PropertyValue
rdfs:label
  • Clock Tower Lady
rdfs:comment
  • The Clock Tower lady represented the Hill Valley Preservation Society and collected donations on October 25, 1985. As Marty McFly and Jennifer Parker prepared to kiss, the dowdy fundraiser interrupted them to ask for a contribution to keep the broken clock tower as is and impede Mayor Wilson in his plans to replace the clock. She was delighted when he contributed 25¢. Marty was frustrated by her uninvited history lesson and appeal for donations, and likely donated the quarter to appease her and get her to leave him and Jennifer alone. However, the Clock Tower flyer that she handed to him would later prove to be invaluable. At first, it seemed to be no more than a handy piece of scrap paper upon which Jennifer had written her grandmother's phone number. When Marty found himself stranded in
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:backtothefuture/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
Eyes
  • Brown
Hair
  • Brown/Grey
Name
  • The Clock Tower Lady
Film
Gender
abstract
  • The Clock Tower lady represented the Hill Valley Preservation Society and collected donations on October 25, 1985. As Marty McFly and Jennifer Parker prepared to kiss, the dowdy fundraiser interrupted them to ask for a contribution to keep the broken clock tower as is and impede Mayor Wilson in his plans to replace the clock. She was delighted when he contributed 25¢. Marty was frustrated by her uninvited history lesson and appeal for donations, and likely donated the quarter to appease her and get her to leave him and Jennifer alone. However, the Clock Tower flyer that she handed to him would later prove to be invaluable. At first, it seemed to be no more than a handy piece of scrap paper upon which Jennifer had written her grandmother's phone number. When Marty found himself stranded in 1955, and Doc lamented that one never knows when or where a bolt of lightning would ever strike, the flyer turned out to have the critical information that Marty needed to get back to the future to 1985... because the flyer included the reprint of the newspaper story about how lightning struck (or would strike) the clock tower at exactly 10:04 p.m. on Saturday, November 12, 1955.