1. Tara's mother also believed that she was a demon, hence she married Maclay and allowed her daughter to be told the 'demon story.'
2. The demon story is new, and Tara's mother was unable to refute it when it started because of her 'condition.'
My theory would be 2.
Assuming that she had a mental illness...Did Maclay marry her before the age of 20 and when the symptoms began, come up with what he deemed the be the most logical conclusion? ...IF Tara's mother did have a condition, then it seems reasonable to think that Maclay might have actually believed the demon story. I don't think so, since Maclay reacts at the end of Family like a man that has just been exposed as a fraud.
Oh, I don't think so either...in fact it's pretty clear both he and Donny knew the demon thing was bogus.
As noted above, I don't know that he is the type of heart strong individual that would marry someone with such a conditions. If the symtoms did manifest themselves when she was 20, and she didn't die till Tara was 17 - we can guess that Maclay and Tara's mom had quite a long marriage. The other question then is - does Maclay REALLY have what it takes to STAY and CARE FOR someone with such a condition for that long?
I don't know about that, but one thing should be noted about Mr. Maclay--he's a right bastard, but he's not a monster. In the shooting script Joss indicated that one of his lines should be delivered in a tone that was "strict, but not bullying," and I've kind of taken my view of the character from that. In his own twisted way I believe Mr. Maclay loves Tara, though he has odd ideas about what loving someone entails. I think he may really have been convinced that everything he did to Tara was in her best interest.
I know that the age of 20 is mentioned as the age where the demon takes hold. I wonder if this age isn't a number that Tara's father picked pout out of the proverbial hat. ...It is an age...where a young woman might have the urge to try and use her independence to leave her family - unless, as Tara's dad asserts, she is a demon.
Definitely a possibility, I would say.
xita wrote: Tara was 18 when she got to college, she turned 19 that november. ...Which I have explained before wouldn't be the case under California public school laws, she would have had to flunk a grade in order for that to be true. ...it just means not careful enough writing.
Of course, we don't know for sure that Tara grew up in California, and the laws of other states are different. But even assuming she did, there's another possibility--in the shooting script Donny says, probably hyperbolically, that he doesn't think Tara spoke till she was 8. Even if that is an exaggeration, it seems Tara was morbidly shy as a child--and with her stutter as well, she may have been thought to have a developmental disability. This could have affected her entrance into or progress through school.
The biggest problem I have with speculating about Tara's past is that a lot of what was explained was an afterthought...we have to make things fit in where they weren't meant to originally be about the same thing.
Mmmm...I see your point, but really not much was revealed about Tara before "Family" except that she was a witch, her mom was a witch, and she had a secret. Oh, and she was a Great Big Lesbo. So there really isn't much that has to be made to fit. Plus, it's fun.
Biggest problem with Family, "The Women in our Family have demon in them." What family is he talking about?
That is a problem. It would have been easier if he'd said "her mother's family," but he didn't. Perhaps more evidence that he himself made the whole thing up? Though he'd still have to have a well-thought-out explanation, or Tara wouldn't have bought it.
So because Tara got her crystal from grandmother, I am going to assume she is the one who taught her magic...Though it bothers me that Grandma wasn't able to knock some sense into mom.
Tara didn't get the crystal directly from her grandmother, she found it in her attic. Her grandmother may even have been dead by that time.
Rosenberg wrote: I thought Tara mentioned to Willow that she'd been practicing magic all her life. So, I don't think she would have been practicing it covertly.
I think it would have to have been covert in that household. In fact Mr. Maclay alludes to as much: "You don't even try to hide it anymore."
Willow mentioned in Tough Love that Tara had been out way longer than she had. That could tie in with the comment Tara made about how after her mother died, she started staying out late and lying to her family about things. Maybe she was lying and staying out late because she was developing a relationship with another girl (or maybe just hoping to develop a relationship). I wouldn't be surprised if Tara showed up at the Lesbian Alliance meetings, in spite of her shyness.
Yeah, the "out longer" comment is very very interesting. A lot of people have assumed it means Tara had a relationship prior to Willow, but I don't think so (although it's possible, with the whole "lying and staying out all night" thing). I think the Lesbian Alliance is a good bet, though. I can just see Tara getting to college and being so excited (albeit extremely nervous) about spreading her wings, and looking at a campus events flyer and thinking, "Wicca group, joining that, Lesbian Alliance, joining that...."
It's interesting that we've pretty much assumed that Tara always knew she was gay--I certainly assumed it--but didn't really have any proof...until "Tabula Rasa." Just as, in real life, it took Willow a while to figure out she was gay, Tara seemed to know it instinctively.
Am I hogging this thread? I feel like I'm hogging this thread.