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* NextToNormal is ''Break The Cutie: The Musical''. Diana has been treated for severe Bipolar disorder for 20 years, haunted by manic-depressive episodes, side-effects of potentially lethal medications, and hallucinations of [[spoiler: her late son]]. After undergoing a heavy dose of ECT (which she seems to have enjoyed a bit ''too'' much), she loses most memories of her family. After regaining them, the trauma of [[spoiler: losing her son]] finally rushes back she decides that [[spoiler: the slow and dangerous treatment isn't worth tearing her family apart, so she decides to leave them]].

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* NextToNormal ''Theatre/NextToNormal'' is ''Break The Cutie: The Musical''. Diana has been treated for severe Bipolar disorder for 20 years, haunted by manic-depressive episodes, side-effects of potentially lethal medications, and hallucinations of [[spoiler: her late son]]. After undergoing a heavy dose of ECT (which she seems to have enjoyed a bit ''too'' much), she loses most memories of her family. After regaining them, the trauma of [[spoiler: losing her son]] finally rushes back she decides that [[spoiler: the slow and dangerous treatment isn't worth tearing her family apart, so she decides to leave them]].

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* ''Tosca'': Floria Tosca is a sweet, religious girl, though a bit prone to jealousy. Corrupt police boss Scarpia uses this jealousy to not only get her to accidentally betray the artist Mario Cavaradossi, who she loves, to him, but then forces her to both tell him where Mario might be hiding Angelotti to stop him from being tortured, then ''agree to be raped'' to keep him from being executed in Scarpia's [[ScarpiaUltimatum namesake ultimatum]]. Poor Tosca has a complete breakdown at that point, asking God why he would do this to her, who lived only for art and love, and tried only to serve him. She manages to palm a dagger and kill Scarpia when he returns to rape her -- but, when she goes to meet up with Mario, the [[DisneyDeath false execution]] that Scarpia arranged... turns out to be [[KilledOffForReal not so fake after all]]. As she breaks completely, and the troops can be heard coming to arrest her for the murder of Scarpia, she takes the only action left to her, and [[DrivenToSuicide throws herself off the roof of a tower]].
** Opera in general is a veritable breeding ground for breaking cuties. And Puccini was a GREAT cutie breaker. Poor, poor Cio-Cio-San from ''Madame Butterfly'', indeed. And if we go to Donizetti, ''Lucia di Lamermoor''. And, in French opera, Marguerite in Gounod's ''Faust.''
*** As that distinguished opera critic, Bugs Bunny said in '''What's Opera, Doc?''', "What did you expect from an opera? A happy ending?"
*** Puccini certainly put his cuties through the wringer. Poor Sister Angelica, forced to live out her days in a convent for the crime of having a child out of wedlock seven years prior: one day her rich aunt comes and tells her, "Your younger sister is about to get married to THE MAN YOU SLEPT WITH, you brazen slut, and you have to sign over your inheritance to her, since you won't be needing it. Oh, and your son died a couple of years ago. Bye," after which Angelica, devastated, brews up a poison out of the plants in the garden she tends, drinks it, and then realizes that she's committed a mortal sin and therefore has condemned herself to hell.
* ''Theatre/WestSideStory''
** Maria.
-->"How do you fire this gun, Chino? Just by pulling this little trigger? How many bullets are left, Chino? Enough for you? And you? All of you? WE ALL KILLED HIM; and my brother and Riff. I, too. I CAN KILL NOW BECAUSE I HATE NOW! How many can I kill, Chino? How many -- and still have one bullet left for me?"
** Anita qualifies even more as a Broken Cutie, as she starts out as comic relief--a snarky but nice girl who's happy to be in America and only wants to live her life in a new country and help Maria and Tony out. Then Tony kills her boyfriend. Understandably she becomes pretty jaded, but she STILL agrees to help Maria get a message to Tony (yes, the guy who killed her boyfriend). Instead she finds his friends, who almost rape her. That's pretty much the last straw, and she tells the lie that leads to the tragic conclusion.) KilltheCutie happens to bother Riff and Bernardo.

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* ''Tosca'': Floria Tosca is a sweet, religious girl, though a bit prone to jealousy. Corrupt police boss Scarpia uses this jealousy to not only get her to accidentally betray the artist Mario Cavaradossi, who she loves, to him, but then forces her to both tell him where Mario might be hiding Angelotti to stop him from being tortured, then ''agree to be raped'' to keep him from being executed in Scarpia's [[ScarpiaUltimatum namesake ultimatum]]. Poor Tosca %%
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has a complete breakdown at that point, asking God why he would do this to her, who lived only for art and love, and tried only to serve him. She manages to palm a dagger and kill Scarpia when he returns to rape her -- but, when she goes to meet up with Mario, the [[DisneyDeath false execution]] that Scarpia arranged... turns out to be [[KilledOffForReal not so fake after all]]. As she breaks completely, and the troops can be heard coming to arrest her for the murder of Scarpia, she takes the only action left to her, and [[DrivenToSuicide throws herself off the roof of a tower]].
** Opera in general is a veritable breeding ground for breaking cuties. And Puccini was a GREAT cutie breaker. Poor, poor Cio-Cio-San from ''Madame Butterfly'', indeed. And if we go to Donizetti, ''Lucia di Lamermoor''. And, in French opera, Marguerite in Gounod's ''Faust.''
*** As that distinguished opera critic, Bugs Bunny said in '''What's Opera, Doc?''', "What did you expect from an opera? A happy ending?"
*** Puccini certainly put his cuties through the wringer. Poor Sister Angelica, forced to live out her days in a convent for the crime of having a child out of wedlock seven years prior: one day her rich aunt comes and tells her, "Your younger sister is about to get married to THE MAN YOU SLEPT WITH, you brazen slut, and you have to sign over
been alphabetized. Please add your inheritance to her, since you won't be needing it. Oh, and your son died a couple of years ago. Bye," after which Angelica, devastated, brews up a poison out of the plants example in the garden she tends, drinks it, and then realizes that she's committed a mortal sin and therefore has condemned herself to hell.
proper place. Thanks!
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* ''Theatre/WestSideStory''
** Maria.
-->"How do you fire this gun, Chino? Just by pulling this little trigger? How many bullets are left, Chino? Enough for you? And you? All of you? WE ALL KILLED HIM; and my brother and Riff. I, too. I CAN KILL NOW BECAUSE I HATE NOW! How many can I kill, Chino? How many -- and still have one bullet left for me?"
** Anita qualifies even more as a Broken Cutie, as she starts out as comic relief--a snarky but nice girl who's happy to be in America and only wants to live her life in a new country and help Maria and Tony out. Then Tony kills her boyfriend. Understandably she becomes pretty jaded, but she STILL agrees to help Maria get a message to Tony (yes,
In ''AStreetcarNamedDesire'' when [[spoiler: Stanley raped Blanche]] the guy who killed her boyfriend). Instead she finds his friends, who almost rape her. That's pretty much the last straw, and she tells the lie that leads to the tragic conclusion.) KilltheCutie happens to bother Riff and Bernardo.cutie ''really'' became [[RapeLeadsToInsanity broken]].



