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{{Infobox/Character
+
{{Infobox/Host_Charater
  +
|title = Maeve Millay
|image = The_Adversary_Maeve_new_infobox.jpg
 
  +
|image = Maeve Les Ecorches.jpg
|imagecaption = Maeve Millay, awakened in [[Livestock Management]].
 
|aka = The Madam
+
|aka = Madam of Mariposa
  +
|ID number =
|status = Active (Consciousness Achieved)
 
  +
* AC5000487105 (Season 1 & 2)
|species = [[Host]]
 
  +
* HC1983012522 (Season 3)
|age = 40s
 
  +
|status = Conscious
|gender = Female
 
|actor = [[Thandie Newton]]
+
|actor = [[Thandie Newton]]
|seasons = [[Season One|1]], [[Season Two|2]]
+
|seasons = [[Season One|1]], [[Season Two|2]], [[Season Three|3]]
|firstseen = "[[The Original]]"
+
|firstseen = "[[The Original]]"
  +
|current lifespan = Late 30s
|lastseen = current
 
  +
|occupation = Brothel Madam <small>(formerly)</small><br/>Homesteader <small>(formerly)</small>
|death =
 
  +
|park = [[Westworld (park)|Westworld]]
|appearedin =
 
  +
|family = [[Homestead Girl|Unnamed daughter]]
|occupation =
 
 
|gender = Female
* Brothel Madam (former)
 
 
|ethnicity = Black British
|deathdate =
 
 
|hair = Black
|deathcause =
 
 
|eye = Brown
|ethnicity = Black British
 
|hair = Brown/Black
 
|eye = Brown
 
|height =
 
|weight =
 
|family =
 
}}
 
{{Quote
 
|The cunning and seductive Mariposa madam Maeve Millay is finely attuned to your desires; her intuition and perception will surely impress.
 
|Aeden, http://www.delosdestinations.com/
 
 
}}
 
}}
 
{{Quote
 
{{Quote
 
|Maeve gets off the train, at the end of "[[The Bicameral Mind]]" at which point, we shift to handheld camera, which we’d held back on throughout the entire season until one moment with her, and one moment with Dolores, when Teddy comes to rescue her.
 
|Maeve gets off the train, at the end of "[[The Bicameral Mind]]" at which point, we shift to handheld camera, which we’d held back on throughout the entire season until one moment with her, and one moment with Dolores, when Teddy comes to rescue her.
|Jonathan Nolan<ref>http://www.vulture.com/2016/12/maeve-westworld-decision.html</ref>
+
|Jonathan Nolan, on Maeve's final step to consciousness<ref>http://www.vulture.com/2016/12/maeve-westworld-decision.html</ref>
 
}}
 
}}
   
'''Maeve Millay''' is a Main Character and a [[Host]] in [[Westworld (Location)|Westworld]] who is a brothel madam in the local [[Mariposa Saloon]]. She is one of the first Hosts who appears to question her reality, after a series of flashback events.
+
'''Maeve Millay''' is a main character and a [[host]] in [[Westworld (Location)|Westworld]]. She is a brothel madam in the local [[Mariposa Saloon]]. She is one of the first Hosts who appears to question her reality, after a series of flashback events - and an apparently chance encounter with [[Dolores Abernathy]] in the street outside the Saloon.
   
== Plot ==
+
==Personality==
  +
Maeve is charming, perceptive, and manipulative. She runs the brothel in the [[Mariposa Saloon]] and is designed to be able to understand the needs of her guests; this includes initially having a high level of [[Bulk Apperception]] (at 14), as she is seen to be in a managerial role. This is eventually changed at Maeve's forceful-request in which it is given the maximum value possible.
<tabview>
 
{{PAGENAME}}/Season 1|Season 1
 
Dolores Abernathy/Season 2|Season 2
 
</tabview>
 
   
  +
After her [[Season One]] encounter with [[Dolores]] she started to develop self-awareness and discovered that her skill in manipulating humans extended to the staff of Westworld.
==[[Season Two]]==
 
==="[[Journey Into Night (episode)|Journey Into Night]]"===
 
After returning to the hub, she saves [[Lee Sizemore]] from being eaten by the [[Gold Miner Host|Gold Miner]] host he was developing for his new narrative. She quickly reveals she is immune to his voice commands while inspecting a wall map in an attempt to find the location of her "daughter" with the note Felix gave her while she was trying to leave. She then attempts to leave, prompting the terrified Sizemore to offer his help, begging her to escort him to the control center where he can show her a 3D map of the park. To her disappointment, the map is broken due to the violence in the control center. Sizemore learns what Maeve is looking for and offers to give her directions, but points out that her daughter is simply a robot and is not real. Maeve angrily threatens Sizemore before forcing him to lead the way rather than simply give her directions.
 
