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List of Jeeves characters

The following is a list of recurring and notable fictional characters featured in the Jeeves novels and short stories by P. G. Wodehouse.

Anatole edit

Anatole is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories, being the supremely skilled French chef of Aunt Dahlia at her country house Brinkley Court. He is mentioned in many of the stories and is often praised as "God's gift to the gastric juices". A small, rotund man, Anatole has a large moustache; Bertie Wooster notes that the ends of Anatole's moustache turn up when he is happy and droop when he is upset. Originally from Provence, Anatole speaks English with a mixed fluency, having learned much of his English from Bingo Little and an American chauffeur from Brooklyn.[1]

Anatole previously worked for the Littles but entered Aunt Dahlia's employment in "Clustering Round Young Bingo". The only cook known to be able to make food that agrees with Tom Travers's digestion, he was relied on to such an extent that Tom Travers postponed a Mediterranean trip because Anatole was ill with influenza in "The Spot of Art". Anatole is described as being temperamental, to the point of nearly resigning in Right Ho, Jeeves when several people at the dinner table push his food away in bids to catch their loved ones' attention.[2]

Many characters esteem Anatole's cooking and try to hire him away from the Travers household, including Jane Snettisham ("The Love That Purifies"), Sir Watkyn Bassett (The Code of the Woosters), and Mrs. Trotter (Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit). In Much Obliged, Jeeves, Bertie comments that Anatole suffers from mal au foie (liver problems) and is apt to discuss the subject at length.[3]

Rosie M. Banks edit

Rosie M. Banks is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories, being an author who writes romance novels. She also appears in Drones Club stories outside the Jeeves canon. She is married to Bingo Little.

Madeline Bassett edit

Madeline Bassett is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories. She is the daughter of Sir Watkyn Bassett and is a rather mushy, sentimental girl. Bertie Wooster is briefly engaged to her.

Watkyn Bassett edit

Sir Watkyn Bassett, CBE, is a fictional character who appears in two Jeeves novels. He is the father of Madeline Bassett, and the uncle and guardian of Stephanie "Stiffy" Byng.[4] He wears a pince-nez, and is described as a small man who makes up for his height by wearing clothes that are striking in appearance, including a prismatic checked suit in The Code of the Woosters. In Stiff Upper Lip, Jeeves, he wears a striking dressing-grown. As Bertie states regarding Bassett, "He was a small man ... you got the impression, seeing him, that when they were making magistrates there wasn't enough material left over when they came to him ... and for some reason not easy to explain it nearly always happens that the smaller the ex-magistrate, the louder the dressing-grown. His was a bright purple number with yellow frogs, and I am not deceiving my public when I say that it smote me like a blow, rendering me speechless."[5][6]

When he first meets Bertie Wooster, Sir Watkyn is the magistrate at Bosher Street Police Court. Shortly afterward, he inherits a great deal of money from a distant relative and retires to live in Totleigh Towers, where he is a Justice of the Peace.[7] As a magistrate, Bassett fined Bertie £5 for stealing a policeman's helmet on Boat Race Night, and Bertie thinks that the fortune Sir Watkyn inherited actually derived from pocketing fines while a magistrate. Sir Watkyn is a noted collector of antique silver, and his collection rivals that of Bertie's uncle, Tom Travers. Each tries to obtain the silver cow-creamer in The Code of the Woosters. In that novel, it is mentioned that Sir Watkyn is engaged to a widow named Mrs. Wintergreen. She is the aunt of Sir Watkyn's friend, Roderick Spode, who is often at Totleigh Towers.[8] However, she is not mentioned again. In Stiff Upper Lip, Jeeves, he obtains a black amber statuette.

In the Jeeves and Wooster television series adapted from Wodehouse's stories, Sir Watkyn is Florence Craye's uncle, which was not the case in the original Jeeves canon.

