Andrea

Andrea is a heavy-set Goth classmate of Daria Morgendorffer at Lawndale High. She was first seen in the very first episode of Daria, Esteemsters, as a member of Mr. DeMartino's history class. The mystery goth was an unnamed background character until the fourth Daria episode, Cafe Disaffecto, where she is addressed by Mr. O'Neill as "Andrea" (an-DRAY-ah).

Young woman of mystery
Unlike many other characters in Daria, virtually nothing is learned about Andrea during the five years that Daria ran on MTV. The tone is set in Cafe Disaffecto when we catch the end of Andrea's coffeehouse poem, which concludes "I'm here. But where are you? Sure, I see your body. Anybody home in that rotting bag of flesh?" Andrea was voiced by Susie Lewis-Lynn in seasons 1-3, then by Janie Mertz in seasons 4-5.

The few hints we get regarding Andrea confirm her cynical outlook on life. Her locker is adorned with a skull and crossbones poster and a biohazard poster (Arts 'N Crass). She is happy to make a bet on Mr. DeMartino getting injured in the DJ/Faculty roller hockey game (and it is implied that she wins the betting pool). When Quinn foolishly tries to raise money from Lawndale High Students so she can get plastic surgery (Too Cute), Andrea asks Quinn if she's worried there might be a hell.

The only other hint of Andrea's inner life comes from cartoon strips in The Daria Database drawn by "Andrea 666" called "Gothic Nights (The Adventures of Queen Hecuba)." The three cartoon strips deal with Queen Hecuba (a thinner, more regal version of Andrea) vanquishing enemies consisting of Upchuck, Kevin, the Lawndale High School faculty (except Janet Barch) and Mack Mackenzie. While the reasons for her antipathy toward the others is understandable, her beef with Mack is puzzling - the other enemies are all tricked into defeat and humiliations, while "Sir Mack the Fearless" is Hecuba's "archenemy" and requires fighting. That strip ends with a spectral version of Barch arriving, which terrifies Mack into retreat and causes Hecuba to give Barch a job; this makes Barch the only teacher given a positive role in the strip. Does Andrea like Barch?

In one of the strips, Andrea seeks to rescue her brother, Damien, from an evil king. This could imply that Andrea is not an only child, though no more information is forthcoming.

Andrea in "Mart of Darkness"
At the end of Mart of Darkness, Daria and Jane locate a clerk at Payday that seems to be avoiding them. The clerk is revealed to be Andrea, who states that she was trying to avoid Daria and Jane because she didn't want to hear them mock and "cut her up" verbally for working at Payday, a job imposed by her parents. However, Daria and Jane state that, as far as they are concerned, they never saw her at all. Andrea's secret is (theoretically) safe.

Andrea in Is It College Yet?
In Is It College Yet?, Upchuck hits on Andrea and offers to take her away from Jodie's graduation party. Andrea is amazed that Upchuck is actually trying to hit on her... and then accepts Upchuck's offer, to Upchuck's surprise. No reason is given for Andrea accepting the offer, and nothing is known about what actually happened afterward.

Andrea in Fanfiction
In some early Daria fanfiction, Andrea was seen as a natural ally of Daria and Jane. In some stories, Andrea has the sort of "omnicapability" that was granted to Daria, making her a master of martial arts, firearms, and other Really Cool Things. The fact that virtually nothing was known about Andrea facilitated such stories, as Andrea was simply a blank slate upon which any sort of characterization could be projected. (Tiffany is another such blank slate, although less appealing.)

Sometimes Andrea is given the fanon last name "Hecuba," from the Gothic Nights strip. Another popular fandom name is 'Thorne', and some fanfic writers use both, for 'Hecuba-Thorne'.

Legion of Lawndale Heroes
In the Legion of Lawndale Heroes series, Andrea's character has progressed to become a fusion of the 'swimsuit model' alter-ego seen in the closing credits of 'Is It College Yet?' and the DC Comics/Legion of Super-Heroes character Dream Girl. She has been shown as having left Lawndale after the destruction of Lawndale High, and discovering a promising career as a model (albeit not of the exacting standards needed to become a supermodel). She has also discovered that she has the ability to have precognitive visions and/or dreams that are accurate out to one year in advance of the event.

(Andrea used this ability to warn Mack Mackenzie of the events surrounding Danielle Todds's arrival at Legion Tower. Because of her warning (although she does know know it yet, Andrea is the most powerful precognitive on Earth at this time) the Earth known as 'D-247' escaped the fate of other Earths due to the events of the 'Daylight Crisis'.)

In LLH 14.2 'I Burn For You'), it is shown that Andrea (presumably due to the aftereffects of events in the Judith Saga), no longer possesses precognitive powers; these have been replaced with strong and currently undefined powers of a mystical nature. To date, Andrea has been shown to be able to use her powers to open up inter-dimensional 'wormholes' for unexplained purposes. When using her powers, Andrea manifests glowing energy signatures in the form of rune-like characters that appear in the immediate area around her; it appears that the more powerful or complex the effect she tries to create/activate, the more complex and numerous the rune-sign about her.)

Tales of the Ringbearers
In the Tales of the Ringbearers fic 'Spirit Stick', Andrea is one of four members of the 'Zombie Legion' destroyed by Archangel when he is accidentally transported over to the Earth known as 'D-404'. At this time, it is unknown if 'D-404' is the same Earth seen in the fic 'A Rookie Mistake', or another world in which the Legionnaires were zombiefied. (The latter seems more likely, as Archangel's Defender Ring identified the year as 1962 - a good twenty-five to thirty years before most of the 'mainstream' Legionnaires were even born.)

Andrea-centric Fanfiction

 * "Andrea," by Artemis Ostrogoth
 * "Four Seasons: The Re-releasing," by TAFKA
 * "Reflections," by TAFKA
 * "Woosh," by Jill Palmer