Glorificus

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Glory
Image:Glorificus.jpg
First appearance "No Place Like Home"
Last appearance "Lessons" (as a manifestation of the First Evil)
Created by Joss Whedon
Statistics
Affiliation None
Notable powers
  • Periodically drains the sanity of human beings to maintain her own, presumably to temporarily prevent returning to Ben's form
  • Understands all languages demonic and human
  • Indestructibility, superhuman strength, and speed
  • Capable of sensing the difference between vampires and mortals
  • Has enormous power from which to cast extreme spells
  • Mystical "shroud" erases the memory of her transformation into Ben from humans
Portrayed by  Clare Kramer

Glorificus, also known as Glory, The Beast, The Abomination, and That Which Cannot Be Named, is a fictional character, a deity in the television series, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, played by Clare Kramer. She appeared during most of the fifth season of the program.

Contents

[edit] Biography

[edit] Character history

Glory is a god from a hell dimension, over which she ruled alongside two other deities; she was the most powerful of the three. Afraid that Glory would take full control of their dimension, the other two began a war against her; Glory lost the war, though narrowly, and was banished into the earthly dimension, where she was forced to share a body with a child named Ben, who was created solely to hold her.

She soon began to gain control over Ben for short periods of time, taking the form of a vain, self-centered human female who possessed superhuman strength but lacked many of her other powers. A magical "amnesia" spell keeps humans from learning that Glory and Ben are one and the same, even if she transforms right in front of them, although since the spell does not affect non-humans, Spike can know that Glory and Ben are the same entity. This becomes a recurring joke in the penultimate episode of Season Five, where Spike finds himself repeatedly having to explain to the Scooby Gang that Ben and Glory are the same person, only for them either to misunderstand him or to instantly forget. However, as Ben and Glory's personalities begin to merge more and more (see below), the magical ruse weakens until, in the finale, the whole gang is able to see through it.

Glory comes to Sunnydale looking for "the Key," a mystical item that will break down the walls between all dimensions, allowing her to return to reign in her own dimension. Use of the Key will also cause the merging of all other dimensions, including the one Buffy and her friends inhabit. Glory is not aware of what form the Key has taken. She surrounds herself with loyal minions and begins the quest to locate the Key.

In order to maintain her sanity and power, Glory feeds off other humans by a process that Buffy and her friends refer to as "brain-sucking." She inserts her fingers into the victim's head, absorbing the energies that bind the victim's mind. The humans that she "devours" in this way become incoherent and mentally unstable; Glory's arrival in Sunnydale is followed by an inexplicable increase in the number of mental patients. One of her unfortunate victims is Willow's girlfriend, Tara. For her part, Buffy is not initially aware of the Key's nature either. It is eventually revealed that Buffy's sister, Dawn, is the Key, in human form. Glory soon discovers this fact, and manages to kidnap Dawn.

The Key can only be used at a certain time, and as that time draws near, the power that separates Glory from Ben dissolves. They still inhabit Ben's body separately, but their memories and personalities begin to blur together.

Buffy attacks Glory with everything she has: Willow's magic spell (that draws on the goddess' stamina, giving sanity back to Tara at the same time), the Dagon Sphere (that lowers Glory's strength as well), her identical robot twin (the "Buffybot"), Olaf's Hammer (with which Buffy beats Glory literally to pulp), and eventually a wrecking ball, commandeered by Xander. Meanwhile, Spike, Giles, and Anya attack her minions. However, the final spell that will open the dimensions has already been started by Doc, unsuccessfully confronted by Spike, cutting Dawn with a knife and making her bleed. Ultimately, after killing Doc and saying goodbye to her sister, Buffy jumps into the portal that is opening between dimensions, resulting in its closure and her own death.

Glory is left significantly weakened, losing her hold on this reality, and returning to the form and mind of Ben. Giles knows that Glory will eventually return and get her revenge unless Ben is killed, so he smothers him. As Ben dies, so does Glory.

Glory is also referred to as "Glorificus" by her minions and in most textual references, and occasionally as "The Beast" by the monks who created Dawn (although she has nothing to do with The Beast who appeared in Angel, the spin-off series of Buffy the Vampire Slayer).

