Log Lady

Margaret Lanterman (née Coulson), better known as the Log Lady, is a character in the television series Twin Peaks (1990–2017), created by Mark Frost and David Lynch. She is played by Catherine E. Coulson and appeared in both seasons of the show, the prequel film Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me, and the 2017 revival series.[1]

Margaret Lanterman
Twin Peaks character
First appearance"Pilot" (Twin Peaks)
Last appearancePart 15 (Twin Peaks: The Return)
Created byDavid Lynch and Mark Frost
Portrayed byCatherine E. Coulson
In-universe information
OccupationBallroom dancing teacher (retired)
ReligionCatholic
Birth date(1940-10-10)October 10, 1940

Character overview

The Log Lady is a fixture in the town of Twin Peaks by the time of Laura Palmer's murder, and most residents in the town regard her as crazy. This is mainly due to her habit of always carrying a small log in her arms, with which she seems to share a psychic connection, often dispensing advice and visions of clairvoyance which she claims come from the log;[2] prior to the murder, she delivers moving and cryptic warnings to Laura Palmer herself.[3][4] The Log Lady does not interpret the messages transmitted by the log, but instead functions as a medium for the information it conveys.[5]

In attempting to solve Laura's murder, Dale Cooper often makes use of the Log Lady's apparent ability to communicate, through the log, with a possibly supernatural realm. Cooper gradually loses his access to this realm as the series progresses, and the Log Lady becomes a less central figure,[6] though she does provide Cooper with at least one useful tip.[7]

When the series was syndicated to Bravo, Lynch created new Log Lady introductions for each episode ranging in length from under a minute to about three minutes.

History

Conceptual history

According to David Lynch, the Log Lady was an old idea of his, where he had intended to do a television series based on the character called "I'll Test My Log with Every Branch of Knowledge". The idea came about while working alongside Catherine Coulson on the set of Lynch's directorial debut, Eraserhead.[8]

History within the series and feature film

It is revealed that the Log Lady's husband was a lumberjack who died in a fire on their wedding night decades before the events of the series. (The Log Lady later says that her husband "met the devil".) Nothing is revealed of her husband beyond this, save for that at some point before he died, her husband returned from a trip to Glastonbury Grove (which served as an access point to the metaphysical realms of both the White and Black Lodges) with a jar of mysterious oil, which he claimed was for "opening a gateway". (However, when the story of her husband's death is first related in the series, Deputy Hawk mentions that the wood "holds many spirits", so it is possible that her husband's spirit resides in her log.)

On February 18, 1989, five days before Laura Palmer is murdered, Margaret briefly encounters Laura outside the local roadhouse, the Bang Bang Bar. Putting her hand to the log and then the stunned Laura's forehead, Margaret intones: "When this kind of fire starts, it is very hard to put out. The tender boughs of innocence burn first, and the wind rises, and then all goodness is in jeopardy."

On the night Laura is murdered, Margaret later claims "my log" witnessed "two men, two girls" both approaching Jacques Renault's cabin—which is located a distance away from her own cabin home in the woods. And then, not long after, she alleges the log heard the screams of a girl.

The Log Lady first comes to the attention of FBI Agent Dale Cooper at a town meeting on February 24—the day after Laura Palmer's murder, which Cooper is investigating. She later approaches Cooper in the Double R Diner, who is clearly skeptical at her claim "my log saw something that night."

Four days later, Cooper arrives at the Log Lady's cabin alongside Sheriff Truman, Doc Hayward, and Deputy Hawk. Cooper is now more open to the log's power following his questioning (perhaps also noting the local men's reverence for the Log Lady's knowledge).

The Log Lady also provides advice to the other townspeople, most notably an other-worldly message she tells Major Briggs to deliver to Cooper and, it is strongly implied, to Donna Hayward in a note mentioning Laura's involvement in the Meals-On-Wheels.

She also guides Cooper to the Bang Bang Bar to see a vision of the Giant on the stage to hear his words: "It is happening again," a reference to Maddy Ferguson's murder, which was occurring at the same time.

During the disastrous Miss Twin Peaks Pageant, the Log Lady is impersonated in a bizarre disguise by the insane former FBI Agent Windom Earle, who intends to abduct the winning girl to help provide the means to enter the Black Lodge. Following his abduction of Annie Blackburn, the Log Lady arrives while Cooper, Truman, and the sheriff's deputies are regrouping at the Sheriff's Station in a desperate move to learn Earle's location. She then presents Cooper with the jar of oil her husband retrieved from Glastonbury Grove, thereby, providing Cooper with the means to enter the Black Lodge.

