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Her mother, Bonnie Plunkett, (Allison Janney) is also a recovering addict. Christy has two children. Her daughter, Violet (Sadie Calvano) was born when Christy was 17. She has also become a teen mother by her boyfriend, Luke (Spencer Daniels). Christy’s young son, Roscoe (Blake Garrett Rosenthal), is a product of her second marriage to Baxter ...
Calvano was born on April 8, 1997, in Los Angeles, California. She was a competitive gymnast [6] before focusing on acting full-time after fourth grade. [7] She attended Occidental College in Los Angeles. [8] [9] Calvano was cast to play the daughter of the main character in the sitcom series Mom, in which she played the character Violet Plunkett.
Season 4 marked the show's full revolution away from storylines involving Christy's children: daughter Violet (played by Sadie Calvano) only appeared in a handful of episodes, and son Roscoe (played by Blake Garrett Rosenthal) would make his final appearance ever on the show early on the season's run.
Her 51-year-old mother Bonnie Plunkett (Allison Janney) is also a recovering drug and alcohol addict, as well as her 17-year-old daughter Violet (Sadie Calvano), who was born when Christy was 17, has become pregnant by her boyfriend Luke (Spencer Daniels).
7.96 [11] Bonnie wants to go to a different AA meeting because she thinks Steve keeps looking at her funny. She and Christy attend a meeting geared to the LGBT community where Bonnie runs into Christy's "Aunt" Jeanine ( Rosie O'Donnell ), a lesbian that Bonnie lived with (and slept with) for two years when she was desperate for a home.
Calvino's mother, Giuliana Luigia Evelina "Eva" Mameli, was a botanist and university professor. [8] A native of Sassari in Sardinia and 11 years younger than her husband, she married while still a junior lecturer at Pavia University. Born into a secular family, Eva was a pacifist educated in the "religion of civic duty and science". [9]
The chapters, which are the first chapters of different books, all push the narrative chapters along. Themes which are introduced in each of the first chapters will then exist in succeeding narrative chapters. For example, after reading the first chapter of a detective novel, the narrative story takes on a few common detective-style themes.
Calvino, in chapter 9, truncates the diagonal cascades in steps: Laudomia through Raissa is a cascade of four cities, followed by cascades of three, two, and one, necessitating ten cities in the final chapter. The same pattern is used in reverse in chapter 1 as the diagonal cascade of cities is born.