Lucy Punch Mr Skin

Lucy Punch Mr Skin




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Lucy Punch Mr Skin
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This article consists almost entirely of a plot summary . It should be expanded to provide more balanced coverage that includes real-world context . Please edit the article to focus on discussing the work rather than merely reiterating the plot. ( September 2021 ) ( Learn how and when to remove this template message )
This article needs additional citations for verification . Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources . Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources: "Sketch" Skins character – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR ( September 2021 ) ( Learn how and when to remove this template message )

^ "Meet the new girl on Skins " . Digital Spy . 15 February 2008 . Retrieved 23 June 2018 .

^ Hodgkinson, Liz (1991) "Obsessive Love. How to Free Your Emotions and Live Again.


Lucy Sketch (commonly known as Sketch ) is a fictional character in British teen drama series Skins . She is portrayed by Aimee-Ffion Edwards . [1]

Sketch appears in only 6 episodes, which is the least for any lead character in the history of the show.

Sketch is portrayed as an obsessive and somewhat delusional Welsh girl. When officially first introduced in Sketch , she is seen to have a huge, bordering on pathological , infatuation with Maxxie Oliver , a boy with whom she goes to school. It is unclear when or how her infatuation developed, but several factors which can lead to obsessive love [2] seem to have been experienced by Sketch. She harbors some rage towards her mother, Sheila, who she feels has never looked after her properly due to her suffering from multiple sclerosis . On top of this, she seems quite distant from a lot of her peers and most likely has feelings of unworthiness or low self-esteem . She sees Maxxie as someone who can make her life much better, and is so 'in love' with him that she pretends to her mother that they're boyfriend and girlfriend. She also wears male clothing and flattens her chest with a sash to appeal to Maxxie, who is gay. She displays manipulative and deceitful behavior showing little regard for anyone she hurts in her delusional quest to become Maxxie's girlfriend. As her story progresses, she later shows some regret for how she acted, though continues to be besotted with Maxxie, and even enters into a relationship with Maxxie's friend Anwar Kharral , in hopes to stay close to him. Although her first name is Lucy, the episode title and all of her peers refer to her by her last name, Sketch.

Introduced in the second episode of series 2 , Sketch is shown to be a pathologically obsessed stalker of Maxxie Oliver's and dreams of becoming his girlfriend, even though she is well aware that he is gay . She works on the lighting for a play directed by Mr. Gelpart, the school drama teacher. After she sees Michelle kissing Maxxie as part of her role, she drops a light from the rafters, surprising even herself. Later, Sketch attends a house party held by Mr Gelpart where she pleads with him to give her Michelle's part. After he refuses the part, saying she was too unattractive to act, she tells the headteacher of the school that he kissed and rubbed her, resulting in Mr. Gelpart being fired. That same evening, Maxxie asked if she is single, and becomes distraught when she realizes he is asking for his friend, Anwar. She escapes to a cupboard and hides underneath a table. Michelle and Tony walk in, and she accidentally witnesses Tony turn down Michelle. After he leaves, Sketch offers her a beer, and they bond over their disdain for men.

After leaving the party, she breaks into Maxxie's home by picking the lock with her hair clip. She proceeds to put on his clothing and masturbate on his bed. Maxxie then arrives back home from the party, and Sketch stays the night underneath his bed. The next morning Maxxie finds a red hair clip on the floor in his bedroom. He later sees Sketch wearing the same hair clip, and realizes that Sketch is his stalker. After seeing another picture taken of him, he calls at her flat, and he discovers that Sketch has made out to her mother that Maxxie is her boyfriend. Her mother discovers the truth about her infatuation and realizes she lied about Mr Gelpart as well. When she threatens to reveal this, Sketch, in panic and desperation, ties her mother to her bed.

Finally, she steals Michelle's main role in the school play ( Osama: The Musical ) by giving her emetics , which she got from her mother. Maxxie confronts her and she confesses her love for him. He frustratedly tells her he is gay. She places his hand on her breast and tells him she's "as close to a boy as you can get", and that after they kiss he will see. At the moment of their kiss, Maxxie whispers to her that he 'felt nothing' and that she disgusts him. She proceeds to slap him on stage, and Maxxie yells at her and walks off. The play abruptly ends to an awkward and confused audience. She goes home, after removing her sash and putting on a low-cut dress, proceeds to Anwar's house. He tells her that Maxxie told him about how she'd stalked him, and she convinced him he was delusional and claimed to have fancied Anwar all along. She goes up to his room to have sex with him, whilst concentrating on a photograph of Maxxie, showing her obsession is not yet resolved. She breaks the fourth wall by looking directly at the camera, at the very end of her centric episode, she, Effy and Rich are the only characters in Skins to do so.

She makes an appearance in Sid, where she is shown to be continuing her sexual relationship with Anwar, even going as far as having sex with him in Sid Jenkins 's bed. Sketch states in Anwar and Sketch's date that she still loves Maxxie (even though she does state that she is rethinking her actions and seeking redemption), however her attempts at dumping Anwar are stifled when he calls her his girlfriend, to get rid of an overbearing waiter.

