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Azula

Azula

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Avatar: The Last Airbender character
Azula
Nationality Fire Nation
Gender Female
Hair color Dark Brown
Age 14 [1]
First appearance "The Storm" (Cameo)
"The Siege of the North"
Voiced by Grey DeLisle

Princess Azula is a fictional character in Nickelodeon's animated television series Avatar: The Last Airbender. The character, created by Michael Dante DiMartino and Bryan Konietzko, is voiced by Grey DeLisle.

In the show, Azula is a gifted Firebending master and highly favored princess of the Fire Nation, a race of people with the ability to create and manipulate fire.[2] She is initially depicted as bent on retrieving her exiled brother, Prince Zuko, and delivering him to their father, Fire Lord Ozai while accompanied by her childhood friends, Mai and Ty Lee. Eventually her focus becomes more directed toward capturing the Avatar and aiding in the war to help secure her nation's victory.

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[edit] Plot overview

Azula first appears in a flashback, specifically Iroh's story about the Agni Kai in which Prince Zuko receives his facial scar and sentence of banishment.[3] Fans immediately began speculating upon who the girl standing next to Iroh might have been. Azula is not shown again until the end of the season, after the siege of the Northern Water Tribe, when Ozai orders Azula to arrest Zuko and Iroh for failure to capture the Avatar and betrayal against the Fire Nation, respectively.[4]

Azula's destructive ways were evident even as a child.

Although Azula's age is never stated in the series itself, the Avatar website gives her age at the time of her first appearance as fourteen. She is the great-granddaughter of both Fire Lord Sozin, through Ozai, and Avatar Roku, through Ursa.[5]

In another flashback, it is revealed that she is named after her grandfather, Ozai's father Azulon and that she and Azulon are both firebending prodigies.[6] Even when she was a child, Azula demonstrated her natural talents early in life, along with her tendency for malice and perfectionism. Her sharp wit and the skill she displayed towards Firebending gained her much attention and acclaim, and her father showed her obvious favoritism, often at Zuko's expense.

Azula is depicted as interested in power from a very young age. She is shown destroying a doll that her uncle had sent her and young Zuko mentions that she throws rocks at the tame turtle-ducks that live in their garden pond. Young Azula suggests that her father would make a far better Fire Lord than the heir apparent, her uncle, Iroh, whom she also dubbed "a quitter and a loser" for abandoning his siege at Ba Sing Se after the death of his son and only child, Lu Ten.[6] Years later, when her brother is burned by their father during an Agni Kai duel, she is shown watching with a savage triumph.[3]

Azula first encounters the Avatar in Omashu during the second season, where she and Aang battle. Soon after, she names the Avatar as a personal target in addition to her brother and enlists the help of her friends Ty Lee and Mai.[7] Azula continues to pursue the Avatar for the rest of the season, becoming the main antagonist like Zuko had been during the previous season. While in Ba Sing Se, she arranges a clever plot to have sent to the leader of the Dai Li, using Mai and Ty Lee as pawns in her elaborate plot, knowing that the Dai Li were keeping a watchfull eye and would be reporting any suspious action the plan turned out to be a success. She was kidnapped in the night and taken to Long Feng, he wanted the Earth King overthrown and in return, the Avatar would be captured and handed over to her. Although, Azula is sidetracked by her conquest of the city. Eventually, she is able to convince her brother to help her secure Ba Sing Se and take down the Avatar. This is achieved when he tries to resist her and fails and is aresseted by the Dai Li. During their showdown in the catacombs, Azula appears to have mortally wounded Aang while he is in the Avatar State with a lighting bolt. It is assumed that the Avatar State has now become broken, and Aang is later shown explaining that his seventh chakra is now "locked." However, Azula suspects that Aang survived. She eventually blames this on her brother.[8]

Upon returning home in the third season, it is revealed that Azula has not taken credit for the murder of the Avatar. She gave the credit to Zuko, claiming that she wanted to make him feel better as he faces their father and repay him for his aid in the siege of Ba Sing Se, knowing that her position in her father's eyes could survive without the additional glory to her name. After Zuko connotes that she's lying, Azula reveals that should the Avatar turn up still alive, all of Zuko's glory would turn to shame. This could lead many fans to believe that Azula planned to steal the throne from Zuko all along, as hinted at during a prophetic dream that Zuko has in Ba Sing Se, where Azula was depicted as a blue dragon. [9]

During "The Day of Black Sun," Azula serves as a distraction to keep Aang, Sokka, and Toph from finding Fire Lord Ozai, assisted by Dai Li agents. She learned of this invasion when she infitrated the Earth Kingdom as a Kyoshi Warrior. [10] Later, Azula accompanies Mai and Ty Lee to the Boiling Rock, where Zuko has been captured, but Zuko, Sokka, Suki, and Hakoda escape. During the escape, Mai attacks the guards allowing them to escape. Azula's calm breaks, and in a fury, she attempts to attack Mai, but is stopped by Ty Lee. After having Mai and Ty Lee locked away, a crazed Azula leads a platoon to the Western Air Temple. There she duels with Zuko until they are both thrown from the airship. She survives by propelling herself to safety. This could arguably signify the beginning of her descent into madness.

Azula has a vision of her mother, signifying the start of her breakdown.

