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6-> ''Onward, ever striving onward\
7Proudly on our brooms we fly\
8Straight and true above the treetops\
9Shadows on a moonlit sky\
10Ne'er a day will pass before us\
11When we have not tried our best\
12Kept our cauldrons bubbling nicely\
13Cast our spells with zest.''
14-->-- '''[[ExpositoryThemeTune Academy song]]'''
15
16Suppose you're a kid attending wizard school, with classes in Potions and Broom Flying, in a medieval castle surrounded by dark forests. It's hard for you, since you weren't raised by a magical family, but you make two best friends pretty quickly, and then spend the rest of the series getting into adventures with them--usually of the out-of-bounds kind. Your chief rival, meanwhile, is the stuck-up scion of an old magical family... who, to make things worse, is blatantly the favourite of one of your most-hated professors, the sour-faced potions teacher. At least the kindly old head teacher is on your side...
17
18''Literature/HarryPotter''? [[OlderThanTheyThink Whoever said anything]] about ''[[JustForFun/SurprisinglySimilarStories him?]]'' And no, we're not talking about ''Franchise/LittleWitchAcademia'', either.[[note]]Though according to creator Yoh Yoshinari, ''Little Witch Academia'' was [[InspirationForTheWork inspired]] by ''The Worst Witch'', specifically the '98 series.[[/note]] We're talking about ''The Worst Witch''. The first book predates ''Literature/HarryPotterAndThePhilosophersStone'' by 23 years.
19
20''The Worst Witch'' is a book series by Jill Murphy about the trials and tribulations of a clumsy witch trying to survive her years at Miss Cackle's Academy For Witches. It has been adapted into both a movie and a TV series, with the latter going on to produce two SpinOff series.
21
22The series follows the adventures of Mildred Hubble, a BookDumb student at the aforementioned school, and her friends Maud Moonshine (changed to Maud Spellbody for the US release, and Maud Warlock for the movie) and Enid Nightshade, as they get into all sorts of mischief, while being tormented by nasty [[AlphaBitch Ethel Hallow]]. Meanwhile, they are always under the watchful eyes of headmistress Amelia Cackle, the extremely strict Miss Constance Hardbroom and her polar opposite, Miss Bat (the books state that there are more teachers). [[FilmOfTheBook The Movie]] adds broomstick trainer Madame Spellbinder, while the first television series added Miss Crotchet as a SuspiciouslySimilarSubstitute for Miss Bat in the third season, a caretaker named Mr. Blossom and made P.E. teacher Miss Drill an AscendedExtra.
23
24Incidentally, the movie features a young Creator/FairuzaBalk as Mildred, with Creator/DianaRigg as Miss Hardbroom, Creator/CharlotteRae as Miss Cackle and her EvilTwin, and Creator/TimCurry as a positively-creepy Grand Wizard. The first TV series features a young Creator/FelicityJones as Ethel Hallow in the first season.
25
26[[AC: There are currently eight books:]]
27# ''The Worst Witch''
28# ''The Worst Witch Strikes Again''
29# ''A Bad Spell for the Worst Witch''
30# ''The Worst Witch All at Sea''[[note]]The last book to be published before the TV series had aired. The next book was not published until 2005, long after the series had finished.[[/note]]
31# ''The Worst Witch Saves the Day''
32# ''The Worst Witch to the Rescue''
33# ''The Worst Witch and the Wishing Star''
34# ''First Prize for the Worst Witch''
35
36[[AC: The first television series and its two {{Spin Off}}s are:]]
37* ''The Worst Witch'' (1998-2001): The original TV adaptation
38* ''Weirdsister College: The Further Adventures of the Worst Witch'' (2001): Set at college in Cambridge, featuring Mildred settling into college life with Ethel for a roommate.
39* ''The New Worst Witch'' (2005): Chronicles the adventures of Mildred's cousin Henrietta 'Hettie' Hubble and her friends; Mona Hallow, who happens to be Ethel's youngest sister, and Crescentmoon 'Cressie' Winterchild, all of whom are tormented by evil witch Belladonna Bindweed.
40
41A new TV adaptation began on 11th January 2017 on Creator/{{CBBC}}, and was later made available for international streaming on Netflix. The 2017 adaptation came to an end on both August 10, 2020 on CBBC and October 1, 2020 on Netflix.
42
43The 2017 show premiered on Creator/DisneyChannel on October 4th, 2021 as a "Disney Channel Original Series". However, unlike the previous incarnations (Netflix and CBBC) of the 2017 show, this version featured a LaughTrack to match with its current Disney Channel sitcoms. The series finished on 30 March 2020, with the two-part episode "The Witching Hour" as the GrandFinale.
44
45----
46!!This book series and its adaptations provides examples of:
47[[foldercontrol]]
48
49[[folder:Tropes A-G]]
50* AnAesop: The GrandFinale of the 2017 not only brings the story arcs full circle but Mildred's speech gives us the overall moral, saying that magic is real as long as we believe in it. Now that's true magic.
51-->'''Mildred Hubble:''' There is magic inside each and every one of us. A witch or not, you just have to believe in it.
52* AcademicAlphaBitch: Ethel Hallow, described as "one of those lucky people for whom everything goes right". The '98 and '17 series upgrade her to a RichBitch, whose family has attended Cackle's for generations.
53* AccentuateTheNegative: Used in the last episode of series 2 of the '98 series by the girls to prevent the school from being sold where they claim it's not just small, it's miniscule.
54* ActorAllusion: In the NHK Japanese dub of the 2017 series, this is not the first time we hear Creator/MasakoKatsuki (Mrs. Cackles) being the leader of a school or place when dark arts are taught, except replace "[[Manga/{{Naruto}} ninjutsu]]" with "witchcraft".
55* AdaptationalAttractiveness:
56** Maud is frequently described as chubby in the books, to the degree that her parents put her on a diet during the holidays. In the '98 series she's played by the slender Emma Brown.
57** A building example in the 1998 series. Algernon Rowan Webb's home is called Gloom Castle, and it's a cold unwelcoming-looking place that Ethel grumbles about. In the series, he instead has a nice house by the river.
58** Miss Drill is a hard-faced BrawnHilda in the books, but played by the young and kinder looking Shauna Shim in the 2017 series.
59** Algernon Rowan Webb is considerably less old and haggard in the 1998 TV series than he was in the books.
60** The TV movie changes the Grand Wizard from a Professor Dumbledore type of very old man with long white hair and beard to, well...Tim Curry. The students even pass around pictures of him and giggle over him like he's a movie star. Miss Hardbroom, who is supposed to be plain, is Diana Rigg.
61* AdaptationalBadass:
62** Miss Hardbroom gets shown doing a lot of incredibly powerful magic in the '98 series. She's even referred to by Agatha as "the really dangerous one". Miss Cackle herself also gets to immobilise Agatha instantly without needing words.
63** This is also the case for Miss Cackle herself in the 2017 series who is able to engage in magical duel in the series opener.
64** In ''The Worst Witch All at Sea'', Mildred is gifted a necklace by Algernon Rowan-Webb. The necklace is an ordinary piece of jewelry with no magic powers. In the 1998 series, the necklace is now a talisman with the ability to repel The Dragon Lord's blasts of fire.
65* AdaptationalNationality: In the 1987 film, Mildred is played by the American Creator/FairuzaBalk (since it was an American co-production), who plays the role with her natural accent.
66* AdaptationDyeJob: Enid Nightshade went from being blonde in the books to having brown hair in the '98 series and later black hair in the '17 series. In the earlier television movie, Mildred (black hair) and Maud (blonde) both turned brunette.
67* AdaptationExpansion: The series has gone through this several times over.
68** The TV movie padded itself with sequences including a "scaring contest" and an early sequence with Punk Charlotte Rae.
69** The '98 series would pad the same adaptation by using the "Ethel's a pig" sequence as the basis for an entire episode (introducing a whole new character in Mr. Blossom's nephew Charlie), while adding in a climactic chase through the school grounds. It's otherwise managed to incorporate adaptations of the next three books pretty much as-is (although ''The Worst Witch Strikes Again'' was made into two separate episodes).
70** Sybil Hallow likewise only made one appearance in the books, but got her entire character expanded. In the '98 series she's viewed as Ethel's AnnoyingYoungerSibling and deeply resents her older sister's bullying ways - looking up to Mildred instead. She's also portrayed as more like Mildred; nervous and accident prone, further putting her in contrast to her confident older sister.
71%%** Seen again in the 2017 adaptation. Building on stories from the books with input from Jill Murphy, the characters get new names (in some cases) and motivations, while the plots are expanded from their original material.
72* AdaptationInducedPlotHole:
73** Miss Gimlett from season 2 of the '98 series. In the books we didn't see all the teachers or all the classes but the TV series makes it clear there are only four in the school. So everyone referencing a Miss Gimlett who just left becomes a plot hole.
74** The plot from the finale of the first book is kept intact for the episode "Double Double Toil and Trouble" - particularly the part where Miss Cackle and Miss Hardbroom initially don't believe Mildred's story about Agatha. It becomes a PlotHole because this time Miss Drill has been involved, rescuing Mildred from Agatha. Miss Drill vouches for Mildred's story but the other two still don't believe her... which leads us to Plot Hole number 2. In the book Mildred turned Agatha and her cronies into snails and so couldn't prove to the teachers that they were really witches. Here, she just blasts them with a shrinking potion. It's not until Mildred talks about a woman that looked like Miss Cackle that the latter believes her in both versions. However, here all Mildred had to do was open the box and show them the shrunken witches - leading viewers to question why she doesn't do that ''before'' telling her story, to make sure the teachers know she's telling the truth.
75** The plot from ''A Bad Spell For The Worst Witch'' appears in season 2 of the '98 series. Chief Wizard Hellibore says to Mildred "are you not the girl who ''ruined'' the Halloween celebrations last year!" at the climax. Except season 1 added an original story where Hellibore visited the school with his wizard students. In that episode he didn't question Mildred's identity and ended up being impressed by her at the end - so logically he shouldn't want to exclude her from his master class in season 2.
76** Otherwise averted within the same plot. Griselda Blackwood's only appearance in the books is Mildred kidnapping her and tying her up so she can go to the Halloween celebrations in her place. Since the '98 series makes Griselda one of Mildred's friends, this role is given to Drucilla instead. It also gives Ethel more motivation to expose Mildred, since she attacked her best friend.
77** Another close subversion is when Mildred casts the spell on Agatha and her cronies. Previously the spell to turn Ethel into a pig was in a big book in the library - that first and second years are said not to be allowed to read. A spell for snails was in the book too (what Mildred uses in the novel). So Mildred instead casts a spell to trap the witches in the ground - as such, an advanced spell like snails likely wouldn't be in her beginner spellbook (where she finds the spell).