In Michelle , Sketch crashes Michelle's birthday camping trip. She is caught having sex with Anwar by Michelle and Maxxie, who are both outraged that Anwar is now in a relationship with her, considering her past history. Sketch apologises for what she has done, tells Maxxie that she is over him, and that she now likes Anwar. Later over the campfire, she sings If You're Not The One with Scarlett . She stares at Maxxie intensely as she sings, obviously still infatuated with him.

At Chris Miles 's house party in Chris , Sketch once again meets Maxxie. The two still have a very hostile relationship even though she insists she is over him. Her relationship with Anwar continues, but she has persuaded him into dressing in a style exactly like Maxxie's with a matching hairstyle as well. When Maxxie forces Anwar to realise this, he dumps Sketch on the spot.

In the last episode of Skins's second series, Sketch tries to convince the emotional and isolated Anwar that he perhaps has no future with his friends—that they will move on without him. We learn that after school she plans on remaining at home to take care of her mother, where she further explains that nothing is wrong with that kind of life style to ease Anwar's doubts. She seems to have accepted that she and Anwar should be together, as the ones left behind. Eventually Anwar is invited to share a flat with Maxxie in London, where he leaves a distraught Sketch behind.

In the fourth Skins Short, which was made alongside series 4, Thomas and JJ are applying for a job at the cinema, where JJ is seen wearing Maxxie's and later Sketch's costumes at the fancy-dress party in her central episode



The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe


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The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe

by
C. S. Lewis



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Lucy, who is Peter , Susan , and Edmund ’s youngest sister, is in many ways the primary protagonist of the novel. She is the first of her siblings to happen upon the world of Narnia, and is arguably the most deeply invested in returning the magical realm to peace and prosperity. Lucy is deeply kind, inquisitive, and open; as the youngest of all her siblings, she is the most naïve but also the most in touch with wonder, magic, and the ability to believe in goodness, righteousness, and fantastical things. She is a loyal friend to Mr. Tumnus , the first creature she met in Narnia, and even convinces her siblings to remain to put themselves in danger to help him. She and Susan also have a special, tender relationship with Aslan , as they are the ones who witness his death, which echoes Jesus Christ’s Crucifixion. By the end of her long reign of Narnia, Lucy is renowned for her valiance and fairness.


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19

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20

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37

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Related Characters:

Lucy (speaker), Edmund (speaker), Susan (speaker), Peter (speaker)




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44-45

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56

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59-60

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67-68

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80-81

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89

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106-107

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126

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154

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157

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163

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Related Characters:

Lucy (speaker), Edmund (speaker), Susan (speaker), Peter (speaker)




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186-187

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188-189

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The timeline below shows where the character Lucy appears in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe . The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.

Chapter 1: Lucy Looks into a Wardrobe

Siblings Peter, Susan, Edmund, and Lucy have been sent away from London to the countryside because of the air-raids taking place...
(full context)


...wardrobe. Peter, declaring there’s nothing to see in the room, leads the others onward, but Lucy stays behind, curious about what is inside the wardrobe.
(full context)


Lucy opens the door and finds several long fur coats hanging inside. She loves the smell...
(full context)


Lucy is frightened, but excited, too. Behind her, she can see the open door of the...
(full context)


As the Faun (Mr. Tumnus) scrambles to pick up all his parcels, he asks Lucy if she is a “Daughter of Eve.” She replies that her name is Lucy , and...
(full context)


The faun introduces himself to Lucy as Mr. Tumnus, and asks why Lucy has come to Narnia. Lucy asks what Narnia...
(full context)


Mr. Tumnus leads Lucy to the warm cave where he lives. He boils tea and makes a delicious meal,...
(full context)


Lucy offers Mr. Tumnus a handkerchief and asks what the matter is. He confesses through his...
(full context)


Lucy asks Mr. Tumnus to let her go home. He says that he of course will,...
(full context)


At the lamp-post, Mr. Tumnus apologizes again to Lucy , and asks for her forgiveness. Lucy wishes Mr. Tumnus well and bids him goodbye, returning...
(full context)


Lucy runs into the hall and joins her three siblings, reassuring them that everything is all...
(full context)


When Lucy opens the wardrobe for her siblings, however, they find that it is an ordinary piece...
(full context)


For the next few days, Lucy is “miserable.” She cannot bring herself to say that Narnia was a lie—she is a...
(full context)


...to play hide-and-seek inside the house. Susan is “It,” and counts while her siblings hide. Lucy returns to the wardrobe room, and decides to have just one more look inside of...
(full context)


Edmund jumps into the wardrobe and feels around for Lucy , but cannot find her. He begins calling for her, and soon finds that he, too,...
(full context)


...make their visit to her castle “a surprise for them.” She tells Edmund that if Lucy met a Faun, she has surely heard “nasty stories” about the Queen. Edmund begs for...
(full context)


After the sledge departs, Edmund hears Lucy calling for him. She is excited to see that he has made it through to...
(full context)


...to hear that he has made friends with a dangerous witch. He asks who told Lucy about the White Witch—when she reveals it was Mr. Tumnus the Faun who told her,...
(full context)