In the finale, Ozai, after declaring himself the Phoenix King, names Azula as the new Fire Lord, but says that she must remain in the Fire Nation to lead the people while he is gone. Azula's tolerance begins to deteriorate, which leads her to banishing nearly all of her servants, including the Dai Li and Lo and Li in suspicion that they would betray her just as Mai and Ty Lee did. She even imagines her mother coming to her coronation on the day of Sozin's Comet after she cuts off some of her hair in frustration. When she is about to be crowned, Katara and Zuko arrive and she then challenges Zuko to an Agni Kai knowing that she couldn't defeat both of them. Zuko accepts the offer due to his recent mastery over firebending and sensing her unstable character. Zuko has the upper hand throughout the duel, and in order for her to defeat Zuko, she directs lightning toward Katara. Zuko however is able to get in front of the blast, saving Katara, and is able to redirect most of it, but is severely burned. Azula then zones in on Katara, but Katara eventually ends up freezing her and chaining her to the floor. When Katara goes to heal Zuko, Azula breaks down completely and begins crying and screaming. It was later confirmed on Nick.com that Azula is currently incarcerated in an Asylum where she is constantly supervised.

[edit] Personality

Azula's grip on reality is shattered.

Azula is a complex young woman. Ever since she was born, she was raised by her father to be a cruel, ruthless firebender and to manipulate people by controlling them through fear. She is a dedicated nationalist, relentlessly drilling herself towards perfection and will settle for nothing less.[11] Even as a child she was seen to react with hostility when outdone. In a flashback, a young Azula is shown pushing Ty Lee over after Ty Lee beats her at cartwheeling.[6] She is rather vain and believes that power and domination are what makes a person strong.[12] She is known for being one of the cruelest characters in the series. From a young age, Azula demonstrated sadistic aggression and lack of remorse.[6] She lacks empathy, treats people as objects and seems unable to view them as living beings with feelings and emotions. Her cruelty and seemingly total lack of compassion extends to many born into her family.[6] Her amorality also accounts for her ability to create and direct lightning, as the skill requires peace of mind[13]. It's this peace of mind that enables her to be such an excellent tactician, regularly displaying a perception and resourcefulness that allows her to take advantage of almost any situation as well as predict a person's actions and thoughts with confidence that she's right, referring to herself as a "people person".

Ironically, for all her refinement and self-confidence, Azula does retain some insecurities. Although she is shown as a good strategist and capable of predicting what her enemies will do, she has a disadvantage in ordinary social situations. In particular, she does not know how to act around teenage boys, whom she tends to intimidate. Her over-competitive nature surfaces during a Kuai ball game, where, despite it being a friendly game, she turns an opponent's slight lameness against her and overly crushes her, comparing the game to an act of war. She later admits her jealousy over how much attention Ty Lee receives from boys after making her cry and giving a quick apology; the only act of genuine kindness that she gives throughout her appearances. [14] It later becomes apparent that her bullying and abusive treatment of people, even "friends" such as Mai and Ty Lee, stems not only from her cruel nature but a deep-rooted fear and inability to trust others. From a young age, she believed her mother favored Zuko and didn't love her, seeing her as a monster; while Ozai obviously favored her over Zuko, it is clear that Ozai is incapable of true, unconditional love and dispensed affection and favor to shape his two children as tools that would respond to his will. This shaped Azula's fears that she couldn't count on love or affection from anyone, no matter how close they seemed. Unable to trust others, she instead tries to dominate them through fear - a paranoia that ultimately drives her insane following the betrayal of her closest friends. Most of Azula's strain, though, is from her father. Possibly the only person to whom she feels accountable, Azula is anxious to please him so that he won't think of her as a failure. Azula won't settle for the slightest infraction in anything and always plans 5 steps ahead to avoid anything that could mess up her perfect image with Ozai.

[edit] Abilities

Azula is a very difficult person to defeat in a one-on-one battle. Her excellent firebending abilities, hand-to-hand combat skills, quickness, and intelligence makes her a formidable foe for just about anyone.

Azula is proficient in the difficult technique of using lightning, a pure form of Firebending. The only other known firebenders who are capable of lightning are Iroh and Ozai. Iroh, Aang and Zuko have been shown to redirect lightning by Iroh's technique, though Aang and Zuko have never been seen creating lightning.[11] Even while breaking down into paranoia and insanity, Azula was still able to create lightning. The second most noticeable feature of Princess Azula's bending is her ability to create blue flames, a feat that not even the Avatar, Ozai or Iroh can perform. Azula has been seen using flames in previously unseen ways, such as jets of flames and whirling disks. Notably, Azula often firebends using only two fingers, rather than a closed fist or open hand.[7] Azula can fight for long periods of time without tiring. (This discipline seems to deteriorate with her sanity; in her final battle with Zuko, she strikes with careless attacks and giant, wasteful bursts of flame, explaining why she tires so quickly and easily in that fight. Her reckless unpredictability in that battle, however, makes her all the more dangerous, especially since Sozin's comet was present at the time). She is also able to generate powerful shields of swirling flames, which she once used to withstand the simultaneous combined attacks of Aang, Zuko, Katara and Toph.[15] She is even able to charge up her fire before releasing it, as was seen during one fight with Aang.[16] She is able to propel herself, using her flames, in a manner similar to a rocket. This ability has also been extended as a means to fly for short periods of time as seen in the Boiling Rock.[12]. Azula is also a skilled melee fighter; in the "The Avatar State," she easily blocked or parried all of Zuko's attacks without the use of Firebending, and in "The Eclipse," avoided the combined forces of Aang, Toph, and Sokka for several minutes, without her bending to aid her. In "Appa's Lost Days", when Suki did a stab attack at Azula with her sword, Azula jumped horizontally and knocked Suki's sword out of her hand and onto a tree. She is an extremely skilled liar, as even Toph was unable to detect her lying.[10] This ability to lie without altering her heart rate and breathing patterns may stem from her discipline, or from the detached aspect of her personality that allows her to inflict savage cruelty without any hint of hesitation or remorse. She is also an accomplished tactician, as she was able to conquer Ba Sing Se, a city thought to be impenetrable, while usurping the entire Government and hierarchy of the Earth Kingdom capital. (www.wikipedia.org)