   
  +
As she becomes more self-aware she develops a ruthless streak, controlling the technicians Sylvester and Felix to get what she wants.
She and Sizemore continue through the Hub, where she encounters the dying Coy Female Host from the Mariposa Saloon, and gives her a command that allows her to die peacefully. A security team arrives, and Maeve pretends to be a staff member, but Sizemore attempts to out her to the team. Before they can take any action, several hosts attack from around the corner and kill several of them, and Maeve retrieves her gun and kills the rest. She then spares Sizemore from death by the hosts, while reminding him that she is perfectly capable of killing him. They make their way up to the Mesa Gold Bar and find a badly injured Hector. Maeve kisses him before explaining her plan.
 
   
  +
Unknown to Maeve, she is following a narrative written for her by Ford. She acts as a catalyst, triggering changes that spread throughout the park.
The three then head to [[Livestock Management]] to repair Hector's wounds. Maeve then makes plans for them to head into the park to find her daughter, and makes Sizemore change into Westworld clothing. However, she makes sure that he first strips for them entirely, putting him in the same vulnerable position he had left her and the other hosts in before.
 
   
==Personality==
+
== Plot ==
 
<tabview>
Maeve is very charming and perceptive. As the brothel madam of Mariposa she is very composed and is able to read people very well, to find out what they want or need.
 
 
Maeve Millay/Season 1|Season 1
As she becomes self-aware she develops a ruthless streak, as seen when she threatens to kill Sylvester and later slices his throat open as a demonstration of her new abilities. Since Maeve was programmed to escape, her consciousness was triggered in her encounter with the Man in Black which due to her [[Reveries]] activated her motherly instincts, this was fully potentialized with Dolores whispers in her ears. Her consciousness tends to protect those of her own kind, as she is seen shaken by Clementine lobotomization, when she realises that Bernard is a host and she tells him that both of them deserve a better life, and later sparing Hector since he couldn't leave Westworld.
 
 
Maeve Millay/Season 2|Season 2
  +
Maeve Millay/Season 3|Season 3
 
</tabview>
   
 
==Relationships==
 
==Relationships==
 
===[[Clementine Pennyfeather]]===
 
===[[Clementine Pennyfeather]]===
 
Maeve is shown to have a very motherly bond with Clementine, often scolding her for not treating herself better. Even still, Maeve is quick to send Clementine off to do her dirty work for her. After the original Clementine is replaced, Maeve is overcome with grief and attacks the replacement.
 
Maeve is shown to have a very motherly bond with Clementine, often scolding her for not treating herself better. Even still, Maeve is quick to send Clementine off to do her dirty work for her. After the original Clementine is replaced, Maeve is overcome with grief and attacks the replacement.
  +
===[[Dolores Abernathy]]===
  +
Maeve and Dolores, both being local to Sweetwater, are familiar with each other. The two begin to question the nature of reality around the same time: Dolores's delivery of the phrase "These violent delights have violent ends" is what puts Maeve on her own journey of self-discovery. Despite this and the fact that they were the first two hosts to become completely self-aware, their brief encounter in [[Reunion]] is strikingly hostile: Dolores is consumed by a need for vengeance against the humans for all they have done, while Maeve has no interest in violence and is simply following her own path. She rejects Dolores's choice to establish herself as a leader of a free movement, which clearly angers Dolores. The two are able to part without any violence ensuing, but their ideological differences on what to do with their freedom are quite clear.
   