Biffy Biffen edit

Charles Edward "Biffy" Biffen is a fictional character who appears in the Jeeves short story, "The Rummy Affair of Old Biffy". An absent-minded friend of Bertie Wooster, Biffy is engaged to a woman named Mabel, who is Jeeves's niece.[9]

Rupert Bingley edit

Rupert Bingley, also known as Brinkley, is a recurring fictional character who appears in two Jeeves novels. He is a smallish man who is thin in his first appearance but has become plump by his second appearance. In his first appearance in Thank You, Jeeves, he is a valet called Brinkley. He has extreme left-wing views and threatens Bertie Wooster.[10] In Much Obliged, Jeeves, Jeeves informs Bertie that his name is Bingley and not Brinkley. By the time of this novel, Bingley has inherited a large sum of money and retired from being a valet. His views become extremely right-wing after he becomes a man of property. He resorts to theft and blackmail to increase his wealth. Bingley is a member of the Junior Ganymede Club and retains his membership after retiring.[11]

As a valet, he was employed at different times by Ginger Winship, L. P. Runkle, and Bertie Wooster.[12]

Mr Blumenfeld edit

Blumenfeld is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories. His name first appears as "Blumenfield" in "Jeeves and the Chump Cyril" (in The Inimitable Jeeves) but is later "Blumenfeld" in "Episode of the Dog McIntosh" (in Very Good, Jeeves).[13] He is an American theatrical manager with a young son. Neither of their first names are stated, though Bertie Wooster jokingly calls Blumenfeld's unfriendly son "Sidney the Sunbeam".[14]

Blumenfeld was inspired by Abraham Lincoln Erlanger, a dictatorial American theatrical producer who produced the 1916 musical Miss Springtime, which Wodehouse contributed to as lyricist. Erlanger employed a twelve-year-old boy to second-guess his creative judgments, on the grounds that this was the mental age of the average Broadway audience; this is similar to Blumenfeld, who relies on the opinions of his twelve-year-old son for the same reason.[15]

Butterfield edit

Butterfield is the butler of Totleigh Towers, Sir Watkyn Bassett's country house located in Totleigh-in-the-Wold. Butterfield's first name is not stated in the novels. In Stiff Upper Lip, Jeeves, Bertie Wooster guesses that Butterfield is a hundred and four years old, and Jeeves agrees that he is "well stricken in years".[16] In The Code of the Woosters, while airing Stiffy Byng's dog Bartholomew, Butterfield sees Bertie drop Constable Oates's helmet out of a window and retrieves it. At the end of Stiff Upper Lip, Jeeves, Bertie agrees to let Jeeves give Butterfield his blue Alpine hat with a pink feather, which Butterfield thinks will help him court a widowed lady in the village.[17]

Stiffy Byng edit

Stephanie "Stiffy" Byng is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories. The niece and ward of Sir Watkyn Bassett, she initially lives with him in Totleigh Towers. She is short and has blue eyes.[18] She wears a wind-swept hairstyle,[19] and has an Aberdeen terrier named Bartholomew. Stiffy often gets bright ideas that end up making trouble for others, and she is not above using blackmail to induce Bertie Wooster to do errands for her.[20]

In The Code of the Woosters, she is engaged to the Rev. Harold "Stinker" Pinker. She appears with Harold Pinker in Stiff Upper Lip, Jeeves and they have married by Much Obliged, Jeeves.[18]

Stilton Cheesewright edit

G. D'Arcy "Stilton" Cheesewright is a recurring fictional character in two Jeeves novels, being an intermittent but jealous fiancé of Florence Craye and thus a menacing "rival" of Florence's ex-"fiancé" Bertie Wooster (who does not actually want to marry Florence). His nickname is probably derived from Stilton cheese. A member of the Drones Club, Stilton is a hulking chap with a large head compared to a pumpkin and a face that looks like "a slab of pink dough".[21] Stilton went to private school, Eton and Oxford with Bertie.[22] He was Captain of the Boats at Eton and rowed four years for Oxford.