Zuko

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Avatar: The Last Airbender character
Zuko
Nationality Fire Nation
Notable Aliases The Blue Spirit (alter ego)
Lee (refugee alias)
Zu-Zu (nickname)
Crown Prince of the Fire Nation
Fire Lord Zuko
Gender Male
Hair color Black
Eye color Gold
Age 16[1]
First appearance "The Boy in the Iceberg"
Voiced by Dante Basco[2]
Elijah Runcorn (Young Zuko)

Zuko is a fictional character in Nickelodeon's animated television series Avatar: The Last Airbender. The character, created by Michael Dante DiMartino and Bryan Konietzko, is voiced by Dante Basco. Early in the show he takes on the role of main antagonist.

In the show, Zuko is a skilled Firebender and the Crown Prince of the Fire Nation, a race of people in which some have the ability to create and manipulate fire & lightning.[3] Before the events of the series, he is exiled from the Fire Nation by his father Fire Lord Ozai and sent to capture the Avatar in order to restore his honor and right to the throne. Zuko is accompanied and advised in his search by his uncle, Iroh.

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[edit] Plot overview

Six years prior to the start of the series Prince Ozai, Zuko's father, makes a bid for the throne over his elder brother Iroh, due to the latter's having recently lost both his only son and his campaign against the city of Ba Sing Se. Firelord Azulon, Iroh and Ozai's father, is furious that Ozai would try to cheat Iroh at such a low point in his life, and orders Ozai to kill his eldest son in order for him to realize the severity of his action. Ozai, considering Zuko a disappointment, was willing to kill Zuko to appease his father. However, in an effort to protect him, Ursa, Zuko's mother, does "terrible, treasonous things" that result in Azulon's death, Ozai's ascension to the throne and her own banishment; for years, Zuko would have no idea if she were dead or alive.

A few years after, Zuko protests a plan of attack that would have sacrificed many soldiers as bait. Ozai challenges his son to an Agni Kai for disrespecting him in his own war chamber. Unwilling to fight his father, Zuko begs forgiveness, only to be savagely burned across the left side of his face. Ozai banishes Zuko from the Fire Nation, ordering him not to return until he finds the Avatar, the last Airbender.

Finding the Avatar was considered a lost cause by many because Ozai, his father Azulon, and his grandfather Sozin, all attempted to find the Avatar and failed. However the show pilot sees the revival of Aang, the Avatar. Due to the nature of Aang's return and Zuko's proximity at the time, Zuko begins the chase immediately. They encounter each other multiple times throughout the first season, each time Zuko failing to capture Aang. During Zuko's pursuit, another Fire Nation leader named Admiral Zhao also takes up chasing the Avatar. Zhao views Zuko as a failure and a traitor. The animosity between Zuko and Zhao reaches the point where Zuko breaks into Zhao's fortress to free a captured Aang, and Zhao attempts to have Zuko murdered by pirates. The two have one last battle during the siege of the Northern Water Tribe, only to be interrupted when the Ocean Spirit seizes Zhao and pulls him into the Water. Zuko tried to save Zhao at the end, only to have Zhao refuse to take Zuko's helping hand out of spite. Zuko and his uncle were labeled traitors to the Fire Nation after this.

The second season opens with Zuko and Iroh still chasing the Avatar, only to be confronted by Azula, Zuko's younger sister. They escape and realize they have been branded traitors to the Fire Nation. Now on the run from Azula, Iroh and Zuko travel the Earth Kingdom, seemingly aimless. Eventually Zuko splits away from Iroh, feeling he could no longer learn from his uncle. However, Iroh follows Zuko out of concern, and the two reconnect after Azula injures Iroh. Zuko begins his transformation, no longer driven by hunting the Avatar, and is allowed to begin to establish an identity free of pursuit. Their travels take them to Ba Sing Se, where Zuko follows his uncle's advice and tries to make a new life for himself and both become very successful people. However when faced with the opportunity to return home, Zuko had to choose between Iroh and a path of good, or follow Azula to fight the Avatar and conquer Ba Sing Se. He ultimately chose Azula. After Aang is mortally wounded by Azula, Iroh fights Azula, Zuko, and the Dai Li off. After being betrayed by Zuko, Iroh looks on his nephew with shame. Almost immediately, Zuko begins to regret his actions.