* While Elphaba from ''Theatre/{{Wicked}}'' isn't exactly a traditional cutie, the Wizard and Madame Morrible do their best to break her by turning her into a terrorist fugitive, murdering her boyfriend, giving her former best friend an important position which seems to be trying to mitigate Elphaba's activities and DROPS a house on her sister. No wonder she finally snaps in epic fashion during 'No Good Deed.'

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* While Elphaba from ''Theatre/{{Wicked}}'' isn't exactly a traditional cutie, Aww, look at [[Theatre/LittleShopOfHorrors Seymour]] with his {{Adorkable}} clumsiness, his hopeless little crush on the Wizard local abused girl, Audrey, and Madame Morrible do their best his quirky way of confiding in his pet plant! The poor guy's lived such a horrible life, and no one's ever loved him--can you really blame him for wanting a little happiness? Or for wanting to break her by turning her into a terrorist fugitive, murdering her boyfriend, giving her former best friend an important position which seems off the jerk who beats up Audrey? Or for having to kill off his boss, too, so he won't get ratted on, and then keeping the plant who needs to be trying fed blood so that Audrey won't leave him and ...well, you see where this is going. Suffice it to mitigate Elphaba's activities and DROPS a house on her sister. No wonder she finally snaps say that [[spoiler:his death is probably the nicest thing that happens to him in epic fashion during 'No Good Deed.'the whole show]].



* In ''Vanities'', Kathy's boyfriend Gary, while she was on the pill, slept with another girl, [[ShotgunWedding got that one pregnant, and married her]]. Kathy is [[BrokenBird utterly and irrevocably devastated]] as a result, to the point of having a nervous breakdown. [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wwM-toAsrvs Cute Boys with Short Haircuts]] says it all.
* By the end of ''Theatre/SweeneyToddTheDemonBarberOfFleetStreet'', Johanna and Toby have gone mad due to having been treated cruelly for their whole lives, but also partly because of their first hand discoveries of Sweeney and Lovett's practices.
* Juliet in ''RomeoAndJuliet''. Three hours after she marries Romeo, he kills her cousin (who was like a brother to her) and gets kicked out of Verona. The ''next day'' her parents try to force her to marry a man she doesn't love, and threaten to disown her if she refuses. Her father claims that he and her mother "have had a curse in having her". Meanwhile, she's loyal to Romeo, not only because of her inclinations, but because of her religious beliefs (i.e. "I'm already married, it would be wrong of me to get married again") and is fully prepared to kill herself rather than go through with the wedding. She ends up taking a potion that makes her appear dead, even though she's terrified of what it will do to her, as part of an incredibly risky plan to get out of Verona that entails never seeing the people she loves again. Then, when she wakes up in her family tomb, her husband is lying dead with his head on her chest. She runs herself through with his dagger. ''And she's fourteen years old.''
* Aww, look at [[Theatre/LittleShopOfHorrors Seymour]] with his {{Adorkable}} clumsiness, his hopeless little crush on the local abused girl, Audrey, and his quirky way of confiding in his pet plant! The poor guy's lived such a horrible life, and no one's ever loved him--can you really blame him for wanting a little happiness? Or for wanting to off the jerk who beats up Audrey? Or for having to kill off his boss, too, so he won't get ratted on, and then keeping the plant who needs to be fed blood so that Audrey won't leave him and ...well, you see where this is going. Suffice it to say that [[spoiler:his death is probably the nicest thing that happens to him in the whole show]].



* In ''AStreetcarNamedDesire'' when [[spoiler: Stanley raped Blanche]] the cutie ''really'' became [[RapeLeadsToInsanity broken]].

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* In ''AStreetcarNamedDesire'' Juliet in ''RomeoAndJuliet''. Three hours after she marries Romeo, he kills her cousin (who was like a brother to her) and gets kicked out of Verona. The ''next day'' her parents try to force her to marry a man she doesn't love, and threaten to disown her if she refuses. Her father claims that he and her mother "have had a curse in having her". Meanwhile, she's loyal to Romeo, not only because of her inclinations, but because of her religious beliefs (i.e. "I'm already married, it would be wrong of me to get married again") and is fully prepared to kill herself rather than go through with the wedding. She ends up taking a potion that makes her appear dead, even though she's terrified of what it will do to her, as part of an incredibly risky plan to get out of Verona that entails never seeing the people she loves again. Then, when [[spoiler: Stanley raped Blanche]] the cutie ''really'' became [[RapeLeadsToInsanity broken]].she wakes up in her family tomb, her husband is lying dead with his head on her chest. She runs herself through with his dagger. ''And she's fourteen years old.''



