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Sponge Trotter (also simply known asSponge) is one of the two main antagonists (alongsideAunt Spiker) of the 1961 Roald Dahl novelJames and the Giant Peach, and it's 1996 movie adaptation. She is one ofJames' two cruel aunts and Aunt Spiker's sister.
After the death of James' parents, Sponge and Spiker had no choice but to take in James and "raise" him. Instead of caring for James, she and Sponge force him to do all the work around the house. They had a tendency to beat James when he disagrees with them or backtalks, and almost always make him go into his room without meals. Spiker and Sponge never call James by his name, but always refer to him with mean, insulting, and opprobrious names such as "you nasty little beast". Why they despise him so much is unknown.
Like her sister, Sponge also hates James to the point that she would kill him over money. Sponge also appears to have little regard for life in general since she tried to eradicate the insect crew. Overall, Sponge shows no actual redeeming traits and is nothing more than a sadistic child abuser and eventfully, an attempted child murderer.
Appearance[]
Aunt Sponge is a greedy, selfish and morbidly fat woman, who is equally cruel, repulsive, unsympathetic and vituperative as her sister Spiker, and presumably the younger of the two. Both Spiker and Spiker are vain, each singing praises of their imagined beauty while they are actually grotesque, but each usually ends up attacking the other's repulsion. Dominated by Spiker, Sponge is apparently a bit more dimwitted, gluttonous, and acquisitive, thinking of eating the peach while Spiker seizes the money-making and remunerative opportunities it will bring to make them rich. According to the musical, Sponge also has "voluptuous curves" and a "solid gold tooth". Sponge attempts to save her own life instead of Spiker's when she notices the giant peach rolling towards her. However, they trip up over each other, and both meet the same fate.
History[]
Sponge and Spiker adopted James after his parents were eaten by arhinoceros and are very abusive and treat him like a slave, forcing James to do hard labor and feeding him nothing but fish heads. Aunt Spiker is thin, quiet and cold. Both of them have a terrible hatred of insects and bugs and kill them in a variety of awful ways, and are thus hated by them as well. It is unknown if Spiker and Sponge are the sisters of James' father or mother. In the book, the illustrations show them to be elderly, so they could possibly be his great-aunts.
Sometime later, Sponge and Spiker discover a peach on a withered old tree, and watch it grow to immense proportions in a matter of seconds. They use the giant peach as an attraction, making lots of money as James watches from the house, not allowed to leave or play with the other children. That night, Sponge and Spiker send James outside to pick up the garbage dropped by their customers.
Later, Sponge and Spiker go searching for James, annoyed at his lack of work at cleaning up the garbage. As they look for him, they tease about the rhino when Spiker hears a sound (Centipede gnawing at the peach's root). Sponge and Spiker investigate where the noise is coming from, but then are thrown off balance by a sudden shaking of the ground. They turn around to see the peach about to roll in front of them and rush to their car in panic. After adjusting the seat and while grabbing the steering wheel, Spiker impatiently tries to start the car, but is unable to. As the peach rolls closer to them, Spiker keeps trying to start the car, unable to step on the accelerator.
One night, while navigating on the peach, James has a nightmare of him as a caterpillar being chased and attacked by Spiker, Sponge, and the rhino, eventually getting trapped in a blind alley before he awakens.
Later, when James escapes on the giant peach, he is followed by Spiker and Sponge all the way to New York City, apparently somehow managing to drive their now crushed car under the ocean and reach New York covered in seaweed and crabs, where they try to convince the authorities that James is a liar and that he be released to them. However, James, now no longer afraid of his aunts, stands up to them and reveals the truth about their horrible treatment of him.
Fed up with James daring to stand up to them, Spiker and Sponge furiously attack him with firemen's axes until the sudden reappearance of the insects came to James' rescue. The aunts are frightened to see the bugs that turned their nephew against them. James and the bugs tie her and Sponge up with Miss Spider's thread, and the beat cop has them taken away on a crane. What happens with Spiker and Sponge afterwards is completely unknown, but most likely, they were arrested for child abuse after being taken away, paying for their crimes once and for all. However, another possibility could be that, with their faces clogged with spider web, they were not able to breathe and suffocated to death, but it is plausible that James would have not allowed to get his aunts killed even though they tried to kill him.
After the credits, there is a scene showing an arcade-like game which consists of controlling a rhinoceros to attack replica models of Spiker and Sponge.
Book[]
In the book, when the peach gets loose and rolls, it rolls over her and Sponge, killing them both, and they subsequently do not reappear at the end.
In the 1996 film, Spiker and Sponge survive and pursue James to New York City in their beat-up car (in the Ice World, James and Miss Spider see a shipwreck with figureheads, having a terrible resemblance of her and Sponge). Upon arriving in New York, both are soaked as if they had been driving their car across the seabed. They attempt to kill James but are tied up with Miss Spider's silk and arrested.
In the 2015 musical, which combines material from both the book and the film, James' aunts survive like in the film. However, the peach lands atop the Empire State Building, and eventually it falls off at the story's climax. As such, Spiker and Sponge are both crushed to death by the peach-pit like in the book.
Gallery[]
Spiker and Sponge in the book.
Spiker and Sponge in the original 1961 book.
"Get up, you lazy little bug!"
Spiker and Sponge ordering James about.
Sponge and Spiker mocking James and ordering him to start on his chores.
Spiker and Sponge in their lounging clothes.
Spiker and Sponge posing for a picture.
Spiker (right) and Sponge (left) after they chased James and the peach from England to New York.
Spiker and Sponge's villainous breakdown.
Sponge trying to kill James.
"What are they?"
Sponge and Spiker being scared and cringing at the bugs.
"HELP!"
Sponge & Spiker being pulled up with Miss Spider's webbing.
Spiker and Sponge tied by Miss Spider's string after James exposes them of their true colors.
"Look! The little maggot's stuffing his face with our peach! Get him, Sponge."
Trivia[]
Both the novel and the film never specify whether Sponge and Spiker were the sisters of James' dad or James' mom. However, considering that in the film they insulted James' dad, it is possible that they were sisters of James' mom at least in the film canon, though they also mocked about her, albeit not so bad like they did with his father. Another explanation could be, also, that they are actually James' great-aunts, especially considering that they are depicted to be old in the book.
Aunt Sponge was portrayed by Miriam Margoyles, who also voiced theGlowworm in the same film, and later voiced the Matchmaker in Disney'sMulan.
When James and Miss Spider were searching for both Mr. Centipede and a compass, one of the sunken ships had both the aunts on the mast for unknown reasons. Interestingly, neither Miss Spider nor James take note of this, and the matter even does not go addressed later on.
When the aunts arrive on New York, it is implied that they drove their car underwater, which is really unrealistic, considering the distance between England and New York and how they would have been able to not breathe during all that time. A possible explanation could be that when the peach rolled over the car, it could have given magic powers to the vehicle and its occupants, and thus the car was given the ability to be drivable underwater and the aunts were given the ability to breathe underwater or hold their breath for days.
With the logic of them gaining powers from the peach, this could mean that they also survived being tied in the webbing, since normally they would not be able to breathe with their faces being clogged with webbing. That would mean they are most likely alive, but imprisoned.
Aunt Sponge in the film resembles her appearance in the original 1961 book.