Tiffany | |
---|---|
Child's Play character | |
Tiffany, Bride of Chucky
|
|
First appearance | Bride of Chucky (1998) |
Last appearance | Curse of Chucky (2013) |
Voiced by | Jennifer Tilly |
Information | |
Significant other(s) | Chucky |
Children | Glen/Glenda |
Tiffany (also known as "The Bride of Chucky") is a murderous doll and an antagonist featured in the fourth, fifth, and sixth installments of the Child's Play franchise of horror films. She is portrayed by Jennifer Tilly in both live-action and voiceover in Bride of Chucky, Seed of Chucky and Curse of Chucky. On January 5, 2017, it was announced that Tilly had signed for the upcoming Cult of Chucky.
As a human, Tiffany has bleached blonde hair and brown eyes, a gothic fashion style, and has a chest tattoo of a broken heart with Chucky written above it. After becoming a doll, Tiffany redoes her hair and makeup to resemble her human self, and wears a golden necklace that says "Tiff". Her appearance changes throughout the series: her lips become smaller, her hair becomes straighter, she no longer wears a leather jacket, and she wears a different dress and new boots. Tiffany, like her love interest, Chucky, wants to transfer her soul to the human protagonist. Both she and Chucky kill people; however, only Tiffany shows remorse afterwards.
Tiffany has many different personalities which can be a little skeptical. She dresses in a gothic fashion and can be described as a hopeless romantic. She has a "bimbo" air, but is sweet, creative, inventive, and somewhat feminist. Unlike Chucky, she possesses a genuinely kind and compassionate side, although she can be quite short-tempered, and is struck sometimes by remorse which is out-of-sync with her love of killing. Not much is known about Tiffany before Bride of Chucky. However, shortly into the movie it is shown that she loves deeply, believing "love would set her free". She is easily disappointed, terribly violent, and unforgiving when angered. She attempts to reform in her second appearance, in Seed of Chucky, to "break her addiction" to killing. However, Tiffany's urge to maim is strong, and she continues to use creative means to murder. She is demure in a way that gives her more humanity than Chucky, making them an unusual pair. Tiffany's 'ordinariness' is highlighted in several ways through the two movies—making her all the more compelling and dangerous.