[edit] Powers and abilities

It is revealed that Glory's powers were reduced when she was imprisoned in human form. However, the powers that remained were:

  • Near-invulnerability: Only a troll god's hammer was able to do any lasting damage to Glory when used repeatedly. In her original form, she is immortal. Willow's lightning bolts caused her pain, but caused no visible damage as the hammer did, though she comments that Willow's assault 'slowed her down' slightly.
  • Superhuman strength: Glory possesses physical strength far beyond that of demons or Slayers. At one point, a building collapses on her after she repeatedly stomps her feet in a temper tantrum over a broken shoe; the collapse slows her down, but she is left without a scratch. Similarly, when a truck hits her at close range, she is unharmed. Presumably, she was not harmed by the great fall from the sky after Willow's teleportation from the hospital attack.
  • Superhuman speed (as shown when Glory pursues Buffy and Dawn immediately after she learns Dawn is the key)
  • The ability to drain the mental energy of humans to maintain her own mental strength. Victims were left in an insane state and appeared to be psychically linked to Glory from that point on.
  • A mystical shroud cast to prevent people from learning that she and Ben were the same person, the origins of which are unclear.

The extent of Glory's true powers as a hell god were never revealed, though according to Gregor in "Spiral", they were beyond what even her compatriot hell gods could conceive. In the finale she gained Ben's aid in recapturing Dawn by offering him immortality should her powers be restored.

[edit] Personality

Clare Kramer, in an interview with the BBC, says Glory's strength was her lack of self-doubt: "She was completely secure in herself, focused on what she wanted and dedicated to her cause." However, her strength was also her downfall; Kramer notes that Glory was unable "to look at more than just herself."[1]

[edit] Servants

  • Dreg
  • Jinx
  • Murk
  • Slook
  • Gronx
  • The High Priest Minion
  • Doc

[edit] Quotes

"Wait, I've always wanted to try that, you know that thing with worms, where, if you rip it in half, you get two worms? Do you think that'll work with you?"
[To Buffy, during their first fight] "You hit me! What, are you crazy? You can't go around hitting people. What, were you born in a barn? Fine. Be that way."
[Repeated Line before something bad happens to her] "Oh sh-."
[After knocking the head off of the Buffybot]"The slayer's a robot?Did everyone else know that the slayer was a robot?"
[When her minions drag Spike in] "Ew, what is that? And why is its hair that color?"
[When she is trying to get information from a Lei-Ach demon who it was she fought in the previous episode] "A slayer?? Oh god, please don't tell me I was fighting a vampire slayer! (Puts one hand to her forehead) How unbelievably common! If I had friends, and they heard about this ..."

[edit] Trivia

  • The picture in the living room of Glory's mansion is a copy of Tamara de Lempicka's Irene and her sisters a.k.a. Four nudes. The Polish art déco/futurist artist is renowned for being strongly feminist and openly bisexual/lesbian.
  • In Buffy & Angel: Official Yearbook 2006, Glory was voted number one by fans as "Best Buffyverse Villain", followed by Angelus and the Mayor respectively.

[edit] Appearances

[edit] Canonical Appearances

Glory has appeared in 13 canonical Buffyverse episodes:

Buffy the Vampire Slayer 
Glory appeared as a guest in 13 episodes:
Season 5 (20002001) - "No Place Like Home"; "Family"; "Shadow"; "Checkpoint"; "Blood Ties"; "I Was Made to Love You"; "Forever"; "Intervention"; "Tough Love"; "Spiral; "The Weight of the World"; "The Gift"
Season 7 (2002-2003) - "Lessons" (as the First Evil)

[edit] Merchandise

  • The character's popularity prompted Diamond Select Toys to release two unique Glory action figures in 2006 and 2007: one figure is modeled on the character wearing her trademark red dress, and the other features the character dressed in black, as seen in "The Gift" (episode 5.22). The latter action figure was released as part of a set, the other figure being Dawn from the same episode.
  • It is rumoured Electric Tiki will release a Tooned-Up Glory maquette, as a design for Glory is shown on company's official site.

[edit] See also

[edit] References