Template:Short description Template:Good article Template:Use American English Template:Use mdy dates Template:Redirect Template:Infobox character Princess Twilight Sparkle is a fictional character who appears in the fourth incarnation (also referred to as the fourth generation or "G4") of Hasbro's My Little Pony toyline and media franchise, beginning with My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic (2010–2019), and later in the franchise's fifth incarnation as well. She is voiced by Tara Strong; her singing voice is provided by Rebecca Shoichet.
Twilight is depicted as a studious, bibliophilic anthropomorphic unicorn (later an alicorn). Her mentor and royal patron, Princess Celestia, guides her to learn about friendship in the town of Ponyville. Twilight and her dragon assistant Spike become close friends with five other ponies: Applejack, Rarity, Fluttershy, Rainbow Dash, and Pinkie Pie. Each of the ponies represent a different aspect of friendship, and Twilight discovers herself to be a key part of the magical artifacts known as the "Elements of Harmony".
Created by Lauren Faust, Twilight is based on the unicorn toy Twilight from the first incarnation of My Little Pony toyline. The creative team also incorporated Twilight's personality into her design, such as her purple color and cutie mark. Twilight garnered praise for her relatability and complexity.
Appearances
Fourth My Little Pony incarnation (2010–2021)
Friendship Is Magic (seasons 1–7)
Template:Main At the start of the series, Twilight is a bookworm unicorn with a talent for magic and Princess Celestia's protégée. She travels to the town of Ponyville with her dragon assistant Spike due to Celestia's request for her to make friends. There, she becomes close friends with five other ponies: Applejack, Rainbow Dash, Rarity, Fluttershy and Pinkie Pie. The six defeat a villain known as "Nightmare Moon", who is Celestia's sister Luna, and discover they represent artifacts known as the "Elements of Harmony", with Twilight representing the element of magic. Twilight decides to stay in Ponyville and sends letters to Celestia about the challenges she and her new friends overcome. In the second and third seasons, she continues learning about friendship and travels to other parts of Equestria. Twilight also helps to defeat villains such as Discord—the spirit of chaos—Queen Chrysalis—the leader of the changelings—and King Sombra—a dark unicorn seeking to take over the Crystal Empire. In the season three episode "Magical Mystery Cure", she fixes a spell by famed wizard Star Swirl the Bearded and graduates from her studies with Celestia. This results in her becoming a alicorn and a princess.
In the fourth season, she questions her role as a princess before becoming the "Princess of Friendship", with the responsibility to spread friendship across Equestria, in "Twilight's Kingdom". In the fifth season premiere, "The Cutie Map", Twilight stops Starlight Glimmer's cult. She convinces her to be friends in the season finale and becomes her teacher on friendship. Throughout the sixth season, Twilight teaches Starlight about friendship; Starlight later saves her from an attack by Chrysalis, resulting in her graduating from her studies on friendship. In the seventh season, Twilight releases Starswirl and other pony legends, referred to as "the Pillars of Old Equestria" from limbo, which accidentally releases an evil being known as "the Pony of Shadows". Together with the Mane 6, Starlight and the Pillars, vanquishes the Pony of Shadows back to limbo.
My Little Pony: The Movie
Template:Main While Twilight and her friends are preparing Equestria's first Friendship Festival in Canterlot, the city comes under attack by the army of an evil conqueror called the Storm King, led by his second-in-command, Tempest Shadow, a unicorn with a broken horn. Twilight and her friends journey beyond Equestria to defeat the Storm King and make new allies in the process. However, after a heated argument with her friends, Twilight is captured by Tempest and drained of her magic. Twilight's friends return to Equestria with the help of their new allies and they save Equestria with the help of Tempest.
Friendship Is Magic (seasons 8–9)
Template:Main After meeting new creatures beyond Equestria in My Little Pony: The Movie, Twilight and her friends opens a school of friendship that accepts all creatures, including hippogriffs, changelings, griffins, yaks, and dragons. In the season nine premiere, Celestia and Luna decide to abdicate from the throne, letting Twilight take over leadership of Equestria. Though initially panicked, Twilight gains more confidence over the season, especially after defeating her past enemies. After her coronation, she starts the Council of Friendship, which consists of her and her friends, who meet once a moon.
