Suzanne Sugarbaker

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Suzanne Sugarbaker Goff Dent Stonecipher is the name of a fictional character. Suzanne was a character on the popular CBS television series Designing Women.

Designing Women was broadcast on CBS from 1986 until 1993. Suzanne was a character for the first five years of the show. She was also the central character on a subsequent series, Women of the House. She was played by actress Delta Burke.

Contents

[edit] Character synopsis

[edit] Sisters

Suzanne is the younger sister of prominent Atlanta decorator Julia Sugarbaker. The differences in the sisters were substantial; there was over a decade's difference in age, and while Julia was a mature, successful businesswoman, Suzanne was more of an attention seeker. She is mainly a financial backer of Sugarbaker's Design Firm, but she "played the role" the firm's salesperson. Her main talent often appeared to be vexing everyone by sitting on the couch (in "her" certain designated place) and complaining about things. Suzanne was intelligent, and often "dumb like a fox".

Although she is shallow, Suzanne truly loves her sister, and whenever something happens and Julia is unable to deal with it, she truly rises to the occasion and does whatever is needed to ensure things get accomplished. As Charlene noted, "One crisis and she's Scarlett O'Hara". This was evident when Julia's boyfriend, Reese Watson suffers a first heart attack, and then later, when another heart attack proves fatal to him. Suzanne handles all the arrangements for her sister, to take the pressure off of her.

[edit] The night the lights went out in Georgia

Suzanne was crowned Miss Georgia World 1975 (in real life, actress Delta Burke won the title of Miss Florida 1974). In the second episode of the series, one of the most memorable scenes of the series occurred. Episode 2 of season 1, titled "The Beauty Contest", underscored the sisters' complicated relationship (and helped define the tone of the show). Suzanne could be exasperating to Julia, but Julia loved her dearly and was willing to defend her. She had this exchange when she overheard the current Miss Georgia World make fun of Suzanne:

JULIA (to Marjorie Leigh Winnick, the current Miss Georgia World): "You probably didn't know that Suzanne was the only contestant in Georgia pageant history to sweep every category except congeniality, and that is not something the women in my family aspire to anyway. Or that when she walked down the runway in her swimsuit, five contestants quit on the spot. Or that when she emerged from the isolation booth to answer the question, "What would you do to prevent war?" she spoke so eloquently of patriotism, battlefields and diamond tiaras, grown men wept. And you probably didn't know, Marjorie, that Suzanne was not just any Miss Georgia, she was THE Miss Georgia. She didn't twirl just a baton, that baton was ON FIRE. And when she threw that baton into the air, it flew higher, further, faster than any baton has ever flown before, hitting a transformer and showering the darkened arena with sparks! And when it finally did come down, Marjorie, my sister caught that baton, and 12,000 people jumped to their feet for sixteen and one-half minutes of uninterrupted thunderous ovation, as flames illuminated her tear-stained face! And that, Marjorie - just so you will know - and your children will someday know - is the night the lights went out in Georgia!"

[edit] Romances

Her marriages and affairs became legendary. Suzanne's three marriages were to writer Dash Goff (played by Delta's real-life husband, Gerald McRaney); Atlanta Braves baseball pitcher Jack Dent; and a fellow named J. Benton Stonecipher, whom was mentioned only once but never seen. In the early episodes, she was also engaged to co-worker Mary Jo Shively's ex-husband, Ted, whom she saw as a professional call, but blossomed to dating, to Mary Jo's dismay.

At one point, her money troubles were so grave (not to mention her being audited by the IRS) that, out of desperation, she almost married an elderly man named Wendell Oliver. His attendant, Roland, confided to Julia, Charlene and Mary Jo, that his children hated the idea of their father remarrying (to Suzanne) and they labeled Suzanne a "money sucking whore" and "society licking bitch."

[edit] General character quirks

As the series went on, the character of Suzanne became progressively quirkier and human. She experienced a number of trials and tribulations:

  • She nearly lost all her fortune because of a crooked accountant, named Reggie Mac Dawson, who is still her arch-nemesis. He absconded with her whole fortune, and is still on the loose. This stopped her extravagant spending, but she still puts on airs that she is rich.
  • Her maid, Consuela Valverde, is alternately a joy and a trial to Suzanne. At times, Suzanne would confide in Consuela, or ask her to put a voodoo curse on someone; but at other times, Consuela and Suzanne will go at one another over minor things. Consuela's family presented Suzanne with a pet pig whom she named Noel, because she was given to Suzanne as a Christmas gift. The pig eventually ran away. Consuela was never seen on-screen; in one episode, Anthony dressed in drag to impersonate Consuela so she could become an American citizen.
  • Suzanne has very few female friends; she feels they are all jealous of her, or think she's after their men. Although she won't ever admit it, she envies the close bond and friendship between her co-workers, Mary Jo and Charlene Frazier Stillfield.
  • Suzanne almost lost her Miss Georgia US crown during a voting mixup, as the representative, a Mrs. Audrey Dickers, stated with glee, but as usual, it came out that she won it honestly and not by sleeping around with the judges, as her hateful, bitter (and somewhat obese) rival, Donna Jo Carnes, had done.
  • At a class reunion, Suzanne had been viciously and gleefully insulted by former classmates, and thanks to the support of Julia, she accepted a trophy for the person most changed, and chose not to savage them, as she would have usually done.

[edit] Keeping up appearances

As a Southerner who was affluent, raised to be a debutante, and later became a beauty queen, Suzanne was extremely concerned about the appearances of her actions to others. She was uneasy and sometimes unpleasant when she interacted with some people. She felt that if these people were seen with her, they would have a negative impact on how others perceived her.

  • Her relationship with the firm's deliveryman, and later partner, Anthony Bouvier is very hard to explain. On the one hand, she is somewhat irritated by the fact that a black man (and an ex-convict at that) is working for her and her sister, stating on more than one occasion that "it just doesn't look right", but yet, on the other hand, she considers him to be her best friend and co-conspirator in many schemes.
  • She also had an ambivalent, and sometimes negative, response to gay men and lesbians. However, in the 1987 episode "Killing All the Right People", in which a young gay interior design colleague named Kendall Dobbs confides to Julia, Suzanne, Charlene and Mary Jo that he has been diagnosed with HIV and doesn't have long to live, Suzanne is uncharacteristcally supportive, going so far as to echo Julia's outrage over the insensitivity of one of their homophobic clients.

[edit] Second series

During the brief run of "Woman of the House", Suzanne takes over the congressional seat of her deceased fifth husband, and softens a bit, realizing with power comes responsibility. To that end, she also decides to pursue her dreams of having a family (illustrated earlier in the Designing Women episode "Oh Susanna"), and adopts an Asian child named Desiree.