78** Inverted in one case where the books had a PlotHole that the '98 series fixed. In the book when Mildred turns Ethel into a pig, Ethel can still talk - and rats her out to Miss Hardbroom. This becomes odd when two books later, Mildred gets turned into a frog and can't communicate with her classmates. In the TV series, Ethel can't talk either when she gets turned into a pig.
79** Another subversion is adapting the second book's plot - where there's a monkey in Enid's room and they assume Mildred has turned Ethel into an animal again (until it's revealed to be Enid's cat). In the books they found out about Ethel getting turned into a pig, but they didn't in the TV series. Here however the monkey is found wearing Ethel's tie, and Ethel is also lying down after Enid made the set fall on her - so her not being in the courtyard with everyone else gives them more reason to suspect Mildred.
80** In the second book Mildred gets blamed for a spell Enid cast going awry - and is put on probation. In the book, Enid enchants a pole in the vaulting competition - and Millie ends up flying into Miss Hardbroom's private study. In the '98 series, they're on a marathon and Enid tries to teleport Millie to the end of the trek. She goofs and poofs her into Cackle's office and then into the music room. Except here it should be obvious that Mildred ''isn't'' the culprit because Cackle and Hardbroom are there and Mildred disappears without using an incantation - making it clear that she isn't the one casting the spell.
81** Another minor one caused from adapting the second book. Maud gets jealous of Mildred having to show Enid around and ends their friendship temporarily. She ends up hanging around with Ethel because she doesn't have any other friends of her own. Except the '98 series adds Ruby and Jadu, making Maud's line "well I've got no one else, have I?" rather odd. Indeed for the episodes in question, Jadu and Ruby are inexplicably in the background as if they don't hang out with Maud and Mildred.
82* AdaptationPersonalityChange:
83** In the original books Miss Bat appears only in the second book and appears to be your average strict teacher. The '98 series has her as a CloudCuckooLander and much more emphatic to the students. Miss Drill is also written as a tough DrillSergeantNasty type of PE teacher in the books but is much more friendly in the '98 series, as well as being rewritten to be mortal (she is implied to be a witch in the books).
84** In the 2017 adaptation Miss Drill is again considerably friendlier than her book counterpart - although unlike in 1998, this time she's definitely a witch.
85* AdaptationSpeciesChange: Miss Drill is a witch in the books, but becomes a {{Muggle}} in the 1998 series.
86* AdaptationalHeroism: A lot of cases in the 1998 TV series:
87** Miss Drill and Miss Bat were just strict teachers in the books, but become the friendlier teachers to whom the girls can go in moments of need.
88** Miss Hardbroom got a couple of PetTheDog moments in the books but is greatly expanded into a JerkWithAHeartOfGold.
89** Drucilla was just a crony of Ethel's but becomes an IneffectualSympatheticVillain and pulls off a HeelFaceTurn eventually.
90** Maud slightly when adapting ''The Worst Witch Strikes Again''. Maud in the book gets jealous immediately that Mildred has to spend time with Enid, but the episode changes things around so that Enid's out of tune singing happens first (with Millie maintaining she was doing it on purpose) and Maud's FaceHeelTurn is born from frustration that Mildred is continuing to stick with Enid despite the girl seeming like trouble.
91** Mildred herself in the same book-to-series change. In the book, she's kicked out of chanting and instead chooses to go into Enid's room to look at the monkey - making it her own fault that she nearly gets in trouble. In the series, she and Enid are both scrubbing the stairs after the latter pranks Ethel in class. Enid gets annoyed and runs off, and Mildred only goes into her room looking for her - making it a complete accident that the monkey gets out.
92** Maud also gets another mild example when adapting the Agatha Cackle portion of the first book. As Mildred stops all of Agatha's witches instantly with a spell, Maud never finds out until the next day and therefore doesn't make up with her friend until after she's saved the school. Heartwarmingly, in the series, Maud gets up early and goes into Mildred's room to apologise. She also helps Mildred save the school.
93** Ethel herself mellows out in ''Weirdsister College''.
94* AdaptationalJerkass: Enid drops all her mischievous nature in the books after ''The Worst Witch Strikes Again''. In the 1998 series, she only becomes slightly better and is still more prone to breaking rules (although on the flipside, she actually does apologise more times in the series for getting Mildred into trouble). She borders on TheFriendNobodyLikes at times - which culminates in ''Weirdsister College'' when she and Mildred acknowledge that they can't be friends as they were at Cackle's.
95* AdaptationalVillainy: Ethel, in just one case - when it comes to pushing the boat out to sea. In the book, Mildred has said she was considering using it to find the lost treasure, and Ethel pushes it out to stop her from doing so. She didn't know Tabby was on board. In the TV show, she and Drucilla push the boat out ''because'' Tabby is on board. And in the TV show, they know there's a series of rapids and a dangerous waterfall ahead.
96* AdaptationalWealth:
97** Ethel in the books is just said to be a top student who luckily "everything goes right" for. Both series have her come from a wealthy family, with her father on the board of governors in the 1998 series.
98** An inversion: Algernon Rowan Webb invites the girls to a castle he owns in the books. The 1998 series has it as a more modest riverside house.
99** Enid is shown to come from a rich family in the 2017 series.
100* AndThereWasMuchRejoicing: Happens twice in the 2017 series:
101** The 2017 season 2 finale ends with Mildred being applauded by the school for her heroric deeds.
102** The 2017 series' GrandFinale has the school celebrating both Mildred's promotion to Head Girl and the defeat of Agatha Cackle.
103* AndTheAdventureContinues: The GrandFinale of the 2017 series ends with everyone at assembly celebrating Mildred's promotion and Agatha Cackle's defeat, which serves as a symbol saying that there are more adventures waiting for them, but for the viewers their adventures at Cackle's Academy has come to a close.
104* AllGirlsWantBadBoys: The first spin-off, ''Weirdsister College'', gives us recurring male characters, one of whom is the dark and mysterious Nick Hobbes, who both Millie and Ethel both get a crush on. In Millie's case, this turns to SingleWomanSeeksGoodMan as she does end up going for that nice boy at the cafe, Ben.
105* AllWitchesHaveCats: The girls at Cackle's Academy receive their kittens in the first year. But it's played with since the rival academy Pentangle's have owls instead. Miss Bat claims that her school had hedgehogs.
106* AlliterativeName:
107** 1998 series: Maud Moonshine; Fenella Feverfew; Clarice Crow; Gary Grailquest; Bryony Besomsworth; Gabrielle Gribble; Lynne Lamplighter.
108** And again in 2017 -- Hecate Hardbroom, Pippa Pentangle and Dimity Drill.
109* AlmaMaterSong:
110** "Onward Ever Striving Onward", the school song, which serves as the opening (and closing) credits theme for the series. It is also sung on multiple occasions by the characters (and actresses) themselves, though the version done for the credits was performed by the choir of the Wispers School for Girls.
111** One episode even ends on the ''characters'' singing the first half of the song (used for the opening credits), leading immediately into the choir picking up the ''second'' half for the closing credits.
112** In the movie one of Agatha's complaints is that her sister changed it. Given the old version (which of course Agatha and her minions [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wMSAFeGtumc sing]]) was about being a [[CardCarryingVillain Card Carrying]] WickedWitch you can see why they got rid of it.
113* AlphaBitch: Ethel in the television adaptation (1998 and 2017), Belladonna in ''The New Worst Witch''. Enid could also count for this, except that she was one of Millie's friends.
114* AlwaysFemale: Per the canon, witches are always female. Wizards are male. Charlie briefly entertains the idea of joining Cackle's as a student, and they find a clause in the school charter that would allow for a male to enroll.
115* AmbiguouslyGay: Miss Hardbroom, subtly in the 1998 adaptation and more obviously in 2017.
116* AscendedExtra: Miss Drill, Drucilla, Fenella, Griselda, Sybil and Clarice all of whom made a grand total of one appearance in the books (although Drucilla got a larger role in the books after the television series) all of whom are expanded into recurring characters in the television series. Also, the character of Deidre Swoop, who made an appearance in one episode of ''The Worst Witch'' and became a recurring character in the two spin-offs. Likewise Pentangle's Academy was only mentioned offhand in one book. Season 3 of the TV series expands Pentangle's into being one of Cackle's biggest rivals.
117* AwesomeButImpractical: Magic spells, at least in the 1998 series, where they tend to be long Latinish sentences, and, as Agatha and her associates found out, they take so long to caste that the potential victim has plenty of time to simply run away before they can finish. Furthermore, mispronouncing a single syllable or saying the spell a bit too loud can have dramatically different effects than what was the spell caster's intent. [[note]] To turn someone into a pig, the spell is Alverix Orcus, Transfrogamorphus, Spotticus, Trotticus, Transferus Porcus.[[/note]]
118* BangingForHelp: In the episode where Miss Cackle gets tied up, gagged and left in the storage closet, when she sees Mildred and Enid flying in through the passage at the top of the closet, she starts making noise.
119* BeastInTheBuilding: Inside the school, Miss Hardbroom suddenly enters to find a pig there, which Mildred tries to pass off as a stray. When the pig talks and explains that she is actually Ethel whom Mildred had turned into a pig, Miss Hardbroom sends Mildred to the library to look up how to remove the spell, telling her to take the pig with her. Mildred is very embarrassed to take a pig into the library, especially as Ethel moans "hurry up", and keeps grunting loudly on purpose.
120-->'''Miss Hardbroom:''' What is this animal doing here?
121-->'''Mildred:''' Er... I let it in, Miss Hardbroom.
122-->'''Miss Hardbroom:''' Well, you can just let it out again, please.
123-->'''Mildred:''' Oh, er... couldn't I keep it as a pet?
124-->'''Miss Hardbroom:''' I think you have quite enough with that cat, without adding a pig to your worries.
125* BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor: Quite literally in "The Genius of the Lamp". Sybil using LoopholeAbuse to get unlimited wishes for her magic lamp results in something else weakening to keep the wishes going. It first just drains the light but eventually effects the girls themselves.
126* BetterToDieThanBeKilled: In the GrandFinale of the 2017 series, [[spoiler:as Ada prepares to send Agatha back into the painting where she has been trapped for the last few years, Agatha instead sends herself to the Vanishment dimension as it is being 'cleared out']].
127* BewitchedAmphibians:
128** Jadu complains that she hasn't turned anyone into a frog yet in a letter home.
129** Ethel dares Mildred to turn her into one, but due to a mix-up, Millie turns her into a pig instead.