* By the end of ''Theatre/SweeneyToddTheDemonBarberOfFleetStreet'', Johanna and Toby have gone mad due to having been treated cruelly for their whole lives, but also partly because of their first hand discoveries of Sweeney and Lovett's practices.
* ''Tosca'': Floria Tosca is a sweet, religious girl, though a bit prone to jealousy. Corrupt police boss Scarpia uses this jealousy to not only get her to accidentally betray the artist Mario Cavaradossi, who she loves, to him, but then forces her to both tell him where Mario might be hiding Angelotti to stop him from being tortured, then ''agree to be raped'' to keep him from being executed in Scarpia's [[ScarpiaUltimatum namesake ultimatum]]. Poor Tosca has a complete breakdown at that point, asking God why he would do this to her, who lived only for art and love, and tried only to serve him. She manages to palm a dagger and kill Scarpia when he returns to rape her -- but, when she goes to meet up with Mario, the [[DisneyDeath false execution]] that Scarpia arranged... turns out to be [[KilledOffForReal not so fake after all]]. As she breaks completely, and the troops can be heard coming to arrest her for the murder of Scarpia, she takes the only action left to her, and [[DrivenToSuicide throws herself off the roof of a tower]].
** Opera in general is a veritable breeding ground for breaking cuties. And Puccini was a GREAT cutie breaker. Poor, poor Cio-Cio-San from ''Madame Butterfly'', indeed. And if we go to Donizetti, ''Lucia di Lamermoor''. And, in French opera, Marguerite in Gounod's ''Faust.''
*** As that distinguished opera critic, Bugs Bunny said in '''What's Opera, Doc?''', "What did you expect from an opera? A happy ending?"
*** Puccini certainly put his cuties through the wringer. Poor Sister Angelica, forced to live out her days in a convent for the crime of having a child out of wedlock seven years prior: one day her rich aunt comes and tells her, "Your younger sister is about to get married to THE MAN YOU SLEPT WITH, you brazen slut, and you have to sign over your inheritance to her, since you won't be needing it. Oh, and your son died a couple of years ago. Bye," after which Angelica, devastated, brews up a poison out of the plants in the garden she tends, drinks it, and then realizes that she's committed a mortal sin and therefore has condemned herself to hell.
* In ''Vanities'', Kathy's boyfriend Gary, while she was on the pill, slept with another girl, [[ShotgunWedding got that one pregnant, and married her]]. Kathy is [[BrokenBird utterly and irrevocably devastated]] as a result, to the point of having a nervous breakdown. [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wwM-toAsrvs Cute Boys with Short Haircuts]] says it all.
* ''Theatre/WestSideStory''
** Maria.
-->"How do you fire this gun, Chino? Just by pulling this little trigger? How many bullets are left, Chino? Enough for you? And you? All of you? WE ALL KILLED HIM; and my brother and Riff. I, too. I CAN KILL NOW BECAUSE I HATE NOW! How many can I kill, Chino? How many -- and still have one bullet left for me?"
** Anita qualifies even more as a Broken Cutie, as she starts out as comic relief--a snarky but nice girl who's happy to be in America and only wants to live her life in a new country and help Maria and Tony out. Then Tony kills her boyfriend. Understandably she becomes pretty jaded, but she STILL agrees to help Maria get a message to Tony (yes, the guy who killed her boyfriend). Instead she finds his friends, who almost rape her. That's pretty much the last straw, and she tells the lie that leads to the tragic conclusion.) KilltheCutie happens to bother Riff and Bernardo.
* While Elphaba from ''Theatre/{{Wicked}}'' isn't exactly a traditional cutie, the Wizard and Madame Morrible do their best to break her by turning her into a terrorist fugitive, murdering her boyfriend, giving her former best friend an important position which seems to be trying to mitigate Elphaba's activities and DROPS a house on her sister. No wonder she finally snaps in epic fashion during 'No Good Deed.'



** The female characters from Ibsen`s plays that doesn`t break, are either willful determinators, {{action girl}}s, or completely insane.

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** The female characters from Ibsen`s plays that doesn`t break, are either willful determinators, {{action girl}}s, or completely insane.
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** Agnes, wife of {{Theatre/Brand}}, suffers a HeroicBSOD when she understands her son is ill, and has to struggle with the fact that she has to stay with her husband for the sake of duty, at the expence of their son`s life. Later, she is shut off from his feelings, which she hides, and passes the DespairEventHorizon.

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** Agnes, wife of {{Theatre/Brand}}, suffers a HeroicBSOD when she understands her son is ill, and has to struggle with the fact that she has to stay with her husband for the sake of duty, at the expence of their son`s life. Later, she is shut off from his feelings, which she he hides, and she passes the DespairEventHorizon.DespairEventHorizon. Eventually, she dies.

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** Agnes, wife of {{Theatre/Brand}}, suffers a HeroicBSOD when she understands her son is ill, and has to struggle with the fact that she has to stay with his husband for the sake of duty, at the expence of their son`s life. Later, she is shut off from his feelings, which she hides, and passes the DespairEventHorizon.
** Hedvig, TheIngenue from Theatre/TheWildDuck, has lived with Hjalmar Ekdal, whom she believed was her father, and was emotionally attached to him. She breaks when he disowns her, because he learns that he in fact is not her father after all. When Hedvig decides she will prove her love for him, TragedyEnsues.

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** Agnes, wife of {{Theatre/Brand}}, suffers a HeroicBSOD when she understands her son is ill, and has to struggle with the fact that she has to stay with his her husband for the sake of duty, at the expence of their son`s life. Later, she is shut off from his feelings, which she hides, and passes the DespairEventHorizon.
** Hedvig, TheIngenue from Theatre/TheWildDuck, has lived with Hjalmar Ekdal, whom she believed was her father, and was emotionally attached to him. She breaks when he disowns her, because he learns that he in fact is not her father after all. When Hedvig decides she will prove her love for him, TragedyEnsues.tragedy ensues.


