Claudia Joy Holden

Claudia Joy Holden
Army Wives character

Claudia Joy Holden as portrayed by Kim Delaney
First appearance "A Tribe is Born"
(episode 1.01)
Last appearance "Onward"
(episode 6.23)
Created by Katherine Fugate
Portrayed by Kim Delaney
Information
Full name Claudia Joy Meade
(birth name)
Claudia Joy Holden
(married name)
Nickname(s) CJ
Gender Female
Occupation Associate attorney
Spouse(s) Michael Holden
(husband; 2 children)
Children Amanda Holden
(daughter, with Michael; deceased)
Emmalin Holden
(daughter, with Michael)
Relatives Sara Elizabeth Burton
(goddaughter, via Roland and Joan)
Molly Victoria Sherwood
(goddaughter, via Frank and Denise)

Claudia Joy Holden (née Meade) is a fictional character on the Lifetime television series Army Wives, portrayed by Kim Delaney.

Fictional biography

Claudia Joy is the daughter of Randall, a judge, and Shirley Meade. The Meades are implied to be from an upper-class New England background.[1]

In Season 2 Shirley comes down to Fort Marshall at short notice. It emerged that Randall had a gambling and spending problem, to the point where Shirley even began to consider looking for a job to pay off the creditors, and was in denial of it. Despite Randall's repeated futile claims to have stopped Shirley decides to leave him and considered divorcing him. At dinner at the officer's club he offers to pay for dinner but instead left it in Michael's name. Claudia Joy, being her "father's daughter", refuses to believe her mother or Michael that her father had a problem, until he asked Emmalin to borrow money from her college fund which he had started for her.[2]

She was a political science major and studied law at Harvard University and, according to a former classmate, was an exceptional student. She later admitted that she studied law only because she was pressured into it due to her father's profession and never really enjoyed it during her college years despite her excellent grades. While in college she was known as "CJ" but since then she is usually addressed by her full name, even by her closest friends. During her third year she fell asleep at the wheel while driving home and fatally hit a pedestrian. No charges were filed but she decided to drop out without completing her studies or a bachelor's degree. At this time she met Michael Holden, who had recently graduated from West Point. They married and she never returned to complete her degree. When the show first premiered it is stated that they have been married for seventeen years. The couple have two daughters: Amanda Joy (born 1990) and Emmalin Jane (born 1992 or 1993). Amanda was killed in the Hump Bar bombing in the Season 1 finale.

The Holdens are close family friends of the Sherwoods; Claudia Joy and Denise are best friends, as are their children. They have known each other for many years through Michael and Frank, who were both concurrently stationed at Fort Carson and Fort Bliss.

Claudia Joy and Michael are the godparents of Joan and Roland Burton's daughter, Sara Elizabeth, and Denise and Frank Sherwood's daughter Molly.

In Season 3 Claudia Joy was diagnosed with diabetes. She initially had difficulty coming to terms with it and tried to hide her condition. After meeting a girl with the same condition at Emmalin's hockey practice she decides to tell the wives. It was revealed at the beginning of Season 7 that Claudia Joy died of heart failure.

Characterization

Claudia Joy is often seen as the motherly figure by the other Army wives. She goes against social norm and quickly "adopts" Pamela and Roxy into "the tribe"; officers and enlisted personnel and their families generally did not mix around. For example, in the pilot, she let Pamela stay at her house to recover after giving birth despite that fact that Pamela was the wife of a sergeant.

Reception

The Chicago Tribune called Kim Delaney one of the best things about the show with Catherine Bell, who portrays Denise Sherwood[3] while Rob Owen of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette found Claudia Joy and Denise "the most passive, least interesting characters".[4]

References

  1. "Mothers & Wives". Army Wives. Season 2. Episode 11. August 17, 2008. Lifetime.
  2. "Great Expectations". Army Wives. Season 2. Episode 12. September 7, 2008. Lifetime.
  3. "'Army Wives' inducts viewers into a potentially interesting world". Chicago Tribune. May 31, 2007. Retrieved August 9, 2012.
  4. Owen, Rob (May 31, 2007). "Tuned In: 'Army Wives' is soap du jour". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved August 9, 2012.

External links