130** Agatha Cackle's evil plan is to turn the whole school into frogs.
131** Ethel also turns Mildred into one in retaliation for scaring her sister. Through the experience, Mildred discovers that the frog in the school pond is a bewitched wizard.
132* BigShutUp: In the first book, Mildred turns about twenty witches into snails. When they are changed back again, they all talk furiously at the same time, causing Miss Cackle to command "will you be quiet at once!".
133* BoardingSchool: Magical boarding school, two decades before [[Franchise/HarryPotter Hogwarts]], even!
134* BoardingSchoolOfHorrors: Downplayed in the books, in that unlike the homely feeling of [[Franchise/HarryPotter Hogwarts]], the school is very utilitarian and prison-like, with many aspects described as "bleak" and "dreary". It is also very cold, even in summer, because all the doors have gaps underneath them, and the windows have no glass. There are also so many rules that you can't do ''anything'' without being told off; and the year is divided into two long terms, the Winter Term running from September to the end of January, and the Summer Term (always very cold and wintry at the start) running from March until the end of July. At the start of ''A Bad Spell for the Worst Witch'', Mildred makes the school sound even more horrible when she tells the young Sybil a made-up story about Miss Hardbroom turning pupils into frogs.
135* BookEnds: The Season 3 premiere of the '98 series opens and ends with the girls dancing to the same song. In the opening, they unsuccessfully try to get Miss Drill to join in. At the end, she does.
136* BookSnap: In the first book, Miss Cackle slams a register shut when Mildred appears in her office, perhaps knowing that Mildred is about to confess to something dreadful, as indeed she does.
137--> Miss Cackle slammed the register shut and pushed her glasses on to the top of her head.
138--> "Now, Mildred, what can I do for you?"
139* BunglingInventor:
140** Ruby, who seems to view herself as a genuine GadgeteerGenius, but whose inventions go wrong more often than not.
141** The fourth season of the 2017 series introduces a magical and normal version of these in the form of new Spells Science teacher Mr Daisy and Spike, the father of new pupil Izzy, [[spoiler:although their latest creations prove a success in saving the day in the season finale]].
142* CallingCard: In the book ''A Bad Spell for the Worst Witch'', Ethel is enraged by Mildred "terrorising her little sister" by telling her a story about being turned into a frog by a teacher, and "insulting her family" by calling her a weed. As revenge, Ethel turns Mildred into a frog while she sleeps, and deposits a clump of weeds on Mildred's pillow.
143* CanisLatinicus: The show was using this to make spells sound cool before Harry Potter was a gleam in JK's eye. In the books, the spells' words were never actually mentioned. It is explained that it is not necessarily needed, but since Cackle's is a traditional type of witch school, it teaches the girls in the traditional way - which means saying your spells in Latin. The 2017 seems to partly do away with this, with some spells being said in English.
144* CanonForeigner:
145** The '98 show adds a lot of characters who weren't in the books. Among the most important are Ruby, Jadu, Mr. Blossom (both of them), Charlie, Miss Crotchet and Ethel's youngest sister Mona in ''The New Worst Witch''.
146** The 2017 remake gives Ethel an ''older'' sister, Esmeralda Hallow, commonly known as Esme. It also introduces Miss Gullet and Mildred's mother, Julie Hubble.
147* CassandraTruth: This happens in ''A Bad Spell for The Worst Witch''. Mildred terrifies Ethel's sister with a made-up story about the frog in the school pond being somebody under an enchantment. Later, Mildred finds out that the frog really is an enchanted human, but nobody will believe her, not even her best friends Maud and Enid.
148* CatScare: In ''The Wishing Star'', Mildred (who is afraid of the dark) has the duty of lighting lanterns around the school, and suddenly sees a pair of glowing red eyes through the school gates. It turns out to be a dog she wished for, whom she adopts as a pet.
149* CatStereotype: Tabby is the only non-black cat at Cackle's, and the only one not specifically bred as a witch's cat, and it's clear that he's not the ideal familiar for a young witch. It's more apparent in the books than in the '98 show (probably because it's easier writing a cat behaving a certain way than it is directing a real cat to do what the script demands), but he's a klutz who can't stay on a broomstick to save his life, and (pretty par for the course for fictional tabbies) also a dimwitted coward. He ''is'', however (another classic trait for fictional tabbies), very friendly and affectionate, and remains Mildred's faithful companion throughout.
150* ChromosomeCasting: The Grand Wizard is the only male character in the TV movie.
151* ChristmasSpecial: The final filmed episode of the 1998 series. It featured a [[SchoolPlay School Pantomime]].
152* ChuckCunninghamSyndrome:
153** No explanation is given (on-screen) as to where Miss Bat went after season 2 of the '98 series, although apparently CITV explained she went to live in Inner Mongolia.
154** At the end of season 2 of the '17 series, Esme has her magic restored. While she is mentioned in the following seasons, there is no mention as to why she is no longer studying at Cackles or to her whereabouts. It is eventually revealed in the season 4 finale she is at college.
155* ClarkKenting: Agatha in the final episode of season 1 of the '98 series who swaps places with Amelia by switching glasses. Justified as they are identical twins. It also doesn't completely work, as the girls notice the sudden odd squint Miss Cackle has suddenly picked up - and she bumps into things.
156* ClosetShuffle: In ''The Worst Witch Strikes Again'', Enid is determined to have some fun on the last day of the term, while Mildred fears being expelled, and wants nothing more than to keep her head down. Just as the whole school is heading into the Great Hall, Enid suddenly dives into a cupboard, taking Mildred with her, so that they can sneak out later. Unfortunately, Ethel sees them vanishing into the cupboard, and locks them in, as the key happens to be there.
157* {{Cloudcuckoolander}}: Miss Bat, as [[MeaningfulName inclined by the name]] is a rather "batty" old woman.
158* ColorCodedForYourConvenience: The 1998 series does this with the sashes the girls wear around their waists, based on what year they are in. First years wear blue, second years wear green, third years wear yellow and fourth years wear red.
159* ConformingOOCMoment: In the episode involving a cursed video game, one of the people playing it is the no-nonsense SternTeacher Miss Hardbroom.
160* ContinuityDrift: "Up In The Air" suggests that Charlie is related to Frank through his sister. The ChristmasEpisode says that Frank's brother Ted is Charlie's father. Though considering Charlie's surname was always Blossom, it would appear that the first appearance was the goof, rather than the later episodes.
161* ContinuityNod: Miss Cackle's love of cheese is a joke in the second episode. In the finale the secret password in her office is [[spoiler: Cauliflower Cheese]].
162* ContrivedCoincidence: 2017 series:
163** There just happened to be an evil witch trying to take over Cackle's Academy on the exact day Mildred ended up there, and tried (and failed) to take her entrance exam, giving her a chance to prove herself worthy of the school.
164** An episode of season 4 has Mildred lose her powers and need to have them recharged by her Grounding Stone. She finds it in the vehicle of the farm she is temporarily staying at, who happens to be a man Julie (her mum) met in Morocco years ago and gave the stone to. [[spoiler:This man is later revealed to be Mildred's long-unknown father]].
165* CoolOldLady: The school founder Hermione Cackle in 1998, contrary to what Miss Hardbroom would like the students to believe. Miss Cackle and Miss Bat are examples too.
166* CoolTeacher: Miss Drill, especially in season 3. Miss Cackle is this too, doubling as a Cool Headmistress. Notably in one episode where the girls are fighting, she assigns them a creative project to help take their minds off the heat.
167* CousinOliver: Arguably the students featured in ''The New Worst Witch'', which introduced a whole new cast of characters - including a previously unmentioned cousin of Mildred, and another sister for Ethel and Sybil - for no purpose other than returning to the magic (high) school format.
168* CrouchingMoronHiddenBadass: Caspian Bloom, the wizard librarian in ''The New Worst Witch.'' He's an absent-minded and ineffectual bumbler more likely to be found asleep over his desk or eating doughnuts than doing anything useful... but on a rare occasion, when he actually has the motivation, he shows that he's actually a pretty damn powerful wizard.
169* CulturalTranslation: Mildred is American in the movie even though it was a British production, filmed in Britain with a mostly British cast.
170* CuteWitch: Mildred is an extremely [[CuteClumsyGirl clumsy]] one.
171* DarkIsNotEvil: Miss Hardbroom wears a LOT of black, but is good at heart.
172* ADayInTheLimelight:
173** Happened twice in the 1998 television series where the story would focus on Sybil's class whilst the main cast were away. "The Unfairground" is one for Jadu - the only plot where she has a proper role. "Sorcery & Chips" and "Which Witch Is Which?" act as these for Ruby too.
174** In the 2017 series, Maud has one in the first season in the parents night episode. Enid had a few of these in the following seasons as well.
175* DeadpanSnarker:
176** Miss Hardbroom, big time - book, 1998 and 2017.
177** Drucilla's grumpy personality makes her a prime example. Ethel also has her moments, but is generally more of a {{Smug Snake}}.
178** Enid is perhaps the most sarcastic and snarky of Mildred's group of friends.
179* DeathGlare: Miss Hardbroom is an expert at this, 1998 and 2017.
180* DecompositeCharacter: In the books it's mentioned that Miss Cackle doesn't believe in "any new-fangled nonsense" and prides herself on tradition. In the '98 series this trait is given to Miss Hardbroom. While Miss Cackle is traditional, she's a lot more open to newer ideas and change.
181* DefrostingIceQueen: Miss Hardbroom in the 2017 series after she meets Miss Pentangle again. In the following episodes she smiles considerably more (although she's just as strict).
182* DeniedFoodAsPunishment: In the tv movie, Miss Cackle sends Mildred straight to bed without supper after wrecking the broomstick display. She isn't sadistic though, in fact earlier in the film when Mildred is sent to her office she doesn't act nasty at all.
183* DiegeticSoundtrackUsage
184** In the 2017 series, the show's theme tune appears in one episode as a piece of music played (badly) by Ethel and in another one played by Enid.
185** In the 1998 series, that show's theme tune appears from time to time in the show as it is the school's song.
186* DisneyAcidSequence: In the 80s tv movie version, the Grand Wizard's Halloween Song involved him singing in front of odd looking chromakeyed backgrounds.
187* DoesNotLikeMagic: Downplayed in the book ''A Bad Spell for the Worst Witch''. When Mildred needs to kidnap somebody, the easiest way would be to turn them into a small animal and keep them in a box, but she feels that there have been enough animal enchantments in the school (especially as she herself was recently turned into a frog), so she decides instead to do a nice, straightforward kidnap, where you can see exactly what is happening.
