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1[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/woee2_9947.png]]
2''Witches Of East End'' is a 2013 FeministFantasy / {{Supernatural|Fiction}} drama series on the [[{{Creator/Lifetime}} Lifetime Network]] based [[TheShowOfTheBooks on the book]] of the same name by Creator/MelissaDeLaCruz.
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4Joanna Beauchamp (Creator/JuliaOrmond) is your average middle-aged art teacher, a single mother with two grown daughters, Ingrid (Creator/RachelBoston) and Freya (Creator/JennaDewan). Except that she is immortal, her estranged sister Wendy (Creator/MadchenAmick) can turn into a cat and has nine lives, and Ingrid and Freya have died and been reborn multiple times over the past few centuries – and all four of them are secretly witches.
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6After growing tired of constantly seeing her daughters be killed by their own magic, Joanna has decided to raise Ingrid and Freya without knowledge of their witchcraft to hopefully see them live past 30 this time. But when a shapeshifter who looks exactly like Joanna targets their whole family, Wendy convinces her that they can't hide Ingrid and Freya's heritage from them anymore.
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8!!This series provides examples of:
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10* AllWitchesHaveCats: Subverted with Wendy, who shapeshifts into one instead.
11%%* AmoralAttorney: Harrison is implied to be one.
12* AsYouKnow: In the very first episode, Ingrid informs Freya that she's engaged to Dash, and Joanna gives Wendy a detailed explanation of how her curse and the girls' BornAgainImmortality works.
13* BathSuicide: Attempted by [[spoiler: Joanna]] in Season 2.
14* BettyAndVeronica: The Gardner brothers and the Beauchamp sisters themselves. It could be argued that both generations of Beauchamp sisters qualify.
15* BlackDudeDiesFirst: Having even a tan skintone will not work out well for a character in this show.
16* BrainwashedAndCrazy: Various characters at various times.
17* BurnTheWitch: In some of Joanna's flashbacks, it's shown that her daughters were burned as witches in earlier eras.
18* ButtMonkey: Poor [[spoiler: Frederick]] is usually beaten up, incapacitated, tortured, paralysed, and beaten up again.
19* CatsAreMagic: The black cat in the first episode has a neat trick...
20* ClearMyName: The shapeshifter manages to frame Joanna for the murder of a man by killing him in front of his wife while looking like Joanna. It's up to Joanna and Harrison to try to prove that Joanna didn't do it.
21* CoffinContraband: As an immortal witch who needs to switch identities every few decades so people don't notice that she doesn't age, Joanna fakes the death of her old identity and then moves to a new city to start fresh. When she moves back to a town where she used to live a century earlier, she digs up the empty grave and stores an emergency stash of money in the coffin. Later on she also uses the grave to store a cursed painting.
22* DisappearedDad: Ingrid and Freya's father isn't mentioned until [=S01E08=], when it's stated he's been gone for ''over a century'', making this an extreme case. Due to their {{born again immortality}} Ingrid and Freya have never seen him before in their present lives, nor in most of their past ones going back centuries. Perhaps unsurprisingly, Ingrid is bitter with him over this, although Freya warms up more quickly. It's somewhat different because Joanna asked him to leave, and thus he's upset that she told his daughters he'd abandoned them.
23* DoubleStandardRapeSciFi: Eva uses a LovePotion on Killian so she can have sex with him as much as possible in order to [[spoiler: have a baby]], yet when everything is out in the open [[spoiler: her death scene]] is rendered as a poignant moment where the audience is meant to sympathize with her - both Freya and Killian himself are visibly moved, and he shows no emotional trauma from the abuse. The indignation of the other characters (and of Killian himself, since in his own message to ''himself'' he says "most importantly, you love Freya") seems to stem from Eva coercing Killian's love and taking him from Freya, with no mention of forced sex.
24** Ingrid's trance state with the Mandragora. This results in horror and a mini-breakdown for Ingrid, but the rest of the cast utter 'oh noes' more akin to 'what a shame' than as if she had suffered a terrible ordeal. She herself insists she enjoyed it, adding to her general confusion.
25* EquivalentExchange: Magic isn't "free", it has to come from somewhere. When Ingrid casts a spell to bring a loved one back to life, she learns that at some point in the future she will lose someone she loves.
26* FoolishSiblingResponsibleSibling: Applies to all sets of sibling protagonists.
27** For Joanna and Wendy, usually played straight, Joanna being the responsible one to Wendy. However, they switch roles when it comes to [[spoiler:the portal key]], with Joanna wanting to keep it and Wendy wanting to destroy it.
28** For Freya and Ingrid, librarian Ingrid is the responsible one and bartender Freya the foolish one. After discovering they are witches, however, Ingrid becomes the foolish one by being very impulsive with magic, casting spells without warning or asking for help, and frequently having it backfire. Whereas Freya is much more reluctant to use her magic – a very responsible decision, considering how naive they are about it.
29** For Dash and Killian, Dash is presented as the responsible one, 'going to med school and being there for Mom' while Killian travels the world and can't settle down. Similarly to Ingrid and Freya, they switch sides after getting their powers back.
30* GeometricMagic: Pentagrams and other forms and symbols are part of successfully practicing witchcraft.
31* HotWitch: Within the boundaries of beauty being in the eye of the beholder, most of the main cast.
32* IdenticalGrandson: In the first episode, Ingrid is seriously weirded out on finding a photo of one of her earlier, much earlier, incarnations. This is before we the audience know the truth, so we don't know what the hell's going on before the photo is destroyed.