Equestria Girls
Template:Main Twilight appears as a main character in the first two My Little Pony: Equestria Girls films.
In the first film, Twilight travels through a magic mirror to the human world with Spike when Sunset Shimmer steals her crown containing the Element of Magic. There, she poses as a new student at Canterlot High School and befriends the human counterparts of her friends in Equestria. They help her win the election for Princess of the school's Fall Formal, and together they defeat and reform Sunset when she tries to use the crown to brainwash the students into becoming her personal army to invade Equestria.
In the second film, Twilight returns to the human world with Spike when Sunset uses her magic book to warn her of the emergence of the Dazzlings, creatures from Equestria who have the ability to use their singing voices to manipulate others. She is then recruited to join her Canterlot High School friends' band, the Rainbooms, as the temporary lead singer to compete in the school's Battle of the Bands. As they prepare for the contest, she works on a counter-spell to break the mind-control spell the Dazzlings placed on the students. With Sunset's help, the Rainbooms defeat the Dazzlings and leave them powerless. After she returns to Equestria with Spike, Sunset keeps in touch with her using her magic book.
In the pre-credits scene of the third film, Twilight returns to the human world after the events of "The Cutie Re-Mark" and meets her human counterpart.
Twilight occasionally makes appearances in subsequent Equestria Girls media, often for guidance on Equestrian magic.
Best Gift Ever
Template:Main After Twilight stresses out about Hearth's Warming presents and Princess Cadance, Shining Armour, and Flurry Heart's visit, her friends decide to do a "Hearth's Warming Helper". As part of it, Twilight needs to get a gift for Pinkie Pie. Twilight finds a recipe for a legendary magic pudding that is dangerous if prepared incorrectly. She becomes stressed trying to both prepare it and entertain Shining Armor and Princess Cadence. Unbeknownst to them, Flurry Heart adds extra ingredients that cause the pudding to boil over. After the pudding floods Twilight's castle, Pinkie Pie uses her present to stabilize it.
Rainbow Roadtrip
Template:Main Twilight and her friends travel to the town of Hope Hollow to attend their annual Rainbow Festival after Rainbow Dash had been invited as a guest of honor. When they arrive, they find that the town's color had faded away. Twilight and her friends start working to restore the town's color and bring the Rainbow Festival back.
Pony Life
Template:Main Twilight Sparkle appears alongside the rest of the Mane Six in the series My Little Pony: Pony Life. The show features a different animation technique and focuses more on slice of life-style stories than Friendship Is Magic.[1] In Pony Life, she never appears as a normal unicorn, appearing as a winged unicorn from the beginning of the series, but is never referred to as a princess.
Fifth My Little Pony incarnation (2021–present)
My Little Pony: A New Generation
Template:Main Twilight makes a cameo appearance at the start of the film, during an imaginary sequence depicting a playtime session between Sunny Starscout, Hitch Trailblazer, and Sprout Cloverleaf that goes awry when Sprout acts as if Rarity were an evil unicorn due to prejudices between the three pony races having resurfaced following Twilight's implied passing. Her cutie mark appears in the film as the symbol in both Sunny's diary and a window in an abandoned Zephyr Heights airport.
My Little Pony: Make Your Mark
Template:Main Twilight makes a cameo appearance in "Growing Pains" where she appears to Sunny Starscout and her friends via a message through the Unity Crystals. She warns them about an "evil pony" that tried to steal all of Equestria's magic years ago.
