Grab Your Tissues and Revisit Jens Final Scenes on 'Dawson's Creek'
Who is Jen’s child’s dad on ‘Dawson’s Creek’? The WB teenager drama’s finale noticed the Michelle Williams personality as a unmarried mother raising daughter Amy.
Beloved TV display Dawson’s Creek is back on Netflix, which means that fans and newbies alike can watch and rewatch the WB teen drama find it irresistible is 1999 in all places again.
Along with reliving the heated Team Dawson and Team Pacey debate, viewers can also revisit Jen Lindley’s fate in the show’s heartbreaking sequence finale. So, what came about to Jen and who does she finally end up with?
Here is your caution for main spoilers if you haven't observed the display sooner than!
The mystery surrounding Jen's child daddy explained:
When Dawson’s Creek flashed five years into the future for the show’s two-part collection finale, audience see that Jen (Michelle Williams) is a unmarried mother raising daughter Amy.
She doesn’t specify who Amy’s father is, but she does say he isn’t involved in their lives, telling her pals, “Hey, guys, keep in mind the time when my boyfriend knocked me up and left me to lift a child on my own?”
At the top of the story — this is your final damage alert! — Jen dies of a fatal middle situation, however not prior to entrusting Amy to her pal Jack (Kerr Smith) and his partner Doug (Dylan Neal).
Jen had a touching message for her daughter in the heartbreaking finale.
Before she dies in a clinic bed with her Grams at her side, Jen information a videotaped message for Amy, allotting motherly recommendation “seeing as how I gained’t be around to completely annoy you," she says in the sweet message.
“I want you to love to the tips of your fingers, and when you find that love, wherever you find it, whoever you choose, don’t run away from it,” she adds. “But you don’t have to chase after it either. You just be patient, and it’ll come to you, I promise, and when you least expect it, like you, like spending the best year of my life with the sweetest and the smartest and the most beautiful baby girl in the world. You don’t be afraid, sweetheart. And remember, to love is to live.”
In 2018, Dawson’s Creek creator Kevin Williamson explained why the writers had Jen die at the end of the story, telling The Hollywood Reporter, “Dealing with the death of one of their own was the final thing that thrust them into adulthood forever. Dawson’s Creek was a coming-of-age story and that was the idea behind that ending. That’s why we killed Jen because I wanted them to deal with a death of one their own as that final lesson.”
Michelle Williams admitted she did not love playing Jen on Dawson's Creek.'
Heartbreaking finale aside, Michelle didn't have the fondest memories of playing Jen.
"It was once an overly other roughly television. We did 22 episodes a year, you’d be getting scripts kind of at the ultimate minute and you had like zero input,” she informed Variety of her time on the display. “That used to be hard, it was once a little bit like a manufacturing facility job. It was formulaic.”
However, she did divulge that she is still close to the cast, adding, "We’re all in a group text… We reconnected and now we have a group text going again, so that’s been nice."
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