Name: Alex Personal Journal:emeraldpenguin9 Contact:email: alex@emeraldpenguin.co.uk Age/Birthdate: 17 Characters already played here: None
Character information
Character's Name: Taylor Series: St Trinian’s Age: Sixteen, nearly seventeen. Timeline: Post 2007 film. Canon Resource Link:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St_Trinian's_(film) Taylor is head of the clique ‘chavs’. She plays (not by the rules) for the school hockey team, she’s also shown to be part of the school’s fight club, the first rule of which is that you don’t talk about the fight club, and she has a highly antagonistic relationship with the head of the clique, the ‘emos’. Taylor is part of the group which scope out the art gallery in preparation for the theft, and then, with the head emo and head girl performs the robbery later in the film. Despite the constant fighting between the two girls, Taylor and the head emo hug in celebration after the success of the break in suggesting an underlying friendship.
Personality: Taylor’s quite a brash person. She doesn’t shy away from much and mainly just likes to have fun. She’s fiercely loyal to those she’s close to and will happily do extremely stupid things if she thinks it’s the right thing to do. Her moral code may not run parallel with the law but it says that her friends are the most important thing. Taylor’s quite confrontational and generally quick to anger and will often take offense where none is meant. Taylor’s not afraid of being noticed, she tends to dress in a way which promotes it, with bright, sometimes clashing colours and short skirts. She’s generally a bit of a flirt and will get on more easily with those who don’t take her too seriously and will just flirt back. She doesn’t take much seriously. The characters in St. Trinian’s are drawn from stereotypes in British teenage culture, in Taylor’s case, she is a chav. Both the casual acceptance of violence and rather common attitude come from this. The image she projects is a big part of who she is; she hates any display of weakness on her part. If she’s really upset about something she’ll drink her way through it and if she’s angry or hurt, she’ll fight. The stereotype also suggests a poorer upbringing and disregard for the law; something which is a universal trait for the St. Trinian’s girls but places Taylor as more open to petty thievery, vandalism and other ASBO inducing behaviour.
Taylor || St. Trinian's | no reserve
Name: Alex
Personal Journal:
Contact:email: alex@emeraldpenguin.co.uk
Age/Birthdate: 17
Characters already played here: None
Character information
Character's Name: Taylor
Series: St Trinian’s
Age: Sixteen, nearly seventeen.
Timeline: Post 2007 film.
Canon Resource Link: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St_Trinian's_(film)
Taylor is head of the clique ‘chavs’. She plays (not by the rules) for the school hockey team, she’s also shown to be part of the school’s fight club, the first rule of which is that you don’t talk about the fight club, and she has a highly antagonistic relationship with the head of the clique, the ‘emos’.
Taylor is part of the group which scope out the art gallery in preparation for the theft, and then, with the head emo and head girl performs the robbery later in the film.
Despite the constant fighting between the two girls, Taylor and the head emo hug in celebration after the success of the break in suggesting an underlying friendship.
Personality:
Taylor’s quite a brash person. She doesn’t shy away from much and mainly just likes to have fun. She’s fiercely loyal to those she’s close to and will happily do extremely stupid things if she thinks it’s the right thing to do. Her moral code may not run parallel with the law but it says that her friends are the most important thing. Taylor’s quite confrontational and generally quick to anger and will often take offense where none is meant.
Taylor’s not afraid of being noticed, she tends to dress in a way which promotes it, with bright, sometimes clashing colours and short skirts. She’s generally a bit of a flirt and will get on more easily with those who don’t take her too seriously and will just flirt back. She doesn’t take much seriously.
The characters in St. Trinian’s are drawn from stereotypes in British teenage culture, in Taylor’s case, she is a chav. Both the casual acceptance of violence and rather common attitude come from this. The image she projects is a big part of who she is; she hates any display of weakness on her part. If she’s really upset about something she’ll drink her way through it and if she’s angry or hurt, she’ll fight. The stereotype also suggests a poorer upbringing and disregard for the law; something which is a universal trait for the St. Trinian’s girls but places Taylor as more open to petty thievery, vandalism and other ASBO inducing behaviour.