Aphrodite (Xena and Hercules)
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Aphrodite is a fictional character played by Alexandra Tydings in Xena: Warrior Princess and Hercules: The Legendary Journeys.
Aphrodite is the Goddess of Love on both Xena and Hercules. Aphrodite inspires love and passionate desire in humankind while her brother Ares, her antithesis, promotes warfare and conflict. Despite this conflict of values, Ares and Aphrodite are good friends and allies. Aphrodite is portrayed very much like a modern-day valley girl, with a somewhat ditzy persona and is often vain. However, she is essentially good-natured and helpful; she is close friends with Gabrielle because of that. Nearly all of Aphrodite's attire resembles lingerie. She is married to Hephaestus, but unlike the myths, their relationship is essentially a happy one.
Before their marriage she was a bit promiscuous she once stole a boyfriend away from Hera and because of that Hera places a curse on her son Cupid in The Green-Eyed Monster. In The Green-Eyed Monster Cupid falls in love with a girl named Psyche, who is said to be more beautiful that Aphrodite and that makes her extremely jealous. Out of jealousy Aphrodite tries to shoot a love arrow at Psyche, but Cupid tries to stop her. This only makes things worse when Hercules is accidentally hit and falls in love with Psyche. Thanks to Hera's curse, Cupid literally turns into a green-eyed monster with jealousy at the thought of losing Psyche. The curse is eventually lifted when the truth comes, after he confesses his love for Psyche and she marries him. Aphrodite gives Psyche Ambrosia to make her a goddess to make amends, since she is the one that sort of started the mess. Although she soon realizes she is now a mother-in-law, which does not make her very happy. She will also become a grandmother soon when Psyche and Cupid have a son, Bliss.
On Hercules, Aphrodite is usually the comic relief or the viewers' window into the politics of Olympus. Though she is originally introduced as a scheming goddess, as devious and almost as uncaring as Ares, she quickly evolves into a more benevolent character, though still prone to mood-swings.
In For Him The Bell Tolls, Aphrodite is determined to break up a royal family marriage that will end a war, only because the newly allied kingdoms plan to destroy her temples. As her son Cupid explains to Gabrielle, "When the Goddess of Love decides to do something petty and spiteful, she can be a tad difficult to reason with."
Aphrodite becomes one of the survivors of the massacre of the Olympians organized by Xena when the gods, under Athena's flag, join together to kill Eve. Aphrodite remains unconvinced that Eve will willingly destroy the gods, to the point where she sneaks Xena and Gabrielle into Olympus itself. After the Twilight of the Gods, Aphrodite becomes mentally imbalanced, due to Ares losing his powers (Love must be balanced by War). Her powers are stolen by Caligula, whom Xena tricks into killing himself. Xena helps restore her and Ares's powers with the golden apples she stole from the Norse Gods, thereby restoring balance to the universe.
This means that Aphrodite is one the Olympians to survive the events of the show. Since episodes of both Hercules and Xena set in the modern day shows that Ares and Hercules continue their rivalry, it is likely at Aphrodite also survives to the present day of the series universe.
[edit] Episodes
- The Apple (Hercules)
- Love Takes a Holiday (Hercules)
- The Green-Eyed Monster (Hercules)
- For Him the Bell Tolls
- Reign of Terror (Hercules)
- Stranger In a Strange World (Hercules)
- The Quill Is Mightier
- One Foul Day (Hercules)
- Fins, Femmes and Gems
- If the Shoe Fits
- Love On the Rocks (Hercules)
- My Best Girl's Wedding (Hercules)
- Love Amazon Style (Hercules)
- Little Problems
- Punch Lines
- Married With Fishsticks
- Motherhood
- The God You Know
- You Are There
- Many Happy Returns