188* DramaticIrony: A small case but the episode "A Pig in a Poke" where Charlie steals a hat and cloak and pretends to be one of the girls. Just as his uncle asks Miss Drill where he is, she suggests he's probably in the library... right as she is directing Charlie unknowingly into the hall with the rest of the girls.
189* DramaQueen: Miss Bat has traces of this; for the most minor insult or hurtful remark, she'll dramatically stride away to go lock herself in the stationery cupboard.
190* DubNameChange: Plently in the Dutch dub.
191** Mildred Hubble to Merel Hobbel
192** Ethel Hallow to Edith Huigel
193** Fenella Feverfew to Vanella Wiggelkoe
194** Griselda Blackwood to Griselda Breekhout
195** Sybil to Sara
196** Hellibore to Hellerook
197** Algernon Rowan-Webb to Evertjan Dromenster
198** Cas to Tes
199** Hobbes to Hops
200** Miss Hardbroom to Heks Hakblok
201** Miss Drill to Juf Kim
202*** Plenty too in french traduction and dub.
203*** Mildred Hubble to Amandine Malabul
204*** Maud Moonshine to Maud Moucheté (TV)/Pamela (book)
205*** Enid Nightshade to Isabelle Tromplamor
206*** Tabby to Petipas
207*** Miss Cackle to Melle Caquet (TV)/Melle Jolidodue (book)
208*** Ethel Hallow to Edith Aigreur (TV)/Octavie Pâtafiel(book)
209*** Fenella Feverfew to Fenella Folavoine
210*** Griselda Blackwood to Griselda Bravoure
211*** Miss Hardbroom to Melle Harebours(TV)/Melle Bâtonsec (book)
212** While not as drastic, the Latin American dub would usually change the last names of the characters for direct or semi-direct translations of them or one of the words composing them. Mildred's became "Embrollo" (Hubble), Maud's was "Luna" (Moon), Enid's was "Sombra" (Shade), Drucilla's was "Del Corral" (Of the Paddock), etc. Some characters, like Ethel Hallow or Miss Cackle, kept their names unchanged.
213* DullSurprise:
214** Jadu is notable for her monotonous and robotic way of speaking.
215** Nothing ever surprises Miss Hardbroom; even the startling news that Mildred has turned Ethel into a pig only causes her to raise one slanting eyebrow.
216* EarlyInstallmentWeirdness: In the first book, Mildred turns Ethel into a pig and she's still able to talk. Two books later when Mildred is turned into a frog, she can't speak at all. It implies that all bewitched animals can't speak. As noted above, the '98 series corrected this by having Ethel unable to speak when she was turned into a pig.
217* EndOfSeriesAwareness: Mildred's speech in the GrandFinale shows how much the 2017 series has come a long way, bringing up the show's overall moral, which is "magic is real as long as you believe in it", and Clarice and Fenella's actresses, Kitty Slack and Billie Boullet respectively, cried TearsOfJoy as they watch Mildred embrace her friends as the story comes to a close.
218* EekAMouse:
219** Invoked by Rowan-Webb during a wizards' duel. Hellibore turns Ethel into a goose girl and he counters by turning himself into a mouse to scare her.
220** Ruby and the other girls have a fit at the sight of a beetle in Ruby's bed. Drucilla is the exception.
221** Drucilla shows she does have her own Achilles Heel when she's confronted with a lizard.
222* EnemyMine: Mildred and Miss Hardbroom form one when two witches from the Middle Ages duel one another, with the castle caught in the crossfire and at risk of collapsing. Miss Hardbroom pretends to threaten the students involved with bringing the two witches into the present day with being turned into toads for ten years. Mildred steps forward to take the punishment instead, knowing the good witch will step in to protect her.
223* EvenEvilHasStandards:
224** Drucilla has a number of moments when she disagrees with Ethel over her nasty tricks. These include expressing doubts about cheating in the summer drink project and being downright shocked at the idea of Ethel turning Mildred into a statue for no less than a few weeks, all for the purpose of winning an art competition.
225** Ethel also feels guilty in "A Bolt From the Blue" of the 1998 series for her prank nearly getting Mildred expelled. She helps the girls uncover Agatha Cackle's plan to make up for it.
226* EveryEpisodeEnding: Every episode of the 1998 series has a FreezeFrameEnding on a close-up of Mildred's reaction to the episode's conclusion (given the preponderance of [[HappyEnding happy endings]], usually a big smile). Aside from two episodes where Mildred was absent.
227* EvilCannotComprehendGood: Adaptations vary on whether Ethel is evil or just arrogant, but in the 2017 series in particular she repeatedly shows an inability to understand why she is hated for her constant vendetta against Mildred. It gets to the point that the season three finale [[spoiler:sees her create a threat against Cackle's solely so that she can stop it and be the 'hero', incapable of understanding the difference between her creating a situation and Mildred's genuine efforts to help others]].
228* EvilTwin: Miss Cackle's sister Agatha, memorably portrayed in the film by Charlotte Rae in a pink wig and a Texan accent.
229* EvolvingCredits:
230** The opening titles to the first episode of the 1998 series does not feature Mildred and her friends. Instead we see the shots we usually see of all of the other witches (as well as one of a witch descending in front of the gate which didn't end up in the proper opening). The school song (used as the show's opening theme) is also not played and instead an instrumental BGM is. It is from the second episode onward we saw Mildred and her friends (bar Enid, who wasn't added until after her debut episode) flying on broomsticks and the school song was used as the opening theme.
231** The 2017 series changes its titles with each season to include scenes for whatever season it is. Of note is that the titles change partway through season 3 to replace a scene of Mildred's mum with Indigo Moon. For season 4, old Mildred is shown at the start of the titles (to hide the change in actress) whereas this is replaced with a shot of new Mildred in the next episode. Azura Moon is added after the episode she is first introduced and Indigo is removed. Enid is also removed after she leaves the show.
232* ExpositoryThemeSong: "Growing Up Isn't Easy", sung by--of all people--''Creator/BonnieLangford''. Yes, ''[[Series/DoctorWho that]]'' Bonnie Langford.
233* FaceHeelTurn: Maud in ''The Worst Witch Strikes Again'', where she stops being Mildred's friend out of jealousy and starts hanging out with Ethel. Carried over into the '98 series in two episodes.
234* FakeOutFadeOut: In the final episode of the 2017 series, after a final shot of the school celebrating Mildred's promotion, the credits roll for the very last time. When it seems that the show was going to end, we get one last post-credit scene of Ethel and Mildred ending their conflict for good.
235* FantasticRacism:
236** In the 1998 series, played up between Miss Hardbroom toward Miss Drill, who isn't a witch.
237** Mildred is the target of a lot of it in the 2017 series - usually in the form of claiming a student from a non-magical family should never have been admitted to the school, even if she has the talent.
238* FemaleFelineMaleMutt:
239** Implied. Witches are said to be AlwaysFemale and it's tradition for them to be given cats. The only time a dog is seen in the TV series is when they turn a man into one.
240** A dog is seem more frequently in ''The New Worst Witch'' as due to a trick played by mean girl Belladonna Bindweed, Hettie ends up with one instead of a cat. She's quite happy about it, preferring dogs, and names the dog Kitty. Miss Cackle is very amused at the idea of a witch having a dog, and Hettie is allowed to keep the pup instead of being made to get a cat. Kitty is not ever seem accompanying Hettie on her broom, however, so maybe there was a point about that.
241** Ultimately subverted in ''The Worst Witch and the Wishing Star'' and the third season of the 2017 series, which sees Mildred acquire a dog that she calls 'Star', who becomes her new broomstick partner.
242* FishOutOfWater: The 2017 show has Esmerelda relate this as her experience in the non-magical world. She had no idea how anything works, and it was crushingly boring for her with magic gone.
243* FoodPorn: Zigzagged. Usually, the food is as dreadful as school food is expected to be, but Maud appreciates date pudding and custard after she has been put on a strict diet by her mother. In ''A Bad Spell for the Worst Witch'', Mildred meets a magician transformed into a frog, who reminisces sadly about a proper old-fashioned tea, with crumpets, butter and honey.
244* ForgotAboutHisPowers: Much fuss is made over Mildred breaking Ethel's violin by accident. None of the teachers could have magically repaired it? Though arguably this could be a case of magic cannot be used to solve all your problems, a lesson which Mildred often learns in the books and the adaptations. We're also told that things like magical food are not as filling, so it could be a case that a magical repair would not have been as effective as repairing the instrument the traditional way.
245* TheFriendNobodyLikes: Dyllis Mustardseed in ''The New Worst Witch'' is a sympathetic version of the trope. She's really a lonely girl who [[IJustWantToHaveFriends just wants friends]] but remains the most unpopular student at Cackle's... perhaps because she keeps trying to get into Belladonna Bindweed's good grades and often follows her around like a lovesick puppy.
246* FullNameBasis: In the 2017 series, Ethel almost always refers to and addresses Mildred as ‘Mildred Hubble’, especially in the later seasons.
247* GeniusDitz:
248** Mildred Hubble. Although clumsy and scatterbrained, she almost invariably has the ideas that save the day. Though there is contention on whether she's more BrilliantButLazy. See AlternateCharacterInterpretation.
249** By contrast, her younger cousin Hettie from ''The New Worst Witch'' switches it around and is more of a DitzyGenius.
250* GirlishPigtails:
251** Mildred keeps these during ''The Worst Witch''. At the end of the first episode of ''Weirdsister College'' she cuts them off after Nick and Ethel make fun of her.
252** Maud is mentioned to have them in ''A Bad Spell For The Worst Witch''.
253** In the 2017 series, in the first episode of the third season, Sybil briefly dons these while trying to imitate Mildred.
254** In ''The New Worst Witch'', Hettie also wears her hair in pigtails, though a different style than Mildred's.
255* GoodFeelsGood: Miss Hardbroom in the 1998 series seems to be surprised at how she enjoys getting cheered when playing the Fairy Godmother in the pantomime.
256* GoodWitchVersusBadWitch: The 1998 episode "Which Witch is Which?" Ruby, Griselda and Fenella accidently bring the heroic Lucy Fairweather and her nemesis Harriet Hogweed into the present day, and they start duelling throughout the castle. It takes Mildred and Miss Hardbroom pulling off a [[SecretTestOfCharacter Secret Test of Character]] to figure out who is who and thus end the duel.
257* GrandFinale:
258** "The [=Uninvited=]" for the 1998 series.
259** "The Witching Hour, Part 2" for the 2017 series.
