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词条 Snoop (The Wire)
释义

  1. Season three

  2. Season four

  3. Season five

  4. Production

     Origins 

  5. Reception

  6. References

{{About|the fictional character|the actress who plays the character|Felicia Pearson}}{{DISPLAYTITLE:Snoop (The Wire)}}{{Infobox character
| name = Felicia Pearson
| series = The Wire
| image = The Wire Snoop.jpg
| image_size = 250px
| first = "Homecoming" (episode 3.06)
| last = "Late Editions" (episode 5.09)
| creator = David Simon
| portrayer = Felicia Pearson
| alias = Snoop
| occupation = Drug organization enforcer
| spouse = Nicole F.
| gender = Female
| family = Unnamed sister
}}

Felicia "Snoop" Pearson is a fictional character on the HBO series The Wire, played by the actress of the same name. She is a young female soldier in Marlo Stanfield's drug dealing organization, the earliest protégé of Chris Partlow.[1] As one of the experienced leaders of Stanfield's crew, she commits many ruthless murders on their behalf.

Season three

Snoop is a gangster shown mid-way in the escalating war between the Barksdale Organization and the Stanfield Organization as one of the new recruits in training, under the wing of Chris Partlow. She is often seen hanging out with Chris and other Stanfield peers before eventually being assigned her first hit by Chris, who deems her ready to kill. She is responsible for killing Barksdale soldier Rico in a drive-by shooting on Poot Carr's corner. She also takes part in Chris' efforts to foil an assassination attempt against Marlo Stanfield. After Stringer Bell is killed by Omar Little and Brother Mouzone, Snoop boasts that she and Chris Partlow had murdered him.

Season four

Snoop is shown a year later as an adept enforcer and significantly recognized as part of the trusted inner circle of Marlo. She and Chris are assigned most of the hits that Marlo initiates, with Snoop assisting Chris in many murders by way of luring the victim to a secluded area and by helping to organize the method of concealment. She is never shown as the actual murderer. The pair dispose of the bodies by depositing them in abandoned buildings, covering them with quicklime and tarps, and boarding up the buildings again. When they re-board the doors, they use a nail gun that Snoop purchased in the first scene of the season. Later, the nail gun's distinctive nails become key clues: every house boarded up with those nails contains a body. Before the police discover this, however, Sergeant Hauk had pulled them over and spotted the nail gun, so Chris had discarded it, to Snoop's chagrin.

Among the people Chris and Snoop murder are "Lex" Anderson, Little Kevin, Old Face Andre, several New York drug dealers, and a security guard who talked back to Marlo. Tired of always concealing her crimes, Snoop tries to keep the guard's badge as a souvenir, but Chris throws the badge away. The pair were also responsible for intimidating Bodie Broadus into accepting Marlo's drug supply and for recruiting middle school child Michael Lee into their organization. They also train the next generation of soldiers for Stanfield's organization, including O-Dog.

In "Final Grades", the last episode of Season 4, Snoop alludes to being a lesbian while talking to Bunk during a routine police search.

Season five

In season five, Snoop continues to act as muscle for Marlo, alongside Chris Partlow. Tension between her and Michael becomes a recurring theme. Snoop carries out orders from her superiors without question, but Michael tends to voice his opinion about certain situations. This occurs when Chris, Snoop and Michael are about to make a hit on Junebug (a rival drug dealer spreading malicious but trivial words about Marlo's sexuality) and after Omar kills Savino Bratton.

Snoop is murdered by Michael when he rightly suspects that she is about to kill him, due to Marlo's suspicion that he had been talking to the police about the Stanfield organization. When Michael draws his gun, Snoop compliments him on his intelligence and asks him how he knew that she was going to kill him. She accepts her fate and nonchalantly looks into the car's wing mirror. Her final words are, "How my hair look, Mike?" Michael answers, "You look good, girl." He then shoots her, presumably in the head.

Production

Origins

Snoop's name is seen for the first time, very briefly, in a season three episode, written on a post-it note and being pinned up to the board. Her name is also pinned on the board in the first episode of season 4 "Boys of Summer". She can be seen for the first time in the widescreen version of 'Hamsterdam' (Season 3, Episode 4), sitting with Justin and Fruit in the gymnasium during Colvin's speech. In the original 4:3 broadcast release she is cropped from the shot. Her name and picture are up on the details board under Chris Partlow as Felicia Pearson AKA "Snoop". Her name can once again be seen briefly early in the season 5 episode "Transitions", as well as in Randy Wagstaff's police file in "The Dickensian Aspect".[2] "Snoop" is the actress's nickname in real life.[3]

Reception

Several critics have praised Pearson's performance as especially frightening.[4][5][6][7] Writer Stephen King called the character "perhaps the most terrifying female villain to ever appear in a television series".[6]

References

1. ^{{cite web| year = 2004| title = Org Chart - The Street| publisher = HBO| accessdate = 2006-07-27| url = http://www.hbo.com/thewire/orgchart/street.shtml}}
2. ^{{cite web| year = 2006 | title = Character profile - Snoop | publisher = HBO | accessdate = 2006-09-15 | url = http://www.hbo.com/thewire/cast/characters/snoop.shtml}}
3. ^{{cite web | year = 2006 | title = HBO series The Wire's Snoop Pearson | publisher = Danaroc.com | accessdate = 2006-09-17 | url = http://www.danaroc.com/inspiring_032006snooppearson.html}}
4. ^{{cite news|author=Ken Tucker |year=2006 |title=5 Reasons to Live |publisher=Entertainment Weekly |accessdate=2006-09-26 |url=http://www.ew.com/ew/article/commentary/0,6115,1528101_7_0_,00.html |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20061212084914/http://www.ew.com/ew/article/commentary/0,6115,1528101_7_0_,00.html |archivedate=December 12, 2006 }}
5. ^{{cite news| author = Michael Endelman| year = 2006| title = "Wire" education| publisher = Entertainment Weekly| accessdate = 2006-09-26| url = http://www.ew.com/ew/article/commentary/0,6115,1533484_3_0_,00.html#TheWireHBO}} {{Dead link|date=February 2012|bot=RjwilmsiBot}}
6. ^{{cite news| author = Stephen King| year = 2006| title = Setting Off a 'Wire' Alarm| publisher = Entertainment Weekly| accessdate = 2006-09-26| url = http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,1333799,00.html}}
7. ^{{cite news| author = Neil Drumming| title = High Wire Act| publisher = Entertainment Weekly| accessdate = 2006-09-27| url = http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,1535094,00.html| date=2006-09-15}}
{{The Wire}}

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