Drusilla, fully restored, now takes care of Spike, who has been temporarily paralyzed by Buffy's attack. When Angel reverts to Angelus, he re-joins the couple. Drusilla soon kills Kendra, another Slayer, by hypnotizing her and cutting her throat with a fingernail (which impresses Spike when he learns of it).
After figuring out Kendra's predictable style she was able to use her unorthodox style of fighting to get close and grapple her, Drusilla hypnotized Kendra and put her in a trance. Defenseless, Drusilla slit her throat, killing her.
Sadly she was killed by Drusilla after she returned to help Buffy and her friends cure Angelus. Drusilla ended up in a one-on-one fight with Kendra and she used her mind tricks to hypnotise Kendra and kill her.
After Buffy briefly dies at the end of season 1, a second Slayer is activated, Kendra. She only appears in a handful of episodes before being killed by Drusilla. In season 3, Faith is introduced as the Slayer replacing Kendra, and makes a big impression on the show's history.
The season 5 episode "The Body" is the saddest "Buffy" episode in its run and certainly one of the most tragic television episodes of all time. You know the premise: Buffy's mom, Joyce (Kristine Sutherland), dies of a brain aneurysm, and the whole gang has to face the devastating fallout of her death.
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.
Season 6
Season 6 is the darkest Buffy ever got, with a heavy addiction subplot and an attempted assault scene that I still can't get through. But it does have the zaniest villains, known as “The Trio,” two emotionally stunted nerds led by a cold–blooded misogynist who gets scarier the older I get.
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.
After the coma
After learning what had happened while she was comatose, she confronted Buffy and Willow on the UC Sunnydale campus where Buffy was studying. Faith was angry at Buffy's attempt to sacrifice her to Angel, and even more so when she found out that Buffy wasn't even with him anymore.
Regardless, Buffy is still referred to as the Slayer. Buffy's second death did not result in another slayer being called because of Faith—a new slayer would not be called until her death; however, Buffy's second resurrection for some reason caused an imbalance in the Slayer line.
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.
As the series went on, the significance of Dawn's arrival is revealed to the series's other characters, and they come to understand that she has not always been Buffy's sister, or indeed a sentient being; Dawn had originally been the mystical "key" to unlocking dimensions and was made into Buffy's sister so the Slayer ...
Dark Willow is the name given to the evil alter-ego of Willow Rosenberg following the death of her lover Tara, which coupled with her addiction to powerful and dangerous magic ultimately caused her to lose her sanity and she sought to end her suffering via bloody vengeance against the "Trio" she viewed as responsible ...
6 MAYOR RICHARD WILKINS
Mayor Wilkins also turned out to be the biggest Big Bad, being the only time we ever see a demon in its true, undiluted form. The Mayor was pretty much invulnerable up until he transformed into his demonic self on Graduation Day, where Buffy and her friends could take him out.
Robert Berman was the name of the first vampire Buffy ever slays. We see him in a flashback scene, and although it is an imperfect staking, it was obviously a pivotal moment in Buffy's life.
Portrayed by
She was tortured to insanity and sired by Angelus, who had murdered her entire family before her eyes in order to turn her into his "masterpiece." Drusilla later sired the young London poet William Pratt, who took the name Spike and became her long-time paramour.
However, Faith Lehane (Eliza Dushku) eventually proves herself as the second most powerful Slayer after Buffy.
She didn't grow up well, witnessed the murder of her Watcher, and was then betrayed by not only someone claiming to be her new Watcher but by Buffy herself. It makes sense that Faith begins her downward spiral toward what she does in “Bad Girls.” She goes from being an anti-hero to something else.
Xander tries to reason with Faith, but she throws him on the bed, teasing she could do anything she wanted to him, and proceeds to strangle him. Angel bursts in and clobbers her with a bat, then tries his own brand of reasoning and seems to be making progress.
Cordelia had been taken over by the dark entity Jasmine (Gina Torres), which got pregnant so it could give birth to itself.
In her final hours, Cordelia curiously became the pseudo-villain of the series after being possessed by the malevolent entity Jasmine. Instead of getting the kind of epic, valiant sendoff that other villains-turned-scoobies did for their finales, Cordelia simply fell into a coma and died unceremoniously in a hospital.
Back in 2003, Joss seemingly wrote off Charisma Carpenter's character (Cordelia Chase) from Angel because he was upset that she was pregnant. The actress told her side of the story several months later, in February of 2021, and her post has gone viral.
However, when Buffy goes outside and finds Spike hiding in a patch of shade, she admits to him that she was actually in Heaven and was happy. Spike is shocked as she relays that feeling the loss of Heaven, where she felt safe, loved, and complete, is Hell, and she stresses that her friends can never know the truth.
Gellar's comments about Buffy the Vampire Slayer Season 6 comes as no surprise, as it's generally the most disliked season by fans, largely because it's too dark, stretches the plot far too thin, and doesn't really offer up that much in the way of great episodes (save for the likes of the absolutely brilliant musical ...