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Claudia (Kirsten Dunst), Interview with the Vampire (plus Louis and Lestat!)

By popular request, the Vampire Claudia returns! I’ve made this character a few times before, but I’m most pleased with this version. I’ve always loved her blue dress, but now I feel I’ve improved enough sculpting hair that her bangs are closer to how I want them.

Claudia, Louis de Pointe du Lac, and Lestat de Lioncourt are available now for purchase at my Etsy shop. Just in time for Halloween! ‍♀️‍♂️‍♂️⚜️

(Also, a HUGE thank you to @costumeloverz71 for the high resolution photos of the dress!)

Jiji in Kiki’s Delivery Service, 1989魔女の宅急便,  Majo no TakkyūbinKiki: “We can fly with our spirit.” DJiji in Kiki’s Delivery Service, 1989魔女の宅急便,  Majo no TakkyūbinKiki: “We can fly with our spirit.” DJiji in Kiki’s Delivery Service, 1989魔女の宅急便,  Majo no TakkyūbinKiki: “We can fly with our spirit.” DJiji in Kiki’s Delivery Service, 1989魔女の宅急便,  Majo no TakkyūbinKiki: “We can fly with our spirit.” DJiji in Kiki’s Delivery Service, 1989魔女の宅急便,  Majo no TakkyūbinKiki: “We can fly with our spirit.” DJiji in Kiki’s Delivery Service, 1989魔女の宅急便,  Majo no TakkyūbinKiki: “We can fly with our spirit.” DJiji in Kiki’s Delivery Service, 1989魔女の宅急便,  Majo no TakkyūbinKiki: “We can fly with our spirit.” DJiji in Kiki’s Delivery Service, 1989魔女の宅急便,  Majo no TakkyūbinKiki: “We can fly with our spirit.” DJiji in Kiki’s Delivery Service, 1989魔女の宅急便,  Majo no TakkyūbinKiki: “We can fly with our spirit.” DJiji in Kiki’s Delivery Service, 1989魔女の宅急便,  Majo no TakkyūbinKiki: “We can fly with our spirit.” D

Jiji in Kiki’s Delivery Service, 1989

魔女の宅急便,  Majo no Takkyūbin

Kiki: “We can fly with our spirit.”

Did you know? Kirsten Dunst voiced Kiki in Disney’s 1997 English dub, released in 1998.


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womanintheradiator:

Kirsten Dunst in Drop Dead Gorgeous (1999)

Louis - Blood // Water

Tribute to l'enfant terrible herself, Claudia.

For those unaware, Claudia was based on Anne Rice’s own daughter Michele, who died at five years old from leukemia. The resulting depression led to Anne Rice publishing her first of many gothic horror novels, starting with Interview with the Vampire, in 1976. While Claudia was based on Michele, so was Lestat on her husband Stan (originally intended to be named Lestan) and Louis on herself.

The 1976 novel is unfortunately the only entry in The Vampire Chronicles from Louis’ POV, which came from a place of her own personal trauma. Lestat was obviously a far more flamboyant, fun, fanciable character for her to focus on, but ultimately not as prone to exploring the existential crises and philosophical questioning present in her original novel.

One may also notice that the doll shop owner Madeleine’s backstory is that of a mother who lost a young daughter who likewise never got to grow up. Rice’s house in New Orleans was famously filled with antique dolls, which is imagery very much associated with Claudia.

For obvious reasons, a five year old was deemed unable to handle the demanding role of Claudia, which is that of a woman’s mind driven mad trapped in a child’s body (she’s actually over eighty years old by the end of her story), and so the role was aged up for a then eleven-year-old Kirsten Dunst. There was a nationwide search that included younger actresses, but Dunst was one of the few who could handle the part. She actually didn’t get to see the film until years later, either. The 1994 film also included her first kiss, which was with none other than Brad Pitt, though neither were enthused! Dunst also wore the blue dress when she attended Rice’s Memnoch Ball in 1995.

The biggest crime of the later books is how Anne Rice completely threw away what would’ve been far more profound for Louis (and of course, Claudia was dead) because of her rampant author’s pet blind spot. Ironically, Louis was her self-insert, while Lestat was her husband and Claudia was her dead daughter.

