She is able to speak fluently (but only in the anime), as well as Tantalog, her native language (with a soft Scottish accent).Įxperiment 624 was the 624th genetic experiment created by Jumba with Hämsterviel's funding. She is naturally heat resistant to toxins and extremely durable. She can use her antennae as prehensile limbs in order to reach distant objects or operate mechanisms (such as a button). Additionally, she has acrobatic reflexes and is shown to be highly athletic and skilled with karate. She is strong enough to shatter the sealed glass containers that experiments had been captured in by headbutting them however, the true extent of her strength is unknown. Like Stitch, Angel has pads on her hands and feet that produce a sticky substance which lets her scale walls and ceilings, a very flexible skeletal system, and retractable claws on her front and back paws, but unlike Stitch, she lacks an extra pair of retractable arms. However, experiments that were created after her (namely Stitch, Reuben, 627, and Leroy) are immune to her song. Also, when Angel's song is sung backwards, it will have the opposite effect (turning evil people and previous experiments to good). She once wore a collar with Hämsterviel's phone number on the tag.Īngel's song causes any formerly evil person who hears it (including rehabilitated experiments created before her) to revert back to evil.
In addition, she has a thin white V-shaped marking on her chest. There are lighter spots around her eyes and light fur from the bottom of her mouth to her stomach. Various official Disney merchandise, promotional imagery, and crossover game appearances (such as Disney Magic Kingdoms) have established that the single upside-down heart-shaped back marking to be the canonical marking. In brief scenes of "Snafu" and in Leroy & Stitch, she lacks any markings on her back or her occiput. In the series episode "Snafu" and in other anime episodes, her back marking became more abstract and she inexplicably gained a marking on her occiput (the back of her head), much like how Stitch has an occipital marking. In her eponymous debut episode of Lilo & Stitch: The Series and in various Stitch! anime episodes, she has a marking that resembles an upside-down heart. For example, her ears are violet-tipped with light pink insides, her nails are purple, and she often possesses lavender markings behind her that are inconsistently drawn in her animated appearances. Her color scheme mirrors Stitch's but with palette-swapped pinks instead of blues. She also has a slightly puffed-out chest and stands slightly shorter than Stitch. Her nose is purple and smaller than Stitch's. She also has big ears, but unlike Stitch's big ears, they lack notches and have more rounded tips. She has long eyelashes and large dark purple eyes that seem to be slightly larger than Stitch's eyes. She has even helped Stitch out of trouble on several occasions.Īngel is a small, pink female koala-like experiment with a strong feminine resemblance to Stitch, though with two long, tendril-like antennae. Angel was taught the meaning of love and ʻohana by Lilo and Stitch, and would do just about anything for them.
Oddly enough, Reuben also has a crush on Angel, though she has shown extreme displeasure towards him. She has a very feminine voice and has been noticed flirting with the other experiments, until Stitch eventually wins her heart. Since being reformed, her sweeter side shows a lot more. She is generally friendly, but sometimes she can be downright nasty. All images are property the copyright holder and are displayed here for informational purposes only.Angel is shown to be seductive and deeply enamored with Stitch. Many historical player head shots courtesy of David Davis. Some high school data is courtesy David McWater. Some defensive statistics Copyright © Baseball Info Solutions, 2010-2022. Total Zone Rating and initial framework for Wins above Replacement calculations provided by Sean Smith.įull-year historical Major League statistics provided by Pete Palmer and Gary Gillette of Hidden Game Sports. Win Expectancy, Run Expectancy, and Leverage Index calculations provided by Tom Tango of, and co-author of The Book: Playing the Percentages in Baseball. Much of the play-by-play, game results, and transaction information both shown and used to create certain data sets was obtained free of charge from and is copyrighted by RetroSheet. Use without license or authorization is expressly prohibited. The SPORTS REFERENCE and STATHEAD trademarks are owned exclusively by Sports Reference LLC. Logos were compiled by the amazing .Ĭopyright © 2000-2022 Sports Reference LLC. Our reasoning for presenting offensive logos. We present them here for purely educational purposes. All logos are the trademark & property of their owners and not Sports Reference LLC.