The final season begins with Zuko and Azula's return to the Fire Nation after conquering Ba Sing Se. Both are praised as heroes through the Fire Nation for capturing Ba Sing Se and for killing the Avatar. However Zuko suspected Aang is still alive, which Azula comes to suspect as well. In order to protect herself in case the Avatar did return one day, she tells Ozai that Zuko killed the Avatar. This does earn Ozai's approval, but causes Zuko to panic. He soon begins to show more signs of regret for his past deeds, and is shown visiting Iroh in prison often asking for advice. After visiting Iroh in his cell many times, Iroh finally reveals that Zuko is also descended from Avatar Roku through his mother and it is his destiny to restore balance to the world and redeem the Fire Nation. As more time passes, even though he finally has everything he ever wanted, Zuko isn't happy because he starts to feel like he doesn't belong. At a war meeting, he unintentionally helps Ozai come up with a plan to burn the Earth Kingdom to ash. With his father's plan being the last straw, he decides to leave the Fire Nation and join Aang. He confronts his father before he leaves during the eclipse to where he expresses his feelings toward his father and his evil plans and also tells him that he is going to help the Avatar defeat him. As he is leaving, Ozai lures Zuko back with the knowledge of what really happened to his mother, and Ozai strikes Zuko with lightning, only to have it redirected back toward him. Zuko then goes to free Iroh from his prison cell, only to find that Iroh had escaped. Zuko then follows Aang to the Western Air Temple. Aang and company were initially reluctant to believe Zuko had changed, but they each came to slowly trust him. While with Aang and his friends, Zuko's firebending gets weaker. Driven to find the original source of firebending, he and Aang quest until they meet the last two dragons. After that encounter, he is able to teach Aang firebending, and ultimately helps him to prepare for the final fight against Ozai. Later he helps Sokka free Suki and Sokka's father, Hakoda, from the Fire Nation's maximum security prison, the Boiling Rock. He also helped Katara attempt to find her mother's killer in order to make amends for his betrayal in Ba Sing Se.

During the finale, Aang disappears shortly before Sozin's Comet arrives and Zuko is put in charge of finding him, since he is an expert at doing so. When Zuko is unable to find Aang, he instead finds Iroh, who he profusely apologizes to. Iroh immediately forgives him. Iroh then tells Zuko that he must face Azula for the crown and that Katara must assist. Once they arrive at the Fire Nation Capitol, Azula challenges Zuko to a one on one Agni Kai, and Zuko accepts to fight her alone, despite Katara's protests. During the duel Zuko clearly has the advantage due to his remaining calm and Azula's deteriorating sanity. In a desperate attempt, Azula cheats and attempts to strike Katara down with lightning. Zuko jumps in front of the lightning, managing to redirect most of the energy, but was injured with a burn on his chest. Katara manages to chain Azula up and helps to heal the wound in gratitude, though a scar still remains.

After the war Zuko is crowned as the new Fire Lord. After his coronation, he visits Ozai in prison to learn his mother's whereabouts (the answer is not shown). He is later seen with the main characters at the Jasmine Dragon, which marks his last appearance in the series.

[edit] Appearance

Zuko is a teenager who matures, both mentally and physically, throughout the series. Therefore, his appearance also changes over time. He is thought to be around 16 years old and although lean, is muscular. His most prominent feature is a dark red scar over his left eye that extends over his ear. His hair is black, and put up in a traditional Fire Nation hairstyle for royalty at the beginning of the series. However, as the series progresses and Zuko matures, he cuts his hair and it grows out into somewhat of a crew cut. Zuko has pale skin and golden eyes.

Although Zuko wears many different outfits throughout the series, he is often depicted at the beginning of the series wearing traditional Fire Nation dress: red armor and uniform, and a brown tunic underneath. However, to emphasize the severance with his family, as well as a psychological maturation, Zuko later sheds the Fire Nation armor and appears clad in a simple, brown outfit.

[edit] Personality

While initially the series' primary antagonist, over time, Zuko has shown to be more of a bitter and complex young man than a truly evil character; he eventually forsakes his past goals and becomes a hero. Zuko's sole motivation for many years was catching Aang, so he could return home with honor as his father had proclaimed. However, his mistakes and struggles lead him to realize his destiny was to oppose his father and join the Avatar to help defeat the Fire Lord.

Zuko's bitterness and his personal circumstances make him feel as if he is an unfortunate person and that the world is out to get him. This seems to have been imprinted onto him since his father often said that "Azula was born lucky, while Zuko was lucky to be born." However, Zuko doesn't want luck and feels that his struggles have made him a wiser and stronger human being.

He once admitted to Sokka that "[he's] never happy" (although this may have been more for comic relief than his actual feelings.)

His past crimes and mistakes still haunt him. However, after he restored his honor by joining the Avatar, his mistakes proved to be the reason that his Uncle Iroh felt Zuko was destined to restore the honor of the Fire Nation as its new Fire Lord. Having earned the trust and friendship of Avatar Aang, Zuko is determined to help lead the Fire Nation and the world into an era of love and peace.

[edit] Firebending and special skills

[edit] Firebending

Zuko using broadswords in conjunction with his Firebending.

Despite his youth, Zuko is highly skilled in both Firebending and dual broadswords. He is capable of holding his own against fighters and benders with more experience using both skills. Through determination, an ability to adapt, and strength, Zuko refuses to give up during a fight. He has also shown great agility.

Although incredibly skilled, whenever Zuko faces his sister Azula, she proves to be the more skilled fighter. She has the ability to generate lightning, a skill very few firebenders are capable of. Zuko attempts to learn this skill from his Uncle Iroh, but is unable to generate lightning because of his own inner turmoil. However, Iroh does teach him how to redirect lightning, a technique he created from watching Waterbenders. However, Zuko cannot test this skill as Iroh refused to throw lightning at his nephew due to the immense risk involved. Zuko does successfully redirect lightning when his own father, Fire Lord Ozai, shoots lightning at him months later.