In Joy in the Morning, Stilton was the local policeman at Aunt Agatha's rural village Steeple Bumpleigh and was engaged to Florence Craye who was in residence there. In this novel, Stilton and Florence temporarily end their engagement because she does not want him to be a policeman. They reconcile after Stilton resigns from the police force when the local Justice of the Peace refuses to let him make an arrest. In Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit, the engagement between Stilton and Florence is threatened because Stilton refuses to grow a moustache and Florence goes to a night club with Bertie. Stilton leaves Florence for good and becomes romantically interested in the novelist Daphne Dolores Morehead.[2]

Stilton is mentioned in Pearls, Girls and Monty Bodkin: "Strong language was no novelty to [Monty] – he had once been present when somebody had slammed a car door on the finger of D'Arcy ('Stilton') Cheesewright of the Drones".[23]

In the television series Jeeves and Wooster, Daphne Dolores Morehead does not appear but is impersonated by Jeeves in drag. Stilton falls in love with this "Daphne Dolores Morehead", and is never made aware that this was actually Jeeves and not the real Morehead in the episode. Stilton goes to New York City at the end of the episode, having heard that Daphne Dolores Morehead lives there.

Lord Chuffnell edit

Marmaduke, Lord Chuffnell, nicknamed Chuffy, is a fictional character in the Jeeves novel, Thank You, Jeeves. He went to private school, Eton and Oxford with Bertie Wooster.[24] Chuffy is a Drones Club member. He becomes engaged to Pauline Stoker, and they have married by Stiff Upper Lip, Jeeves.[25]

Chuffy's aunt, Myrtle, Dowager Lady Chuffnell, appears in Thank You, Jeeves. She has a young son, Seabury, and is romantically involved with Sir Roderick Glossop. Her engagement to Glossop is threatened but saved in "Jeeves and the Greasy Bird".[26]

In the television series Jeeves and Wooster, Myrtle is Chuffy's sister, Mrs Pongleton, and her son Seabury is therefore Chuffy's nephew.

Clementina edit

Clementina is a fictional character in the Jeeves short story, "Jeeves and the Kid Clementina". She is Bobbie Wickham's cousin.[27]

Edwin Craye edit

The Hon. Edwin Craye is a fictional character in the Jeeves stories. The fourteen-year-old son of Lord Worplesdon and younger brother of Lady Florence Craye, he is a bothersome Boy Scout who seeks to perform "daily acts of kindness", though he is more concerned with performing daily acts than actually being helpful. He always causes trouble for others with his meddlesome actions, especially after he has fallen behind with his daily acts of kindness and is trying to catch up. He appears in "Jeeves Takes Charge" and Joy in the Morning.

A prototype of Edwin Craye appears in the Reggie Pepper story "Disentangling Old Percy". This early version of Edwin is a meek adult. He has the title Lord Weeting in the British edition of the story.[28]

Florence Craye edit

Lady Florence Craye is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories, being the beautiful, intellectual and serious daughter of Percy Craye, Lord Worplesdon.

A novelist, in Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit (1954), she is engaged to Oxford-educated muscular ex-policeman G. D'Arcy Cheesewright.

Gussie Fink-Nottle edit

Augustus "Gussie" Fink-Nottle is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories. He is a teetotaller and studies newts.

Boko Fittleworth edit

George Webster "Boko" Fittleworth is a fictional character in a Jeeves novel, being an author with a unique dress sense, a member of the Drones Club, and a good friend of Bertie Wooster. In Joy in the Morning, even the normally unflappable Jeeves was strongly affected at the sight of Boko, who dresses "like a tramp cyclist". According to Bertie, after Jeeves first saw him, Jeeves winced and tottered off to the kitchen, probably to pull himself together with cooking sherry. Boko is engaged to Zenobia "Nobby" Hopwood. He once shared a flat with Harold "Ginger" Winship and employed Magnolia Glendennon as his stenographer, as mentioned in Much Obliged, Jeeves.[29]

Tuppy Glossop edit

Hildebrand "Tuppy" Glossop is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories. The nephew of Sir Roderick Glossop, Tuppy is a Drones Club member and the fiancé of Bertie Wooster's cousin, Angela Travers.

Honoria Glossop edit

Honoria Glossop is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories. She is the athletic and brainy daughter of Sir Roderick Glossop.

