As with Rory, I’m not counting “alternate” versions of Amy. So, no “Amy’s Choice,” older Amy from “The
Girl Who Waited,” or “The Wedding of River Song” (spoilers ahead.)
Saving the Star Whale (“The Beast Below” –
Series 5, Episode 2)
A
clunky episode, but Amy does a fine job realizing what no one else does: that the Star Whale came to help Starship UK
and the passengers don’t need to hurt it to keep it under control. Since this epiphany is based on the Star
Whale’s similarity to the Doctor (old, kind, the last of its kind, can’t bear
to hear children crying,) one might argue that Amy shouldn’t know him that well
yet. It works for me, though – she’s
spent over a decade wondering and obsessing about him, so when he finally comes
back, I can see her paying close attention and being a quick study.
Disarming Bracewell (“Victory of the Daleks”
– Series 5, Episode 3)
Another
instance of Amy getting down to the emotional truth of things when everyone,
the Doctor included, is going at it the wrong way. The Doctor tries to get the android Bracewell
to tap into his humanity, thus disarming the bomb in his chest (yeah – makes
total sense to me, too,) by remembering pain, but Amy encourages him to remember
love instead. Super cheesy? Oh my, yes.
But also important and life-saving.
Well done, Amy!
Evading the Handbots (“The Girl Who Waited” –
Series 6, Episode 10)
Trapped
in an unfamiliar world and chased by unintentionally-lethal but implacable
robots, without either the Doctor or Rory to help, Amy manages to stay one step
ahead. Obviously, the techie genius
badass Amy with a sword comes later, but I’m thinking of that first day. Already, she figures out how to temporarily
short out the handbots, she notices important details that help keep her safe,
and she starts learning how to get the Interface to tell her what she needs to
know.
Investigating the Silurian Ship (“Dinosaurs
on a Spaceship” – Series 7, Episode 2)
With
the Doctor, Rory, and Rory’s dad off in another part of the ship, Amy manages
her own pseudo-companions, Nefertiti and Riddell, quite handily. She delegates well and works off their
Excellent Questions, and she gleans quite a bit from the computer. While she puts it all down to “pressing
buttons,” she’s in fact pretty darn clever, shrewdly interpreting the data on
hand and figuring out how to find the answers she’s looking for.
Keeping the Doctor Honest (“A Town Called
Mercy” – Series 7, Episode 3)
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