Zuko later transitions from pupil to Master, joining Aang and teaching him how to firebend. Zuko initially has trouble doing so due to losing his drive and motivation (as for years, his sole motivation was hunting the Avatar). But after he and Aang go on a quest to discover the true source of firebending, the two encounter the last two dragons in existence and learn that firebending is more about life than destruction and rage. Learning the secret of Firebending, Aang and Zuko both display incredible skill with Firebending.

When Zuko finally faced Azula again near the "Western Air Temple", the two are shown to be evenly matched. During the Agni Kai in the series finale, Zuko was able to hold his own during the entire duel, while Azula slipped deeper into madness and fatigue. Zuko gained the upper hand in the intense battle and taunted his sister to use her lightning so that he could redirect it. Azula charged up but at the last second, sent the lightning in Katara's direction. Zuko jumped in the way to save her and was barely able to redirect it, sustaining a large burn on his chest.

[edit] Other skills

Zuko has also shown to be highly skilled in the use of the double broadswords, a talent he refined during his time at sea. In "The Blue Spirit" and "Zuko Alone", Zuko succeeds against a number of adversaries with the aid of his swords.

Zuko has demonstrated an ability in stealth on multiple occasions which he uses as the Blue Spirit. He was able to infiltrate a Fire Nation fortress, the Northern Water Tribe's city and the Dai Li's base at Lake Laogai without detection. [4][5] His proficiency at stealth was also utilized during the 3rd season episode, "The Southern Raiders", in which he and Katara snuck into and out of a Fire Nation command outpost, onto a Fire Nation ship, and then stalked and cornered the former commander of the Southern Raiders in his home village, without him noticing them until they wanted him to.

Appa

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Avatar: The Last Airbender character
Appa
Nationality Air Nomads
Gender Male
Hair color White (with brown arrow shaped patch of fur)
Eye color Brown
Age 106
First appearance The Boy in the Iceberg
Voiced by Dee Bradley Baker

Appa is a fictional character on the Nickelodeon animated television series Avatar: The Last Airbender. In the show, Appa is the only known living Sky Bison, a race of animals that can naturally fly. He is voiced by Dee Bradley Baker.

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[edit] Creation and conception

In a flashback on Appa's Lost Days, Appa's herd flies down to an Air Nomad Temple where Aang and other young Airbenders are waiting. Aang brings Appa an apple as a sign of friendship, which Appa accepts, sealing their bond as well as giving Appa his name, after the word apple.[1]

According to an interview with the artists involved with creating Avatar, found on the Avatar Season One Box Set, Appa's design was based on the Catbus from the movie My Neighbor Totoro as they found it difficult to create a six-legged mammal.[2]

The show's creators, Michael Dante DiMartino and Bryan Konietzko, have described Appa's appearance as a cross between a buffalo and a manatee.[2] Appa, like all flying bison, is covered in thick white fur with brown arrow markings that is remarked to be extremely itchy[3] and is known to shed at the end of winter.[4] The arrows on the flying bison's backs have inspired the tattoos that Airbenders receive as a sign of their mastery. In recent episodes, he also wears a suit of leather and metal armor during battle that was crafted for him by Sokka.[5]

Appa in Indian languages means daddy/father.

[edit] Plot overview

[edit] History

Appa assisting the group in battle against the Shirsu as seen in "Bato of the Water Tribe".

Aang and Appa's first meeting is seen during a flashback sequence in Appa's Lost Days.[1] It is tradition with Air Nomads that each young Airbender is given a flying bison calf once they come of age to be the Airbender's life-long animal companion. Almost immediately, the two became friends and would remain close, Appa being the one thing from Aang's home that Aang took with him when he fled the Southern Air Temple.[6] In fact, their bond is so deep they appear to share some form of energy bond, as revealed by Guru Pathik.[1]

Appa was stuck in suspended animation along with Aang for 100 years until their discovery by Katara and Sokka.[7] Since then, Appa has been the group's main form of transportation in their quest, as well as occasionally assisting in battle.[8] In "The Library" Appa was a consistent part of the group throughout the series until his capture by the Sandbenders.[9] However, Appa has been returned to group as of the Season 2 episode Lake Laogai.[10]

[edit] Lost Days

Appa became lost for a short while, when the group was traveling in the Earth Kingdom. He was kidnapped by Sandbenders in the middle of the vast Si Wong desert, while Aang, Katara, Sokka, and Momo were trapped in a vast underground library.[9] It is later revealed that he was eventually sold to a Fire Nation circus where an animal tamer attempted to make him part of the show.[1] Appa later escaped and journeyed throughout the Earth Kingdom until he encountered the Kyoshi Island Warriors, who attempted to heal the various wounds he had sustained in his travels and escort him back to Aang.[1] Appa was forced to leave after an attack by Azula and her allies, ushered away by Suki while the warriors tried to delay the three Fire Nation women.[1] On his journey he encountered Guru Pathik at the Eastern Air Temple. The Guru was able to tell Appa of Aang's location by reading his energy.[1] Consequently, Appa flew to Ba Sing Se, where he was captured by Long Feng.[1]

Appa was kept in a secret location at Lake Laogai until his rescue by Zuko, who was initially planning on utilizing him to capture the Avatar.[10] Appa eventually returns to the main group in the last scenes of Lake Laogai.[10]