260* GroupHug: How the GrandFinale of the 2017 ends with Mildred embracing Maud, Izzy, and Azura, ending Mildred's storyline, while Ethel is embraced by Felicity and Sybil as they reconcile with Ethel, ending Ethel's storyline.
261* GranolaGirl: Crescentmoon "Cressie" Winterchild from ''The New Worst Witch'' ([[MeaningfulName With that name, it's no big surprise]]).
262[[/folder]]
263
264[[folder:Tropes H-R]]
265* [[HalloweenSongs Halloween Song]]: "Anything Can Happen on Halloween" from the TV film.
266* HeelFaceTurn: Drucilla toward the end of season 3 of the '98 series agrees with Mildred and Jadu's plans of wanting to challenge Miss Cackle's abolishing of school clubs, which puts her at odds with Ethel. This leads to Drucilla briefly becoming friends with Mildred's gang.
267* HideYourLesbians: Miss Hardbroom and Miss Pentangle in the 2017 series (possibly - it's on a children's channel in the UK so nothing is confirmed, but there is some heavy duty subtext).
268* HowWeGotHere: Episode 1 of Season 3 of the 2017 begins with Ethel and Mildred fighting on broomsticks. Maud says that the term started so well. The rest of the episode shows how they got to this point.
269* HugeSchoolgirl: Enid Nightshade in the book series is described as very large and shy, though really she had a secret evil(ish) spark that she used her size and relative newness to the school to disguise, much to Worst Witch Mildred's chagrin. In both TV series, however, Enid was played be a very small (and more visibly spunky) actress.
270* HypocriticalHumour: Miss Cackle catches Miss Drill and Miss Bat spying on Mr. Hallow through the keyhole and sends them away to their classes. Once they're gone, she takes a good look herself.
271* IAmSpartacus: In the 2017 series, to save Miss Hubble from punishment for supposedly getting Mildred to cast an unauthorized spell (she actually did it herself), most of the girls in her art class claim they were the ones who did this instead.
272* IceQueen: Miss Hardbroom.
273* IdenticalTwinIDTag: Amelia and Agatha - distinguished in the film by Agatha's pink hair. In the 1998 TV series Agatha has round glasses with thicker lenses, which is used as a plot point in the season 1 finale -- as a tell tale sign that Agatha is impersonating Amelia is that she's squinting a lot more and keeps bumping into things (due to not wearing her proper glasses). In the 2017 series, Agatha is distinguishable by the fact that she ''doesn't'' wear glasses. Averted in the book, where the glasses are the same.
274* ImportantHaircut: After Cass comments that Mildred's pigtails make her look childish, then gets backstabbed by Hobbes, and laughed at by him and Ethel, Mildred cuts off her pigtails. Lampshaded by Cass in the second episode, "do you really think cutting your hair is going to fix everything?"
275* IncrediblyLamePun: In an episode, Mildred and Enid accidentally cast a spell that causes written down numbers to multiply and spread around the entire school. Ms. Hardbroom stops the spell and remarks, "As for these girls, I think their number's up." She allows herself a giggle before realising that nobody else is laughing.
276* IneptMage: Mildred Hubble. Though it's worth noting that - while abysmal in the classroom - she does prove quite good at thinking on her feet with using magic in tight situations. Further justified in the TV series where it's established that she had no real knowledge of magic before arriving at Cackle's, so her ineptitude is more based on a lack of experience rather than her just being bad.
277* {{Invisibility}}: Invisibility potions are used several times in the books and adaptations, which gradually wear off, causing the drinker to reappear slowly from the head down.
278** Mildred accidentally makes an invisibility potion, instead of the laughter potion they were supposed to make.
279** When Miss Cackle's wicked sister Agatha plans to take over the school, her witches plan to drink an invisibility potion to sneak into the school.
280** When Mildred is turned into a frog and is pursued around the potion lab, she seizes the opportunity to escape by drinking some spilled invisibility potion.
281---> '''Miss Hardbroom''': (unaware the frog is Mildred) How strange. Not only the noisiest, but also the most knowledgeable frog I am ever privileged to meet.
282** In the final episode of the 97 series, one of the girls uses an invisibility potion to sneak into Miss Cackle's office.
283** In the season 1 finale of 2017 series, Ethel gives Mildred an invisibility potion to allow Mildred to sneak back into Cackle's Academy.
284** In episode 1 of ''Weirdsister College'', Hobbes drinks a potion to sneak into the Beetle's office. He is stopped from being thwarted by the Beetle, who has had previous experience with invisibility potions and knows what to look for, after she's distracted by Mildred.
285* ItsAWonderfulPlot: Played with in the episode "Maud's Big Mistake" in the 2017 series. On parents night, Maud uses forgetting powder on the entire school so everyone will forget all her mistakes and she'll receive rave reports from the teachers. But her deceitful use of magic has unexpected and unfortunate consequences: since almost everyone considers her friendship with Mildred Hubble, aka "the worst witch" to be her biggest mistake, everyone, including Mildred, forgets they were ever friends! And Maud finds that without her to help keep Mildred on her feet, Miss Cackle would have had no faith that Mildred had even prayer of ever turning around her appalling performance (nor Mildred herself for that matter) and would have expelled her that parents night after blowing up the potions lab. Maud, upon realizing how important she is to Mildred's life, decides to set things right.
286* {{Jerkass}}: Ethel Hallow (except in rare moments), Gary Grailquest, Barry Dragonsbane, Mistress Hecate Broomhead.
287* JerkWithAHeartOfGold:
288** Miss Hardbroom. Although a [[SternTeacher stern]], borderline {{sadist teacher}}, she ''does'' care for the well-being of her students; she just doesn't get why they can't simply be quiet and do as they're told. This is true in the 1998 series and the 2017 one, where she places the safety of the girls above everything.
289** Enid is an example as well, especially in her first few appearances. She became considerably less jerkish as the show/books went on, though she had a bit of a relapse when she made a guest appearance in ''Weirdsister College.''
290** Drucilla, despite being a nasty bully for most of the series, has a compassionate side and teams up with Mildred and her friends several times during the series.
291* IJustWantToBeNormal: Subverted. During the 2017 series, after Esmeralda was tricked into giving Agatha her powers, she tries to adjust to the normal, non-magical life, but considering she's been a witch and trained to use her powers for nearly her whole life, she does a terrible job adjusting herself to the normal life. Also she occasionally misses having her powers.
292* IllTimedSneeze: While secretly listening outside the staff room door, Mildred suddenly sneezes and is heard by the teachers. The punishment is subverted, though - when Miss Hardbroom opens the door to investigate, Mildred has her hand raised as though just about to knock, and manages to avoid trouble by BlatantLies.
293* JustWokeUpThatWay: Mildred is suddenly woken by the sound of her bedroom door being slammed; to the discovery that her tabby cat has grown to the size of a mammoth, everything is her room is much bigger than usual, and she has amazing jumping powers. She then sees [[MirrorReveal in the mirror]] that she has been turned into a frog.
294* KarmaHoudini:
295** Belladonna Bindweed in ''The New Worst Witch,'' especially in the first series, where she plays TeachersPet for all it's worth. Especially noticeable in the series finale, where she is actively and willingly aiding the villains in their plans to take over Cackle's and bring chaos and misery to the world, and yet manages to get off without any form of retribution. At the end of the episode, she even [[LampshadedTrope lampshades]] her own KarmaHoudini status, smugly stating that she gets away with most things.
296** By the second series, however, the teachers seem to have caught on, especially Miss Hardbroom, and so in this series Belladonna isn't nearly the KarmaHoudini she once was.
297** Ethel isn't usually one, but she isn't seen to get into trouble for two of her worst deeds in the third series: causing chaos by magically transforming Mrs. Cosie's cafe, and secretly transforming Mildred into a statue which she intended to pass off as her own work of art at a competition.
298* LaboriousLaces: Mildred's bootlaces are frequently trailing along the floor, to show her general clumsiness.
299* LaughTrack: Used exclusively for the Disney Channel version of the 2017 series to match with the channel's current sitcoms.
300* LargeHam:
301** Tim Curry as the Grand Wizard in the movie.
302** The Dragon Lord from the series as well.
303** Miss Drill when she gets witch powers to become Hilary Hemlock.
304* LetUsNeverSpeakOfThisAgain: In season one, episode 11 of the '98 series, "Let Them Eat Cake":
305-->'''Miss Cackle:''' Now come along, Miss Hardbroom, I've declared this an afternoon out, and you know what that means.\
306'''Miss Hardbroom:''' A holiday?\
307'''Miss Cackle:''' More than that. Tomorrow, we will forget that we were here together. An afternoon that never happened.
308* LettingHerHairDown:
309** Tradition for the Halloween celebrations - all the girls and teachers have their hair down (Miss Cackle is the only one who wears it down normally since it's too short to tie up). It's the only time of year the girls spot Miss Hardbroom without her PrimAndProperBun.
310** The girls also wear their hair down for bed. Miss Hardbroom does too, combined with a leather dressing gown. She also does this once when she's drugged with a potion which reverses her normal personality.
311* LongLostRelative: The fourth season of the 2017 series reveals that Izzy, a first-year witch brought in from the ordinary world, is actually [[spoiler:Mildred's half-sister, as her father met Julie Hubble on a holiday in Morocco but lost her number after they went home]].
312* LoopholeAbuse:
313** Miss Hardbroom encourages Mildred to use this in the pilot of the 2017 series; she makes it clear to all of those in the room that no witch can interfere in the duel between Ada and Agatha Cackle without forfeiting their status as witches, which were affirmed when they were accepted at the Academy, but as Mildred ''didn't'' pass her entrance exam, such a rule doesn't apply to her...
314** An episode from season 4 of the 2017 series has Mildred pull out of the running for head girl and turn in the badges she's collected from the competition. She then changes her mind, but is told that reutrned badges cannot be re-issued. However, Miss Cackle notes according to the rules that if a head girl candidate pulls out, a "new candidate" may enter the competition, up until midnight of the same day. Mildred tells the teachers that she is "that new candidate" and rejoins the contest.
315* LovePotion:
316** In the last episode of ''The New Worst Witch'', Mona makes a love potion, freaking Belladonna out when she thinks it's to use on her.
317** The 2017 series has the teachers accidentally drugged by one, with hijinks ensuing as the majority of the staff end up fawning over Rowan-Webb until the students are able to alert Miss Cackle to the spell before she can see him and fall under its influence.
318* LowerHalfReveal: In the book ''The Worst Witch Strikes Again'', Enid pokes her head around Mildred's door, tells Mildred not laugh, then brings the rest of herself into the room, revealing her sports kit: a pair of vast black shorts pulled up underneath her arms, bought by her mother, who buys everything with growing room for her.
