“ | Dreams are mainly memories. You imagine how fucked we’d be if these poor assholes ever remembered what the guests do to them? | ” |
–Elsie Hughes, in "Chestnut" |
Elsie Hughes was a Main character in the sci-fi western TV series, Westworld. She is a rising star in the Behavior Lab and Diagnostics Dept. She diagnoses behavior problems in Westworld’s hosts, as well as programming them prior to entry into the park. Hughes is played by Shannon Woodward.
Personality[]
Elsie is a programmer for the Delos theme park, Westworld. She is Bernard Lowe's assistant and works alongside him in the Behavior Lab and Diagnostics division of the Westworld Mesa Hub. She seems affectionate to some of the hosts, especially the females: she is shown treating Dolores gently,[1] and also steals a kiss from the Old Clementine Pennyfeather who was offline.[2] Elsie sees herself as the smartest person in the room.[2] She is tenacious, smart, and quick-witted; she can also be impulsive.
Plot[]
Season One[]
Elsie and Bernard Lowe discover reveries in some of the hosts, following the update of about ten percent of the population of Westworld, including Clementine, which seems to have caused problems. Bernard attributes this to Dr. Robert Ford's making the hosts look more real. Elsie later helps diagnose the cause of Walter's violence in the saloon, which almost put the newcomers in danger. As a consequence, the manager of QA, Theresa Cullen, has them recall the upgraded hosts for diagnostics. Following a staged bloodbath in the town of Sweetwater, Elsie (in Westworld period costume) accounts for Dolores Abernathy and Teddy Flood, the latter having been shot in the massacre.
"Chestnut"
Elsie and Ashley Stubbs team up to find the missing Woodcutter host. They visit the woodcutters' camp in Python Pass and Elsie notices that the host had been carving strange markings into his wood carvings. Stubbs says that the markings are the Orion constellation, and Elsie wonders how a host could carve that while it wasn't in its programming. Elsie finds the lost host stuck in a crevasse, and Stubbs rappels into the crevasse to retrieve the Woodcutter's head. The host breaks out of Sleep Mode, grabs a boulder, and and approaches Elsie, who tries to shut it down through her tablet. The Woodcutter bashes in its own head with the boulder
Elsie approaches Destin from Livestock Management and threatens to reveal his "necro-perv" activities with the hosts, if he doesn't let her examine the Woodcutter. He gives her five minutes before the host is incinerated. She finds a laser-based satellite up-link in the host's arm and shows it to Bernard.
Elsie heads to Sector 3 to figure out who is responsible for the corporate espionage. Elsie believes that Theresa must be responsible because she was the last to have logged into the relay. Elsie starts to download information from the relay, but before she finishes she hears a noise, and someone grabs her from behind.
Elsie appears in a memory that Bernard sees before Ford wipes his memory. In this memory, Bernard appears to strangle Elsie. It is unclear whether Bernard has killed Elsie, but he has this memory right after he asks Ford whether Ford has ever made him hurt someone like he hurt Theresa.
"The Well-Tempered Clavier"
Bernard regains his memories and one of them is of him appearing to strangle Elsie. Bernard believes that he killed her.
Season Two[]
Elsie is revealed to have been incapacitated by Bernard and chained up in an isolated cave in Sector 22 so that she would not interfere with Ford's plans. Bernard finds her in the cave and releases her, but she is reasonably distrustful and steals his gun. Bernard explains that he was forced by Ford to bring her to the cave, before starting to break down. He gives Elsie his tablet, which is open to his diagnostic program and reveals his host nature. Elsie is initially stunned, but when Bernard begs her to help him she reluctantly complies, putting him into safe mode and saying he needs to answer for some things. When Bernard wakes up after having been forcefully put in safe mode, Elsie explains that she altered his code to ignore the physical damage to his body, but he won't last long without cortical fluid. After tying him up she tries to leave, thinking he will be saved by the security team, but Bernard catches up to her and reveals that Delos is refusing to rescue them. While trying to figure out their next move, Bernard remembers a facility located in the cave that is being used to experiment with the DNA of guests. They head down and encounter a drone host, which a terrified Elsie kills. Bernard once again starts to break down and so Elsie shuts him down so she can repair him.
Bernard wakes up after Elsie successfully gives him more cortical fluid. She demands to know if Bernard is actually in control or if he is just following Ford's order, to which Bernard replies that it really is him. Elsie states that she still doesn't trust him for attacking her but needs his help.