[edit] Journey into the Fire Nation

Appa still accompanies Aang and his group even after they enter the Fire Nation. However, in order to make sure that he does not give away Aang's identity when flying, Aang covers Appa with clouds as a disguise while in flight.[5]

At the Western Air Temple, he was among the first members of the group to accept Zuko as Aang's firebending teacher, as he is still grateful for Zuko freeing him in Ba Sing Se.[10] He flew Aang and Zuko to the Sun Warrior Temple in order to learn the origin of firebending. He also flew Zuko and Katara to the Southern Raiders ship, so Katara could confront the murderer of her mother. [11]

In the two-hour finale, when Aang and Momo disappear, Sokka believes he ate Momo, though this being entirely untrue. After the search for Aang failed and with the comet and impending war fast approaching, the group was forced to divide their efforts to prevent the Fire Nation from wiping out the Earth Kingdom. Appa flew Zuko and Katara to the Fire Nation capital where they fought and defeated Azula before she could assume leadership of the throne. Afterward, Appa is last seen outside of Iroh's tea shop in Ba Sing Se listening to Iroh play a horn. [12]

[edit] Personality

Appa has been shown to be afraid of fire because of the sadistic ringmaster at the circus always whipping him with a fire whip.[1] He also trusts those who have been nice to him, such as all of the group he travels with. He trusts Zuko after he frees Appa from captivity.[10] He can become quite temperamental towards anyone who he thinks is a threat to himself or his friends, especially Aang. Conversely, he has demonstrated an unrestrained affection towards those that he likes, often licking anyone he deems a friend. Appa also has a fear of going underground or in small tunnels, evidenced by his claustrophobic panic in "The Cave of Two Lovers."

[edit] Abilities

Appa possesses the ability to fly, hence the name Sky Bison. He utilizes his Airbending for this purpose; his tail appears to be the main driving force behind his bending but has shown to also be able to accomplish it with his mouth. Due to his size and mass, it takes a lot of energy for him to stay aloft. As a result, Appa cannot fly for an extended time and periodically requires stopping and resting.[4] He has also shown to be a fairly adept swimmer as well,[7] although he is more frequently seen flying or walking than swimming. Despite the tranquility related to his personality as well as his species, Appa has shown himself to be very capable of fighting when necessary. With his bending, Appa can create powerful gusts of air with just a flick of his tail and can gain advantage over his opponent by hovering. Being a bison, he is also naturally capable of brute strength and endurance. The best demonstration of this was in "Bato of the Water Tribe" where he endured multiple strikes from a Shirshu tongue before finally succumbing to the paralyzing venom,[8] and "Appa's Lost Days" where he fought a rather large boarcupine, and was impaled by many painful quills.[1] During larger battles, Appa serves as a mount for Aang. Appa and Aang are usually integral in large conflicts because their enemies rarely had effective counters to Appa's strength and maneuverability in the air. Only in the "Day of the Black Sun" was Appa's air supremacy truly challenged. During that episode, Sokka outfitted Appa with battle armor, serving to make Appa an even stronger force to be reckoned with.[5]
(www.wikipedia.org)

Toph Bei Fong

Avatar: The Last Airbender character
Toph Bei Fong
Nationality Earth Kingdom (Gaoling)
Notable Aliases The Blind Bandit, The Runaway
Gender Female
Hair color Black
Eye color Pale green (blind)
Age 12 (Possibly 13 by season 3)
First appearance "The Swamp" (Aang's vision),
"The Blind Bandit"
(actual appearance)
Voiced by Jessie Flower
(www.wikipedia.org)

toph

Toph Bei Fong (北方 托芙) is a fictional character in Nickelodeon's animated television series Avatar: The Last Airbender. The character, created by Michael Dante DiMartino and Bryan Konietzko, was voiced by Jessie Flower.

In the show, Toph is a blind Earthbending master of the Earth Kingdom, a race of people who can control and manipulate earth.[1] She grew up in a wealthy and highly respected family but left it behind when she had agreed to teach Aang earthbending to help him fulfill his duty as the Avatar, and accompanies him on his quest to defeat the imperialistic Fire Nation and bring peace to the war-torn nations.[2]


Contents

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[edit] History and family

The luxurious Bei Fong estate

Toph is the only child of the wealthy Bei Fong family, who reside in the Earth Kingdom town of Gaoling and whose symbol is a flying boar. Toph's parents are very protective of her, viewing her blindness as a disability in every sense of the word. They assume that she is weak and vulnerable to everything around her. She ran away constantly when she was younger. To avoid risk and danger, they kept her at the beginner level of earthbending for over six years, had guards keep close watch on her at all times, and kept the knowledge of her existence from the public.

Toph said she left her privileged existence behind in order to "teach Aang Earthbending"; in reality, she left to escape the influence of her controlling parents. She further claims to hate them both, but she once, in tears, confided to Katara how she actually thinks that she "probably really hurt them" when she left. She has Katara send a note to them, but does not disclose her words.