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** Theatre/HeddaGabler is broken by the rules of society, well on the way to BrokenBird territory.
** The female characters from Ibsen`s plays that doesn`t break, are either willful determinators, {{action girl}}s, or completely insane.
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* Creator/HenrikIbsen has broken many cuties in his production at large.
** Agnes, wife of {{Theatre/Brand}}, suffers a HeroicBSOD when she understands her son is ill, and has to struggle with the fact that she has to stay with his husband for the sake of duty, at the expence of their son`s life. Later, she is shut off from his feelings, which she hides, and passes the DespairEventHorizon.
** Hedvig, TheIngenue from Theatre/TheWildDuck, has lived with Hjalmar Ekdal, whom she believed was her father, and was emotionally attached to him. She breaks when he disowns her, because he learns that he in fact is not her father after all. When Hedvig decides she will prove her love for him, TragedyEnsues.
** Aline Solness from Theatre/TheMasterBuilder. She married Solness, then had to go through a massive DespairEventHorizon when her childhood home burnt to the ground, and her sons died afterwards. She never recovered, and is left with a continuous ThousandYardStare.
** Margit from Theatre/TheFeastAtSolhaug, when she realized she married the wrong man. After his death, she retires to a convent.
** Helene Alving from {{Theatre/Ghosts}}, who married a faithless upper class jerkass and bore him a son, who in turn ended up with his father`s generic disease and lost his wits.
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** Anita might also count as this. She starts out as a nice girl who's happy to be in America and only wants to live her life in a new country and help Maria and Tony out. Then Tony kills her boyfriend. Understandably she becomes pretty jaded, but she STILL agrees to help Maria get a message to Tony (yes, the guy who killed her boyfriend). Instead she finds his friends, who almost rape her. That's pretty much the last straw, and she tells the lie that leads to the tragic conclusion.

to:

** Anita might also count qualifies even more as this. She a Broken Cutie, as she starts out as a comic relief--a snarky but nice girl who's happy to be in America and only wants to live her life in a new country and help Maria and Tony out. Then Tony kills her boyfriend. Understandably she becomes pretty jaded, but she STILL agrees to help Maria get a message to Tony (yes, the guy who killed her boyfriend). Instead she finds his friends, who almost rape her. That's pretty much the last straw, and she tells the lie that leads to the tragic conclusion.) KilltheCutie happens to bother Riff and Bernardo.



* ''{{Hamlet}}'' pretty much pulls this trope on Ophelia. Between his running into her room disheveled, sexually harasses her (in two separate scenes, no less) and finally kills her father under the impression that he was killing Claudius, driving her insane. It's not ''quite'' KillTheCutie, since she kills herself, but it's at the hard dark edge of the two tropes. Indeed, Hamlet himself qualifies as a broken cutie. Many of his friends speak highly of the good and loving man he was before his uncle murdered his brother and married his mother. The brooding, cynical man who is mean to Ophelia and mindlessly manslaughters her father is a different man from the sweet-natured heir to the throne who wrote her love letters and was Horatio's best buddy. We don't see much of him being this guy (because the play begins when he is already broken), but he still has the ability to make us laugh!

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* ''{{Hamlet}}'' pretty much pulls this trope on Ophelia. Between his running into her room disheveled, sexually harasses her (in two separate scenes, no less) and finally kills her father under the impression that he was killing Claudius, driving her insane. It's not ''quite'' It could be considered KillTheCutie, since it's debatable whether or not she kills herself, but herself or accidentally drowns; either way, it's at the hard dark edge of the two tropes. Indeed, Hamlet himself qualifies as a broken cutie. Many of his friends speak highly of the good and loving man he was before his uncle murdered his brother and married his mother. The brooding, cynical man who is mean to Ophelia and mindlessly manslaughters her father is a different man from the sweet-natured heir to the throne who wrote her love letters and was Horatio's best buddy. We don't see much of him being this guy (because the play begins when he is already broken), but he still has the ability to make us laugh!laugh! He's adorable.
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* Aww, look at [[LittleShopOfHorrors Seymour]] with his {{Adorkable}} clumsiness, his hopeless little crush on the local abused girl, Audrey, and his quirky way of confiding in his pet plant! The poor guy's lived such a horrible life, and no one's ever loved him--can you really blame him for wanting a little happiness? Or for wanting to off the jerk who beats up Audrey? Or for having to kill off his boss, too, so he won't get ratted on, and then keeping the plant who needs to be fed blood so that Audrey won't leave him and ...well, you see where this is going. Suffice it to say that [[spoiler:his death is probably the nicest thing that happens to him in the whole show]].

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* Aww, look at [[LittleShopOfHorrors [[Theatre/LittleShopOfHorrors Seymour]] with his {{Adorkable}} clumsiness, his hopeless little crush on the local abused girl, Audrey, and his quirky way of confiding in his pet plant! The poor guy's lived such a horrible life, and no one's ever loved him--can you really blame him for wanting a little happiness? Or for wanting to off the jerk who beats up Audrey? Or for having to kill off his boss, too, so he won't get ratted on, and then keeping the plant who needs to be fed blood so that Audrey won't leave him and ...well, you see where this is going. Suffice it to say that [[spoiler:his death is probably the nicest thing that happens to him in the whole show]].
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* ''WestSideStory''

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* ''WestSideStory''''Theatre/WestSideStory''
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* ''{{Hamlet}}'' pretty much pulls this trope on Ophelia. Between his running into her room disheveled, sexually harasses her (in two separate scenes, no less) and finally kills her father under the impression that he was killing Claudius, driving her insane. It's not ''quite'' KillTheCutie, since she kills herself, but it's at the hard dark edge of the two tropes. Indeed, Hamlet himself qualifies as a broken cutie. Many of his friends speak highly of the good and loving man he was before his uncle murdered his brother and married his mother. The brooding, cynical man who is mean to Ophelia and mindlessly manslaughters her father is a different man from the air to the throne who wrote her love letters and was Horatio's best buddy.

to:

* ''{{Hamlet}}'' pretty much pulls this trope on Ophelia. Between his running into her room disheveled, sexually harasses her (in two separate scenes, no less) and finally kills her father under the impression that he was killing Claudius, driving her insane. It's not ''quite'' KillTheCutie, since she kills herself, but it's at the hard dark edge of the two tropes. Indeed, Hamlet himself qualifies as a broken cutie. Many of his friends speak highly of the good and loving man he was before his uncle murdered his brother and married his mother. The brooding, cynical man who is mean to Ophelia and mindlessly manslaughters her father is a different man from the air sweet-natured heir to the throne who wrote her love letters and was Horatio's best buddy. We don't see much of him being this guy (because the play begins when he is already broken), but he still has the ability to make us laugh!
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* ''{{Hamlet}}'' pretty much pulls this trope on Ophelia. Between his running into her room disheveled, sexually harasses her (in two separate scenes, no less) and finally kills her father under the impression that he was killing Claudius, driving her insane. It's not ''quite'' KillTheCutie, since she kills herself, but it's at the hard dark edge of the two tropes.

to:

* ''{{Hamlet}}'' pretty much pulls this trope on Ophelia. Between his running into her room disheveled, sexually harasses her (in two separate scenes, no less) and finally kills her father under the impression that he was killing Claudius, driving her insane. It's not ''quite'' KillTheCutie, since she kills herself, but it's at the hard dark edge of the two tropes. Indeed, Hamlet himself qualifies as a broken cutie. Many of his friends speak highly of the good and loving man he was before his uncle murdered his brother and married his mother. The brooding, cynical man who is mean to Ophelia and mindlessly manslaughters her father is a different man from the air to the throne who wrote her love letters and was Horatio's best buddy.

