Scarlet Fever

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

"Scarlet" as a name has always invoked an air of passion and sensuality. Usually a female-oriented trope, the name "Scarlet" (sometimes with two T's) often denotes a woman with a fiery, indomitable personality and complicated morality. If she's a hero, she'll be on the aggressive side. If she's a villain, she's almost never straightforwardly evil. As one can expect, she is often a Lady in Red and/or a Fiery Redhead, especially if "Scarlet" is actually a nickname or codename.

While male examples exist (Captain Scarlet and The Scarlet Pimpernel come to mind), they usually have a much different feel, playing up the boldness of the color red rather than any direct sexualization.

Examples of Scarlet Fever include:

Anime and Manga

  • Erza Scarlet from Fairy Tail. Her last name was chosen for her by Jellal because of her red hair.
  • Freezing's Dr. Scarlet Ohara, who's willing to do anything to save the world including knowingly (if extremely reluctantly) setting up her teenage human test subjects to die to ensure funding for her real project.

Comic Books

Literature

Music

  • Scarlet's Walk is an album by Tori Amos where the character, Scarlet, travels the U.S. post 9/11.

Tabletop Games

  • The sultry Miss Scarlet from Clue.
  • The Scarlet Empress, one of the primary villains in Exalted.

Video Games

Western Animation

  • Scarlett, the most well-known female hero from G.I. Joe. Her backstory is an homage to Gone with the Wind, as her birth name is Shanna O'Hara and she's from Atlanta.
  • On The Critic, Jay's boss Duke meets Alice's Southern Belle sister Miranda at a costume ball and is instantly smitten with her, nicknaming her Scarlet.

Real Life