and grandchildren. Albert had written of a place in the San Juan Mountains of Southwest Colorado that reminded him, somehow, of the place they had left behind in Germany (he was only eight years old when they left), and she decided to go there and start a ''[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gasthaus gasthaus]''—and maybe bring the family together again. These boom-towns would surely see a lot of visitors needing a place to stay. Since her arrival in [[:Category:Babylon|Babylon]] in Apr 1877, she's been scouting out potential locations and attempting to organize capital, though she's come to realize the town seems to have lost its boom…</p> | ||
+ | <!--<p>The Reprisal Raid resulted in much of the hotel she was living out of being burned; she survived, but the business did not. The owners agreed to sell the place to her on the cheap, and she's been doing what she can to repair and renovate ever since. The arrival of the over-protective [[Bill Hatcher|new marshal]] exacerbated the already-waning guest traffic in town; funds have been short, and progress has been slow.</p>--> | ||
*Been in the US for 25+ years | *Been in the US for 25+ years | ||
+ | *Insists on cooking German food, even out West, where nobody knows what it is | ||
*Absolutely fearless (of people), and will not, under any circumstance, tolerate foolish, childish behavior, or impoliteness—would slap the President in public for being rude. | *Absolutely fearless (of people), and will not, under any circumstance, tolerate foolish, childish behavior, or impoliteness—would slap the President in public for being rude. | ||
===Contact=== | ===Contact=== | ||
Line 24: | Line 26: | ||
=Traits= | =Traits= | ||
− | Speaks German better than English; Fearless (of people); Stubbornness; "The Slap" | + | Speaks German better than English; Expert at all manner of home-crafting skills (esp cooking); Fearless (of people); Stubbornness; "The Slap" |
=Notes= | =Notes= |
Latest revision as of 09:32, 16 November 2024
| ||||||||||
Actor: Alice Krige
Concept
Uncompromising Family Matriarch (minus most of the family)
Tropes
Details
Eva Katharina née Fisch was born in 1812 in Mingolsheim, Baden. Even as a child, she had a defiant, fiery streak in her. In 1832 she married Johannes Walz, a successful local tradesman, and bore him a total of 14 children before he died on 16 Sep 1845. After the "Badian Revolution," she decided she'd had enough of the Old World and its political chaos, and in Mar-Apr 1851 she emigrated with her still living eight children (six had already died) to Lancaster, Pennsylvania. The family moved to Minnesota several years later.
She found the American spirit suited her. She operated a number of different enterprises over the decades, increasing in scope and independence as her children grew and eventually left home for enterprises of their own, out West. But when the Civil War erupted, she stayed well out of it, fearing a return to the chaos of her early years—though her neighbors knew better than to challenge her "aggressive neutrality" (to her face, at least). Even so, some of her children defied her wishes by enlisting, most-notably, her youngest son Albert, who made a name for himself in the Union Army as a scout.
After 60, she figured she had at least one good venture left in her before old age finally caught her up, and she moved out West herself, to be closer to her children and grandchildren. Albert had written of a place in the San Juan Mountains of Southwest Colorado that reminded him, somehow, of the place they had left behind in Germany (he was only eight years old when they left), and she decided to go there and start a gasthaus—and maybe bring the family together again. These boom-towns would surely see a lot of visitors needing a place to stay. Since her arrival in Babylon in Apr 1877, she's been scouting out potential locations and attempting to organize capital, though she's come to realize the town seems to have lost its boom…
- Been in the US for 25+ years
- Insists on cooking German food, even out West, where nobody knows what it is
- Absolutely fearless (of people), and will not, under any circumstance, tolerate foolish, childish behavior, or impoliteness—would slap the President in public for being rude.
Contact
Category: Technical/Trade (Hospitality)
Traits
Speaks German better than English; Expert at all manner of home-crafting skills (esp cooking); Fearless (of people); Stubbornness; "The Slap"
Notes
- Al Walz's mother