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* Maria in ''WestSideStory''.

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* Maria in ''WestSideStory''.''WestSideStory''
** Maria.



** Anita might also count as this. She starts out as a nice girl who's happy to be in America and only wants to live her life in a new country and even help Maria and Tony out. Then Tony kills her boyfriend. Understandably she becomes pretty jaded, but she STILL agrees to help Maria get a message to Tony (yes, the guy who killed her boyfriend). Instead she finds his friends, who almost rape her. That's pretty much the last straw, and she tells the lie that leads to the tragic conclusion.
* Shelley in the musical ''Bat Boy''. She is living happily with her veterinarian father and house-wife mother. She falls in love with Edgar, a feral 'Bat Boy' that was found nearby who lived on blood, after her mother makes him civil and caring. All is well. Towards the end of the show, after Shelley and Edgar have already had sex, it's then revealed that while her mother worked as her father's assistant in a lab, he accidentally spilled an experimental pheromone on her, and, driven mad with lust, raped her. Stumbling her way home, [[spoiler:she is then attacked and ''raped by a swarm of bats''.[[YouFailBiologyForever She got pregnant and gave birth to twins: a mutant]] (Edgar), and a human (Shelley) So, Edgar turns out to be her ''twin brother''.]] In the finale, Shelley watches as her father (Dr. Parker), furious and out of his mind, slits open his throat to tempt Edgar with blood. Edgar pounces on him and begins to drink, and Dr. Parker takes the initiative to stab him multiple times in the back. Trying to get him to stop, her mother rushes in and is also stabbed by her husband. All three of them die, and Edgar dies ''in her lap''. So, no only does she find out her lover is actually [[spoiler:her ''brother'']], she watcher her ENTIRE FAMILY get murdered by her father, who in turn bleeds out through the neck. After that, she's very quiet. Nice story, right? I thought so too.

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** Anita might also count as this. She starts out as a nice girl who's happy to be in America and only wants to live her life in a new country and even help Maria and Tony out. Then Tony kills her boyfriend. Understandably she becomes pretty jaded, but she STILL agrees to help Maria get a message to Tony (yes, the guy who killed her boyfriend). Instead she finds his friends, who almost rape her. That's pretty much the last straw, and she tells the lie that leads to the tragic conclusion.
* Shelley in the musical ''Bat Boy''. She is living happily with her veterinarian father and house-wife mother. She falls in love with Edgar, a feral 'Bat Boy' that was found nearby who lived on blood, after her mother makes him civil and caring. All is well. Towards the end of the show, after Shelley and Edgar have already had sex, it's then revealed that while her mother worked as her father's assistant in a lab, he accidentally spilled an experimental pheromone on her, and, driven mad with lust, raped her. Stumbling her way home, [[spoiler:she is then attacked and ''raped by a swarm of bats''.[[YouFailBiologyForever She got pregnant and gave birth to twins: a mutant]] (Edgar), and a human (Shelley) So, Edgar turns out to be her ''twin brother''.]] In the finale, Shelley watches as her father (Dr. Parker), furious and out of his mind, slits open his throat to tempt Edgar with blood. Edgar pounces on him and begins to drink, and Dr. Parker takes the initiative to stab him multiple times in the back. Trying to get him to stop, her mother rushes in and is also stabbed by her husband. All three of them die, and Edgar dies ''in her lap''. So, no only does she find out her lover is actually [[spoiler:her ''brother'']], she watcher watched her ENTIRE FAMILY get murdered by her father, who in turn bleeds out through the neck. After that, she's very quiet. Nice story, right? I thought so too.



* While Elphaba from ''Theatre/{{Wicked}}'' isn't exactly a traditional cutie, the Wizard and Madame Morrible do their best to break her by turning her into a terrorist fugitive, murdering her boyfriend, giving her former best friend an important position which seems to be entirely trying to mitigate Elphaba's activities and DROPS a house on her sister. No wonder she finally snaps in epic fashion during 'No Good Deed.'

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* While Elphaba from ''Theatre/{{Wicked}}'' isn't exactly a traditional cutie, the Wizard and Madame Morrible do their best to break her by turning her into a terrorist fugitive, murdering her boyfriend, giving her former best friend an important position which seems to be entirely trying to mitigate Elphaba's activities and DROPS a house on her sister. No wonder she finally snaps in epic fashion during 'No Good Deed.'



* Kim in MissSaigon. Orphaned when her family's village is bombed. Has to go to work as a prostitute to support herself. On her very first night of work, meets and falls in love with a disillusioned GI (who himself may be an example of this trope). He plans to take her home with him, but instead, they are separated in the chaos of the fall of Saigon. She has to endure pregnancy and childbirth on her own. She has to kill her cousin to protect her child from him. After ''three years'' of pining away for Chris with her faith in him and love for their child being the only things that kept her going, she rushes to his hotel room. . .to be greeted by his wife. Determined to make sure that they take the boy with them to America (as a half-Asian, he would be an outcast in Vietnam), she kills herself. ''Yeesh''.
* NextToNormal is pretty much ''Break The Cutie: The Musical''. Diana has been treated for severe Bipolar disorder for twenty years, haunted by manic-depressive episodes, side-effects of potentially lethal medications, and hallucinations of [[spoiler: her late son]]. After undergoing a heavy dose of ECT (which she seems to have enjoyed a bit ''too'' much), she loses most memories of her family. After regaining them, the trauma of [[spoiler: losing her son]] finally rushes back she decides that [[spoiler: the slow and dangerous treatment isn't worth tearing her family apart, so she decides to leave them]].