Chapter 5: Back on This Side of the Door

Lucy and Edmund return to find that the game of hide-and-seek is still going on, and...
(full context)


Peter reprimands Edmund for being “beastly” to Lucy and setting her off. Edmund protests that Lucy has been spouting nonsense. Peter replies that...
(full context)


When they encounter Lucy again, she has clearly been crying. She tells the others that she doesn’t care what...
(full context)


...listens thoughtfully to Peter and Susan’s story, and then asks them how they know that Lucy isn’t telling the truth. Susan tells him that Edmund accused Lucy of lying. The Professor,...
(full context)


...not exactly surprise him. Peter and Susan as the Professor what they should do about Lucy , and he advises them to try minding their own business; with that, the conversation is...
(full context)


...their conversation with the Professor, Peter and Susan try hard to make things better for Lucy . Peter gets Edmund to stop teasing her, and no one brings the wardrobe up at...
(full context)


...going on. One morning, Peter and Edmund are playing near a suit of armor when Lucy and Susan rush into the room and warn them to get out of the way—Mrs....
(full context)


...a light in the corner of the wardrobe. Peter realizes that they have “got into Lucy ’s wood after all.” The children all stand up and make their way to the back...
(full context)


...to Narnia before after all, he calls him a “poisonous little beast.” Peter, Susan, and Lucy head onward, and Edmund lags behind them, planning on how he will “pay [them] all...
(full context)


Peter suggests Lucy act as the leader, since she is the most familiar with Narnia. Lucy decides to...
(full context)


Susan and Peter are frightened, and ask Lucy to explain what’s going on. She tells them that the Queen is actually the horrible...
(full context)


Lucy spots a robin on a tree branch, and observes that it seems like it wants...
(full context)


After a while, the robin stops leading the children through the wood and flies away. Lucy and Edmund are frightened, worried that they have walked into a trap, but Susan points...
(full context)


...know the beaver is on their side, and the beaver holds up a little white cloth— Lucy recognizes it as the handkerchief she gave to Mr. Tumnus. The beaver reveals that Mr....
(full context)


...bravery; Susan feels as if she has just smelled something delicious or heard beautiful music; Lucy feels excited, as if it is the morning of a holiday.
(full context)


Lucy asks where Mr. Tumnus has gone, but the beaver insists that before they discuss any...
(full context)


...Adam and the Daughters of Eve. Mrs. Beaver boils potatoes and sets the table with Lucy and Susan’s help, while Mr. Beaver and Peter go out to catch some fish for...
(full context)

Chapter 8: What Happened after Dinner

...become of him. Mr. Beaver explains that Tumnus has been taken to the Witch’s house. Lucy asks what will happen to him there, and Mr. Beaver predicts that he will be...
(full context)


Mr. Beaver tells the children they’ll understand Aslan’s power when they finally meet him. Lucy asks if Aslan is a man—Mr. Beaver reveals that Aslan is a great lion. The...
(full context)


Lucy suddenly realizes that Edmund is not sitting at the table. The group looks about frantically...
(full context)

Chapter 10: The Spell Begins to Break

Back at the Mr. Beaver and Mrs. Beaver’s house, Peter, Susan, and Lucy hurriedly gather food and supplies for the journey. They want to leave now and get...
(full context)


...Susan, a bow and a quiver of arrows along with a little ivory horn; for Lucy , a diamond bottle of restorative cordial and a small dagger. Father Christmas warns them that...
(full context)


Miles away, the Mr. Beaver, Mrs. Beaver, Peter, Lucy , and Susan are still making their way to the Stone Table; they, too, are surprised...
(full context)


At last, the group reaches the clearing where the Stone Table is. Peter, Susan, and Lucy take in the sight of the landmark—it is a huge slab of grey stone inlaid...
(full context)


Peter bravely approaches Aslan, and Aslan greets Peter, Susan, Lucy , Mr. Beaver and Mrs. Beaver warmly. His voice has a calming effect. Aslan asks where...
(full context)


While Lucy and Susan are whisked away to be prepared for dinner, Aslan brings Peter to a...
(full context)


...out at the Stone Table, and members of Aslan’s army are scattered in every direction. Lucy runs towards Peter with fear; Susan is being chased up a tree by Maugrim. Peter...
(full context)

Chapter 13: Deep Magic from the Dawn of Time

In the morning, Peter, Susan, and Lucy awake to the news that Edmund has been brought back to camp in the middle...
(full context)

Chapter 14: The Triumph of the Witch

As they reach their new encampment and begin to unpack, Susan and Lucy notice how sad Aslan looks. Indeed, as the camp comes together, Aslan’s poor mood begins...
(full context)


Susan and Lucy creep out of their tent and see Aslan walking away into the wood. They decide...
(full context)


Susan and Lucy beg Aslan to tell them what’s the matter; he replies only that he is sad...
(full context)


Susan and Lucy hide in the bushes and watch as Aslan approaches a great crowd standing around the...
(full context)


...Narnia forever; she wants him to “despair” in that knowledge before he dies. Susan and Lucy look away, unable to bear watching as Aslan is killed.
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