Missing Mom: Difference between revisions

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** Mustang's birth parents died when he was a young child.
** The homunculi in the manga have a father, but no mother. This is first addressed by Pride, when he mentions that he never knew what it was like to have a mother until he was adopted by Mrs. Bradley.
* Brock's mother Lola in ''[[Pokémon (anime)|Pokémon]]'' was said to have left their family ([[Dub -Induced Plot Hole|or dead in the American translation]]), but later returned.
** Jessie's mom Miyamoto went missing on an expedition to find Mew.
* Quint, the mother of Subaru and Ginga Nakajima in ''[[Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha]]'', was an [[Action Mom]] who was killed during a secret mission. Her death didn't seem to affect them in a negative way, and they remember her quite fondly. ''Nanoha'' is much more notable for ''[[Fundamentally Female Cast|missing men]]'', though, Nanoha herself has a father that her ''[[Triangle Heart 3 ~sweet songs forever~]]'' counterpart didn't (he was killed while in his bodyguard work while his wife Momoko was still pregnant with Nanoha).
* Nadeshiko in ''[[Cardcaptor Sakura]]'' died when Sakura was three years old. Like in the ''Nanoha'' example, there doesn't seem to be any negative repercussions and her presence can still be felt in the series... sometimes literally, since she visits her family every so often as a ghost.
* In ''[[Lucky Star]]'', Konata's [[Ill Girl]] mother Kanata died when Konata was very young, forcing her [[Otaku]] father to raise her on his own. An episode has her visiting her family as a ghost... which causes much terror for Konata and her father when she secretly joins in on a picture. [[Hilarity Ensues]], in a genuine way.
* In ''[[Clannad (visual novel)|Clannad]]'', Tomoya Okazaki lost his mother when he was young, and the grief caused his father to become an alcoholic bum in the process.
** In After Story, {{spoiler|the main character works to keep it from repeating with Ushio after getting a wake-up-call. That's because Nagisa, Ushio's mother, [[Death by Childbirth|died in childbirth]].}}
* ''[[Ranma ½]]'' has a boatload of missing mothers:
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** Kuzco from ''[[The Emperor's New Groove|The Emperors New Groove]]'' lacks in the parental department as well.
** The female eponymous character from ''[[Lilo and Stitch (Disney film)|Liloand Stitch]]'' lives with her older sister. Apparently their parents died recently, as she remembers things they used to say. Given her explanation ("It was raining, and they went for a drive"), we can assume they died in a car accident.
** ''[[The Princess and the Frog]]'': Charlotte just lives with her father and there's no mention of a mother. Averted with Tiana, though, who has her mother... and a [[Disappeared Dad|dad who was hinted to have died in]] [[World War OneI]] during the [[Time Skip]].
** ''[[Dinosaur]]'': Aladar is separated from his mother when his egg is unexpectedly taken away from her nest by a hungry Oviraptor while his mother was trying to protect said nest from [[Big Bad|the Carnotaurus]]. The Oviraptor then takes the egg into a nearby forest where it proceeds to crack it open and eat the fetus inside, but loses the egg to another Oviraptor. While the two Oviraptors begin to fight over the egg, Aladar's egg rolls off a ledge and into a nearby river where it is then picked up by a passing Pterodactyl. The Pterodactyl then flies the egg all the way to Lemur Island (home to Aladar's eventual foster family of lemurs) and leaves it there, where he will eventually hatch and be adopted. It's implied that his biological mother was either killed by [[Big Bad|the Carnotaurus]] (who also smashed her other eggs) or was among the many dinosaurs that was killed by the meteorite.
*** Inverted with [[Last of Her Kind|Baylene]] however. She, despite being one of the oldest dinosaurs in the film, actually lost her spouse, as well of all of her siblings and her descendants to the meteorite, therefore making her the last surviving Brachiosaurus on Earth. Also, Plio, the lemur girl that adopts Aladar, despite her father being the chief of the lemur clan, actually doesn't have a mother as well. Inverted with Plio herself, where even though she already has a daughter named Suri, she actually doesn't have a husband.