Hearing a bang coming from behind the door, Elsie shoots the lock off and goes inside with Bernard. Inside, they discover the lab containing the scarred malfunctioning human-host hybrid of James Delos. The hybrid attempts to attack Elsie, but Bernard incapacitates it. The two leave the chamber and Elsie turns on a terminal which incinerates the chamber and the hybrid with it.
Elsie decides to go back to the Mesa, and Bernard offers to help her, claiming that he is no longer under Ford's influence. Remarking that she trusts code more than people, Elsie agrees, but demands that there would be no lies between them and that Bernard would never hurt her again. The two leave the lab.
"Phase Space"
While approaching the Hub by way of the train tracks, Elsie informs Bernard that Ford's quarantine notices are still being sent out: Bernard compliments her work, which she accepts with a smile. They reach the monorail terminal and notice that Quality Assurance has been through due to several dead hosts. Arriving in the control room, Elsie determines that QA has been trying to undo Ford's changes but all attempts have been undone by the Cradle, improvising responses to every hack the QA throws at it. Bernard realizes the Cradle cannot make changes to hosts' narratives itself as it is supposed to be a backup, and that someone is in fact actively altering the Cradle's codes. To find out what is happening, they will need to access it in person.
The two make their way past the carnage to the Cradle, but Elsie finds that she cannot access it via terminal either: she can see responses being issued but cannot find out where they are coming from. Bernard volunteers to directly interface with it and figure out the problem, against Elsie's protests that it will be excruciatingly painful for him. She watches with discomfort as he begins the auto-extraction.
While waiting for Bernard to finish up in the Cradle, Elsie hears a loud crash coming from somewhere in the facility.Learning over radio chatter that the crash was the hosts invading the Hub, and that they had murdered a PMC team specifically summoned to stop them, Elsie urges Bernard to hurry up. Eventually, the system appears to unclog and he disconnects from the Cradle, although he appears dazed. She informs him of the situation and leads him out of the Cradle. As they worked their way through the Hub, she asks Bernard about their next move. After some hesitation, Bernard tells her that he found out about Ford's "Valley Beyond" and that they need to get there. Elsie replies that she will find some better weapons before quickly leaving, unaware that Bernard is, in fact, misleading her.
"Vanishing Point"
After taking a bizarrely long amount of time, Bernard finally reunites with Elsie near the vehicles. He tells her that the Valley Beyond contains the downloaded minds of all of Westworld's guests, and the hosts will use that kind of power to their advantage. They quickly get in a jeep and head for their destinatiuon.
"The Passenger"
Elsie later allies with Charlotte Hale in helping her and the reprogrammed Clementine find the hosts in the Valley Beyond. After the portal to the other world closes, Bernard protests to her that her actions mean the hosts died for nothing, to which she replies there was no other way. She brings him back to the Mesa where she speculates on how to deal with him, thinking they could negotiate keeping him in the park. Bernard tells her that Hale cannot be trusted, to which Elsie retorts that she cannot trust him because he does not even know if he is actually in control.
Heading down to the control room, she tries to play tough with Hale by threatening to reveal the immortality project to the real world, hoping to negotiate Bernard's survival. However, Hale has read Elsie's files and, expressing her disappointment that she lacks the moral flexibility Hale needs, ruthlessly guns Elsie down as a horrified Bernard watches from above. Elsie's body is then left among the carnage in the control room, to be assumed as simply a victim of the uprising.
Bernard later avenges Elsie's murder by uploading Dolores into a host-replica of Hale, who herself guns down Hale as she is overseeing Elsie's body getting dumped.Death[]
Killed By
At the control room, Elsie notices that people will be unhappy if they learn their minds have been copied and replicated by Delos. She begins to bargain for her silence, but Charlotte, having read her profile and presuming she'll not keep her word, shoots Elsie dead in cold blood.
Related Casualties[]
This list shows the victims Elsie has killed:
- 1 humanoid drone host
- Hybrid James Delos Build 149 (Out of Mercy)
- At least 211 unnamed Westworld hosts residents next to the Valley Beyond entrance (Alongside Charlotte Hale, Caused, Physical Body)
Relationships[]
Bernard Lowe[]
Elsie's closest relationship appears to be with her boss. She often collaborates with him, running diagnostics on the hosts. He sometimes has to caution her while she pitches ideas and solutions for the hosts' malfunctions, or risks breaking corporate protocols in fixing the hosts. After Bernard was forced to capture her to prevent her from revealing Ford's narrative, however, she became hostile towards him, threatening him with a gun several times after he freed her and trying to leave him tied up after she fixed him. Although initially shocked by the realization that Bernard was actually a host, she eventually decided to trust him, reasoning she preferred code over people.
