Caroline Swann | |||||||||||||||||
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Emmerdale character | |||||||||||||||||
Portrayed by | Sarah Moyle | ||||||||||||||||
Introduced by | Kathleen Beedles (2007) Gavin Blyth (2009) |
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Duration | 2007, 2009 | ||||||||||||||||
First appearance | 25 May 2007 | ||||||||||||||||
Last appearance | 8 December 2009 | ||||||||||||||||
Classification | Former; recurring | ||||||||||||||||
Profile | |||||||||||||||||
Date of birth | 1971 | ||||||||||||||||
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Caroline Swann (née Potts) is the sister of Laurel Thomas. Caroline first appeared on 25 May 2007, at the hospital when her mother Hilary woke up from a coma caused by a car crash. The elder of Doug and Hilary's two children, Caroline was always her mother's favourite as a child, even in adult life, causing some resentment from Laurel. Caroline returns on 2 December 2007 when her parents return to their home after staying with Laurel and Ashley in Emmerdale. Caroline says that her husband, Ben, has been made redundant and they have lost their house, so without asking they had moved into Doug and Hilary's house. Doug and Hilary then decide to move back to Emmerdale.
Caroline was seen again on 8 December 2009 when Doug and Ashley turn up at Hilary's house to see Laurel, following Ashley and Laurel's separation. This was her last appearance to date.
Read more about this topic: List Of Minor Emmerdale Characters (2007)
Famous quotes containing the words caroline and/or swann:
“I have eyes to see now what I have never seen before.”
—Anonymous, U.S. correspondence student. As quoted in The Life of Ellen H. Richards, ch. 9, by Caroline L. Hunt, quoting Ellen Swallow Richards (1912)
“As if the musicians did not so much play the little phrase as execute the rites required by it to appear, and they proceeded to the necessary incantations to obtain and prolong for a few instants the miracle of its evocation, Swann, who could no more see the phrase than if it belonged to an ultraviolet world ... Swann felt it as a presence, as a protective goddess and a confidante to his love, who to arrive to him ... had clothed the disguise of this sonorous appearance.”
—Marcel Proust (18711922)