Dame Bronwyn
(played in the movie by Sophie Dahl)
Dame Bronwyn, known in mortal life as Wendy Broadner, is a knight who serves the Count of the White Rose in Pennsyvania.
She "unofficially" investigated an unseelie incursion into one of the baronies in her lord's demesne during the course of the short-lived campaign.
Constance de Percy
(played in the movie by Rachel Weisz)
Influences: The early history of the Percy family, and the so-called curse of the Percies.
Bastard daughter of a Norman nobleman, Constance was Embraced by one of the Ventrue for her cold and ambitious nature. She has recently travelled to Jerusalem on business for her clan.
After her successful investigation of the curse of five knights, she is now concentrating on her real mission: ensuring that Lucius Rufus becomes the new Prince of Jerusalem.
Sister Grace
(played in the movie by Uma Thurman)
Influences: "Sister Mary Werewolf"; Uma Thurman in The Adventures of Baron Munchausen (looks)
Best moments: Her not-quite-romance with Elmore.
Quote: God moves in mysterious ways.
Sister Grace was my Silver Fang Theurge in a Werewolf: Wild West campaign. She was an orphaned Irish girl who had taken the vows of a Catholic novice before coming into her inner bitch, and was struggling to reconcile her faith with the lore of the Pack.
Sister Grace picked up some of the elements I'd enjoyed playing in Lianna and the Messenger, both of whom were pretty firmly retired before I created her. She taught me that it is possible to revisit old turf with new characters and new eyes, especially with a new GM.
Robyn Sealy
(played in the movie by Shelley Hack)
Influences: The novels of Charles de Lint and Robert Holdstock; Changeling; Victorian fairy tale books.
Quote: I can't imagine why you think my paintings might be real.
I originally developed Robyn for a cross-genre World of Darkness campaign where she was the changeling (before the Changeling rules came out) and later retooled for Jeremy Zimmerman's never-quite-got-off-the-ground A Damn Fine Cup of Coffee in the Lonesome October.
Robyn is a well-known but extremely reclusive artist. Her best-known works are for trading card games and a tarot deck of her own design. Her art is, of course, heavily influenced by her involvement in the supernatural. The retooled Robyn was born in Victorian England, was as far out of her own time as she was out of her own place.