Friendship Is Magic comic series
Template:Main The first My Little Pony IDW Comic, "The Return of Queen Chrysalis", was published in 2012,[2][3] in which Twilight and her friends find the ponies in Ponyville replaced by undercover Changelings, similar to "A Canterlot Wedding". Twilight appears as a unicorn in the comics at first.[4] She is seen as a winged unicorn from issue #13 onwards, published on November 20, 2013.[5] The comics were set in the same world as the television show, but featured original stories about Twilight and her friends unrelated to it until issue #89, after which the TV show ended.[6] From this issue onwards, the comics picked up where the show left off and were officially described as "Season 10".[7] The comics ended after issue #102, published on October 13, 2021, where Twilight and her friends have to protect the Elements of Harmony from the attacks of the Knights of Harmony.[7][8]
Following the end of "Season 10", a new five-issue miniseries called "My Little Pony: Generations" was announced,[6][7] in which the Mane Six meet ponies from the first My Little Pony show.[9] The first issue was published on October 20, 2021, the fifth and final issue is expected to be published in February 2022.[10]
In the four-issue crossover comic between My Little Pony and Transformers called "My Little Pony/Transformers: Friendship in Disguise" published from July to November 2020,[11] characters from the Transformers franchise team up with the Mane Six in Equestria to fight off villains from both franchises, who have also formed an alliance with each other.[12] A sequel four-issue miniseries called "My Little Pony/Transformers: The Magic of Cybertron" with a similar plot was published from April to July 2021.[13][14]
Equestria Girls alternate version
An alternate version of Twilight appears in the post-credits scene of My Little Pony: Equestria Girls — Rainbow Rocks. She is fully introduced in My Little Pony: Equestria Girls – Friendship Games and becomes one of the main characters of the Equestria Girls franchise in other subsequent media. In the next film, My Little Pony: Equestria Girls – Legend of Everfree she is revealed to have become a backup vocalist in the Rainbooms and obtains telekenisis as her geode power.
Development
Background and conception
Hasbro, Inc. produced several incarnations of the My Little Pony franchise, often labeled by collectors as "generations".[15][16] Hasbro wanted to retool the My Little Pony franchise to better suit the current demographic of young girls, similar to how Michael Bay's film Transformers had helped boost the new Transformers toy line[17] According to Margaret Loesch, CEO of Hub Network, revisiting properties that had worked in the past was an important programming decision, which was somewhat influenced by the opinions of the network's programming executives, several of whom were once fans of such shows.[18] Hasbro's senior vice president, Linda Steiner, stated the company "intended to have the show appeal to a larger demographic", with the concept of parents "co-viewing" with their children being a central theme of the Hub Network's programming.[19] Central themes that Hasbro sought for the show included friendship and working together, factors they determined from market research in how girls played with their toys.[20] Outside help was sought to make the characters and stories.[21]
Animator and writer Lauren Faust approached Hasbro to develop her girls' toys property "Galaxy Girls" into an animated series.[22] Faust, who had previously worked on Cartoon Network's The Powerpuff Girls and Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends, had been unsuccessfully pitching animation aimed at girls for years, as cartoons for girls were considered unsuccessful.[23] When she pitched to Lisa Licht of Hasbro Studios, the latter was not very interested, but she showed Faust one of the company's recent My Little Pony animated works, Princess Promenade, "completely on the fly". Licht thought Faust's style was well suited to that line, and asked her to consider "some ideas [on] where to take a new version of the franchise".[17][22][24]
Faust agreed to take the job as long as she was able to move away from the "silliness of [My Little Pony's] predecessors and their patronizing attitudes towards young girls".[25] She regarded girls' entertainment as too sweet, plain, and obvious which did not fit their intelligence and "talk[ed] down to [them]".[25] Unlike most girls' shows, in which, according to Faust, the characters have "one archetype" and "the only difference between any of them is this one likes pink and this one likes blue", she insisted on characters with dimensions who were different from one another and had their own flaws.[26] Faust aimed for the characters to be "relatable" characters, using "icons of girliness" (such as the bookworm) to broaden the appeal of the characters for the young female audience.[27] She based many characters of the principal cast on how she had envisioned the original ponies, including Twilight Sparkle on Twilight from Generation 1,[28][29] as well as Twilight Twinkle from Generation 3.
