Mrs. Doyle

Mrs. Doyle

Infobox character
colour =
name = Mrs. Doyle


caption = Pauline McLynn as Mrs Doyle
first = Good Luck, Father Ted
last = Going to America
cause = Series ended
nickname =
alias =
species = Human
gender = Female
age =
born =
death =
occupation = Housekeeper
title =
callsign =
family = Unnamed sister
spouse = Mr. Doyle
children =
relatives =
residence = The Parochial House, Craggy Island
episode =
portrayer = Pauline McLynn
creator =

Mrs. Joan Doyle (played by Pauline McLynn) is a character in the Irish television comedy "Father Ted". Mrs. Doyle is a housekeeper who looks after the three Priests and the parochial house on Craggy Island.

Refreshments

Mrs. Doyle is relentless in her responsibility to provide refreshments to the Priests and their visitors. She will never take no for an answer (especially when it comes to offering tea). Ever since episode 4 of series 1, Competition Time, she badgers anyone with her catchphrase "Go on, go on, go on, go on, go on, go on, GO ON!" As she said to Father Ted Crilly once, "Ah, you'll have some cake... there's cocaine in it! Oh, not cocaine, no! What am I on about, I meant, erm, what are they called... raisins!"

Mrs. Doyle has a unique test for her sandwiches. She eats one of them whole, and if it does not meet her standards, she throws all of the rest in the bin. Her sandwiches seem to cause her a great deal of physical discomfort and would appear to be revolting, but at the end of her test she assures everyone that "they're fine!" Mrs. Doyle was deeply hurt by Ted's introduction of a tea making machine called the Teamaster into the Parochial House [ [http://www.tv.com/father-ted/a-christmassy-ted/episode/52897/summary.html Father Ted: A Christmassy Ted - TV.com ] ] , but she sabotaged it and convinced Ted that she was the best at making the tea.

Character Analysis

Mrs. Doyle is the most mysterious character in the show. She is always referred to as "Mrs. Doyle" by other characters. She seems to be friends with a lot of women who are similar to her in dress and appearance, and perhaps even in occupation. They always refer to her as "Mrs. Doyle", and she never uses their first names either, referring to them as "Mrs. Dineen" or "Mrs. Jones" and so on. Apart from relentless tea-making, her other main jobs include bathing Dougal, digging drainage ditches, fixing the roof and cleaning the big window in the living room, which usually ends up with her careening off the window sill onto the floor. Mrs. Doyle is also prone to plummeting off the roof of the house.

Mrs. Doyle's first name was actually revealed to be Joan early on in the series (albeit only in the script, and not on-screen). In the script book the writers added a comment which stated that early on in writing they revealed a lot of information which could have been a dark secret over the series, and they seemed to use this later on as in the series 3 episode "The Mainland", the mention of Mrs. Doyle's first name is obscured by other loud noises (a fire bell in the police station, and plates clattering in the restaurant).

Mrs. Doyle's personal life outside of the parochial house is always kept a mystery, although we know that at one stage in her life, she must have had a husband. She is very secretive about him, at one point beginning a story by saying "Well, one time when my husband... I've said too much." She also mentions having a sister, although she only mentioned these two people once on separate occasions, and gave nothing away about either.

The writers of Father Ted, confirmed at Ted Fest 08, that Mrs. Doyle was married and worked just as hard at home for her husband as she did for Ted and Dougal.

Miscellanea

* Mrs. Doyle's mole moves from one side of her face to the other between Series 1 and 2 whilst in Series 3 it vanishes altogether.

*Pauline McLynn got back into her Mrs. Doyle character for a series of television adverts for Inland Revenue in 2001. She even used her trademark "Go on, go on, go on..." line, but she didn't say this in all the ads (in others, she said "You will, you will, you will...", "You don't, you don't, you don't...", and even said "Go online, go online, go online..." on another).

References


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