ý

Characters – WJECLinda in Blood Brothers

The main characters in Blood Brothers are Mickey Johnstone and Edward Lyons, and their mothers, Mrs Johnstone and Mrs Lyons. Learn about the complicated and difficult lives they lead.

Part of English LiteratureBlood Brothers

Linda in Blood Brothers

Linda is a kind and confident character. From the age of seven, she protects Mickey and stands up for him against his brother Sammy and anyone else who she feels in being unfair to him. As a teenager, she is open about her love for Mickey and often embarrasses him by expressing this in public. When she is in her late teens, she falls pregnant with Mickey’s baby and marries him.

As an adult, Linda has very few opportunities due to her poor background and early pregnancy. She stands by Mickey while he is in prison but becomes frustrated by him continuing to take anti-depressants after being released from prison, as she feels that they stop him being himself. Although she can be seen as selfish for having an affair with Edward, in many ways she is just as trapped by her circumstances as Mickey is.

Love triangle: Mickey, Linda and Edward.

Caring

How is Linda like this?

Linda stands up for Mickey against Sammy and other characters, including his teacher.

Evidence

Oh, leave him alone, you. Y’ big worm!

Analysis

Linda gets into trouble for being rude to a teacher for defending Mickey, demonstrating her loyalty to him and how she is willing to suffer negative consequences in order to stand up for him. Even as a child and teenager, she puts other people before herself.

Frustrated by Mickey taking pills

How is Linda like this?

Linda becomes more and more upset that Mickey does not appear to be trying to come off the pills - although she doesn’t realise that he later does try to stop taking them.

Evidence

An’ what about what I need? I need you. I love you. But, Mickey, not when you’ve got them inside you. When you take those things, Mickey, I can’t even see you.

Analysis

Linda has spent all of her life putting other people’s needs before her own, and as an adult this becomes too much for her. She finds the pressure on her relationship with Mickey too much when he is taking anti-depressants. We can see that what Linda really wants is for Mickey to be well and happy again.

Trapped in a hard life

How is Linda like this?

The Narrator sings about Linda’s limited life, trapped to a housewife role with no sign of escape.

Evidence

There’s a girl inside the woman / Who’s waiting to get free / She’s washed a million dishes / She’s always making tea.

Analysis

The use of the word free reminds the audience of how imprisoned Linda is in her role as a working class housewife. Just like Mickey, her life is repetitive with no hope of change. This could be what leads to her affair with Edward.