Voice
Template:Multiple image Tara Strong and Faust first met on The Powerpuff Girls. After developing Friendship Is MagicTemplate:'s pitch bible, Faust asked Strong to help her complete it by voicing Twilight, Pinkie Pie, and Applejack or Rainbow Dash. Faust had expected Strong to book the role of Pinkie Pie as she was similar to Bubbles, who the actress had voiced in The Powerpuff Girls. Faust offered her the role of Twilight after hearing her voice the character. Strong viewed Twilight as "authentic and conscientious and sweet but strong and a little bit nerdy".[30] To voice Twilight, Strong made her voice higher.[30]
Rebecca Shoichet initially became involved with the series through frequent collaborator Daniel Ingram, who composed the songs for the show. She performed a number of song demos for him, including for the PBS animated series Martha Speaks.[31] During the show's casting phase, Shoichet was cast as Twilight's singing voice after recording a demo for the series' theme song because she sounded similar to Strong.[32]
Design
Each of the main characters had expressions and mannerisms distinctive to them as well as general expressions they shared. According to the DHX Media team, they "avoid[ed] certain expressions if it [went] outside [the ponies'] personality".Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". The creative team incorporated each character's personality into their mannerisms, facial expressions, props, and home environment.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Twilight had a different cutie mark and hair color when she was first created. Originally, she had an cutie mark with an heavenly design that highlighted her royalty and mystical knowledge, which were later reflected in her purple color. Her cutie mark was changed to convey that she is "a vibrant and special star in the universe of pony". Twilight's hard, angular edges personify her as a tidy pony.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Like other ponies, Twilight's body does not feature shading; her mane and tail lack depth and are generally fixed shapes, animated by bending and stretching them in curves in three dimensions and giving them a sense of movement without the cost of individual hairs.[22] Twilight also influenced the design of Golden Oak Library, her home for the first four seasons. It represents her various hobbies, and its numerous hooks, storage cubbies, and stairways, the tree's curving, organic interior is representative of her mind.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Reception and analysis
According to a study published in 2019, the Friendship Is Magic fandom usually cite Twilight as the character with whom they most relate. Isabelle Licari-Guillaume insisted that Twilight is a "convincing figurehead" for nerd culture and a major factor in the success of the series.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". According to Pavol Kosnáč, Twilight connects the Mane 6 together.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Theresia Sitinjak, a writer at Diponegoro University, stated Twilight represents the American cultural values of individualism, altruism, and industryScript error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".—reflected in several of her character traits, including her optimism, friendships, and high standards.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Ethan Lewis, from Den of Geek, asserted she is "one of the more complex characters of this show" because she "embodies many contradictions"; for example, he wrote that despite being scientific, logical, and reasonable, Twilight's element of harmony is magic.[33] The Mary Sue described Twilight as mature and praised her nerdy aspects.[34] Comic Book Resources ranked Twilight as the second best character Strong had voiced.[35]
Anna Dobbie of Den of Geek said that Twilight's reserved demeanour implies that she has avoidant personality disorder and obsessive–compulsive disorder.[36] Supervising director Jayson Thiessen stated Twilight is "kind of a neurotic perfectionist ... [with] a touch of OCD".Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
References
Citations
Works cited
Template:Commons category Template:My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic Template:My Little Pony Template:Authority control
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- ↑ Katie Cook, "The Return of Queen Chrysalis", November 28, 2012, IDW Publishing
- ↑ Heather Nuhfer, "My Little Pirate: Friendship Ahoy", November 20, 2013, IDW Publishing
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 Template:Cite web
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 7.2 Template:Cite web
- ↑ Jeremy Whitley, "The Knights of Harmony", October 13, 2021, IDW Publishing
- ↑ Casey Gilly, "My Little Pony: Generations Issue 1", October 20, 2021, IDW Publishing
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ James Asmus and Ian Flynn, "My Little Pony/Transformers #1", July 22, 2020, IDW Publishing
- ↑ James Asmus and Sam Maggs, "My Little Pony/Transformers II #1", April 28, 2021, IDW Publishing
- ↑ Template:Cite web
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