Blood Brothers: Characters (AQA GCSE English Literature)
Revision Note
Characters
It is vital that you understand that characters are often used symbolically to express ideas. Russell uses all of his characters to symbolise various ideas prevalent in his society, and the differences and similarities between characters reflect contemporary debates. Therefore it is very useful not only to learn about each character individually but how they compare and contrast to other characters in the play. Below you will find character profiles of:
The narrator
Mrs Johnstone
Mrs Lyons
Mickey
Edward
Linda
The narrator
The narrator, much like a chorus in Greek tragedy, provides information and highlights key ideas to audiences
In the prologue , the narrator acts as a gossiping voice of the public, to mirror prevalent attitudes: “So did ya hear the story of the Johnstone twins?”
The narrator tells audiences that the twins die in the end, creating tension
He asks the audience to judge Mrs Johnstone, suggesting she is cruel and heartless for giving away her child, highlighting the questions that will be raised as the music unfolds
The narrator foreshadows events, acting as an omniscient narrator
The narrator delivers warnings in rhymes and riddles, alluding to the supernatural quality of superstition and fate
He foreshadows that the past will come back to haunt the mothers: “The devil’s got your number/he’s knocking at your door”
His warnings parallel the consequences of the superstition with accountability for past actions
The narrator delivers Russell’s ideas at the end of the play: “And do we blame superstition for what came to pass? Or could it be what we, the English, have come to know as a class?”
As an omniscient narrator, he takes on certain minor parts which represent roles in society, acting as the voice of the public throughout the play
He acts as a milkman asking Mrs Johnstone to pay her bills: “I’m up to here with hard luck stories”
He acts as a gynaecologist delivering the news of her twins: “Congratulations. And the next one please, Nurse.”
He acts as a bus conductor, warning Mrs Johnstone that Sammy’s behaviour will lead to trouble
Mrs Johnstone
Mrs Johnstone is introduced as a sympathetic character, cheerful despite her difficult circumstances
She sings a song telling audiences her husband left her for a younger woman when she was 25 (a few months prior) because she looks 42
She explains she has seven children and another on the way
Unable to pay bills or feed the children, she is still hopeful about her new job
She struggles to discipline her children, yet is loving and warm-hearted: “I love the bones of every one of them”
Mrs Johnstone is shown as vulnerable
She attempts to fight for her twins but is persuaded by Mrs Lyons’ threats that the child welfare agency will take her children if she cannot feed them all
This could suggest Mrs Johnstone feels threatened by the social care system
Mrs Johnstone’s situation is highlighted as a dilemma, with either choice presenting huge challenges
Mrs Johnstone is shown as moral and honest
She refuses the money Mrs Lyons attempts to bribe her with
She admits her weaknesses and flaws easily
Her character is fatalistic and impulsive, highlighting themes of superstition and fate
She sings a song about living on the “never-never” (on borrowed time)
She realises that everything she has can be lost very quickly, suggesting a sense of powerlessness in her unstable circumstances
Her superstitious nature is the reason Mrs Lyons convinces her to separate the twins, and the narrator warns audiences this will not be forgiven
Although she ignores the superstition, at the end of the play the brothers die and the superstition comes true; she is unable to escape her past
Mrs Johnstone functions to show discrimination against working-class mothers
The narrator, acting as a voice of the public, judges her as cruel and heartless for giving up her son
The policeman tells her he will take her to court if her boys get into any more trouble
The towns-people celebrate when her family leaves for Skelmersdale
Mrs Lyons
Mrs Lyons is introduced as Mrs Johnstone’s employer: a lonely, dissatisfied woman in a large house whose husband is away for long periods of time
As she is unable to have children, she uses Mrs Johnstone’s difficulties and superstitious nature to persuade her to give her one of her twins
Audiences see she is capable of lying to her husband to get her way
She is presented as financially reliant on her husband, yet emotionally unsupported
Mrs Lyons represents a middle-class mother with financial security, but dysfunctional relationships
Once she has the baby, she fires Mrs Johnstone, breaking her promise to allow her to see her son and showing the audience her careless disregard for others
She insists on good manners from Edward and tells him working-class children are bad influences in a bid to keep the brothers apart and maintain the lie
During a confrontation over Mickey and Edward’s friendship, she slaps Edward and insists he stays isolated from friends, ignoring his emotional needs
Russell tracks the way superstition and lack of accountability lead to guilt and paranoia through the character of Mrs Lyons
After playing on Mrs Johnstone’s superstitious nature, she becomes superstitious about her deceit; she is unable to deal with her loss of control
She becomes violent, attempting to stab Mrs Johnstone
Children sing songs about her being the “mad woman”