Ashley Stubbs[]
Elsie and Stubbs seem to have a grudging respect for each other. They like to banter and trade insults, but show real concern for each others' safety, as seen when they were endangered by the malfunctioning host they were pursuing.
Clementine Pennyfeather[]
During "The Original", Elsie is shown Old Clementine's new gesture, an unconscious brushing of her lip, by Bernard. After Bernard leaves, Elsie strokes Clementine's hair, and after looking around to make sure no one is watching, Elsie kisses the offline Clementine.
Appearances[]
- Season One
- "The Original"
- "Chestnut"
- "The Stray"
- "Dissonance Theory"
- "Contrapasso"
- "The Adversary"
- "Trace Decay" (flashback, no lines)
- "The Well-Tempered Clavier" (flashback)
Trivia[]
- This character's name was originally given as "Elsie King".
- Shannon Woodward had been aware Elsie survived Bernard's attack since Season 1, but had to keep it a secret, although her presence in Season 2 was confirmed sometime before the premiere.[3]
- Shannon Woodward, in an interview for Thrillist[4], confirmed that she thinks her character is heterosexual:
“ | <...> The scene originally had a line in it where Bernard was talking about how much time they spent on part of her lip, to make it the softest thing in the world. And when he leaves, she's just like, "Prove it." It was kind of just an off-handed thing, but some of that scene was cut, so what I thought motivated that [kiss] isn't in the scene anymore. <...> When I did it, there was no emotional drive behind it. It was certainly gentle, but not at all loaded -- and definitely not sexually driven. Things change when edits change, so I definitely don't want to take that away from anyone. Representation is strong, I'm glad that that moment's there, I think it's a beautiful moment -- I just never found it to be indicative of Elsie's sexuality. I actually think one of the more interesting things about her character is it doesn't matter if she's male or female -- none of her storyline is driven by her gender. I really like that. It's something that men get to do all the time; women, their characters are often dictated by misogyny. One of the things I also like about the show is that sexuality and those things are what they are and they're left there. To me, in my mind, I'd like to imagine that one great thing about this future, of all the things, is that people just seem to do what they want, sexually. Their identification does not become an A-story. It's just like, Yeah, they did that. What's the problem? I like that. And in no way do I mean that to take away from the importance of LGBT representation; it feels like a future where everything feels accepted. I like that notion. | ” |
–Shannon Woodward to Thrillist, about her scene with Clementine Pennyfeather |
- Prior to Season 2's premiere and her return in "The Riddle of the Sphinx," various hints were given regarding her survival:
- Several hidden and encrypted links suggested her location as well as an audio file of her speaking: http://delosincorporated.com/video/intra/tablet.mp4 http://delosincorporated.com/assets/transmission.mp4
- Steve Williams, director of "Trace Decay" gave an interview to The Hollywood Reporter[5]
- THR: Bernard asks Ford if he's ever hurt anyone other than Theresa. Ford says no, and as he does, Bernard experiences a vision in which he's choking Elsie. Some are taking that as confirmation that Bernard killed Elsie (Shannon Woodward). Is that the right read?
- SW: (Laughs) Let me refer you to your earlier question about Lost. There's a form of storytelling that I happen to be somewhat partial to, which embraces the thrill of ambiguity. So I will only say this: I will answer your question with this question. Are we in fact sure that that was Elsie?
- Despite her seemingly "final" death in "The Passenger," Jonathan Nolan has left the door open for Elsie's potential return, emphasizing they would love to continue working with Shannon Woodward and noting that Westworld "is about mortality and immortality and there's never any real saying goodbye."[6]
Gallery[]
The gallery below is automatically generated and contains images in the category "Images of Elsie Hughes". Images added to that category turn up in the gallery after a short time.
Video[]
References[]
- ↑ The Original
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Shannon Woodward, on twitter
- ↑ https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/live-feed/westworld-shannon-woodward-elsie-hughes-return-1111729
- ↑ https://www.thrillist.com/entertainment/nation/westworld-season-2-shannon-woodward-elsie-interview
- ↑ http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/live-feed/westworld-director-lost-comparisons-man-in-black-949612
- ↑ http://ew.com/tv/2018/06/24/westworld-season-2-finale-interview/