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  1. Despite being the main catalyst of the novel, Margalo is completely absent from the original film, which instead focuses on Stuart looking for his real parents and Snowbell plotting to get rid of him. Margalo is sometimes thought to be the deuteragonist of the film.

    • 3 min
  2. On a cold winter's day, the family discovers a yellow canary named Margalo half-frozen on their doorstep. Margalo is taken in and spends the winter in the family home, where she befriends Stuart; Stuart in turn protects her from Snowbell.

    • E. B. White
    • 1945
  3. His friend offers to kill Margalo on his behalf—but not Stuart, who is a member of the family. Margalo receives warning of the murder plot and flees without a word of goodbye to Stuart. Stuart resolves to go out into the world in search of her.

  4. After taking her in, Stuart bravely protects Margalo from Snowbell, and Margalo repays Stuart for this when she helps Stuart escape from a garbage heap that is being shipped off to sea. At some point after rescuing Stuart, Margalo is warned that one of Snowbell's friends is going to eat her.

  5. Before meeting Stuart, Margalo was afraid to stand up for herself against Falcon's abuse. Like Stuart, she also lost her biological parents (at least her mother). She is similar to Meg from Hercules since they both work with the main antagonist with the same actor (James Woods).

  6. Like an old-fashioned suitor, Stuart is worried for his love’s safety and whispers lines from Shakespeare at her sleeping form. But it is actually Margalo who saves Stuart after he is trapped in a garbage can and then dumped on a barge to be sent out into the East River.

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  8. Falcon traps Margalo in a paint can, and attempts to kill Stuart by dropping him from the sky; Stuart instead lands in a garbage truck and is taken to a garbage barge out at sea.

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