33* {{Immortality}}: It's unclear whether or not all witches are immortal or if Wendy and Joanna have been specifically cursed to be immortal: Ingrid tells Dash that witches live much longer and age differently than other people, but the King specifically says he wants them to "live long and suffer" when he curses them. Their immortality certainly works differently than just not dying. Joanna has NighInvulnerability, Wendy has ResurrectiveImmortality, and the girls have BornAgainImmortality.
34* MageSpecies: Witchcraft is genetic. More precisely, all witches are not human, but are really [[spoiler: from another world, namely Asgard]].
35* {{Masquerade}}: The very first thing Ingrid and Freya learn about being a witch is that they must never tell anyone about it.
36* LanguageOfMagic: Just speaking words in [[GratuitousLatin Latin]] will make things happen if someone has magic powers. Old Norse is said to be the older language of magic, with all magic coming from [[spoiler: Asgard]], though how does that works with all the "newer" magic in Latin is anyone's guess.
37* MindRape: Wendy essentially destroys Maura's mind as a side effect of the [[LaserGuidedAmnesia memory spell]] cast on her, resulting in her being institutionalized for terrifying delusions.
38* MsFanservice:
39** Freya is a HeadTurningBeauty who's prone to wearing [[{{Stripperiffic}} very revealing outfits]] and gets quite a few sex scenes.
40** Aunt Wendy is a feline shapeshifter, conveniently [[ShapeshiftingExcludesClothing without the power to transform her clothing as well]], so there are plenty of opportunities for the shapely brunette cougar to be naked on screen (albeit often with CensorShadow, SceneryCensor or ToplessnessFromTheBack angles).
41* NavelDeepNeckline: Archibald's courtesan wears a dress cut to the navel, cementing his status as a satanist/occultist in the 19th century. The big ol' orgy he's throwing when we meet him helps, too.
42* NoodleIncident: There are several mentions or brief flashes to past experiences of Joanna and her family which are only vaguely explained:
43** There's a sequence in [=S01E03=] where Joanna pulls a flask, a gun, and a hammer out of a box, and then flashes back to the enemies she defeated using each of them without context as to who those people are.
44** Wendy mentions in passing how she once died by being eaten by an alligator. And once from syphilis.
45* OohMeAccentsSlipping: Julia Ormond's native English accent comes out frequently.
46* OurGhostsAreDifferent: They can touch people who can see them (aka witches), they can affect electricity, and if they stick around on Earth for too long they'll remain stuck there.
47* PhantomZonePicture: One of Freya's ex-boyfriends from a past life is trapped in a painting. He escapes in [=S01E01=] and tries to do the same to Freya, but is eventually trapped in another painting. And apparently he's not the only person the witches got rid of that way.
48* PostCoitalCollapse: In the pilot, we cut to a sweaty and breathless Dash as he rolls off of Freya in bed after they have their "goodbye sex" before he leaves the country to be a Doctor Without Borders, both carefully wrapped in a ModestyBedsheet. He even comments on [[SexGoddess how good she is at her goodbyes]], which is her way of trying to convince him to stay.
49%%* ReincarnationRomance: [[spoiler: Killian and Freya.]]
50* RoaringRampageOfRevenge: The guy trapped in the painting in the first episode goes on one against Freya when he gets out.
51* SatelliteCharacter: In the first season, both the Gardiner brothers only have scenes and dialogue related to Freya. The second season tries to give them their own storylines, with varying success.
52* ShapeshiftingExcludesClothing: The reason why Wendy ends up naked a couple of times when she turns into a cat and back into her human form again.
53* ShirtlessScene: Freddie Prinze Jr. gets one in the fourth episode. Wendy spends a moment EatingTheEyeCandy before deciding that, no, she's not going to leave so soon. Both Gardner brothers and [[spoiler: Frederick]] get their share throughout the series.
54* SkepticismFailure: Ingrid spends the first episode declaring herself a "rational skeptic" who doesn't believe in witchcraft, until of course she's then proven ''completely'' wrong.
55* SpookyPainting. A guy in a painting suddenly starts to move. See PhantomZonePicture above.
56* StalkerShrine: As shown is [=S01E03=], the shapeshifter has one filled with pictures of Joanna.
57* TarotTroubles: The witches lay the cards a couple of times to find out various information, with the biggest importance placed on Freya's "Trickster and Emperor" spread, showing her being torn between the two brothers, of whom one - represented by "the trickster" - will be her destroyer and the other - the Emperor - is her soulmate. Unfortunately, there is no "trickster" Tarot card, though going by the function, the Magician, the Fool, or possibly even the Devil would work. The two cards are also shown to have a clear meaning, one positive and one negative.
58* UnwantedHarem: Joanna seems to have admirers popping up all the time, but she's unwilling to get involved with anyone.
59* UnwantedRevival: In [=S01E02=] Ingrid doesn't know yet that Wendy will come back to life a few hours after being stabbed to death by the shapeshifter, and uses a spell to resurrect her. Wendy is less than pleased about it and informs Ingrid that sooner or later she'll have to pay the price by losing someone she loves.
60* TheWeirdSisters: The book and the show revolve around a family of witches constituted by Joanna Beauchamp and her two grown-up daughters Ingrid and Freya. The show introduces a fourth witch, Wendy Beauchamp, who is Joanna's estranged sister.

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