Bunny boiler

Bunny boiler is a pejorative term for an obsessive and dangerous person, referring to a former lover who stalks the person who spurned them. The term is normally used for a woman who stalks a former male lover or his new female partner.

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Etymology

The term derives from a scene in the 1987 film Fatal Attraction where a scorned woman (played by Glenn Close), seeking revenge on her ex-lover (Michael Douglas), kills his daughter's beloved pet rabbit, named Whitey, and places the deceased animal in a pot of boiling water when he is away from home. The scene concludes with the family returning to the house with the daughter in the garden searching for her rabbit, and the mother (Anne Archer) taking the lid off a boiling over pot to reveal her deceased pet (parts of the scene were cut from syndicated broadcasts.)

Its first known appearance in print was on December 6, 1990, when The Dallas Morning News reported on a Ladies' Home Journal interview with Close, referring to her erstwhile character as a "bunny-boiler". The phrase appeared in print with increasing frequency beginning in 1994.

Uses in popular culture

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