Tag-Team Suicide

A plot pattern that occurs frequently in Shakespeare's plays. In modern works, it's often a homage to Romeo and Juliet. The pattern goes as follows:


 * 1) Alice and Bob are in love with each other.
 * 2) Something happens to Alice that makes Bob think she is dead, or otherwise unreachable.
 * 3) In despair, Bob commits suicide.
 * 4) Alice returns, and then realizing that Bob is dead, Alice commits suicide.

Often there can be variations but the end result is often the same. It is usually an example of love but it can also be an occasional example of despair over losing a valued rival.

Anime and Manga

 * Checker does this after Charlene dies in the incredibly bad Joseph Lai psuedoanime Space Transformers.

Comic Books

 * Used in an X-Men storyline that was a homage to Romeo and Juliet, making the rival families one of humans and one of mostly mutants to boot.
 * And then later on.

Film

 * Played with in Bram Stokers Dracula. At the beginning of the film, set in medieval times, Dracula's noble love throws herself off a tower when she hears false news of his death in combat. When Dracula returns, the bishop tells him that she is damned to hell for her suicide. Enraged, he renounces God and becomes a vampire, technically committing suicide.

Folklore and Mythology

 * Also in the original myth of Pyramus and Thisbe (recounted by Ovid) that Shakespeare ripped off referenced when he wrote Romeo and Juliet. Probably the Ur Example.

Literature

 * In New Moon
 * In the Robotech novelizations Roy Fokker does this after the death of Captain Kramer when he decides life just isn't worth living anymore, pulls out his IV, and leaves the hospital to see Claudia effectively killing himself.

Theatre

 * From Shakespeare:
 * Romeo and Juliet is perhaps the most famous example. Juliet takes a sleeping potion as part of a plan for her and Romeo to get out of Verona. Friar Lawrence's information to Romeo explaining the plan never arrives, and when Balthasar tells him of Juliet's apparent death, he buys poison from an apothecary, goes back to Verona and heads for the Capulet tomb to die alongside Juliet, kills Paris who thinks he's there to do the evil version of Due to The Dead, and then poisons himself. Juliet wakes up, finds Romeo dead, and then kills herself with Romeo's dagger.
 * Parodied in Pyramus and Thisbe (the Show Within a Show in A Midsummer Nights Dream)
 * Antony and Cleopatra
 * This in turn was inspired by Plutarch's Life of Antony (circa 1st century CE), making this both Older Than They Think and Older Than Feudalism.
 * Pyramus and Thisbe itself come from a much older source -- Ovid's Metamorphoses.
 * Cassius and Titinius in Julius Caesar.
 * In the play The Servant of Two Masters, the eponymous servant is trying to hide the fact that he is serving another from his two masters, Florindo and the cross-dressing, in disguise Beatrice. When each (at different times) finds the others belongings mixed in with their own- thanks to a mix up from the sevant- the servant claims he put the items there and that they belong to him, given to him by his recently deceased ex-master. Little does he know, that Beatrice and Florindo are actually lovers trying to find each other (made more difficult by Beatrice's disguise), and so on hearing of their beloved's demise, both decide to end it all... luckily, this is a comedy and they do so by drowning themselves in the same fountain and find each other just in time... leading to even more confusion.

Web Original

 * Played with for laughs in one particular YouTube video by Smosh, about Batman and Robin making their own YouTube how-to guide. It involves a 'euthaniser gun', a rabid dog, and Batsy picking a particularly bad time to pull a particularly Jerkass practical joke...

Real Life

 * Truth in Television: Rudolf von Habsburg, heir to the throne of Austria-Hungary, and his lover Mary Vetsera killed each other after the emperor demanded they break off their affair. Or did they? This is the official version, but ten thousand theories of varying crackpot-levels have been proposed. Was he killed by the French for being pro-German? The Germans for being pro-French? Did Rudolf murder Vetsera and kill himself in grief? Did the Emperor know? Does the Pope know? It's complicated.