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* ''Fly Away Home'' begins with the heroine's mother dying in car crash.
* This is the plot of ''Grace Is Gone''. The mother died in Iraq, and the father tries to explain this to kids.
* This is Hallie's fate in ''[[The Parent Trap (1961 film)|The Parent Trap]]''.
* In ''[[Spaceballs]]'', princess Vespa has (naturally) no mother.
* The heroine of ''[[Whale Rider]]'' has no mother.
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* In the ''[[Alice, Girl from the Future|Alisa Selezneva]]'' series by K. Bulychev, Alisa nominally has both parents, but only her father is actually present.
* In [[Diana Wynne Jones]]' [[Chrestomanci]] story ''Charmed Life'', Cat and Gwendolyn's parents are killed.
* In Chris Roberson's ''[[Warhammer 4000040,000]]'' [[Blood Ravens]] novel ''[[Dawn of War]] II'', a [[Space Marine]] squad happens on two boys, who are searching for their mother; Sergeant Thaddeus at first thought she had abandoned them, and then realized that she could have been searching for them and been caught in the tyranid attack. When the boys realize that she is almost certainly dead, they are eager for [[Revenge]]; Thaddeus tells them to leave the fighting to the Marines, but they might be [[Blood Ravens]] one day, and they want to be, so they can fight.
* ''[[The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time]]'': Christopher, an eccentric boy, is raised by his father because his mother has died. {{spoiler|Or so he's been told, and the fact she hadn't}} is a major plot point.
* ''[[The City of Ember]]'' by Jeanne DuPrau is a double load. Lina Mayfleet has a missing mom that died when her younger sister Poppy was born ''and'' a [[Disappeared Dad]] that died shortly after the mother. But her friend Doon Harrow has a missing mom that has no explanation whatsoever. Many fans' favorite excuse is that she died when Doon was young.
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* ''[[Smart Guy (TV series)|Smart Guy]]'': Ditto with the above examples.
* ''[[Sanford and Son]]'': Lamont's deceased mother Elizabeth, who Fred is always claiming he's "coming to join" during his fake heart attacks.
** Also Harold's mother in the [[Trans -Atlantic Equivalent]], ''[[Steptoe and Son]]''.
* ''Make Room For Daddy'': The 1956-1957 season fits this trope, as Danny Thomas' original co-star Jean Hagen, left the show after the end of the third season and her character was [[McLeaned]].
* ''[[Step by Step]]'': Frank Lambert's wife abandoned him and their three children (J.T., Al, and Brendan). Although it is implied that she is still very much alive, she disappeared to parts unknown and has no contact with her children, leaving step-mother Carol Foster to fill the void.
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* In ''[[Castle]]'', Meredith—Richard's ex-wife and Alexis' mother—lives in Los Angeles to further her acting career, meaning she's not around. Played with, in that as much as Richard and Alexis care for her they're kind of ''glad'' she's missing—she's flighty, irresponsible (even more so than Richard) and [[The Ditz|ditzy]], with the kind of obnoxiously shallow personality that grates after a while.
* In ''[[China Beach]]'', [[Hooker with a Heart of Gold|KC Koloski]] is a missing mom for most of the time as far as her daughter Karen is concerned. There are references to a few visits in infancy, but Karen was mostly raised by a Vietnamese nanny until her mother got her onto one of the last choppers out of Saigon and sent her to the U.S. to live with KC's old friend (and former john) Boonie.
* Two ''[[Ghostwriter (TV series)|Ghostwriter]]'' team members have missing moms. Lenni's mom died when she was little and Rob only lives with his dad.
* The main characters' mother in ''[[Charmed]]'' was drowned by a Warlock when they were very young. Prue saw her die, Phoebe was too young to remember her at all, and Paige never knew her since she was raised by [[Muggle Foster Parents]]. They meet her in the past and some episodes feature her as a [[Spirit Advisor]], though.
