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Sunny Baudelaire

title.pt=Sunny Baudelaire

body.pt=Sunny Baudelaire é a mais nova dos três órfãos Baudelaire que protagonizam Desventuras em Série, uma série de treze volumes de comédia sombria para o público infanto-juvenil escrita pelo autor americano Daniel Handler sob o pseudônimo Lemony Snicket e publicada entre 1999 e 2006. Ela é a caçula dos três irmãos, descrita como bebê durante a maior parte da série e como criança pequena perto do fim. Sua característica marcante nos primeiros livros são seus quatro dentes anormalmente grandes e afiados e sua paixão por morder; ao longo da série, ela desenvolve um segundo talento — a culinária — que acaba se tornando dominante. O nome Sunny foi escolhido por Handler por soar tipicamente americano, contribuindo para a ambiguidade geográfica deliberada do grupo de irmãos como um todo.[1] Ela aparece em todos os treze livros, no longa-metragem de 2004 e na série televisiva da Netflix de 2017–2019. Sunny Baudelaire is one of the three Baudelaire orphans who are the protagonists of A Series of Unfortunate Events, a thirteen-volume children's dark comedy series written by Daniel Handler under the pseudonym Lemony Snicket and published between 1999 and 2006. She is the youngest of the three siblings, described as an infant for most of the series and as a young child toward its close. Her defining characteristic in the early books is her four abnormally large, sharp teeth and a passion for biting; as the series progresses she develops a second and ultimately dominant talent for cooking. Her name was chosen by Handler to sound distinctly American, contributing to the deliberate geographic ambiguity of the sibling group as a whole.[1] She appears in all thirteen books, the 2004 feature film, and the 2017–2019 Netflix television series.

Character overview

Sunny is introduced in the first book, The Bad Beginning, as an infant. She cannot walk until well into the series and speaks throughout the early volumes in a private language: short utterances — rendered in the text as invented words or sounds — that only her siblings Violet and Klaus understand, and that the narrator Snicket translates parenthetically for the reader. The translations are a recurring comic device: Snicket's glosses are often elaborate, deflating, or tangentially relevant, and the gap between Sunny's few syllables and his extended rendering of them is one of the series' running jokes.[2] As the series progresses and Sunny grows older, her speech becomes increasingly intelligible and by the final book she speaks in full sentences.

Her primary physical trait — four large, sharp teeth — is her most reliable asset in the early volumes. She is deployed on multiple occasions to bite through ropes, locks, and other obstacles that her siblings cannot overcome through inventing or reading alone.[2] The series presents each of the three children as having a distinct skill; Sunny's biting is treated on the same structural footing as Violet's inventing and Klaus's reading, and the books regularly place the children in situations where one skill must compensate for another's absence.

Beginning in the ninth book, The Carnivorous Carnival, Sunny discovers a talent and passion for cooking. From that point forward, cooking gradually eclipses biting as her characteristic contribution to the trio's survival. By the later volumes she functions as the group's cook in a sustained way, preparing food under difficult conditions and — in one episode in The Slippery Slope — using a smoked salmon preparation to signal her location to her siblings across the Mortmain Mountains.

Role across the series

In the early books, Sunny is the most physically vulnerable of the three children and the most frequently used as a hostage. In The Bad Beginning, Count Olaf locks her in a birdcage suspended from the tower of his house as leverage to force Violet into a false marriage. This pattern — Sunny as the target whose capture compels compliance — recurs in several of the earlier volumes, and her helplessness in these situations is a deliberate part of the series' structure: it concentrates the threat Count Olaf poses and tests her siblings' resourcefulness under the most acute pressure.[2]

As the series' structure shifts in the later books — the Baudelaires become fugitives accused of a crime they did not commit, and the moral picture grows more ambiguous — Sunny's role shifts accordingly. She participates in the morally complicated decisions the children are forced to make, contributes through cooking as a practical skill, and by the final book, The End, is an active agent rather than a ward. In the epilogue material of The End, it is implied that Sunny later becomes a radio host who discusses her recipes publicly, a detail that gives her a more complete arc than the series' deliberately ambiguous close provides for her siblings.

Name and allusion

Sunny's first name, along with that of her brother Klaus, alludes to the real figures of Claus and Sunny von Bülow, subjects of a prominent American criminal case in which Claus von Bülow was tried — and ultimately acquitted on appeal — for attempting to murder his wife.[3] Handler has described the choice as partly practical: the name "Sunny" sounds distinctly American, and the siblings' names were chosen together to resist placing the series in any single national tradition. Violet sounds British, Klaus German, and Sunny American, a combination Handler described as creating "a certain amount of confusion" about the setting.[1] The family surname, Baudelaire, comes from the 19th-century French poet Charles Baudelaire, whose collection Les Fleurs du mal Handler described as discussing "dreadful circumstances and finding beauty in them."[1]

Adaptations

2004 film

In Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events (2004), directed by Brad Silberling, Sunny was played by twins Kara and Shelby Hoffman. The film depicts Sunny as slightly older than in the books — already walking at the story's start — while retaining her sharp teeth as a visual and plot element. Her untranslated speech is rendered with subtitles.[4]

Netflix series (2017–2019)

In the Netflix adaptation, which ran for three seasons between 2017 and 2019, Sunny was played by Presley Smith. Her speech is subtitled throughout the series, and her role follows the books' arc from helpless infant to increasingly capable contributor. Handler served as showrunner across all three seasons, ensuring that the adaptation covered the later books — including the volumes in which Sunny's cooking talent becomes central — that the 2004 film had not reached.[4]

  1. ^a ^b ^c ^d Epstein, Nadine (2007-02). The Jewish Secrets of Lemony Snicket. Moment. https://web.archive.org/web/20110726173206/http://momentmag.com/moment/issues/2007/02/200702-Handler.html.
  2. ^a ^b ^c Langford, David (2002-12). Lemony Who? SFX. https://ansible.uk/sfx/sfx098.html.
  3. ^ Kramer, Melody Joy (2006-10-12). A Series Of Unfortunate Literary Allusions. NPR. https://www.npr.org/2011/07/15/6253438/a-series-of-unfortunate-literary-allusions.
  4. ^a ^b Han, Angie (2014-11-05). Netflix Making Lemony Snicket’s “A Series Of Unfortunate Events” Series. SlashFilm. https://www.slashfilm.com/534741/netflix-lemony-snicket/.
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