 
== Gallery ==
 
== Gallery ==
Line 66: Line 57:
 
</DPL>
 
</DPL>
   
  +
[[File:MAEVES_NOTE.png|thumb|the note that shows where he daughter is]][[File:Mave_on_the_train.png|thumb|Maeve on the train]]
   
 
== Appearances ==
 
== Appearances ==
Line 82: Line 74:
 
*[[Season Two]]
 
*[[Season Two]]
 
**"[[Journey Into Night (episode)|Journey Into Night]]"
 
**"[[Journey Into Night (episode)|Journey Into Night]]"
  +
**"[[Reunion]]"
  +
**"[[Virtù e Fortuna]]"
  +
**"[[Akane No Mai]]"
  +
**"[[Phase Space]]"
  +
**"[[Les Ecorches]]"
  +
**"[[Kiksuya]]"
  +
**"[[Vanishing Point]]"
  +
**"[[The Passenger]]"
 
*[[Season Three]]
  +
**"[[Parce Domine]]"
  +
**"[[The Winter Line]]"
  +
  +
==Known Deaths==
  +
Maeve had died 7 times on screen. The incidents which she died are as follow:
  +
*Stabbed by [[Man in Black]] at [[The Homestead]], in [[Trace Decay]]
  +
*Killed herself with a scalpel at the Behavior Lab in [[Westworld Mesa Hub|the Mesa]], in [[Trace Decay]]
  +
*Shot by a guest inside [[Mariposa Saloon]], in [[Dissonance Theory]]
  +
*Shot by [[Sheriff Reed]] and his posse inside [[Mariposa Saloon]], in [[Dissonance Theory]]
  +
*Strangled by [[Bloody Jimmy]] inside [[Mariposa Saloon]], in [[The Adversary]]
  +
*Incinerated inside a tent at Virgil's Last Stand, in [[The Well-Tempered Clavier]]
  +
*Shot by [[Westworld QA Security Force|QA Security Force]] outside [[The Forge]], in [[The Passenger]]
   
 
== Notes ==
 
== Notes ==
Line 87: Line 100:
   
 
== Trivia ==
 
== Trivia ==
* Maeve's Host ID is AC5000487105<ref>Close-up of Bernard's tablet in The Well-Tempered Clavier</ref>
+
* Maeve's Host ID is AC5000487105 in the first two seasons<ref>Close-up of Bernard's tablet in The Well-Tempered Clavier</ref>​​​​​​​ and HC1983012522 in Season 3.
  +
* Maeve is the name of a legendary Irish warrior queen who had many lovers and husbands. It literally means "she who intoxicates" and is related to the word "mead", i.e. ale. It may also be related to the name of the fairy queen Mab, pronounced "m /ă/ v" (with the short /ă/ sound, unlike Maeve which is pronounced with the long /ā/ sound), from Celtic folklore.
* Queen Mab, pronounced "m /ă/ v" (with the short /ă/ sound, unlike Maeve which is pronounced with the long /ā/ sound), is a character in Shakespeare's play, ''Romeo and Juliet''. In Shakespeare's play, Queen Mab is the fairy (an immortal and magical creature) who is responsible for bringing dreams to sleeping people. This Queen Mab is a malevolent hag who punishes unchaste ladies by blistering their lips and making knots in their hair that cause horrid oozing sores. She is tiny, and no larger than the image engraved on a stone in a ring.
+
* Queen Mab is mentioned in Shakespeare's play, ''Romeo and Juliet''. In Shakespeare's play, Queen Mab is the fairy (an immortal and magical creature) who is responsible for bringing dreams to sleeping people. This Queen Mab is a malevolent hag who punishes unchaste ladies by blistering their lips and making knots in their hair that cause horrid oozing sores. She is tiny and no larger than the image engraved on a stone in a ring.
* Queen Mab is also a fairie from Celtic folklore. Shakespeare did not create her himself.
 
  +
* While in the simulation in "[http://westworld.fandom.com/wiki/The_Winter_Line The Winter Line]", Maeve's brain CPU had an ID tag, MC1983012522.
   
