- Windom Earle
Windom Earle is a fictional character in the American TV series "
Twin Peaks ", played byKenneth Welsh .He is a former
FBI agent, and the former partner and best friend of AgentDale Cooper . He mainly features in the second season. He is anevil genius and a master of disguise, well-versed in esoterica from all parts of the world. He has extensive knowledge of the “dugpas ”, ancient sorcerers fromTibet dedicated to pureevil . Cooper says of Windom Earle “his mind is like adiamond : cold, hard and brilliant.”Earle claims to have killed his wife Caroline, the love of Cooper’s life. He also has a fascination with the
Black Lodge , whose secrets he is trying to unlock, as well asblack magic .Major Garland Briggs states that Earle was involved inProject Blue Book , as was Briggs; however, their investigation in which Earle was involved was directly related to Twin Peaks and not the usualUFO investigations.He is obsessed with
chess and this also plays a role in some of the episodes, when he decides to use real people as the pieces. When he had worked with Cooper, they played a game every day. Cooper enlists the help ofPete Martell , a genius chess player, tostalemate the game with as few pieces lost as possible.At one point, Earle leaves a plaster mask of Caroline on Cooper’s bed, with a tape recorder underneath. At another, he shuts down the town’s power station causing chaos. He also hides a bug within a
bonsai in Twin Peaks’ Sheriff’s Department, which Sheriff Truman thinks is fromJosie Packard .Towards the end of the second season,
Leo Johnson becomes Windom Earle’s slave, and is controlled by an electric dog collar. They captureMajor Garland Briggs , and Earle interrogates him fairly unsuccessfully usingHaloperidol . Major Briggs does, however, end up revealing that fear opens the gate to theBlack Lodge .Earle chooses, “three Queens” (Audrey, Donna and Shelly) for a “gathering of the Angels,” by giving them each a third of a poem ('"Love's Philosophy" by Percy Shelley) and arranging for them to meet in the Roadhouse. However, in the end he uses
Annie Blackburn for “queen” after she wins Miss Twin Peaks, and takes her into the Black Lodge.Earle appears to be killed by BOB in the Black Lodge, when he attempts to take Cooper’s soul. BOB says that Earle cannot ask for souls, but he will take Earle’s.
Dramatically, Earle represents an alternate Cooper - an FBI agent, once pure and following a code representing good, but ultimately being corrupted and pursuing evil; the implication being that even a pure soul like Cooper can wind up like Earle.
Related Studies
* Martha P. Nochimson, 1997. The Passion of David Lynch: Wild at Heart in Hollywood. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press: [http://books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=2rNQAePxT8QC&oi=fnd&pg=RA1-PA1&sig=XKXkUp0nKJraoZ6bf8Y0BoEWzTE&dq=the+passion+of+david+lynch Open Access Copy]
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