Sir Gaston is a character on ABC's Once Upon a Time. He débuts in the twelfth episode of the first season and is portrayed by co-star Sage Brocklebank in Season One and guest star Wes Brown in Season Five.
Gaston is based on the character of the same name, and is an allusion to the rose from the Disney film Beauty and the Beast.
History
Gaston, the eldest son of Lord LeGume, comes to meet Belle, after Belle's father Maurice arranges for the rendezvous. Because his kingdom needs Lord LeGume's army to end the ogre skirmishes, Maurice wants them to marry to solidify the alliance. Gaston is formally polite, but upon noticing Belle is unhappy with the set-up, he apologizes and even offers to leave to ease her discomfort. As he starts leaving, Belle decides it couldn't hurt to go on a walk with him. In the woods, Gaston tries to win her over with flowery praise, which Belle finds amusing, but she doesn't fall for it. He disputes the rumors about his apparent womanizing, although he is searching for a woman with a strong character as Belle's. Hearing a beast nearby, Gaston goes to track it down, and Belle follows, finding him near a pit where a young ogre has fallen in. He suspects the ogres are using their young as spies and wants to bring the fledgling to the castle, but Belle doesn't want the men torturing the ogre. She persuades him into letting her decipher the ogre's intentions by consulting a magical antiquities book. During this, she tells him about her mother instilling her love for books, and then lends him her favorite one, Her Handsome Hero, a tale of compassion and forgiveness. When he tries to kiss her, she is momentarily fazed before directing his attention to the antiquities book, which states the mirror of souls can prove if a person has evil in his or her heart. Since the item is only an hour's ride away, she goes to fetch it, and Gaston stays to keep watch on the ogre. Before she goes, he makes her promise that if the ogre does turn out to be evil, she'll bring Maurice and his knights. In her absence, Gaston tortures the ogre, believing the creature is inherently evil. The ogre attacks him and escapes, and when Belle finds him, he leaves out any mention of how he harmed the ogre. Maurice then deems the ogre dangerous and leaves with Gaston to hunt it down. Once the ogre is cornered, Gaston prepares to shoot it, and Belle stops him by making the arrow pierce the mirror. Only then, Belle notices the wounds on the ogre's back, and that Gaston's reflection in the mirror has a demonic gaze. She calls him out for hurting the ogre, while he argues that ogres are evil and he didn't need a mirror to know that. Belle allows the ogre to leave, but afterwards, news spreads of the ogres breaching the eastern region. Since her father cannot protect their people without Lord LeGume's army, she accepts Gaston's marriage proposal to secure the kingdom's future. ("Her Handsome Hero")
When war worsens as the ogres ravage the lands, Maurice's desperation to keep his people safe leads him to call upon the Dark One, Rumplestiltskin, for aid. With Maurice, Belle and several knights, Gaston stays in the war council room, awaiting a response from Rumplestiltskin. They fear for the worst after hearing loud pounding at the door, but it turns out to be the Dark One. Rumplestiltskin promises to help Maurice if Belle becomes his maid forever. Gaston objects out of worry over her safety, as does Maurice, but Belle consents in order to save the kingdom from the ogres. After Belle's departure, Gaston considers storming Rumplestiltskin's castle with an army. In the end, he decides to follow Belle's example of having compassion and forgiveness, and he goes to the castle to confront Rumplestiltskin alone. As soon as Rumplestiltskin opens the door, Gaston tries to engage him in a fight to secure Belle's release, but the Dark One quickly ends him, turning him into a rose. He later gives the rose to Belle, who has no idea it's Gaston, and cuts the plant's stem before sticking the flower in a vase. ("Skin Deep," "Her Handsome Hero")
After his death, Gaston goes to the Underworld, where he is unable to move on because of his unfinished business. He begins working at Underbrooke's pet shelter taking care of the animals there. In his locker, he has the book Belle once gave him, which only reminds him of the choice he made that led to his own death. Despite trying to throw out the book several times, it always returns to him. ("Her Handsome Hero")Family
Lord LeGume | Unknown | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Belle † | Gaston † | Younger brother(s)[1] | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Notes:
- Solid lines denote blood parent-child relationships
- Dashed lines denote marriage and engagement relationships that result in offspring
- † denotes the deceased
- Gaston is the eldest son of Lord LeGume
- Gaston and Belle were formerly betrothed
Trivia
Production Notes
- Wes Brown replaced Sage Brocklebank as Gaston for the episode "Her Handsome Hero." The "Skin Deep" shots of Gaston in the recap were re-filmed with Wes Brown.
