Betty Applewhite Desperate Housewives Marc Cherry Alfre Woodard ⭐ Easy
Cherry’s response was the Applewhite family. In a 2005 interview with The Advocate , Cherry explained that he wanted to subvert the "perfect neighbor" trope. "I thought it would be fascinating to introduce a woman who is, by all accounts, the ideal suburbanite—elegant, musical, polite—but who is hiding a monster in her house," Cherry said. "The twist? The monster is her son."
Woodard played Betty as a woman carved from marble. While Teri Hatcher or Felicity Huffman would scream or cry, Betty would simply lower her eyelids or play a mournful Chopin nocturne. The image of Woodard sitting at a grand piano, wearing a severe black dress, while her son rattled chains in the basement, is one of the show’s most indelible images. Cherry’s response was the Applewhite family
In the gated, gossip-fueled utopia of Wisteria Lane, secrets are the currency of survival. From Bree’s locked pantry to Gabrielle’s torrid affair, every resident has something to hide. But in Season Two of ABC’s Desperate Housewives , creator attempted something audacious: introducing a Black family whose secret wasn’t just adultery or embezzlement, but a man chained in a basement. "The twist