It’s like it never occurred to her that the “Human Nature” trope (see Clark in Superman II, Angel in Angel: the Series, Clark again in Smallville, the Tenth Doctor in Doctor Who, Castiel in Supernatural, etc…) is so much more profound for the tragic inhuman character who actually desires most to be human, is at odds with their own species or wants to experience human belonging/family/love, rather than the one who would happily throw away that humanity they never really wanted (Lestat in The Tale of the Body Thief). Funnily enough, Brad Pitt’s Meet Joe Black is also this trope. Louis, not Lestat, is the character who belonged with this trope as it is in every other piece of fiction that uses it. Those medias understood it’s best used as a heartbreaking gut punch instead of a comedy romp. It’s something that hurts when it is cruelly snatched away or must be given up for the sake of a duty larger than oneself. The only Vampire Chronicles character who would prefer even more to be human than Louis because of the profound unhappiness in their physical form would be Claudia. It’s the thing they most have in common together.

Merrick was yet another time when these characters’ potential to continue on the center stage was woefully misused and under-realized in favor of endless new OCs and Lestat. Louis was written out of the starring role that put Anne Rice’s career on the map the second she and the fandom wrote him off as a liar, despite never being able to fully retcon out Lestat’s actions during Interview with the Vampire. There were certainly better uses for Claudia’s ghost than as a cruel manipulation that then never gets closure for her or Louis’ obviously continuing feelings for her. Given that he’s still not over her death more than a century later, it’s always the elephant in the room in regards to Louis in the present. It’s the storyline that keeps Louis frozen in time, unable to continue his own story beyond the 19th century except as a series of vignettes and observations by other characters. Merrick completely failed both Louis and Claudia. He’s as much of a ghost in the present story as she is.

Because of this, Louis’ story now will always be incomplete; a profoundly influential character used as little more than a prop in the background of other characters’ narration. And of course, Claudia’s tragedy was being incomplete from the start.

Characters like Angel and many copycats (not only vampire characters either–Russell T Davies has fully admitted Buffy and Angel’s influence on his Doctor Who revival and Torchwood spinoff, while the entire Fanged Four are Anne Rice’s archetypal lineup) would directly not exist without Louis. And yet, Angel got the center stage as the deeply-flawed inhuman protagonist with a “human soul” that Louis never got again. Louis is Anne Rice’s archetype (a massive influence on all inhuman creatures with human feelings ostracized from their own kinds, doomed to never belong to either world and the outsider looking in on a life they can never have) that has actually inspired more leads than Lestat ever did. Other media, in Interview with the Vampire’s image, knew that the flashier, funnier, cooler Lestat archetype (which was likewise influential, but rarely an initial lead) is instead an antagonistic, often villainous foil to a more serious, introspective character’s existential crisis and the greater philosophical and moral depth that this brings a story.

Anne Rice stumbled upon that when she wrote Interview with the Vampire, but seemingly didn’t understand it. Or perhaps it was easier for her to avoid her personal trauma by focusing instead on an object of fantasy and fancy.

Unfortunately, she denigrated Louis to make Lestat palatable as an antihero instead of a villain or even antivillain. He and his POV became inconvenient to the change in narrative and Lestat’s POV became rarely challenged, despite him being the more likely of the two to fit as the unreliable narrator with far more reasons to lie and make himself look better. His verifiable actions contradict lies like him only killing evildoers. Claudia being the most glaring refutation, but also the fact that Louis was targeted not because he was evil, but rather because he had wealth Lestat wanted. Louis was telling his story as a cautionary tale in which he wasn’t sugarcoating himself (quite the opposite–he’s the king of self-loathing) or anyone else, not a narcissistic ego trip disguised as a rebuttal.

The author’s retcon and fandom buying into the narrative of Louis as the unreliable narrator is a huge mistake and it goes a long way to explain the fall in quality of the later series. Louis should never have been consigned to the role of Antonio Salieri.

Interview With The Vampire - Welcome To The Black Parade

kirsten dunst
kirsten dunst
Virgin Suicides

Virgin Suicides


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 Cast of Marie Antoinette photographed by Annie Leibovitz for Vogue magazine, 2006

Cast of Marie Antoinette photographed by Annie Leibovitz for Vogue magazine, 2006


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celebritytgcaptions:

There are at least three ways you can play this game:

  1. Click and drag the GIF to your computer. Whatever the frozen image is while dragging is what you got in that category.
  2. Take a screenshot/grab of each individual GIF instead of clicking and dragging it.
  3. Take a screenshot of all nine GIFs at once, getting a full random set all in one go!

The original click & drag game got marked as explicit so I remade it. This new version features over 100 celebrities among all the different categories. So have fun!

Self-Reblogging to add some celebrities to the tags. There are a TON of celebs in this game so it’ll be self-reblogged a few times.


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Kirsten Dunst on the set of Marie Antoinette (Dir. Sofia Coppola, 2006).

Kirsten Dunst on the set of Marie Antoinette (Dir. Sofia Coppola, 2006).


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