Lady Tremaine

Lady Tremaine, the Evil Stepmother, is the villain of Cinderella. The arch-enemy of Cinderella, Lady Tremaine does not harm her stepdaughter physically, but seeks to destroy her psychologically, motivated by jealousy of Cinderella's beauty - as it serves to accentuate the ugliness and awkwardness of the stepmother's own daughters, Anastasia and Drizella Tremaine - and is a socialite, determined to gain higher status by marrying one of her daughters to Prince Charming. She is often considered the most hated Disney Villain, perhaps due to her bitterness, ruthless cunning and cold, calculating personality. =Appearances on Film and Television=

Prologue
She is introduced in the prologue of the film. Young Cinderella's father, a widower, anxious for his daughter to have a mother figure, married Lady Tremaine, who is described as a woman of good family, with two daughters of her own, named Anastasia and Drizella, and a cat named Lucifer. After Cinderella's father died, Lady Tremaine showed her true colors, pampering her own daughters while forcing Cinderella to become a servant in her own home. After the prologue it is revealed that Cinderella lives in a small room at the top of the tower in her house.

The Royal Ball
Lady Tremaine allows Cinderella to attend the Royal Ball, on the condition that Cinderella finishes all her chores and finds a suitable dress. She and her daughters then proceed to heap chore after chore on Cinderella. When, despite this, Cinderella appears ready for the Ball in a suitable dress (her mother's, decorated by her mice and bird friends), Lady Tremaine (indirectly but intentionally) causes her daughters to tear apart Cinderella's dress, leaving her unable to attend the ball. When Cinderella, with the help of the Fairy Godmother, nevertheless attends the ball, her stepfamily do not recognize her. This was probably a result of their belief that she was at home with her dress in tatters - a dress very different style to her new dress at that - but Lady Tremaine notes a familiarity about her as she dances with The Noble Prince. She is not however permitted to study Cinderella long enough to make the connection.

The Finale
At the news that the Prince will marry the girl whose foot fits in the glass slipper (accidentally left behind by Cinderella at the Ball), Cinderella becomes quite distracted and falls into a dreamlike state, dancing and singing to herself. Lady Tremaine makes the connection that Cinderella must somehow have attended the ball and danced with the Prince, and realizing the identity of the mysterious girl at the Ball, quietly follows Cinderella up the tower and locks her in her room, putting the key in her pocket.

The Duke then arrives with the glass slipper, which both Anastasia and Drizella attempt to force their feet into. While this is happening (prologued by the stepsisters' repeated attempts to get the slipper to fit their own feet), two mice, Jaq and Gus, steal the key from Lady Tremaine's pocket and bring it to the door of Cinderella's room. Though delayed by Lucifer, the mice succeed in returning the key to Cinderella, who rushes downstairs to the Duke. Lady Tremaine, in her determination to keep Cinderella from getting a happy ending that her own daughters will not, trips up the servant bearing the glass slipper, causing it to smash. However, Cinderella reveals that she has the other slipper, and that it fits her foot, much to her stepmother's horror.

Cinderella II: Dreams Come True
She made her second appearance in the direct-to-video sequel Cinderella II: Dreams Come True, this time voiced by Susan Blakeslee. In this film, she only appeared in the An Uncommon Romance segment, where Anastasia has to go against her mother for the first time. Lady Tremaine is shown to be cold towards her own daughters, forbidding Anastasia from entering a relationship with a common baker's boy, since she still wants her daughters to marry wealthy husbands.

Cinderella III: A Twist In Time


Her latest appearance - and her most significant role so far - was in the second direct-to-video Cinderella sequel, Cinderella III: A Twist in Time (once again voiced by Blakeslee). This time, she acquires the Fairy Godmother's magic wand after Anastasia finds it. Lady Tremaine, intent on ruining Cinderella's happy ending and stealing it for her own daughters, uses the wand to reverse time to undo Cinderella's "happily ever after". She also enchants the glass slipper to fit Anastasia so that Cinderella never gets to try on the slipper herself, then brainwashes the Prince into forgetting Cinderella and marrying Anastasia. Most notably, she uses the magic want to transform Anastasia into the mirror image of Cinderella, and teleports Cinderella into a pumpkin which becomes a twisted parody of the original coach from the first film, and transforms Lucifer into its coachman, to take her far away from the palace and presumably kill her.