319* MagicAIsMagicA: Magic is rarely used to make practical tasks easier, such as tidying up, repairing breakages, aiding learning: many menial tasks still have to be done by hand, such as training cats to fly on broomsticks, and lighting lanterns around the school. Use of spells is also governed by the Witches' Code, which is occasionally referenced by Miss Hardbroom, especially concerning turning people into animals, which is generally forbidden, except in self-defence.
320* MagicFire: In one episode of the 2017 series, some students try to make a magic fire but use too many fireflies and create a normal fire instead.
321* MagicPotion: Miss Hardbroom teaches the students how to brew potions, whose many effects include making witches' magic stronger and turning people into things.
322* MarsAndVenusGenderContrast: Discussed in the 'Witch vs Wizard' debate in "Sweet Talking Guys".
323* MeaningfulName: Everyone's surname has something to do with witchcraft.
324** Miss Drill is an exception; her name relates to being a PE teacher.
325** Miss Bat is rather [[{{Cloudcuckoolander}} batty.]]
326** Miss Crotchet's refers to the fact she is a music teacher.
327** Mr. Blossom (both of them) refers to the fact he is a gardener.
328** Crescentmoon Winterchild from ''The New Worst Witch'' is a GranolaGirl and has the name to match.
329* MeaningfulRename: When Miss Drill is given witch powers from a potion, she renames herself 'Hilary Hemlock'.
330* MeaningfulBackgroundEvent: At the end of the GrandFinale of the 2017 series, as Mildred embraces Maud, Izzy, and Azura, in the background, Ethel reconciles with Felicity and Sybil with a group hug.
331* MundaneUtility: When Mildred is turned into a frog in ''A Bad Spell for the Worst Witch'', she reflects that being able to jump like a frog is the only pleasant aspect of her condition.
332* MyGodWhatHaveIDone:
333** After Mildred proves her talents for art and drawing, Maud becomes jealous and feels overshadowed. She eventually tells Mildred that she feels stupid next to her, in response to which Mildred angrily destroys her own work, saying she wouldn't want Maud to feel like a fool for anything, and storms off to her room. In a likely {{TearJerker}} moment, Maud realizes what a jerk she has been, and breaks down in tears for the first and only time in the series.
334** Earlier in the TV series, Maud ignores Mildred after she crashes into the Grand Wizard. In contrast to the books - where Maud doesn't make up with Mildred until after she's saved the school from danger - she is unable to sleep due to feeling guilty, and goes straight to Millie's room to apologize.
335** In the 2017 episode "Maud's Big Mistake", Maud casts a spell to make the academy forget her mistakes on the first parents' night, but this results in everyone forgetting her friendship with Mildred and leaving nobody with any hope that Mildred can improve from her role as 'worst witch'. Maud removes the spell as soon as possible, and her father subsequently casts a spell to make the staff forget her mistake.
336* NamedByTheAdaptation:
337** In the books, Maud's last name wasn't revealed until ''The Worst Witch All at Sea'' where she is called Maud Spellbody. The '98 TV series gave her the last name "Moonshine". Drucilla was also given the last name "Paddock", and that became her name in the books too. The teachers' first names weren't revealed in the books but the '98 TV series says Miss Cackle is Amelia, Miss Hardbroom is Constance, Miss Bat is Davina and Miss Drill is Imogen.
338** In the 2017 TV series a few of the teacher had their first names changed. Miss Ada Cackle, Miss Hecate Hardbroom and Miss Dimity Drill. In the same series, Maud's last name is "Spellbody."
339** Girls Dawn, Gloria and Harriet in the books were only featured extras in the TV series but got last names too. Dawn Raven, Gloria Newt, Harriet Goodcharm. Likewise Sybil's friend Clarice got 'Crow' as a last name.
340** Maud is said to get a pet bat for her birthday in ''The Worst Witch Strikes Again''. The 1998 series names him Barney. Enid's pet is also given two separate names - Coco in monkey form, and Teaser as a cat.
341* NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast: Any evil or bad witches tend to have last names resembling some kind of plant or weed. 'Bindweed', 'Hogweed', 'Wormwood', 'Hemlock'.
342* NeverMessWithGranny:
343** Of course she likely wasn't a granny then, but the girls find this out about the school founder Granny Cackle; she was a magical version of Myth/RobinHood that went by the name of "Cackle The Jackal" - and founded the school with money she had stolen from an evil warlock.
344** Miss Cackle is also quite old, but she's able to immobilise three wicked witches without even using an incantation. And when she thinks someone is about to steal a TomeOfEldritchLore from her office, she's prepared to fight them one on one.
345* NobodyPoops:
346** Cackle's Academy is never really shown to have toilets in either of the series. The trope is almost averted through Beatrice's fear of needing the toilet during an exam, but this never occurs.
347** In one 1998 episode, Ethel almost averts this too - when Drusilla snaps at Mildred to "get lost!", Ethel remarks [[DeadpanSnarker "She probably will - she needs a map to find her way back from the bathroom!"]]
348* NoOntologicalInertia: In the 2017 series:
349** When Mildred's mother revokes her powers, the nullifying spell she placed on her model of the castle deactivates as well.
350** In the season three finale [[spoiler: when the evil Indigo Moon is defeated, the storm she summoned vanishes and Mildred turns back from having part of her face turned to stone.]] Averted however [[spoiler: in that the evil Indigo's damage to the castle remains.]]
351* TheNthDoctor:
352** In season 2 of the '98 series, Ethel Hallow has a "witch over" which gives her a change of appearance (and accent) to explain the actress changing from Felicity Jones to Katy Allen.
353** In the '17 series, the change in actor for Maud is attributed to a game of magical Hide and Seek that got out of hand.
354** Also in the '17 series, Mildred accidentally mixes an appearance changing potion to explain her change in actress at the beginning of season 4.
355* ObjectShapedLandmass: In ''All at Sea'', there is a rocky formation a short way out to sea, called Cat's Head rock, which is indeed shaped like a cat's head, and is said to be the home to a treasure chest.
356* ObliviousTransformation: In ''A Bad Spell for the Worst Witch'', Mildred is at first startled by her tabby cat suddenly becoming much bigger; then she realises that everything else is much bigger, so she must be smaller. The truth only dawns when she discovers the MundaneUtility of being able to take a massive jump, sees her reflection in a mirror, and discovers that she has been turned into a frog.
357* ObsessiveHobbyEpisode: In one episode of the Netflix show, several teachers and students become obsessed with a game that turns out to be cursed.
358* OldTimeyBathingSuit: In ''The Worst Witch All At Sea'', Miss Cackle orders bathing suits for the girls when they have a seaside excursion. In keeping with the old-fashioned nature of the school, these are striped old-timey bathing suits, complete with a [[SchoolSwimsuit school badge]]. When the girls are disappointed to see these, Miss Hardbroom is appalled by their lack of enthusiasm, and makes them write [[TheDreadedThankYouLetter thank-you cards]] to Miss Cackle for providing the bathing suits.
359* OneSteveLimit: Belladonna Bindweed is the antagonist in ''The New Worst Witch''. Bindweed was also the last name of one of Agatha Cackle's associates. Justified in that she is made out to be Belladonna's grandmother.
360* OurClonesAreDifferent: The series features a spell that a witch can use to clone herself. Among the ingredients are kippers and slippers. Done correctly, the clone has the exact same personality as the donor, but if another type of fish is used in place of the kippers, the personality will be different.
361* OutOfCharacterAlert: If Miss Cackle is acting incredibly stern to one of the pupils or being unsupportive when the someone needs help, there's a good chance that it's actually Agatha pretending to be her twin sister.
362* OutOfCharacterMoment: Miss Bat's only canonical appearance from the books in the TV series comes across as this. Yelling at Mildred and sending her out of class for laughing during chanting is incredibly out of character.
363* PageTurnSurprise: In ''A Bad Spell for the Worst Witch'', the reader gets a surprise on turning the page to see a huge picture of the face of Mildred's tabby cat, filling the whole page, when the cat is normally depicted as very tiny. This is to reflect how Mildred first sees the cat, when she has been turned into a frog.
364* PeoplePuppets: In "Witch Switch", several people control a {{muggle}} by means of a spell like this. Because he then repeats every action the person controlling him takes (which means any things accidentally said as well), there is a lot of mishap, which makes the guy seem high or insane.
365* PhantomZonePicture: Agatha and Miss Gimlett trap Ada in one of these when they take over the school. After Miss Hardbroom finds out and attempts to rescue her, she gets the same treatment. Eventually the tables are turned, and both end up trapped in the same picture as punishment.
366* PlayingAgainstType: InUniverse example. Miss Hardbroom plays the Fairy Godmother in the school play of Cinderella.
367* PlotHole: The TwoTeacherSchool element creates this sometimes. Notably in "The Great Outdoors", Ruby and other students are on a bird-watching trip for half term. It's implied that Miss Cackle and Miss Bat supervise them - as Miss Drill and Miss Hardbroom chaperone Mildred's trip. But in the next episode "The Heat Is On", Ruby and the other girls are still on their trip - but Miss Cackle and Miss Bat are at the school. So that begs the question of which teacher is supervising these girls. There are also numerous other scenes of one teacher taking Mildred's classes, but the others walking around the school or in the staff room - begging the question of who was taking classes for the other years.
368* PowerTrio: Mildred, Maud and Enid. Later, ''Weirdsister College'' had Mildred, Cass, and Ethel, and ''The New Worst Witch'' had Hettie, Mona and Cressie. The 2017 series adds a second PowerTrio with Sybil, Clarice and Beatrice.
369* PoweredByAForsakenChild: The magic lamp Sybil creates. After she wishes for unlimited wishes, it draws energy from everything else in order to sustain all the wishes. Once it's run out of inanimate objects, it starts draining energy from the teachers and students.
370* PragmaticAdaptation:
371** Both the movie and the '98 TV series add padding to the first story, with the TV series turning Ethel's little adventure into a separate episode, while the somewhat anticlimactic end to the original story instead gets turned into a large chase scene. The movie simply has to pad out several of its sequences, notably making Ethel's taunting a result of her cheating at a game of "Scare Tag" (in the book the teasing follows Mildred's lack of success with Tabby) and adding in the music video below. The second story (a HalfwayPlotSwitch) was simply adapted into two separate episodes, while the third and fourth became two-parters. Also, Madame Spellbinder, Miss Crotchet and Miss Swoop are unique to the adaptations.
