was "cancelled." Didi decides it's time to wean Tommy from the bottle after he gets his first tooth, but he doesn't want to let go.

The DeVilles had an abortion in 1990, Angelica couldn't figure whether it would be a boy or a girl thus creating the twins. The ghost turns out to be transforming into Tommy (as a ghost). Chuckie died a long time ago along with his mother; that's why Chaz is a nervous wreck all the time.

That's a theory police have not ruled out.

Because of her addictions and her mental state, Angelica was expelled from society, which lead to a break with reality and her eventual death. The DeVilles had an abortion. The Rugrats really were a figment of Angelica's imagination. Angelica spent the last days of her life in the back of the school cafeteria, imagining friends around her and playing with the lives of her creations. "The killer could have accessed the residence from the alley into the back yard." Chuckie tells the first part, but at first it's cheerful and not scary, but Angelica orders him to tell it right, which he does (reluctantly). he lived as an outcast, being ridiculed for his weirdness and retardation. Chuckie died in 1986 along with his mother, that's why Chaz is a nervous wreck all the time. Suzie was Angelica's only friend, who entertained the thought of Angelica's creations because they seemed to make her happy. [The episode begins with a view of Phil and Lil as thunder booms and lightning flashes.

Take your favorite fandoms with you and never miss a beat. Fortunately, Tommy manages to distract by telling them that there's chocolate pudding in the downstairs kitchen, and after Ickis licks Chuckie, he states that eating the pudding would be a better choice. After endless crying and a refusal to disappear like the others did when Angelica was angry with them, she hit him. In season 18, episode 11, our Ghost Adventures crew investigate a dark energy haunting the owner of a North Scottsdale home. This page lists fan theories about the television series Rugrats.. Directed by Jim Duffy, Jeff Scott. Angelica was constantally taking hits of acid so she would never have to live without her creations.

As he grew up, his damage only became more evident, and by the time he was 9 in "All Grown Up!" Imagination Theory.

As he grew up, his damage only became more evident and by the time he was 9 in "All Grown Up!" who had a daughter named Kimi that was torn from her because she was a cocaine addict (Angelica imagined her from Kira's stories). The Rugrats really were a figment of Angelica's imagination.

After she hit him, he screamed a screeching tune, and Stu ran in and pulled his neice off of his only child, but it was too late. Tommy, Chuckie, Dil, Phil, Lil and Angelica are having a sleepover at Angelica's house and are having a "campout" in her room.

Everyone is roasting marshmallows over Angelica's battery-powered campfire, save for Dil, who is cooing as he plays with a wooden block.

To sum it up, all the rugrats in the show are dead and are simply the hallucinations of a paranoid schizophrenic Angelica.
NickSplatTake your favorite fandoms with you and never miss a beat. He lost his mind after the death of his wife and was in denial that she was ever prostitute. The only rugrat not to be fictional however, was unborn Tommy's brother, Dil.

The only rugrat not to be fictional however, was unborn Tommy's brother Dil. Angelica appears in the story (as a witch) and hides the key to the attic of the house. (Angelica imagined Kimi from Kira's stories.) Angelica bursts in and yells at them, claiming that this is dumb story, but they continue sleeping.

Real Monsters Rugrats NickSplat7 Things You Missed in Rugrats, Hey Arnold, Rocko’s Modern Life, and More! With Christine Cavanaugh, Elizabeth Daily, Kath Soucie, Cheryl Chase. An instrumental of "Kumbaya" plays as the camera moves from them, past Chuckie, Tommy, and Dil, until it reaches Angelica. Chaz lost his mind after the death of his first wife and was in denial that she was ever a prostitute.

Land that was once supposedly occupied by … He closes the door, but Angelica orders the monsters to get the Rugrats.

Later in life she followed in her mother's footsteps, dying of overdose at age 13 when "All Grown Up!" Upon return to America, Chaz and Kira married and she got her greencard. It was a surprisingly happy and romantic story. Dil didn't follow her commands and after endless crying and a refusal to disappear like the others did when Angelica was angry with them, so she hit him. Tommy was born in 1988, but he was a stillborn, that's why Stu is constantly in the basement making toys for the son who never had a chance to live. The theory even expands into the "Rugrats" sequel show, "All Grown Up."

Because of the time lapse between the present and the last time she interacted with her imaginary world, she made them older. Angelica's mom actually died of a heroin overdose. Upon return to America, Chaz and Kira married and she got her greencard.

Due to this, he sustained a brain hemorrhage, which resulted in a deformation. When Angelica died of the overdose, Suzie helped arrange her funeral.

"I don't know that he came in to murder her," said Harley.

She later became a psychologist and teamed up with Nickelodeon to make the Rugrats. On a trip to Paris to find love, Chaz fell in love with a hooker named Kira (He was originally going to marry a different hooker, but she just wanted him for his money). As for "All Grown Up," Angelica was a bipolar schizophrenic, who, as a teenager, became addicted to various narcotics, bringing her back to her childhood, thus creating a world in her mind that she obsessed over. Kira continually struggled with addiction, but was relatively happy with her life and Chaz The immense guilt over this is what caused Angelica to start using drugs, and to un-create the rugrats briefly, until her experience with hallucinogenics. Angelica was schizophrenic and bipolar because she was a crack baby. Angelica was constantly taking hits of acid, so she would never have to live without her creations who were her only company.

The Gist of It: The "Rugrats" babies were really a figment of Angelica’s imagination.