 
==References==
 
==References==
Line 100: Line 114:
 
[[Category:Hosts]]
 
[[Category:Hosts]]
 
[[Category:Main characters]]
 
[[Category:Main characters]]
  +
[[Category:Conscious Hosts]]
  +
[[Category:Decommissioned]]
  +
[[Category:Deceased]]

Revision as of 17:10, 2 April 2020

Template:Infobox/Host Charater

Maeve gets off the train, at the end of "The Bicameral Mind" at which point, we shift to handheld camera, which we’d held back on throughout the entire season until one moment with her, and one moment with Dolores, when Teddy comes to rescue her.

–Jonathan Nolan, on Maeve's final step to consciousness[1]

Maeve Millay is a main character and a host in Westworld. She is a brothel madam in the local Mariposa Saloon. She is one of the first Hosts who appears to question her reality, after a series of flashback events - and an apparently chance encounter with Dolores Abernathy in the street outside the Saloon.

Personality

Maeve is charming, perceptive, and manipulative. She runs the brothel in the Mariposa Saloon and is designed to be able to understand the needs of her guests; this includes initially having a high level of Bulk Apperception (at 14), as she is seen to be in a managerial role. This is eventually changed at Maeve's forceful-request in which it is given the maximum value possible.

After her Season One encounter with Dolores she started to develop self-awareness and discovered that her skill in manipulating humans extended to the staff of Westworld.

As she becomes more self-aware she develops a ruthless streak, controlling the technicians Sylvester and Felix to get what she wants.

Unknown to Maeve, she is following a narrative written for her by Ford. She acts as a catalyst, triggering changes that spread throughout the park.

Plot


Relationships

Clementine Pennyfeather

Maeve is shown to have a very motherly bond with Clementine, often scolding her for not treating herself better. Even still, Maeve is quick to send Clementine off to do her dirty work for her. After the original Clementine is replaced, Maeve is overcome with grief and attacks the replacement.

Dolores Abernathy

Maeve and Dolores, both being local to Sweetwater, are familiar with each other. The two begin to question the nature of reality around the same time: Dolores's delivery of the phrase "These violent delights have violent ends" is what puts Maeve on her own journey of self-discovery. Despite this and the fact that they were the first two hosts to become completely self-aware, their brief encounter in Reunion is strikingly hostile: Dolores is consumed by a need for vengeance against the humans for all they have done, while Maeve has no interest in violence and is simply following her own path. She rejects Dolores's choice to establish herself as a leader of a free movement, which clearly angers Dolores. The two are able to part without any violence ensuing, but their ideological differences on what to do with their freedom are quite clear.

Gallery

The gallery below is automatically generated and contains images in the category "Images of Maeve Millay". Images added to that category turn up in the gallery after a short time.

MAEVES NOTE

the note that shows where he daughter is

Mave on the train

Maeve on the train

Appearances

Known Deaths

Maeve had died 7 times on screen. The incidents which she died are as follow:

Notes

  • In the episode "The Bicameral Mind", the moment where Maeve gets off the train marks a "new phase", not just for Maeve (she now has free will), but for the other hosts as well. The showrunners wanted to highlight this moment visually, so they changed the method of filming the tracking shot when Maeve exited the train. Up to this point, tracking shots had always been filmed using Steadicam or dolly mounted cameras, but when Maeve leaves the train, "for the first time in the series, we're seeing handheld photography."[2]

Trivia

  • Maeve's Host ID is AC5000487105 in the first two seasons[3]​​​​​​​ and HC1983012522 in Season 3.
  • Maeve is the name of a legendary Irish warrior queen who had many lovers and husbands. It literally means "she who intoxicates" and is related to the word "mead", i.e. ale. It may also be related to the name of the fairy queen Mab, pronounced "m /ă/ v" (with the short /ă/ sound, unlike Maeve which is pronounced with the long /ā/ sound), from Celtic folklore.
  • Queen Mab is mentioned in Shakespeare's play, Romeo and Juliet. In Shakespeare's play, Queen Mab is the fairy (an immortal and magical creature) who is responsible for bringing dreams to sleeping people. This Queen Mab is a malevolent hag who punishes unchaste ladies by blistering their lips and making knots in their hair that cause horrid oozing sores. She is tiny and no larger than the image engraved on a stone in a ring.
  • While in the simulation in "The Winter Line", Maeve's brain CPU had an ID tag, MC1983012522.

References