Despite her handicap, Toph has developed special skills that make her a very formidable Earthbender. Once, when she was very young, Toph ran away from home, seeking refuge in nearby caves. It was there she found companionship with the blind, earthbending Badgermoles that inhabited the caves. By imitating their movements, Toph came to harness her own earthbending abilities, becoming a master in her own right. However, she kept her talent secret from her family and Master Yu, her earthbending teacher. Toph fought frequently in Earth Rumble, an underground earthbending Lei tai tournament, under the alias "The Blind Bandit." By the time Aang and his friends discover Toph at the tournament, she had won her way to become the current champion, holding a 42-0 win-loss record prior to her encounter with Aang.[2]

The Bei Fong family appears to be well-known and influential in the Earth Kingdom. In the episode "The Serpent's Pass," Toph's mere showing of her family's seal was sufficient enough to gain passage on a Ba Sing Se-bound ferry, despite lacking proper documentation to obtain a ticket normally.

Toph's hometown, Gaoling (高陵) (which means "tall hill"), is also a name of a county in Shanxi, a central province in China.

[edit] Plot overview

The Blind Bandit, champion of Earth Rumble VI.

In search of an earthbending teacher who "listens to the earth," the group arrives in the town of Gaoling and eventually come across the town's underground earthbending tournament, Earth Rumble VI. After watching Toph's performance and recalling the vision he experienced in the swamp, Aang believes she is that person.[3] When Xin Fu, the tournament host, calls for volunteer challengers, Aang takes up the offer for a chance to speak to her. Thanks to his airbending in conjunction with her inability to see what is not on the ground, Aang easily defeats Toph and upsets her winning streak. She, however, does not give him a chance to speak and immediately leaves the arena in a huff.

Aang later finds Toph at the Bei Fong estate, and he is eventually able to talk to her about his quest and need for an earthbending teacher. However, before Toph can make a decision, she and Aang are kidnapped by the earthbending tournament stable, who believe that Toph lost intentionally because they didn't see anything hit her.

The tournament wrestlers demand a ransom, which Katara, Sokka, Master Yu, and Toph's father (voiced by Cam Clarke) pay, but only Toph is released. The competitors announce that they will be handing Aang to the Fire Nation for the reward instead, prompting Katara to plead Toph for her help in rescuing Aang. Her father interjects, claiming that his daughter is blind, tiny, helpless, and fragile, and unable to help them. Slighted, Toph steps forward and single-handedly defeats the entire tournament stable and the host, Xin Fu. Master Yu is speechless and awed by Toph's amazing earthbending skill. Her father is silent.

That night, Toph tries to reason with her parents that she is skillful at fighting and enjoys it, and that she should be allowed to live a normal life like any other kid. She hopes that all of this new information does not change the way they feel about her. Toph's father replies that it does not change his love for her as a father, but it instead has made him realize that he has allowed her too much freedom. He plans to have guards watching over her all day long. Toph's protests are unheard.

Outside town, just as Aang and his friends are about to depart, Toph appears and claims that her father had changed his mind, saying that she was free to travel the world. Upon hearing this shaky testimony, the group is swift to depart, sailing into the night sky with a new member and earthbending teacher. With his daughter's sudden absence, Toph's father concludes that the Avatar has kidnapped his daughter and issues a large reward to Master Yu and Xin Fu to bring her back by any means necessary.[2] While traveling with the Avatar, Toph's social attitudes change considerably. She becomes much less snide and private, but nonetheless still retains her cocky attitude. Her bending abilities also improve throughout Book Two, as she has learned to bend metal using her special ability to "see" the impurities (small fragments of earth) in the metal.[4]

Toph joins Sokka and Suki in the series finale to hijack a fire nation airship to attempt to prevent the "burning of the old world". While commandeering an airship she uses Metalbending almost as proficiently as Earthbending. The three succeed in stopping the airship brigade, giving Aang the time he needed to defeat Phoenix King Ozai and to save the world. Toph's last appearance is complimenting Sokka's poorly drawn painting of the group by saying "they all look perfect", again pointing out that she can't see it, and makes everyone laugh except Sokka. It's unknown if she returned to her parents after the battle ended.

[edit] Character

When relaxing, Toph usually exposes her visibly dirty foot soles.

As a tomboy, Toph brings a totally new personality to the group. Unlike the nurturing Katara, flighty Aang or gruff but goofy Sokka, Toph is fiercely independent, sarcastic, direct, brutally frank, and confrontational--the choleric of the group. She appears to have the same carefree and adventurous personality as Aang, and she is very tomboyish in the way she acts and dresses - a contrast to the delicate doll her parents see her as. However, unlike Aang, who avoids fighting whenever possible, Toph loves battling and takes great pride in her earthbending skills.

Despite being blind, Toph is arguably the most perceptive of a person's true character in the group, most likely due to her ability to perceive people's lies by their heart rate. When Zuko attempted to join the Avatar's group, she was the only one who trusted his sincerity, while the others thought it was a trick of his. While a good judge of character and often logical, she can sometimes let her fierce pride cloud her judgment of a situation or people she knows, especially when she believes she has been insulted. This makes her quick to anger at others, but she never fails to admit her own fault once she has calmed down.

Toph's relationship with her parents is very conflicted: when Aang suggested that she should leave with them, Toph voiced reluctance of doing so. After she joined "Team Avatar", she claimed that she hated them. In "The Earth King", Toph receives a letter supposedly from her mother, saying that she seemed to understand her daughter. Toph is glad to go see her mother again, although it turns out to be a trap. And in "The Runaway", she confesses to Sokka that one reason she relied on Katara was that Katara cared about who she really was (in contrast to how her parents wouldn't let her just be herself), and added that was more than her own mother ever did. But Toph still does love her parents; she realizes that they just wanted to protect her and were most likely hurt when she ran away. In the end she sent them a letter (with Katara writing it down) using Sokka's messenger hawk.