- The line, "I am Sir Gaston, and you, beast, have taken..." was changed to "I am Sir Gaston, and you, beast, have taken my love."
- The new line is based on the version that was originally scripted for "Skin Deep," where Gaston says, "I am sir Gaston. I fight for honor. For freedom. For love. And you, Beast, have taken my love. That shall not stand. For now you will taste the cold steel of my blade ––."[2]
- Despite that, when archive footage was used in "Beauty," Sage appeared instead of Wes.
Disney
- Maurice states that Gaston is the son of Lord LeGume. According to the story reel included in the Platinum and Diamond Editions of the DVD and Blu-ray release of Disney's Beauty and the Beast, LeGume was originally intended to be Gaston's surname.[3] ("Her Handsome Hero")
- In addition, "légume" is French for vegetable.
Props Notes
- The sword Gaston is using during the ogre skirmishes[4] is the same sword King Fergus is using during the Battle for DunBroch in "The Bear King."[5][6] ("Her Handsome Hero")
Goofs
- In "Skin Deep," after Belle sets down Gaston's rose on the table and talks to Rumplestiltskin and the camera shifts back and forth between the two, the rose keeps changing positions in the vase though no one is touching it.
Appearances
Once Upon a Time: Season One | ||||||||||
"Pilot": | "The Thing You Love Most": | "Snow Falls": | "The Price of Gold": | "That Still Small Voice": | "The Shepherd": | "The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter": | "Desperate Souls": | "True North": | "7:15 A.M.": | "Fruit of the Poisonous Tree": |
Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent |
"Skin Deep": | "What Happened to Frederick": | "Dreamy": | "Red-Handed": | "Heart of Darkness": | "Hat Trick": | "The Stable Boy": | "The Return": | "The Stranger": | "An Apple Red as Blood": | "A Land Without Magic": |
Appears | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent |
Once Upon a Time: Season Five | |||||||||||
"The Dark Swan": | "The Price": | "Siege Perilous": | "The Broken Kingdom": | "Dreamcatcher": | "The Bear and the Bow": | "Nimue": | "Birth": | "The Bear King": | "Broken Heart": | "Swan Song": | |
Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | |
"Souls of the Departed": | "Labor of Love": | "Devil's Due": | "The Brothers Jones": | "Our Decay": | "Her Handsome Hero": | "Ruby Slippers": | "Sisters": | "Firebird": | "Last Rites": | "Only You": | "An Untold Story": |
Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Appears | Mentioned | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent |
Once Upon a Time: Season Seven | ||||||||||
"Hyperion Heights": | "A Pirate's Life": | "The Garden of Forking Paths": | "Beauty": | "Greenbacks": | "Wake Up Call": | "Eloise Gardener": | "Pretty in Blue": | "One Little Tear": | "The Eighth Witch": | "Secret Garden": |
Absent | Absent | Absent | Archive | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent |
"A Taste of the Heights": | "Knightfall": | "The Girl in the Tower": | "Sisterhood": | "Breadcrumbs": | "Chosen": | "The Guardian": | "Flower Child": | "Is This Henry Mills?": | "Homecoming": | "Leaving Storybrooke": |
Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent |
Once Upon a Time: Comics | |||||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||||
|
Once Upon a Time: Specials | ||||||||||
"Magic is Coming": |
"The Price of Magic": | "Journey to Neverland": | "Wicked is Coming": | "Storybrooke Has Frozen Over": | ||||||
Archive | Absent | Archive | Absent | Archive | ||||||
"Secrets of Storybrooke": | "Dark Swan Rises": | "Evil Reigns Once More": | "The Final Battle Begins": | |||||||
Absent | Archive | Archive | Archive |
Note: "Archive" denotes archive footage.
See also
References
- ↑ Maurice: "We have a visitor in the castle today: The eldest son of Lord LeGume."
("Her Handsome Hero") - ↑ ONCE UPON A TIME: "Skin Deep" script (PDF) pp. 28. Retrieved on July 14, 2019.
- ↑ Beauty and the Beast: The Purdum Reel (Alternate Intro). YouTube (December 8, 2011).
- ↑ File:517BTS3.jpg
- ↑ File:509ShowYourselfWitch!.png
- ↑ Once Upon a Time - Gaston/King Fergus Sword (Stunt) (4862). iCollector. Archived from the original on April 28, 2020. Retrieved on April 28, 2020.