Ultimately, Anastasia is her mother's undoing; she comes to feel reluctant to marry somebody under false pretenses - while she cares for the prince, he does not love her, and she cannot bear to live the rest of her life pretending to be Cinderella.

Furious, Lady Tremaine tries to turn both Cinderella and Anastasia into toads, but the Prince defends the two from the spell and reflects it back with his sword, turning Lady Tremaine and Drizella into toads instead. Anastasia then restores herself to normal before giving the magic wand to Cinderella so that she can undo all the wrongs that had been committed. During the end credits, Lady Tremaine and Drizella have been restored, but are wearing scullery clothes identical to those Cinderella used to wear, implying that they will be working in the palace as servants as their punishment.

Appearance
Lady Tremaine appears to be old and elderly. She has grey hair shaped like two buns, green earings and a red gown.

=Personality=

Unlike most other Disney Villains, Lady Tremaine does not possess any magical powers or exert any physical force. She strongly believes in maintaining her self-control, reminding her daughters of this when the two fight during their music lesson. The only time she herself breaks this rule is, ironically, at this point; when Cinderella interrupts the music lesson to bring Lady Tremaine the invitation to the Royal Ball, she slams her hands onto the keys of the piano in frustration.

She is proud of never going back on her word; when permitting Cinderella to attend the Ball, she makes sure to lay down seemingly impossible conditions; when Cinderella nevertheless does the required chores and puts on an appropriate dress, Lady Tremaine provokes her daughters (by subtly showing them that some of their unwanted accessories have been used to decorate her stepdaughter’s dress) to rip the dress apart; without appropriate attire, Cinderella does not fulfil her stepmother’s conditions and is therefore unable to accompany them; this allows Lady Tremaine both to keep her word and to maintain her self-control.

Behind the Scenes
Lady Tremaine was voiced by Eleanor Audley, who also provided live-action reference for the character. She was animated by Frank Thomas.

Significance in Story

 * "The villain-victim relationship was one of the very best we had on any feature... Lady Tremaine was the only villain to live beside her victim day by day" - Frank Thomas and Ollie Johnston

Thomas commented that Lady Tremaine was the driving force throughout the film, and that she had to be believable, even tough she was far from human, to be considered a serious threat to the realistically animated Cinderella. The fights between Lucifer and the mice could be seen to reflect the (much less physical) conflict between their human counterparts, Lady Tremaine and Cinderella.

Animation
Like all of the character animators for "Cinderella" (excluding Ward Kimball, who animated Lucifer and the Mice), Thomas used live-action footage as reference when drawing the frames of animation. Eleanor Audley, dressed as Lady Tremaine, was filmed performing every action the character was required to make; the individual frames from this footage were then placed under animation paper. The actions were not traced exactly, but used as guidelines. .

Whenever the photostats were followed too closely, or a piece of human action was directly copied, the results seemed to the animators to lose the 'illusion of life'. The live action reference was therefore used primarily to suggest to the animator movements and mannerisms he may not have thought of otherwise. These were then applied to the animated character within their context. Thomas praised Audley's cold, regal performance, the inspiration for his animation of the character.

Disney TV Specials

 * Mickey Mouse's House of Villains: The evil stepmother named Lady Tremaine, two stepsisters Anastasia and Drizella and an cat named Lucifer. LadyT.jpg

Kingdom Hearts Birth by Sleep
She appears in Kingdom Hearts Birth by Sleep, along with Drizella Tremaine and Anastasia Tremaine. In the game, she plays out the same role as in the movie, only this time, the evil in her heart transforms Cinderella's pumpkin carriage into a giant Unversed, and she is killed when the monster incinerates her and her daughters with a fire bomb. This marks the first time she is killed in any depiction.

=Trivia=


 * Lady Tremaine was nominated for a place in 'AFI’s 50 Greatest Villains list', along with the Queen, Stromboli, Man, Maleficent, Cruella De Vil and Ursula. The Disney Villains to make the final list were the Queen (10), Man (20), and Cruella De Vil (39)
 * Lady Tremaine makes a cameo in the Who Framed Roger Rabbit Special Edition DVD in one of the menus.

=References=