Toph is brutally honest when criticizing others. She is vocal about her opinions on others regardless of status or age.[5] Her occasional spoiled attitude or aloofness may be related to her being the only child of one of the richest families in the Earth Kingdom. Thanks to her time as a competitor and champion of the earthbending tournaments, she is an expert in verbally taunting and insulting her opponents,[2] and on occasion her friends, particularly Sokka.[5]

Inside this hardened exterior, though, Toph hides trace insecurities in regards to her blindness. She has doubts about her appearance, being unable to see what she looks like.[6] Being coddled by her parents all her life because of her disability, Toph hates being tended to and catered for. Her eagerness to prove her strength and independence has led to some initial difficulties with Aang and his friends. Toph insists that she can "carry her own weight," and often mistakes a simple friendly gesture as an act of pity for her blindness. Her encounter with Iroh, however, has taught her that Aang, Katara, and Sokka care for her because they are friends, not because her disability makes them feel obligated to do so.

One of Toph's most obvious traits involves her very poor personal hygiene. She has been seen belching loudly (to the point that when a group of playwrights was gathering info on the Avatar and his companions, many believe she "saw" through echolocation), picking her nose, spitting, and is usually covered in dirt or, as she calls it, "a healthy coating of earth."[6] She is accustomed to lying on the ground and always walking around everywhere barefoot, leaving her soles quite soiled. This is common, as Earthbenders in the show walk barefoot, likely so that they are in direct contact with the earth at all times. Despite her uncouth habits, Toph is in fact well-educated in the manners and bearings of high society--she merely chooses to ignore them.[7]

[edit] Name

Toph is the only character within the series to express a surname, Bei Fong. In "The Serpent Pass," Toph's passport reads as 土國頭等護照北方拓芙 (tǔ guó tóu děng hù zhào běi fāng tuò fú) which translate as 'Earth Kingdom First Class Passport: Bei Fong Toph'. Here, her name means 'supported lotus,' which matches her parents view of their daughter as a flower that has to be protected. In "Tales of Ba Sing Se", her name was written as 托 夫 (Tuō Fū), which means "entrusted man". In "The Earth King," on the document from home, her name is reverted back to 拓芙. Her last name Bei Fong ( 北 方 ) is the Mandarin pronunciation for the word "North". The word 托 (Tuō) also means 'to support in one's palm' and the word used for child care[8] and is usually a prefix to another Fù ( 付 ) that means "pay".[9]

[edit] Earthbending

A visual of Toph's ability to feel vibrations traveling through the ground.

While the Earthbending style used by most Earthbenders is rooted in the Hung Gar style of Kung Fu, Toph's style is uniquely based on Chu Gar Southern Praying Mantis Kung Fu.[10] Though blind, Toph has the unique ability to use Earthbending to "feel" even the most minute vibrations in the earth, be it the presence of trees and buildings or the march of ants several meters away. Through this heightened seismic sense, she can visualize where people are, their relative distance to her, and their physical build. This sense provides her with a distinct advantage when facing other Earthbenders in combat, as they characteristically require contact with the ground and extract rocks from their surroundings.[2] As another result of her blindness, Toph has acquired an acute sense of hearing, enabling her to recognize people by the sound of their voices and home in on distant conversations.[11] Most significantly, Toph retains the ability to sense when a person is lying based on his or her heartbeat and breathing patterns. [12]

Unfortunately, due to her dependency on vibrations in the earth, Toph is left considerably vulnerable to attacks initiated in midair or opponents who require little constant contact with the ground, such as the case with Airbenders.[2] Terrain that impairs Toph's ability to sense vibrations also hinders her abilities. She has some difficulty with sand, which constantly shifts and lacks solidity, disallowing her to accurately "feel" her surroundings, describing the vibrations as "fuzzy" (During the finale, she displays her new proficiency at bending sand, but it is unclear whether or not she still has trouble seeing through it). As further illustrations of her affinity for the earth, Toph does not know how to swim and expresses an aversion for flying[13][14] as well as travelling underwater in a submarine.[12]

As of the end of Book Two, Toph is the only known Earthbender with the ability to bend metal. While Toph is seen concentrating in her iron prison, Guru Pathik explains to Aang in a parallel scene how metal is just a part of Earth that has been purified and refined. As a result of her ability to feel the vibrations in earth, Toph is able to locate the impurities (the small fragments of earth) and manipulate them to "bend" the metal portion.[4] Later on, Sokka gives Toph a small piece of meteorite, which being composed of earth and metal, she can easily mold into a myriad of shapes (one of which appeared similar to the Nickelodeon logo and subsequently transforms it into an arm bracelet she now wears).[15] She has said to have learned Earthbending from the original earthbenders, the badgermoles, when she ran away to a cave and came upon them. Through learning earthbending not as a martial art, but as an interaction with the world, she was able to learn how to effectively "see".

While other Earthbenders such as King Bumi or Aang may be more powerful, Toph is undeniably the most skilled Earthbender in the world at the end of the series; she is one of only two humans known to use the Badgermoles' Earthsight ability. In addition, Toph invented Metalbending and studies Sandbending (it is implied that Sandbending is difficult for "normal" Earthbenders). (www.wikipedia.org)