372** In the Halloween portions in the 1998 series, a broomstick formation team would probably require special effects well outside the show's budget and - since the sequence would involve Mildred causing everyone to fall off their brooms - pose too much of a risk for the young actresses. It's changed to a tableau where Mildred is given the only flying role, and Ethel's prank leads to her crashing into the Grand Wizard. This in fact gives more motivation for Mildred to run away, since she was the only one who messed up. Additionally, in the book she turned all Agatha's followers into snails from behind; that might be too anticlimactic, so it's expanded into a whole episode's worth of material, where Agatha and cronies get inside the school before they're stopped. The book also had Maud not make up with Mildred until after she's saved the school, but the series has her immediately go to Millie's room to apologise (and discovering one of Agatha's witches allows her to be involved in the action).
373* PrinceCharming: Mildred is able to conjure up one in the series finale. Amusingly he's implied to have to kiss ''every'' girl in the school who's been affected by the WickedWitch's sleeping spell.
374* PreviouslyOn: Happens only on the CBBC broadcast of the show, where viewers get a recap on what they missed from the last episode.
375* PutOnABus:
376** In the 2017 series, at the start of season 2, it is explained that Drucilla has transferred to Pentangle's Academy.
377** Miss Bat and Mr Rowan-Webb do not return for season 4. It is explained by Miss Cackle they have retired.
378** In season 4, Indigo is returned to the 1980s without any memory of her time at Cackle's.
379** Enid leaves partway through season 4 to train for an international games competition.
380* RaceLift:
381** Mrs. Tapioca in the '98 TV series becomes Italian when she was presumably British in the books.
382** The 2017 series is much more diverse than the 1998 series, with Miss Drill and Enid played by Black actresses.
383* RapidHairGrowth: In ''The Worst Witch Saves the Day'', Mildred has several accidents with her hair, the first of which results in Ethel clumsily chopping it off, leaving her looking terrible. To try to restore it, she tries a magical hair tonic, which makes her hair grow extremely rapidly, engulfing her bedroom, and the corridor.
384* ReasonableAuthorityFigure: Most of the teachers at Cackle's are ultimately this, with the notable exception of Miss Hardbroom.
385* RhymingWizardry: Most of the spells rhyme.
386-->''"In pond, lake, or swampy bog, bring this girl back from a frog."''
387* RobeAndWizardHat: Pointed hats and robes are FANCY/Formal dress. The student wear variations on their school colors of black even grey in their off hours. Including their pajamas.
388* RousingSpeech: How two of four finales of the 2017 series end:
389** Miss Cackle ends the second season by expressing the school that tonight they'll celebrate that they are "one magical family".
390** How Mildred accepts the position as Head Girl during assembly in the series finale of the 2017 series. Here, Mildred expresses to the rest of the students and staff how grateful she is for the adventures they had together.
391* RulesLawyer: In ''Wishing Star'', after the judges of an inter-school competition have seen Mildred’s flying display with her new dog Star, all observe that technically witches don’t have to have cats as their broomstick partners-cats were just selected as being the simplest option for such a role-and thus conclude that Mildred flying with Star breaks no rules, which leads to Mildred being allowed to keep Star as her broomstick partner in future lessons.
392[[/folder]]
393
394[[folder:Tropes S-Z]]
395* SamusIsAGirl: It turns out the often mentioned only once seen dr. foster of ''' "the foster's effect" ''' fame who everyone (except Professor Johnathan Shakeshaft) thinks is a man is in fact an Australian woman.
396* SchoolPlay: There's two... nearly in the 1998 version. One episode featured the girls rehearsing for a production of ''The Selfish Giant'', only for Enid to drop the scenery on Ethel. The production is never mentioned in after that episode though other episodes imply Miss Drill does them regularly. The ChristmasSpecial the following year featured the characters in a pantomime of ''Cinderella''.
397* ScoutOut: When the girls go on a school camping trip, they run into some boys called the Rocky Mountain Rangers.
398* ScrewTheRulesIMakeThem: In the 2017 episode "The Worst Headmistress", Agatha is able to take control of Cackle's once she learns that she is actually the elder sister, the sisters' mother having lied about the birth order for their whole lives. However, when the Great Wizard learns of this deception, he makes it clear that he will alter the usual laws to allow Ada Cackle to remain headmistress as she is clearly the better choice, Agatha only acting as headmistress to satisfy her own ego.
399* SelfFulfillingProphecy: In ''The Worst Witch All at Sea'', when Ethel catches Mildred sneaking down to the beach to feed her cat Tabby (whom she is keeping on a boat in secret), Mildred fabricates a story that she is checking out the boat in order to sail out and look for some legendary treasure on a nearby rock in the bay. Ethel attempts to thwart this by unmooring the boat, leading Mildred to set out to rescue Tabby, in the process of which she ends up ''actually'' finding the treasure on the rock!
400* SheCleansUpNicely: Mildred in her Cinderella ball gown in the school pantomime in the 1998 version. Completely averted with Charlie in the prince costume - it was meant for Drucilla, after all. The rest of the girls also get to wear ballgowns for that scene.
401* SiblingYinYang: Ethel is a confident, snobby over-achiever. Her sister Sybil is clumsy, nice and timid.
402* SlipknotPonytail: In "Alarms & Diversions" Miss Bat's hair gets blown loose in the tornado.
403* SlowClap: Happens twice in the 2017 series at the end of two finales:
404** How the season 2 finale of the 2017 series ends after Miss Cackle's speech.
405** How the last scene of the series finale of the 2017 series ends following Mildred's speech.
406* SneezeOfDoom: In the 2017 series, Beatrice Bunch's asthma [[spoiler:or allergy to cats as it turns out to be]] causes her to have sneezing fits, and each sneeze teleports her to random places around the castle.
407* StudioAudience: Although the 2017 series wasn't filmed in front of a studio audience throughout its run, an off-screen audience applauding happens twice:
408** The season 2 finale not only ends with the school applauding Miss Cackle and Mildred but an off-screen studio audience joins in the applause. Turns out, the studio audience was friends and family of some of the cast members that attended the show's last day of production for season 2.
409** The GrandFinale ends with the school celebrating their victory and Mildred's promotion as an off-screen studio audience applauds. Turns out, the studio audience was friends and family of some of the cast members that attended the show's last day of production, including Bella Ramsey and Kelsey Calladine-Smith, who both left the show after the third season. In fact, the applause from them lasted for so long, even after the final scene was wrapped, it had to be sweetened so that there's enough time for the closing theme to play the episode out.
410* SigningOffCatchPhrase: The final episode ends with the same announcer from "Enid's Last Race" thanking the viewers for watching the show and bids them farewell.
411* SpellMyNameWithAnS:
412** The character's name is confirmed to be spelled "Dru'''c'''illa" in the credits and whenever it's written down. However it's misspelled by many fans, likely due to the popularity of [[Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer another character]] who spells it with an S.
413** To further complicate this: the 2017 series - in which Jill Murphy was involved in the production - confirms the spelling as "Dru'''s'''illa", and that is the more common spelling in the UK where the books and shows are set.
414* SpinoffSendoff: ''The New Worst Witch'' opens with an OlderAndWiser Mildred dropping her cousin Henrietta off at Cackle's Academy.
415* SpoilerOpening:
416** The Filipino airing of the 2017 series replaces the opening titles with its own version that credits the actors and names the characters they play. However, the titles reveal Miss Hardboom's full name as "Miss Joy Hecate Hardbroom", which spoils the twist in Miss Hardbroom's story in season 3.
417** The third season 4 opening, after Enid left, ends with a brief scene of Mildred celebrating her promotion of Head Girl with the rest of the school before the title logo is shown. This spoils the ending of the GrandFinale where Mildred becomes Head Girl and Ethel and Mildred end their conflict for good and become friends.
418* SternTeacher: Miss Hardbroom is perhaps a cross between this and a SadistTeacher.
419* StudentsPlayingMatchmaker: The episode "Love at First Sight", Mr. Rowan-Webb the wizard has a crush on the singing teacher Miss Bat. The girls make a love potion to make her fall in love with the first wizard she sees, but ''all'' the teachers end up drinking it, meaning the women teachers fall in love with Rowan-Webb, while he falls in love with himself.
420* SuspiciouslySimilarSubstitute: Three staff members at Cackle's get them by the third season of the '98 series.
421** Miss Bat is replaced by Miss Crotchett to teach chanting. She's equally as odd and quirky (though calmer and less of a DramaQueen). They even have similar first names - Davina and Lavinia.
422** Frank Blossom is replaced as caretaker by another balding jovial man from OopNorth. Somewhat justified since it's meant to be his brother Ted.
423** Mrs. Tapioca gets replaced as cook by another Italian, Mrs. Semolina.
424* TakenForGranite: Indigo Moon's fate after she gained magic. Also nearly happens to Mildred's mum and to Mildred herself, but as a result of being zapped by the evil Indigo Moon, who also threatened to do the same to Miss Hardbroom.
425* TastesLikeFriendship: In the book ''A Bad Spell for the Worst Witch'', Mildred is turned into a frog. She meets the frog in the school pond, who offers her a nice fly from his store. Mildred says she is hoping to be changed back into her usual self before she gets used to such delicacies.
426* TeachersPet: Belladonna in ''The New Worst Witch'' often plays this role, especially in the first series, though unlike most examples of the trope she has no ''real'' respect or admiration for the teachers and is basically just sucking up to them in order to make herself look good and everyone else look bad.
427** Ethel attempts to be this in the original series, and to a somewhat lesser extent in the '17 series. Sometimes it works, because she's genuinely the best student. However, Miss Hardbroom won't hesitate to punish her too when she's caught causing mischief.
428* TeachersUnfavoriteStudent: Downplayed -- Mildred, while well-meaning, is highly inept, forgetful and clumsy. Despite occasional PetTheDog moments, her form-teacher Miss Hardbroom frequently picks on her, and compares her unfavourably to the top pupil Ethel Hallow. When the young students are presented with black cats, Mildred is given a dim-witted tabby instead; and Mildred strongly suspects that Miss Hardbroom has arranged this.
429* ThisLoserIsYou: Mildred Hubble is gangly, funny-looking, and no bloody good at anything. Even her cat, the imaginatively named Tabby, is a misfit. She got into the school on a scholarship, because Miss Cackle liked a story she wrote, just in case people were wondering how she managed to pass the entrance exam to the Academy.
430* ThoseTwoGuys: There were at least three separate sets.
431** Fenella and Griselda
432** Baz and Gaz
433** Sybil and Clarice
434** Tim and Azmat in ''Weirdsister College''
435* ThoseTwoGirls: Get used to Bella Ramsey and Jenny Richardson when they aren't on the set. The two are super close, they are like sisters!
436* TheGlomp: How Maud, Izzy, and Azura met up with Mildred at the end of the GrandFinale.
