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'''Ralph White''' (October 23, 1930 - February 1963) is a character in [[Carrie (Novel)]] and an unseen character in [[Carrie (1976)]], [[The Rage: Carrie 2]], [[Carrie (2002)]] and [[Carrie (2013)]]. He is the father of [[Carrie White]] and the husband of [[Margaret White]]. He was not involved in raising Carrie, although all versions strongly suggest that it was through his blood that Carrie gained her powers.
 
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==Literary==
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Ralph White was a construction worker who came into contact with Margaret White in 1960. He was also a fundamentalist Christian and believed, as did his wife, that all forms of intercourse, even in marriage were sinful, as opposed to many other Christians who believe martial sex is something to be nurtured and enjoyed. Nevertheless, two years after meeting Margaret, he married her. After one night of raucous drinking with men, Ralph came home and heated by the booze, seduced Margaret, resulting in the forthcoming pregnancy of his daughter. A few months after the intercourse but shortly before the baby was born, some men were killed in a grisly construction accident, to include Ralph. As a result, [[Carrie White (Novel version)|Carrie]] was a posthumous child.
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==1976==
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Ralph is only mentioned by name during the film. [[Carrie White (1976)|Carrie]] revealed at one point, that "He Ran Away". Margaret tried to convince her child, that her husband was tempted by The Devil and taken away. Carrie, on the other hand, had a more realistic view of what transpired, feeling it was not a "Devil" but most likely another woman.
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==The Rage: Carrie 2==
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23 years later, Ralph was mentioned again by a woman named [[Barbara Lang (The Rage)|Barbara Lang]], who was the mother of [[Rachel Lang (The Rage)|Rachel]]. Barbara said, that Ralph was the father of Rachel. Rachel herself possessed similar powers to Carrie and was also considered an outsider, although Rachel was more independent and outspoken than Carrie. Meanwhile, a grown up [[Sue Snell (1976)|Sue Snell]] the only survivor of [[The Black Prom (1976)|The Blank Prom]] tried to inform Rachel, that she and Carrie were half-sisters, but with different mothers.
 
[[Category:Carrie (2002) characters]]
 
[[Category:Carrie (2002) characters]]
 
[[Category:2002]]
 
[[Category:2002]]

Revision as of 00:06, 7 January 2018

Ralph White (October 23, 1930 - February 1963) is a character in Carrie (Novel) and an unseen character in Carrie (1976), The Rage: Carrie 2, Carrie (2002) and Carrie (2013). He is the father of Carrie White and the husband of Margaret White. He was not involved in raising Carrie, although all versions strongly suggest that it was through his blood that Carrie gained her powers.

Literary

Ralph White was a construction worker who came into contact with Margaret White in 1960. He was also a fundamentalist Christian and believed, as did his wife, that all forms of intercourse, even in marriage were sinful, as opposed to many other Christians who believe martial sex is something to be nurtured and enjoyed. Nevertheless, two years after meeting Margaret, he married her. After one night of raucous drinking with men, Ralph came home and heated by the booze, seduced Margaret, resulting in the forthcoming pregnancy of his daughter. A few months after the intercourse but shortly before the baby was born, some men were killed in a grisly construction accident, to include Ralph. As a result, Carrie was a posthumous child.

1976

Ralph is only mentioned by name during the film. Carrie revealed at one point, that "He Ran Away". Margaret tried to convince her child, that her husband was tempted by The Devil and taken away. Carrie, on the other hand, had a more realistic view of what transpired, feeling it was not a "Devil" but most likely another woman.

The Rage: Carrie 2

23 years later, Ralph was mentioned again by a woman named Barbara Lang, who was the mother of Rachel. Barbara said, that Ralph was the father of Rachel. Rachel herself possessed similar powers to Carrie and was also considered an outsider, although Rachel was more independent and outspoken than Carrie. Meanwhile, a grown up Sue Snell the only survivor of The Blank Prom tried to inform Rachel, that she and Carrie were half-sisters, but with different mothers.