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* Kim in MissSaigon. Orphaned when her family's village is bombed. Has to go to work as a prostitute to support herself. On her very first night of work, meets and falls in love with a disillusioned GI (who himself may be an example of this trope). He plans to take her home with him, but instead, they are separated in the chaos of the fall of Saigon. She has to endure pregnancy and childbirth on her own. She has to kill her cousin to protect her child from him. After ''three ''3 years'' of pining away for Chris with her faith in him and love for their child being the only things that kept her going, she rushes to his hotel room. . .to be greeted by his wife. Determined to make sure that they take the boy with them to America (as a half-Asian, he would be an outcast in Vietnam), she kills herself. ''Yeesh''.
* NextToNormal is pretty much ''Break The Cutie: The Musical''. Diana has been treated for severe Bipolar disorder for twenty 20 years, haunted by manic-depressive episodes, side-effects of potentially lethal medications, and hallucinations of [[spoiler: her late son]]. After undergoing a heavy dose of ECT (which she seems to have enjoyed a bit ''too'' much), she loses most memories of her family. After regaining them, the trauma of [[spoiler: losing her son]] finally rushes back she decides that [[spoiler: the slow and dangerous treatment isn't worth tearing her family apart, so she decides to leave them]].
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* ''SpringAwakening'' is also a good candidate for ''Break The Cutie: The Musical'' because ''half the characters'' get broken. Ilse and Martha got physically/sexually abused by their fathers, and they both had crushes on Moritz. Speaking of Ilse, she got kicked out for telling someone about her father and ran off to an artist's colony, only to head back home when one of them ''holds a gun to her chest.'' After heading back and [[ContrivedCoincidence conveniently meeting Moritz,]] who ''also'' got kicked out for failing in school, she offers to take him home--but he refuses. After realizing he's made a huge mistake, [[spoiler: he [[AteHisGun eats his gun]].]] Meanwhile, Wendla gets pregnant by Melchior and later [[spoiler: gets [[KillTheCutie a botched abortion]]]], which Melchior is unaware of because he got framed by [[SadistTeacher the teachers]] and sent to a reformatory for [[spoiler: his best friend's suicide.]] Then there's Hanschen and Ernst, who... [[WhatHappenedToTheMouse kind of vanish after the second act.]]
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* In ''AStreetcarNamedDesire'' when [[spoiler: Stanley raped Blanche]] the cutie ''really'' became [[RapeLeadsToInsanity broken]].
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* NextToNormal is pretty much ''Break The Cutie: The Musical''. Diana has been treated for severe Bipolar disorder for twenty years, haunted by manic-depressive episodes, side-effects of potentially lethal medications, and hallucinations of [[spoiler: her late son]]. After undergoing a heavy dose of ECT (which she seems to have enjoyed a bit ''too'' much), she loses most memories of her family. After regaining them, the trauma of [[spoiler: losing her son]] finally rushes back she decides that [[spoiler: the slow and dangerous treatment isn't worth tearing her family apart, so she decides to leave them]].

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* NextToNormal is pretty much ''Break The Cutie: The Musical''. Diana has been treated for severe Bipolar disorder for twenty years, haunted by manic-depressive episodes, side-effects of potentially lethal medications, and hallucinations of [[spoiler: her late son]]. After undergoing a heavy dose of ECT (which she seems to have enjoyed a bit ''too'' much), she loses most memories of her family. After regaining them, the trauma of [[spoiler: losing her son]] finally rushes back she decides that [[spoiler: the slow and dangerous treatment isn't worth tearing her family apart, so she decides to leave them]].them]].
----
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* Kim in MissSaigon. Orphaned when her family's village is bombed. Has to go to work as a prostitute to support herself. On her very first night of work, meets and falls in love with a disillusioned GI (who himself may be an example of this trope). He plans to take her home with him, but instead, they are separated in the chaos of the fall of Saigon. She has to endure pregnancy and childbirth on her own. She has to kill her cousin to protect her child from him. After ''three years'' of pining away for Chris with her faith in him and love for their child being the only things that kept her going, she rushes to his hotel room. . .to be greeted by his wife. Determined to make sure that they take the boy with them to America (as a half-Asian, he would be an outcast in Vietnam), she kills herself. ''Yeesh''.

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* Kim in MissSaigon. Orphaned when her family's village is bombed. Has to go to work as a prostitute to support herself. On her very first night of work, meets and falls in love with a disillusioned GI (who himself may be an example of this trope). He plans to take her home with him, but instead, they are separated in the chaos of the fall of Saigon. She has to endure pregnancy and childbirth on her own. She has to kill her cousin to protect her child from him. After ''three years'' of pining away for Chris with her faith in him and love for their child being the only things that kept her going, she rushes to his hotel room. . .to be greeted by his wife. Determined to make sure that they take the boy with them to America (as a half-Asian, he would be an outcast in Vietnam), she kills herself. ''Yeesh''.''Yeesh''.
* NextToNormal is pretty much ''Break The Cutie: The Musical''. Diana has been treated for severe Bipolar disorder for twenty years, haunted by manic-depressive episodes, side-effects of potentially lethal medications, and hallucinations of [[spoiler: her late son]]. After undergoing a heavy dose of ECT (which she seems to have enjoyed a bit ''too'' much), she loses most memories of her family. After regaining them, the trauma of [[spoiler: losing her son]] finally rushes back she decides that [[spoiler: the slow and dangerous treatment isn't worth tearing her family apart, so she decides to leave them]].

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* Aww, look at [[LittleShopOfHorrors Seymour]] with his {{Adorkable}} clumsiness, his hopeless little crush on the local abused girl, Audrey, and his quirky way of confiding in his pet plant! The poor guy's lived such a horrible life, and no one's ever loved him--can you really blame him for wanting a little happiness? Or for wanting to off the jerk who beats up Audrey? Or for having to kill off his boss, too, so he won't get ratted on, and then keeping the plant who needs to be fed blood so that Audrey won't leave him and ...well, you see where this is going. Suffice it to say that [[spoiler:his death is probably the nicest thing that happens to him in the whole show]].

