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Oz (Buffy the Vampire Slayer)
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==Appearances== ===Television=== Oz's most outstanding trait is his detached, ironic approach to life, masking a deeply philosophical interior and a very calm, devoted, gentle nature.<ref>''Buffy the Vampire Slayer'', season 3, episode 18, "[[Earshot (Buffy episode)|Earshot]]"</ref> He is also the lead [[guitarist]] for the band [[Dingo ate my baby|Dingoes Ate My Baby]] (a reference to the death of [[Azaria Chamberlain]]), which performs frequently at The Bronze. A high school senior, one year above Willow and the rest of the group, he is highly intelligent and "tests well", but his only real ambition lies in music. He notices Willow in her Eskimo costume at a dance at The Bronze, and seems to be interested in her at first sight; but does not meet her directly until [[What's My Line, Part One|several episodes later]]. They have several dates, on [[Surprise (Buffy episode)|one of which]] he witnesses a vampire being dusted by Buffy for the first time, and is unsurprised upon learning vampires exist and merely remarks that "it explains a lot". After this he becomes a member of the Scooby Gang, helping with research and fighting. In the episode "[[Phases (Buffy episode)|Phases]]" Oz learns he has become a [[werewolf]], [[shapeshifting|turning]] into a monster on the three nights around a full moon, having been bitten on his finger by his cousin Jordy. On his third night as a wolf, Oz is nearly killed by werewolf hunter [[List of Buffyverse villains and supernatural beings#Dangerous Mortals|Gib Cain]] for his pelt, but is saved by [[Buffy Summers|Buffy]] and the Scooby Gang, with whose help he quickly finds a way to minimize the danger posed by the wolf: he locks himself into a cage for the appropriate nights, watched over by the Scoobies in shifts. The revelation that Oz is a werewolf does not dissuade Willow from dating him, and they become a couple. Even though he is intelligent, several incompletes in his senior year require that he repeat it, putting him in the same graduating year as the rest of the gang. During this year, his relationship with Willow goes through rough water as he and [[Cordelia Chase|Cordelia]] catch [[Xander Harris|Xander]] and [[Willow Rosenberg|Willow]] kissing. They break up, but get back together again after Oz confesses he misses her ("[[Amends (Buffy episode)|Amends]]"). In the episode "[[Graduation Day, Part One]]," Oz and Willow make love before the impending confrontation with the evil [[Richard Wilkins III|Mayor Wilkins]]. After graduation, he attends UC Sunnydale together with Buffy and Willow, and is seen taking 'Introduction to Psychology' by [[Maggie Walsh|Professor Walsh]] along with them. Unlike the other two, he does not have a dorm room, but stays in a house off campus along with the rest of the band,<ref>''Buffy the Vampire Slayer'', season 4, episode 1,"[[The Freshman (Buffy episode)|The Freshman]]"</ref> and now locks himself up into a cage in a crypt at a local cemetery. Oz makes one appearance on ''[[Angel (1999 TV series)|Angel]]'' to deliver the Ring of Amarra, and plays a crucial role in the plot of that episode ("[[In the Dark (Angel)|In the Dark]]"). He was rumored to be a recurring character in the unproduced sixth season before the show's cancellation at the end of season 5. While appearing to the outside world to have come to terms with his lycanthropy rather easily, evidence arises he indeed is fearful of his werewolf side ("[[Fear, Itself (Buffy episode)|Fear, Itself]]"), and especially of hurting others with it.<ref>Writer David Fury in ''The Monster Book'' (2000) by C. Golden, S.R. Bisette and T.E. Sniegoski, New York: Pocket Books, page 51. {{ISBN|0-671-04259-9}}. ''"[...] [T]he fears are personalized: Oz fears hurting Willow [...]."''</ref> Moreover, he starts to see that he and his wolf side may not be as separate as he'd like to think. When he meets a female werewolf, [[Veruca (Buffyverse)|Veruca]], a seductive UC Sunnydale student who sings in a band, they are immediately drawn to each other, and unbeknownst to him, they meet as wolves in the woods and have sex on the first night of the full moon. Veruca, who, unlike Oz, is conscious of her state and believes they are "the wolf all the time," tries to convince Oz that they belong together. Unlike Oz, Veruca sees nothing wrong with killing humans when she is a werewolf as she feels that that is her true identity. Instead of telling the others about Veruca, he convinces her to join him in his cage on the next night they are due to turn into werewolves. They have sex again and are found the next morning lying together naked by Willow, who is devastated. Willow considers using magic to hurt Veruca, but changes her mind at the last minute. Veruca, who watched Willow, then attacks her. During the attack, Veruca transforms into a werewolf and tries to kill Willow, but Oz, also in werewolf form, protects Willow and kills Veruca.