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  1. A gifted writer and storyteller, Aibileen makes up stories for Mae Mobley to teach her that Black people and white people are not so different and encourages Mae Mobley to think twice about the assumptions white adults make about Black people.

  2. Mae Mobley Leefolt is a 2 1/2 year old white toddler. She is the daughter of Elizabeth and Raleigh Leefolt. She has a younger brother, Lil Man. Aibileen Clark, a 53-year-old black maid, takes care of her, and Mae Mobley is mostly seen through Aibileen's eyes.

  3. Mae Mobley Leefolt Character Analysis. The young daughter of Elizabeth Leefolt, Mae Mobley loves her maid, Aibileen, more than her actual mother. Due to her mother’s negligence, Mae Mobley lacks self-confidence, but Aibileen tries to instill in her the belief that she is good and valuable.

  4. Aibileen cares the most about two people in this world: her best friend Minny Jackson and Mae Mobley, the white girl she raises over the course of novel. As the novel’s moral compass, Aibileen is a warm, compassionate woman who bears racial oppression with a quiet resilience.

  5. Aibileen's own beloved son, Treelore, died in a senseless accident a little over two years before the novel opens. He was only 24 years old at the time. Treelore's death, and Aibileen's love for Mae Mobley, moves her to take the extraordinary risk of making her story public (albeit anonymously).

  6. En 1963, la narradora Aibileen Clark (Viola Davis) es una trabajadora doméstica afroamericana ("sirvienta") en Jackson, Misisipi. Trabaja para la socialité Elizabeth Leefolt (Ahna O'Reilly) y cría a su hija de dos años, Mae Mobley (Emma y Eleanor Henry), a quien Elizabeth descuida por ser gordita.

  7. Mae Mobley Leefolt. Elizabeth Leefolt’s daughter and the young girl Aibileen spends most of the novel caring for. Mae Mobley longs for her mother’s attention, though she is often not able to get it and so sees Aibileen as more of a mother figure than Elizabeth. Stuart Whitworth, Jr.