翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Sue Scott
・ Sue Scott (actress)
・ Sue Scott (politician)
・ Sue Scott (sociologist)
・ Sue Semrau
・ Sue Serino
・ Sue Shelton White
・ Sue Simmons
・ Sue Sinclair
・ Sue Sisley
・ Sue Slipman
・ Sue Smith
・ Sue Smith (footballer)
・ Sue Smith (politician)
・ Sue Smith (trainer)
Sue Snell
・ Sue Son
・ Sue Spaid
・ Sue Station
・ Sue Station (Fukuoka)
・ Sue Stockdale
・ Sue Street
・ Sue Stultz
・ Sue Sylvester
・ Sue Tanner
・ Sue Taylor (producer)
・ Sue Terry
・ Sue Thearle
・ Sue Thomas
・ Sue Thomas (agent)


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Sue Snell : ウィキペディア英語版
Sue Snell

Susan D. "Sue" Snell is a fictional character created by Stephen King. She was in his first published novel, ''Carrie'' in 1973, and also appeared in the 1976 film, the 1988 musical, the 1999 film sequel, the 2002 television movie, and the 2013 film remake.
In every adaptation and portrayal of the character, she is a popular teenage girl dating Tommy Ross. After tormenting Carrie White in the locker room, Sue begins to feel remorse for her actions. She asks Tommy to do her a favor and take Carrie to the prom in an attempt to make Carrie feel accepted and to ease her own conscience. In this she has been described as the "godmother" in King's "dark modernization of ''Cinderella''." The disaster that takes place at the high school prom is set in place when Tommy accepts.
==Novel==
In the novel, King uses commentaries by Sue Snell as one of his innovative narrative techniques to tell Carrie's history. Sue is a popular student at Ewen High School, who feels guilty after participating in a mean-spirited prank designed to humiliate Carrie. Her teacher, Rita Desjardin, says that Sue is not a bully by nature and therefore the shower incident is out of character. When the prank happened, Sue had been dating Tommy Ross for six months. While preparing for the prom, buying a gown and accepting Tommy’s invitation, Sue begins to plan for Carrie to go to the prom in her place.
Staying home on prom night, she begins to doubt her own motives: worry about her late period - she both fears and hopes she is pregnant - and the possibility of Tommy falling for Carrie. When the town whistle begins blowing, Sue looks out her window, sees the fire at the school and rushes to her mother’s car. Speeding towards the school, Sue is horrified when the school explodes. She slams on the brakes, and the car screeches to a stop, throwing her against the steering wheel. She gets out of the car, and is knocked down by the explosion of a gas station nearby. She later flags down a deputy sheriff, who interrogates her. The deputy later recalls Sue stating "They've hurt Carrie for the last time," indicating that she had no part in what happened.
Three hours later, Sue finds Carrie lying by a wrecked car driven by Billy Nolan and Chris Hargensen, near death from being stabbed by her mother. She and Carrie have a brief telepathic conversation in which she convinces Carrie she had no part in the prom prank. Carrie cries out for her mother and dies, every detail of her death witnessed by a horrified Sue, who later identifies Carrie's body for the official records. To Sue's relief, her menstrual period begins, though it is implied that Carrie caused her to miscarry, possibly in an act of kindness.
Sue is targeted by a blue-ribbon panel investigating the "Black Prom" as a partial instigator of the setup to humiliate Carrie at the prom. Sue accuses the commission of wanting a scapegoat. It is not known if she was ever criminally charged. In 1986, she authors a book, ''My Name Is Susan Snell'', which records the events of the prom from her perspective, reminding readers that "we were kids" and apt to make mistaken choices even while trying to do right. It is, however, also implied that this event has broken Sue's heart to the core. She wants to earn enough money with this book to go to a place, where she can forget everything and embrace death in peace.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Sue Snell」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.