In the back-to-back episodes “Surprise” and “Innocence,” Buffy Summers (Sarah Michelle Gellar) lost her virginity to her gallant vampire lover
In the episode "Surprise", Buffy loses her virginity to Angel, an event which triggers the loss of his soul and unleashes his sadistic alter-ego, Angelus.
Buffy Summers lost her virginity to her then-lover, Angel, a vampire with a soul.
In the second series, on her 17th birthday, Buffy loses her virginity to Angel, a 245 year-old vampire who, unlike his compadres, has a soul.
Yeah, I can't imagine this plotline is going to play out like an afterschool special or a Lifetime movie. No. But I did want to ask about the way she got pregnant—at the party in the first issue of Buffy Season 9, after Buffy became black-out drunk.
Season nine continues, after issue five's cliffhanger revelation that the Slayer was pregnant, with Buffy deciding what to do about the unwanted pregnancy – the result of a drunken night at a party.
Buffy & Angel Slept Together Again In Angel
The Oracles confirm his humanity and Angel steps into the sun to reveal his newfound life to Buffy. Thrilled to no longer be hindered by his curse, Angel and Buffy live the day as a normal couple, sleeping together without fear of Angelus returning.
Later, in Angel's perfect-day dream sequence, Angel and Cordelia consummated their relationship, but Angel called out "Buffy!" as he lost his soul, just as he did in Sunnydale years earlier.
In November, the activist chimed in on the great debate over whether Angel or Spike was the “right” man for Buffy. To be fair, Angel was the right boyfriend for Buffy coming into her power. Spike was the right man to be with as she became the power.
Willow loses her virginity to Oz the day before graduation in season three. Their relationship continues into the fourth season, with both of them in college.
It actually speaks to Abrams's point about Buffy -- that Angel was the perfect love interest for Buffy when she was growing into her own, while Spike was an ideal man to be with her when she'd fully embraced her power and potential.
In a new issue of the "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" comic book series, being released Wednesday, Buffy sleeps with a fellow slayer. And, oh yeah, she's a woman. It's an unusual development for a lead character of a series, whether on television or in comic books.
Connor was the half-demon son of the vampires Angel and Darla and a member of Angel Investigations. Connor was conceived when his father, Angel, slept with Darla while going through a dark phase. After several failed attempts to abort her pregnancy, Darla returned to Los Angeles seeking Angel's help.
So Xander has sex for the first time with Faith. But he and Cordelia were dating for almost a whole season. And, especially at the beginning, their relationship was purely physical in nature.
He was forced by his restored conscience to reconcile with his sinful past; however, the curse came with an additional danger: Angel could never experience true happiness, as it would result in the removal of his soul. Angel lost his soul twice: first, when he slept with Buffy Summers, and again, due to a spell.
In a seemingly impossible event, vampires Angel and Darla had a child, the end result being Connor, a human with superhuman abilities. Connor is introduced in the episode "Lullaby," when Darla sacrifices herself to give birth to him, by staking herself in the heart.
Canon is that Angel loves Buffy, but due to the curse on him, they cannot be together because if truly happy, he goes back to being Angelus.
Buffy slept with Angel, Parker, Riley and Spike.
Buffy Summers was an illusory version of the original Buffy, stuck in a world where she was instead in a mental hospital as a patient with schizophrenia.
In "Seeing Red," Spike goes to Buffy searching for forgiveness after having sex with Anya. Buffy is hurt and angry. She tells him she could never trust him enough to love him.
He loves cooking and cleaning. Freddie Prinze Jr has opened up about his marriage to Buffy star Sarah Michelle Gellar, revealing his cooking and cleaning skills are integral to all these years together.
Sadly, at the end of the series, Buffy did not end up with Angel, or anyone at all. Despite the show ending, a comic book series produced by Buffy creator Joss Whedon has continued. In the final issue of Buffy the Vampire Slayer: The Reckoning, Buffy also did not end with Buffy romantically involved with anyone.
In the TV series, no (not sure what happens in the comic books). Buffy and Angel were doomed from the start -- despite being (in my opinion) soulmates -- because she was a human and he was a vampire. This is ultimately why they broke up.