In Twin Peaks: The Return, which is set roughly 25 years after the original series, a terminally ill Log Lady has several telephone conversations with Deputy Tommy "Hawk" Hill, providing guidance in the Sheriff Department's investigation into Special Agent Dale Cooper's disappearance. She passes away in the fifteenth episode, shortly after telling Hawk that her log has turned gold. The Sheriff's Department all gather together to mourn her death.

Background history

In The Secret History of Twin Peaks, an epistolary novel by Mark Frost, details of Margaret's childhood are revealed. Her maiden name is Coulson (the same as the actor who plays her) and she was born in October 10, 1940. In 1947, Maggie Coulson was one of three elementary school students who disappeared in the woods during a school nature walk (the others were Alan Traherne and Carl Rodd—owner of the Fat Trout Trailer Park in Fire Walk With Me). The children were found a day later, having lost time and bearing strange triangular marks on their skin. The book also revealed that the name of her late husband was Sam.[9]

Shortly after Twin Peaks premiered, the contemporaneous new television series Northern Exposure featured a reference to the Log Lady in Season 1, episode 5 "Russian Flu" (1990). Several characters find themselves on a viewing platform at a waterfall and peering through the binoculars see a "lady" holding something, which they determine to be a log. This happens while music reminiscent of Twin Peaks is playing.

In Season 1, episode 14 "Mr. Chaney" (1992) of the American television show Eerie, Indiana, the main protagonist, Marshall Teller is rescued from a werewolf by another character known as "The Kid with the Grey Hair" by means of hitting the werewolf on the head with a log. Immediately afterwards Marshall exclaims "It's you!" to which The Kid with the Grey Hair responds "Well I ain't the Log Lady."

The 2010 video game Alan Wake features many references to Twin Peaks, amongst which is a character called the "Lamp Lady", a woman who carries a lamp around in public while uttering cryptic sentences.

Coulson appears carrying a log in "Dual Spires", an episode of the TV series Psych which parodies Twin Peaks.

In 2014, Coulson reprised the role of the Log Lady in the music video for "Unknown Species" by Pretty Little Demons.[10]

The video game Deadly Premonition which is heavily influenced by Twin Peaks, features a character called Roaming Sigourney, also known as Granny with the Pot, who roams the town always carrying a pot containing an unknown dish. She claims that the Pot knows things that may pertain to the case being investigated in the game.

In the sixth episode of the first season of the Norwegian teen drama web series Skam there is a Halloween party where character Noora dresses up as Coulson for the party.

In the heavily influenced by Twin Peaks 2017 videogame Thimbleweed Park, the Log Lady is mentioned when the player tries to pick up a pile of wood when playing with one of the characters, Agent Ray. She refuses to pick up the wood because she isn't a log lady.

gollark: I don't really have any recommendations like that, then.
gollark: <@339893966503804928> Do you mean fiction books, books on some sciencey topic, or what?
gollark: There are quite a lot of books, see.
gollark: What *sort* of books?
gollark: > And why are so many software date glitches on December 31st of 1969?That's when the unix epoch starts, so a date of "0" or something is interpreted as that.

References

  1. "Official New Twin Peaks Cast Revealed!". Welcome to Twin Peaks. 25 April 2016. Retrieved 26 April 2016.
  2. Dery, Mark (2000). The Pyrotechnic Insanitarium. Grove Press. pp. 227. ISBN 0-8021-3670-2. Retrieved 2008-12-10. log lady.
  3. Stewart, Mark Allyn (2007). David Lynch Decoded. AuthorHouse. p. 56. ISBN 1-4343-4985-3. Retrieved 2008-12-10.
  4. Marcus, Greil (2007). The Shape of Things to Come. Macmillan. pp. 163–164. ISBN 0-312-42642-9. Retrieved 2008-12-10.
  5. Lavery, David (1995). Full of Secrets. Wayne State University Press. pp. 123–124. ISBN 0-8143-2506-8. Retrieved 2008-12-10.
  6. Nochimson, Martha (1997). The Passion of David Lynch. University of Texas Press. pp. 73–74. ISBN 0-292-75565-1. Retrieved 2008-12-10.
  7. Johnson, Jeff (2004). Pervert in the Pulpit : Morality in the Works of David Lynch. McFarland. p. 163. ISBN 0-7864-1753-6. Retrieved 2008-12-10.
  8. King, Susan (June 13, 1993). "Retro : Taking Another 'Peak' : BRAVO AIRS ALL 30 EPISODES OF SERIES WITH REAL LYNCHIAN INTROS". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved August 31, 2014.
  9. Frost, Mark (18 October 2016). The Secret History of Twin Peaks. Flatiron Books. ISBN 978-1-250-07558-1.
  10. Diaz, Eric (May 2, 2014). "The Log Lady Returns for Twin Peaks-Inspired Music Video". Nerdist. Retrieved May 21, 2016.
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