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Evey Hammond

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Evey Hammond

This image is a candidate for speedy deletion. It will be deleted after Monday, 19 November 2007.
Evey in V for Vendetta #6

Publisher Warrior
Vertigo Comics
First appearance 1982
Created by Alan Moore
David Lloyd
Characteristics
Alter ego Evey Hammond
Notable aliases Eve, V, E-V (movie version, only)

Evey Hammond is a fictional character in the V for Vendetta graphic novel (created by Alan Moore and David Lloyd) who becomes involved in V's life when he rescues her from a gang of London's secret police.

Contents

Biography

Evey grew up on Shooters Hill in south-east London. As a child, she lost both her parents; her mother died following a nuclear war in the early 1980s, and her father was arrested and executed by the Norsefire, the fascist dictatorship that seized power during the war's aftermath, because of his socialist political leanings. Sent to a youth hostel, she is forced to work packing matches into boxes for shipment, and then begins working at a munitions factory. Struck by poverty, Evey becomes a prostitute. The first potential customer she approaches turns out to be a Fingerman, a member of Norsefire's secret police, working on a vice squad sting operation. As the man is about to rape her, she is saved by a mysterious man in a Guy Fawkes mask and black cloak, calling himself "V." V lets Evey watch him blow up the Houses of Parliament and Big Ben. V takes Evey to his underground hideout, which he refers to as the "Shadow Gallery." He blindfolds her so she cannot see where they were going. Evey comes to confide in V, telling him about the death of her parents. V comforts her and she becomes dependent on him for safety and security. When Evey offers to repay V's kindness, he dresses her up as a young girl and sends her to distract Anthony James Lilliman, a paedophile bishop whom he has targeted for revenge. Evey is stricken with guilt over her complicity in the bishop's murder, and she realizes that V is far more sinister than she suspected. When Evey finds herself abandoned by V and alone in the streets, she is taken in by an older man, Gordon Deitrich, who is involved in organized crime, and who becomes her lover. When Deitrich is murdered by Alistair Harper, a Scottish gangster, Evey tries to take revenge, but is herself captured by a Fingerman because he thought that she was going to kill Commander Peter Creedy of the Finger since Harper is partners with Creedy. She is thrown in prison and tortured by the police, who know of her connection to V. Inside her cell, Evey discovers a letter left there by the cell's former occupant, a woman named Valerie Page. The letter is the story of Valerie's life, from her first love to her film career to her imprisonment for being a lesbian. Valerie's tragic death and firm resolve inspire Evey not to give into the interrogations. When she says that she would rather die than surrender her integrity by informing on V, she is surprisingly set free from her cell. She soon learns that V had staged the whole thing, an exercise that puts Evey through the same experiences that shaped him. Initially furious, Evey comes to understand and accept her identity and freedom. The inspiring letter was not fake, as it had been given to V by Valerie when he was an inmate at the Larkhill Resettlement camp, a concentration camp secretly run by Norsefire to eliminate those considered "inferior" (Jews, blacks, Muslims, homosexuals, etc.) under Chancellor Adam Susan's world view. After V exacts his revenge on all of his former torturers, V is mortally wounded when he allows Detective Eric Finch, the head of London's police force, to shoot him numerous times. V dies in Evey's arms, leaving her to carry out the final step in his plan to blow up 10 Downing Street. She dons his Guy Fawkes mask and rescues Sergeant Dominic Stone from an angry mob. She brings him to the Shadow Gallery, identifies herself as V to London, which causes anarchy throughout the country, and the cycle begins anew.

Film portrayal

Portman as Evey.
Portman as Evey.

Evey is portrayed by Natalie Portman in the 2006 film adaptation. In the movie, Evey is not a would-be prostitute, but she is still caught by a fingerman during the city curfew. She does not start as a naive, 16-year-old waif, but as an older, more independent and free-thinking counterpart from the latter part of the graphic novel. The background of her family is changed. In the film, she has an older brother who is killed by a virus that was secretly developed by the government and first tested on V's fellow inmates at Larkhill. Her parents become political activists and participate in anti-government protests. The Hammonds are arrested by the Fingermen and die in Belmarsh prison (Evey's mother starves to death during a hunger strike, while her father is shot by British soldiers during an assault on the prison). Evey's last memory of her mother is of watching her head being covered by a black bag as she is dragged away. Suddenly orphaned, Evey is sent to a child reclamation camp and is working for the British Television Network when the film begins. Evey does form a relationship with Deitrich (here, a popular talk show host and acquaintance of hers at the network) but the two do not become lovers, as he is homosexual. In the graphic novel, V abandons Evey after he kills Lilliman; in this version, she runs away from him. Evey is abducted by V when Party Leader Peter Creedy raids Deitrich's home and captures him; V gets to her before Creedy does. The ensuing sequences involving the torture Evey undergoes and the inspiration she finds in Valerie's letters, are taken from the graphic novel. She does not personally take up the mantle of V after his death, but she does grant him his final wish and give him a Viking funeral in a train car filled with explosives. Like the graphic novel, London's chief of police, Inspector Eric Finch, discovers her. However, unlike the graphic novel, Peter Creedy and his have already mortally wounded V, and he is dead by the time Finch finds them. Finch's hatred for the government overpowers him; he lets her pull the lever triggering the explosives. Evey and Finch then watch as Parliament is destroyed by V's funeral car, ending Norsefire's oppressive reign over England. Portman first met director James McTeigue while filming Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones; he was working as assistant director. She allegedly beat several other notable actresses to get the part. It was announced in early January 2005 that Portman was cast in the film. [1] During production, she took voice coaching lessons from Barbara Berkery to perfect an English accent, working with her every day for a month before filming began. [2] She had her head shaven in one take on camera. Star Wars fans were surprised when she arrived at the 2005 Cannes Film Festival for the Revenge of the Sith screening with a shaved head.

Notes

  1. ^ P for Portman?. dc-on-film.com. Retrieved on 16 December, 2005.
  2. ^ Natalie Portman: From A(midala) to V. comingsoon.net. Retrieved on 1 April, 2006.

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Evey Hammond from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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