* On ''[[M*A*S*H (television)|Mash]]'', it's eventually established that Hawkeye's mother died when he was ten (although, in one of several [[Series Continuity Error|continuity error]]s on the show, an early episode has him mention her as if she were alive).
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** April and Bianca's mother lives in Italy.
** In an odd twist, some of the fan favourites are parents who outlasted their kids' stay on the show. Miles may or may not qualify, given that Rabbit was actually a ghost.
* Samantha's mother on ''[[WhosWho's theThe Boss?]]''.
* The premise of ''[[My Two Dads]]''.
* [[Frasier]] Crane's mother was dead at the start of the series but had appeared on ''[[Cheers]]''.
* Elaine's mother on ''[[Seinfeld]]'' is never mentioned and presumably dead.
* Carrie's mother on ''[[The King of Queens]]''.
* Buddy's mother/Mr. Ernst's wife on ''[[Hey, Dude!|Hey Dude]]''.
* Sean's mother on ''[[Grounded for Life]]''.
* Tessa from ''[[Suburgatory]]''.
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* In ''[[Tom and Jerry]]'', Spike the bulldog has a son but his mate is nowhere to be seen.
* Pretty much everyone in ''[[Defenders of the Earth]]''—King Features' answer to the JLA that teams up [[Flash Gordon (comic strip)|Flash Gordon]], [[The Phantom (comic strip)|The Phantom]], [[Mandrake the Magician]] and his sidekick Lothar along with their children Rick, Jedda, K'Shin & Lothar Jr—suffered from this. Rick is orphaned in the very first episode {{spoiler|when his mother, assumed to be but never named as Dale Arden, dies resisting Ming's mind probes. Though they somehow manage to rescue her essence to power the Defenders' super computer, she is never mentioned again nor are Flash or Rick ever shown interacting with the computer as though it held emotional value for them}}. Jedda's mother is never mentioned at all, nor is LJ's (though one might presume that the absent women were Diana and Karma, their father's respective lovers from the source comics), while K'Shin was an orphan adopted by Mandrake.
* There's actually quite a few on ''[[The Fairly Odd ParentsOddParents]]''. Wanda, Chester, Wendell (Dr. Bender's son), and Trixie have no mothers onscreen despite their fathers appearing. Trixie mentioned her mother in her first appearance, but she has never appeared on screen, even when all the parents in Dimmsdale meet, leading some fans to believe this was a [[Retcon]].
* The mother of the protagonists of ''[[Street Sharks]]'' is never seen and her absence is hardly mentioned at all. All that is known is that she gave their father a watch for his birthday, which he valued greatly (implying that she was dead).
* ''[[Kid vs. Kat]]'': Coop & Molly Burtonburger's Mother is never seen or heard of, it is most likely that she is dead or divorced
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* Mr. Chan in ''[[The Amazing Chan and The Chan Clan]]'' appears to be a single father, as no mention is ever made of the childrens' mother. Popular fan theory is that he's a widower. (Not that farfetched, actually: [[Charlie Chan]] actually ''is'' a widower in the original books.)
* Sylvester the Cat and his son in the Robert McKimson-directed [[Looney Tunes|WB cartoons]] where Sylvester mistakes Hippety Hopper the kangaroo as a giant mouse. No mom seen, none mentioned.
* Reggie Bullnerd from ''[[Chalk ZoneChalkZone]]'' basically is seen with his father in the second, third, and fourth seasons. The whereabouts of his mother is still unknown.
* [[Only Sane Man|Jeera]] and [[The Ditz|Zariah]] from ''[[Tak and the Power of Juju]]'' just only lived with their [[Fat Bastard]] of a father.
* Keo from ''[[Yakkity Yak]]'' only lived with his dad.
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[[Category:Always Female]]
[[Category:Orphaned Index]]
[[Category:Missing Mom]]
[[Category:A Separation]]
[[Category:Alliterative Trope Titles]]
[[Category:Missing Mom{{PAGENAME}}]]