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* Aww, look at [[LittleShopOfHorrors Seymour]] with his {{Adorkable}} clumsiness, his hopeless little crush on the local abused girl, Audrey, and his quirky way of confiding in his pet plant! The poor guy's lived such a horrible life, and no one's ever loved him--can you really blame him for wanting a little happiness? Or for wanting to off the jerk who beats up Audrey? Or for having to kill off his boss, too, so he won't get ratted on, and then keeping the plant who needs to be fed blood so that Audrey won't leave him and ...well, you see where this is going. Suffice it to say that [[spoiler:his death is probably the nicest thing that happens to him in the whole show]].show]].
* Kim in MissSaigon. Orphaned when her family's village is bombed. Has to go to work as a prostitute to support herself. On her very first night of work, meets and falls in love with a disillusioned GI (who himself may be an example of this trope). He plans to take her home with him, but instead, they are separated in the chaos of the fall of Saigon. She has to endure pregnancy and childbirth on her own. She has to kill her cousin to protect her child from him. After ''three years'' of pining away for Chris with her faith in him and love for their child being the only things that kept her going, she rushes to his hotel room. . .to be greeted by his wife. Determined to make sure that they take the boy with them to America (as a half-Asian, he would be an outcast in Vietnam), she kills herself. ''Yeesh''.
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* Juliet in ''RomeoAndJuliet''. Three hours after she marries Romeo, he kills her cousin (who was like a brother to her) and gets kicked out of Verona. The ''next day'' her parents try to force her to marry a man she doesn't love, and threaten to disown her if she refuses. Her father claims that he and her mother "have had a curse in having her". Meanwhile, she's loyal to Romeo, not only because of her inclinations, but because of her religious beliefs (i.e. "I'm already married, it would be wrong of me to get married again") and is fully prepared to kill herself rather than go through with the wedding. She ends up taking a potion that makes her appear dead, even though she's terrified of what it will do to her, as part of an incredibly risky plan to get out of Verona that entails never seeing the people she loves again. Then, when she wakes up in her family tomb, her husband is lying dead with his head on her chest. She runs herself through with his dagger. ''And she's fourteen years old.''

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* Juliet in ''RomeoAndJuliet''. Three hours after she marries Romeo, he kills her cousin (who was like a brother to her) and gets kicked out of Verona. The ''next day'' her parents try to force her to marry a man she doesn't love, and threaten to disown her if she refuses. Her father claims that he and her mother "have had a curse in having her". Meanwhile, she's loyal to Romeo, not only because of her inclinations, but because of her religious beliefs (i.e. "I'm already married, it would be wrong of me to get married again") and is fully prepared to kill herself rather than go through with the wedding. She ends up taking a potion that makes her appear dead, even though she's terrified of what it will do to her, as part of an incredibly risky plan to get out of Verona that entails never seeing the people she loves again. Then, when she wakes up in her family tomb, her husband is lying dead with his head on her chest. She runs herself through with his dagger. ''And she's fourteen years old.''''
* Aww, look at [[LittleShopOfHorrors Seymour]] with his {{Adorkable}} clumsiness, his hopeless little crush on the local abused girl, Audrey, and his quirky way of confiding in his pet plant! The poor guy's lived such a horrible life, and no one's ever loved him--can you really blame him for wanting a little happiness? Or for wanting to off the jerk who beats up Audrey? Or for having to kill off his boss, too, so he won't get ratted on, and then keeping the plant who needs to be fed blood so that Audrey won't leave him and ...well, you see where this is going. Suffice it to say that [[spoiler:his death is probably the nicest thing that happens to him in the whole show]].
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* By the end of ''SweeneyTodd'', Johanna and Toby have gone mad due to having been treated cruelly for their whole lives, but also partly because of their first hand discoveries of Sweeney and Lovett's practices.

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* By the end of ''SweeneyTodd'', ''Theatre/SweeneyToddTheDemonBarberOfFleetStreet'', Johanna and Toby have gone mad due to having been treated cruelly for their whole lives, but also partly because of their first hand discoveries of Sweeney and Lovett's practices.
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* While Elphaba from ''{{Wicked}}'' isn't exactly a traditional cutie, the Wizard and Madame Morrible do their best to break her by turning her into a terrorist fugitive, murdering her boyfriend, giving her former best friend an important position which seems to be entirely trying to mitigate Elphaba's activities and DROPS a house on her sister. No wonder she finally snaps in epic fashion during 'No Good Deed.'

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* While Elphaba from ''{{Wicked}}'' ''Theatre/{{Wicked}}'' isn't exactly a traditional cutie, the Wizard and Madame Morrible do their best to break her by turning her into a terrorist fugitive, murdering her boyfriend, giving her former best friend an important position which seems to be entirely trying to mitigate Elphaba's activities and DROPS a house on her sister. No wonder she finally snaps in epic fashion during 'No Good Deed.'
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* In ''Vanities'', Kathy's boyfriend Gary, while she was on the pill, slept with another girl, got that one pregnant, and married her. Kathy is [[BrokenBird utterly and irrevocably devastated]] as a result, to the point of having a nervous breakdown. [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wwM-toAsrvs Cute Boys with Short Haircuts]] says it all.

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* In ''Vanities'', Kathy's boyfriend Gary, while she was on the pill, slept with another girl, [[ShotgunWedding got that one pregnant, and married her.her]]. Kathy is [[BrokenBird utterly and irrevocably devastated]] as a result, to the point of having a nervous breakdown. [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wwM-toAsrvs Cute Boys with Short Haircuts]] says it all.
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* In ''Vanities'', Kathy's boyfriend Gary, while she was on the pill, slept with another girl, got that one pregnant, and married her. Kathy is [[BrokenBird utterly and irrevocably devastated]] as a result, to the point of having a nervous breakdown. [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xD2JmRRlFeM Cute Boys with Short Haircuts]] says it all.

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* In ''Vanities'', Kathy's boyfriend Gary, while she was on the pill, slept with another girl, got that one pregnant, and married her. Kathy is [[BrokenBird utterly and irrevocably devastated]] as a result, to the point of having a nervous breakdown. [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xD2JmRRlFeM com/watch?v=wwM-toAsrvs Cute Boys with Short Haircuts]] says it all.
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* By the end of ''SweeneyTodd'', Johanna and Toby have gone mad due to having been treated cruelly for their whole lives, but also partly because of their first hand discoveries of Sweeney and Lovett's practices.