437* TearsOfJoy:
438** In one episode of the 2017 series, Sybil has these after her friends put a surprise party on for her.
439** Kitty Slack, without breaking character successfully, lets it out at the end of the GrandFinale of the 2017 series as she watches Mildred embracing her friends in her final appearance. Her [[https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/screenshot_2021_07_10_195509.png expression says it all]].
440* TiedTogetherShoelaceTrip: * In ''A Bad Spell for the Worst Witch'', Mildred kidnaps another girl Griselda. She tricks Griselda into looking under her bed for a beetle, and stealthily ties her laces together. When Griselda emerges, Mildred quickly ties her arms and gags her. Griselda tries to run for it, but falls on her back because of her tied laces.
441* TimeyWimeyBall: Plays a part in the 2017 series 4 episode "A Witch in Time"; [[spoiler:Mildred uses up three time-loop spells to try and stop Ethel becoming Head Girl, but after her final loop injures Maud, Mr Daisy points out that the one she used up came from a different timeline and he still has the 'original' loop spells from this timeline]].
442* TokenMinority:
443** Jadu Wali most blatantly in the 1998 series. She's a token Indian character who is entirely in a supporting role, and usually falls under TheGenericGuy. She doesn't get an episode to herself until the second-last one of the series.
444** Azmat Madari in ''Weirdsister College'' is the only non-white member of the main cast, mainly functioning as ThoseTwoGuys with Tim Wraithewight. We do at least get to see an apparition of his mother in the pilot episode.
445** Ruby Cherrytree is the other non-white member of Mildred's friend group, but she's able to transcend the tokenism just about; getting an established personality as an avid technofile, allowing her to have more agency in plots, and getting plenty of episodes in which she plays a prominent role.
446** The 2017 series averts the tokenism with more people of color (some not actually main characters either, but just in the background).
447* TookALevelInKindness:
448** Ethel, kind of, in ''Weirdsister College.'' She's still haughty and stuck-up, but has become less actively antagonistic towards Mildred.
449** Deirdre Swoop, in her one appearance in the first TV series, wasn't the nicest of witches -- when she returns as a recurring character in ''Weirdsister College'' she's grown a lot friendlier, and as Cackle's newest teacher in ''The New Word Witch'' she's downright adorable.
450* ToyTransmutation: In one episode Mildred gets [[IncredibleShrinkingMan shrunk]], and another witch tries to grow her back, but that turns her into a rag doll instead.
451* TrademarkFavouriteFood:
452** Miss Cackle's is cheese. The password to her safe is actually 'cauliflower cheese', to the girls' surprise.
453** Mildred frequently says pizza is her favorite in the second episode, and is delighted that they get to have it on Saturdays.
454** Maud's appears to be chocolate.
455* TranquilFury: Miss Hardbroom's response to Mildred accidentally emptying a bucket of water over her head in attempting to put out a non-existent fire. She barely even raises her voice when addressing her mortified pupil.
456--> '''Miss Hardbroom:''' IF you remember the drill, Mildred, pupils are expected to come into the yard from the main door; not, as you seem to imagine, through an upstairs window.
457* TriumphantReprise: A variation in the season 3 premiere. The first scene has Miss Drill walking in on the girls dancing to a pop song - and they are then immediately reprimanded by Miss Hardbroom. At the end of the episode, when Miss Drill has agreed to be the president of Mildred's new club, the girls start dancing to the same song again. And this time Miss Drill joins in.
458* TroubledButCute:
459** Hobbes in ''Weirdsister College.'' There's no doubting that he isn't an entirely pleasant person, but as the last episode reveals, he was bullied some point prior to coming to the college, and it could be argued much of his behavior stems from that.
460** Ethel could arguably be considered a female version of this trope. Yes, she's unpleasant, but there also seems to be an implication of having to live up to family standards - it's notable in ''Weirdsister College'' when asked why she came to the college she responds with simply "I'm a Hallow". This is shown with her interactions with Sybil during their time at Cackles; both have to live up to extreme family standards.
461*** This is even more a part of her character in the 2017 series, where she feels that she is in direct competition with her older sister Esmerelda, who is widely acknowledged as Cackle's best student for years, with Ethel developing a vendetta against Mildred because she unintentionally thwarted Ethel's attempt to really impress the staff in her entrance exam.
462* {{Tsundere}}: Miss Bat is a Type B. She's normally friendly and quirky - but will flip out if she's offended. This usually happens as a result of Miss Hardbroom's attitude.
463* TwinSwitch: A sinister version occurs in the 2017 series' season one finale. Miss Cackle's evil twin, Agatha, locks her sister in a cupboard and proceeds to masquerade as her to launch her revenge against Cackle's Academy.
464* TwoTeacherSchool: In the two tv series, Cackle's seems to survive on only having four teachers, and Weirdsister's runs with four lecturers as well.
465* UnnecessaryMakeOver: Mildred Hubble gives herself a radical makeover in the first episode of the spin-off ''Weirdsister College'' that involves cutting off her GirlishPigtails. The other characters make a big fuss about how much better she looks except she gave herself an extremely frumpy hairstyle that made her look like she was in her 30s. She tidied herself up a bit towards the end of the series but most fans still preferred her with pigtails.
466* WeedingOutImperfections: In ''A Bad Spell for the Worst Witch'', Mildred upsets Sybil, the little sister of her worst enemy Ethel Hallow, by impulsively telling her a made-up tale about the frog in the school pond being a poor first-year who was two seconds late for a lesson, and turned into a frog by a teacher. When Ethel calls her out, Mildred refers to Sybil as "a bit of a weed", and then recklessly retorts to the angry Ethel "Weeds! All you Hallows are weeds, weeds, weeds!" Ethel's revenge is to turn Mildred into a frog, and leave a clump of weeds on her pillow.
467* WeightLossSalad: At the beginning of ''A Bad Spell for the Worst Witch'', Maud, who was previously described as tubby, mentions that her mother put her on this awful diet of lettuce and celery and stuff like that, and that she is now glad to be back at school, out of her mother's clutches.
468* TheWeirdSisters: In the HalloweenEpisode of the '98 TV series, Mildred runs into a trio of true {{Wicked Witch}}es.
469* WhamEpisode: 2017 series:
470** "The Mists of Time": The episode reveals some of the twin Cackles' early lives, and shows that Agatha was the older twin (by 13 minutes) rather than Ada, and she should have been the headmistress of Cackle's.
471** "Out of Bounds" features a DownerEnding all around with Ethel finding out the truth about Agatha's birthright and telling her about it, Agatha regaining her powers and taking control of the academy, her twin sister Ada getting trapped inside a painting, and Mildred getting expelled and transported home.
472** "All Hallow's Eve/The Big Freeze" is the two-part Season 2 finale revealing that Mildred did indeed come from a magical witching family and that 12 generations before Mildred's time, [[SmallRoleBigImpact one of her ancestors had sacrificed 12 generations of magic to reignite a founding stone]], making Mildred the first magical Hubble in centuries.
473** "Bad Magic" is a major game-changer for this version of the series. Not only is Miss Hardbroom's real name revealed to be Joy, it's also revealed that Joy used to be a fun-loving girl who didn't follow the Witches Code. She was attracted to the non-magical world and was friendly with a girl named Indigo Moon. She decided to give Indigo witch powers, but Indigo got carried away with it, and turned to stone. Since then, Joy became more stern and serious and started following the code, eventually growing up to become the stern headmistress she is now.
474** "Ethel Hallow to the Rescue", the two-part season 3 finale, along with a NothingIsTheSameAnymore scenario during the ending where Mildred goes against several hundred years of witching tradition, and opens up Cackle's Academy to various non-magical girls that were outcasts.
475* WickedWitch:
476** Miss Hardbroom speaks against this trope in the HalloweenEpisode. "There are some genuinely wicked witches in this world - but they do not have long, warty green noses". Indeed when we meet Agatha and her cronies, they look like normal women - apart from looking a little rough from (presumably) living in the forest.
477** A true example appears in the series finale when the girls accidentally conjure up the WickedWitch from ''Sleeping Beauty''.
478* TheWindowOrTheStairs: Twice in the books, Mildred makes an unusual journey through a window, reinforced by Miss Hardbroom's sneering remarks.
479** After Enid has bewitched Mildred's vaulting pole, Mildred sails in through the window of Miss Hardbroom's private study.
480---> '''Miss Hardbroom''': Nice of you to drop in, Mildred. However, it was hardly necessary to use such an unorthodox method of getting here. Everyone else seems to find the stairs perfectly adequate.
481** During a fire drill, Mildred sees Miss Hardbroom wreathed in thick smoke, and tries to help by flying down from a window on her broomstick, spilling a bucket of water over Miss Hardbroom as she does so.
482---> '''Miss Hardbroom''': Pupils are expected through the main door, and ''not'', as some pupils seem to imagine from upstairs windows.
483* WizardingSchool: Cackle's Academy. Well, Witching School, obviously, but it's the same principle. Also predates Hogwarts by 23 years. Another (boys') school for wizards had been mentioned since the early seasons, and finally appears in the episode "Better Dead Than Co-Ed" of the '98 series.
484* WritingLines: This happens to Mildred a lot. One example is "I must try very hard not to be quite so silly", written one hundred times. In a rare moment of Ethel being told off, she is made to write "I must tell the truth at all times".
485* YouAreGrounded: Miss Cackle does this to Mildred in both shows. In the HBO version, it's for wrecking Ethel's violin following an attempt to cheat via magic in the school PE Class (and also will be banned from the school field trip if any more bad behavior occurs during her three week grounding period). In the Netflix version, it's for telling Ethel she was Miss Cackle's niece as a prank.
486* YourTomcatIsPregnant: The 2017 series has Maud find out Midnight is really a female after she has a litter.
487* ZanyScheme: One of the most notable ways Hettie from ''The New Worst Witch'' differs from her cousin Mildred is that while Mildred was a well-meaning and untalented girl who just kept stumbling into trouble, Hettie is a quite talented but overeager witch who seldom lets an episode pass without trying to pull off some ZanyScheme or other -- usually to have them backfire on her.
488[[/folder]]
489----
490-->"You don't need a cauldron and you don't need a spellbook. There is magic inside each and every one of us. Witch or not. You just have to believe in it."
491
492--> '''[[Series/TheMuppetShow Statler]]:''' Believe?! How is that a magic word?\
493'''[[JustForFun/StatlerAndWaldorf Waldorf]]:''' I don't know. How about we believe in the power of stupidity?\
494'''Both''' Do-ho-ho-ho-ho-hoh!

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