<ref>''Buffy the Vampire Slayer'' season 4, episode 6, [[Wild at Heart (Buffy episode)|Wild at Heart]]</ref> After he kills Veruca, he nearly attacks Willow, but Buffy stops him in time. Oz realizes that Veruca was correct, and tells Willow that he is, indeed, "the wolf all the time" and needs to leave in order to try to better understand his own nature. Some months later, Oz returns to [[Sunnydale]], having made progress with his [[lycanthropy]] through techniques learned in [[Tibet]].<ref>''Buffy the Vampire Slayer'', season 4, episode 19, [[New Moon Rising (Buffy the Vampire Slayer)|New Moon Rising]]</ref> He no longer uncontrollably changes into a werewolf during a full moon, and can now control his transformations, and shows Willow this when he takes her outside and shows her that the moon is full and he has not changed. However, when experiencing the powerful negative emotion of jealousy evoked by the discovery that [[Tara Maclay]] has replaced him in Willow's affections, he does change, and is seized by The Initiative and locked in their cells until Buffy, helped by [[Riley Finn]], sets him free. The knowledge that Willow now loves Tara makes Oz leave [[Sunnydale]] for good, though he and Willow each affirm the depth and permanence of their connection. He is last seen in Willow's dream in the episode "[[Restless (Buffy episode)|Restless]]." ===Literature=== In 2007, Joss Whedon launched a [[canon (fiction)|canonical]] ''Buffy'' continuation in comic format, ''[[Buffy the Vampire Slayer Season Eight]]''. The series follows Buffy and her allies some time after the events of the television series finale. Oz initially features in a minor dream sequence in Whedon's premiere story arc, "[[The Long Way Home (Buffy comic)|The Long Way Home]]" arc amid a collage of friends and family, but is not featured in any principal role until the 2009 story arc "[[Retreat (Buffy comic)|Retreat]]", written by [[Jane Espenson]].<ref>{{cite web|last=Vineyard|first=Jennifer|title=Joss Whedon Sends Buffy Back To The Future In New Season-Eight Comic|url=http://www.mtv.com/movies/news/articles/1590279/story.jhtml|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080917120747/http://www.mtv.com/movies/news/articles/1590279/story.jhtml|url-status=dead|archive-date=September 17, 2008|publisher=[[MTV]]|date=2 July 2008|access-date=4 July 2008}}</ref> The story sees Buffy and her army of Slayers magically transport themselves to Oz's sanctuary in Tibet to escape the pursuit of her masked enemy, the mysterious "Twilight". There, they hope to learn from Oz how to suppress their magical abilities, as he did, and therefore to avoid Twilight's detection. Oz introduces Buffy, Willow and friends to his wife Bayarmaa, who is also a werewolf, and his young son, Kelden. Oz and a number of other werewolves assist the rendered-powerless Slayers when Twilight's armed forces attack, though Oz subsequently remains with his family when Buffy and her company depart once again. Oz also appears in ''Buffy'' Expanded Universe materials; the details offered in these appearances would later be contradicted by canonical stories, such as Espenson's arc for ''Season Eight''. In addition to supporting roles in a number of novels and comic books, Oz is central to the comic book trade paperback ''Oz'' (2001) and the novel ''[[Oz: Into the Wild]]'' (2002). Both of these appearances are written by [[Christopher Golden]]. ''Into the Wild'' is set during Oz's quest to control his wolf-side, set after the television episode "Wild at Heart". Golden's frequent writing partner [[Nancy Holder]] also wrote the 2005 novel ''[[Queen of the Slayers]]'', set after the events of the season 7 finale. In ''Queen of the Slayers'', forces conspire to kill Buffy for destroying the Hellmouth in Sunnydale. When Buffy encounters Oz, he is the leader of a pack of werewolves who can completely control their wolf forms; Oz assists in the final battle of the book, set during a full moon.
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