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* By the end of ''SweeneyTodd'', Johanna and Toby have gone mad due to having been treated cruelly for their whole lives, but also partly because of their first hand discoveries of Sweeney and Lovett's practices.practices.
* Juliet in ''RomeoAndJuliet''. Three hours after she marries Romeo, he kills her cousin (who was like a brother to her) and gets kicked out of Verona. The ''next day'' her parents try to force her to marry a man she doesn't love, and threaten to disown her if she refuses. Her father claims that he and her mother "have had a curse in having her". Meanwhile, she's loyal to Romeo, not only because of her inclinations, but because of her religious beliefs (i.e. "I'm already married, it would be wrong of me to get married again") and is fully prepared to kill herself rather than go through with the wedding. She ends up taking a potion that makes her appear dead, even though she's terrified of what it will do to her, as part of an incredibly risky plan to get out of Verona that entails never seeing the people she loves again. Then, when she wakes up in her family tomb, her husband is lying dead with his head on her chest. She runs herself through with his dagger. ''And she's fourteen years old.''
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* In ''Vanities'', Kathy's boyfriend Gary, while she was on the pill, slept with another girl, got that one pregnant, and married her. Kathy is [[BrokenBird utterly and irrevocably devastated]] as a result, to the point of having a nervous breakdown. [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xD2JmRRlFeM Cute Boys with Short Haircuts]] says it all.

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* In ''Vanities'', Kathy's boyfriend Gary, while she was on the pill, slept with another girl, got that one pregnant, and married her. Kathy is [[BrokenBird utterly and irrevocably devastated]] as a result, to the point of having a nervous breakdown. [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xD2JmRRlFeM Cute Boys with Short Haircuts]] says it all.all.
* By the end of ''SweeneyTodd'', Johanna and Toby have gone mad due to having been treated cruelly for their whole lives, but also partly because of their first hand discoveries of Sweeney and Lovett's practices.
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* While Elphaba from ''{{Wicked}}'' isn't exactly a traditional cutie, the Wizard and Madame Morrible do their best to break her by turning her into a terrorist fugitive, murdering her boyfriend, giving her former best friend an important position which seems to be entirely trying to mitigate Elphaba's activities and DROPS a house on her sister. No wonder she finally snaps in epic fashion during 'no good deed'

to:

* While Elphaba from ''{{Wicked}}'' isn't exactly a traditional cutie, the Wizard and Madame Morrible do their best to break her by turning her into a terrorist fugitive, murdering her boyfriend, giving her former best friend an important position which seems to be entirely trying to mitigate Elphaba's activities and DROPS a house on her sister. No wonder she finally snaps in epic fashion during 'no good deed''No Good Deed.'
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* In ''Vanities'', Kathy's boyfriend Gary, while she was on the pill, slept with another girl, got that one pregnant, and married her. Kathy is [[BrokenBird utterly and irrevocably devastated]] as a result. [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xD2JmRRlFeM Cute Boys with Short Haircuts]] says it all.

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* In ''Vanities'', Kathy's boyfriend Gary, while she was on the pill, slept with another girl, got that one pregnant, and married her. Kathy is [[BrokenBird utterly and irrevocably devastated]] as a result.result, to the point of having a nervous breakdown. [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xD2JmRRlFeM Cute Boys with Short Haircuts]] says it all.
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* Philomele in ''The Love of the Nightingale'' starts out as a beautiful if naive girl. Her sister and best friend Procne asks her husband Tereus to bring her for a visit. Tereus proceeds to fall for Philomele who in turn has fallen for a captain. Tereus then [[spoiler: tells her Procne's dead, kills her lover, proceeds to rape her after she turns him down and finally cuts out her tongue to keep her from talking. She spends five years alone but with her servant before finally making dolls to reenact what happened to her to Procne. Tereus tries to kill them but they (as it is a Greek myth) turn into birds, making them a literal BrokenBird]]

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* Philomele in ''The Love of the Nightingale'' starts out as a beautiful if naive girl. Her sister and best friend Procne asks her husband Tereus to bring her for a visit. Tereus proceeds to fall for Philomele who in turn has fallen for a captain. Tereus then [[spoiler: tells her Procne's dead, kills her lover, proceeds to rape her after she turns him down and finally cuts out her tongue to keep her from talking. She spends five years alone but with her servant before finally making dolls to reenact what happened to her to Procne. Tereus tries to kill them but they (as it is a Greek myth) turn into birds, making them a literal BrokenBird]]BrokenBird]]
* In ''Vanities'', Kathy's boyfriend Gary, while she was on the pill, slept with another girl, got that one pregnant, and married her. Kathy is [[BrokenBird utterly and irrevocably devastated]] as a result. [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xD2JmRRlFeM Cute Boys with Short Haircuts]] says it all.
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*** As that distinguished opera critic, Bugs Bunny said in '''What's Opera, Doc.?''', "You expected a happy ending?"

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*** As that distinguished opera critic, Bugs Bunny said in '''What's Opera, Doc.?''', "You expected a Doc?''', "What did you expect from an opera? A happy ending?"
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* While Elphaba from Wicked isn't exactly a traditional cutie, the Wizard and madam Morrible do their best to break her by turning her into a terrorist fugitive, murdering her boyfriend, giving her former best friend an important position which seems to be entirely trying to mitigate Elphaba's activities and DROPS a house on her sister. No wonder she finally snaps in epic fashion during 'no good deed'

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* While Elphaba from Wicked ''{{Wicked}}'' isn't exactly a traditional cutie, the Wizard and madam Madame Morrible do their best to break her by turning her into a terrorist fugitive, murdering her boyfriend, giving her former best friend an important position which seems to be entirely trying to mitigate Elphaba's activities and DROPS a house on her sister. No wonder she finally snaps in epic fashion during 'no good deed'
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*** As that distinguished opera critic, Bugs Bunny said, "You expected a happy ending?"

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*** As that distinguished opera critic, Bugs Bunny said, said in '''What's Opera, Doc.?''', "You expected a happy ending?"
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*** As that distinguished opera critic, Bugs Bunny said, "You expected a happy ending?"

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