By the end, her bitterness makes her tell Mickey about Edward and Linda’s affair
This is the event which leads to the violent deaths of both twins
Mrs Lyons is presented as privileged, acting as a foil for Mrs Johnstone’s character
When she tells her husband she is pregnant, he gives her a large sum of money to buy what she needs for the baby, in contrast to Mrs Johnstone’s character
The policeman has a drink with Mr and Mrs Lyons, playing down Edward’s trouble with the law, contrasting the way Mickey and Mrs Johnstone are treated
When she wishes to get Edward away from Mickey, she and her husband buy a new house in a new town:
This implies she can escape challenging situations easily
It depicts her inclination to try to outrun her past
The narrator warns her repeatedly she cannot escape the consequences of her actions
Mickey
Mickey Johnstone is the twin that stays with Mrs Johnstone while his brother grows up with Mrs Lyons; he represents working-class men
He is a likable, sympathetic character to challenge the audience's perceptions of the working-class
Mickey sings about his admiration for his troubled older brother, depicting the consequences of the absence of a good male role model in a boy’s life
When Mickey meets Edward, he shows the influence of his upbringing (nurture) on his character:
He teaches Edward to swear words
He does not respect his material possessions
He is surprised by Edward’s generosity
His warm and honest nature attracts Edward’s friendship
Mickey’s character development, from happy and shy to depressed and angry, depicts the impact of societal pressures on working-class males
Initially, he is shown as shy; he needs Linda and Edward to encourage his confidence
Mickey is portrayed as a typical carefree teenager but is threatened by the police and suspended from school for being rude, suggesting a lack of support as a child
Mickey’s confidence decreases as he grows up, whereas Edward’s confidence grows
In Act II, Edward leaves for university and Mickey loses his job in the factory; this can be seen as the turning point in Mickey’s development
Their different upbringing creates a barrier in their relationship: Mickey tells Edward: “In your shoes, I’d be the same, I’d still be able to be a kid. But I’m not in your shoes”
Mickey shows a clear desire to provide for Linda and his family, reflecting the nature of his mother and his desire to be a good man
His inability to do so leads to his decline: his redundancy leads to crime, arrest and depression, connecting poverty with crime
The support he is offered from authorities comes in the form of addictive pills; his low esteem leaves him unable to cope
When he loses Linda to Edward, his jealousy turns to rage
Before his death, he is angry with his mother for keeping him and denying him the opportunities Edward had: “I could have been him!”
Edward
Edward, the twin who grows up as Mr and Mrs Lyons’ son, represents a boy with a middle class upbringing, acting as a foil character for Mickey
He is presented as innocent, finding Mickey’s rough ways amusing
Despite his trouble at school and with the law, he is offered a second chance, unlike Mickey
He goes to a private school and a top university, which secures him a powerful job
His confidence and sociability grow from his university friends, while Mickey is shown to have no friends except for his brother who leads him to crime
Edward presents as trusting and open-hearted like his mother, alluding to his innate nature
His connection with Mickey cannot be separated and he refuses to obey his mother’s advice about working-class friends like Mickey
Edward’s kindness (helping Mickey with money, a job and a house) causes Mickey’s jealousy and eventually destroys his self-esteem, suggesting the significance of social class differences
Edward’s character development, from shy and timid to confident and powerful, tracks the impact of his middle-class upbringing on his nature
He believes Mickey to be confident despite Mickey’s shyness towards Linda, suggesting both the façade of confidence Mickey has raised, as well as Edward’s own ignorance about the world
In Act I, Edward is shy and wishes he could be like Mickey
However, in Act II, he is shown as confident and sociable with lots of friends and support
He becomes a powerful councillor; he helps Linda, Mickey’s wife, and starts an affair with her while Mickey is at his weakest
His inability to understand Mickey due to his sheltered life leads to his death, as well as Mickey’s
Linda
Linda is a brave and loyal working-class girl; she is Mickey’s best friend and ally
She stands up for Mickey against bigger boys, showing her bravery
She stands up for him again at school against the teacher and gets herself in trouble, showing her self-sacrificing loyalty to Mickey
As a teenager, she loves Mickey and openly encourages their romance
Linda’s loyalty to Mickey is tested by the pressures of her working-class circumstances
As a young mother, dealing with a depressed Mickey just out of prison and with a drug habit, she seeks the help and comfort of Edward
Edward, secure and in control of his life, offers her help and they begin a secret affair
Linda acts as the catalyst for the tragedy as she comes in between the twins
The love triangle between Mickey, Edward and Linda overwhelms Mickey and leads him to a deadly confrontation with Edward
The narrator foreshadows her tragic involvement in Act I: “The price she’ll pay just for being there”
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