Lady Glossop edit

Lady Glossop is a fictional character in the Jeeves stories, being the wife of well known nerve specialist Sir Roderick Glossop, mother to Oswald and Honoria, and an acquaintance of Bertie's fearsome Aunt Agatha. She is mentioned but does not appear in the stories, and dies before the events of Thank You, Jeeves.[30]

In the first and second seasons of the television series Jeeves and Wooster, Lady Glossop makes appearances, and entertains as much suspicion of Bertie's sanity as her husband. In the fourth season, Jeeves instead states to Bertie that Lady Glossop eloped with a bus conductor, and also says that Sir Roderick was anxious to remarry.

Roderick Glossop edit

Sir Roderick Glossop is a recurring fictional character in the comic novels of P. G. Wodehouse. He is the father of Oswald and Honoria, as well as the uncle of Tuppy Glossop. Sometimes referred to as "the noted nerve specialist" or "the loony doctor", he is a practitioner of psychiatry. He also appears in a Blandings Castle novel outside the Jeeves canon.

Percy Gorringe edit

Percy Gorringe is a fictional character in a Jeeves novel, being a side-whiskered poet and writer, the stepson of newspaper owner Mr Trotter and the son of Mrs Trotter. He gets engaged to Florence Craye and is intent on producing her novel Spindrift as a play in Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit, but is dumped by Florence after the play is a flop, as mentioned in Much Obliged, Jeeves.[31] He writes mystery novels under the name Rex West.[32]

Agatha Gregson edit

Agatha Gregson (née Wooster, later Lady Worplesdon) is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories, being Bertie Wooster's fearsome Aunt Agatha and mother of Thomas "Thos" Gregson.

Thomas Gregson edit

Thomas "Thos" (sometimes written Thos.) Gregson is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories. The troublesome son of Agatha Gregson and her first husband Spenser Gregson, he first appears in "Jeeves and the Impending Doom", in which he is being tutored by Bingo Little. His next appearance is in "The Love That Purifies". In this story, he is stated to be fourteen years old. In the novel The Mating Season, he procures the cosh that ultimately ends up in Jeeves's possession. Bertie mentions reluctantly taking his cousin Thos to the theatre at the request of his Aunt Agatha in several stories.[33]

Francis Heppenstall edit

The Reverend Francis Heppenstall is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories. He is the vicar at the village church at Twing. He is one of the entries in "The Great Sermon Handicap", manages the annual village school treat in "The Purity of the Turf", and is the uncle of Mary Burgess in "The Metropolitan Touch". He also has two sons.[34]

Kipper Herring edit

Reginald "Kipper" Herring is a fictional character in a Jeeves novel, being a childhood friend of Bertie Wooster from Malvern House.[35] In Jeeves in the Offing, Kipper is employed as a journalist at the Thursday Review, in which capacity he writes a scathing review of a book on preparatory schools by his former headmaster Aubrey Upjohn. He is engaged to the mischievous Bobbie Wickham.[36]

Jeeves edit

Reginald Jeeves, usually referred to as Jeeves, is a recurring fictional character in the eponymous stories, being the valet of Bertie Wooster.

Bingo Little edit

Richard P. "Bingo" Little is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories. A member of the Drones Club and a close friend of Bertie Wooster, Bingo often falls in love in the early stories. Bingo also appears in Drones Club stories outside the Jeeves canon.

Mortimer Little edit

Mortimer Little, later Lord Bittlesham, is a fictional character appearing in the Jeeves semi-novel, The Inimitable Jeeves. He devotes himself almost entirely to eating and is very fat. He is the uncle of Bingo Little, who is dependent upon him for an allowance. In "Jeeves Exerts the Old Cerebellum", Bingo's stratagem, suggested by Jeeves, to get his allowance increased backfires by inducing Old Mr. Little to marry his cook, Miss Watson. He acquires the title Lord Bittlesham by the time he appears in "Comrade Bingo", and also appears in "Bingo and the Little Woman".[37]

Daphne Dolores Morehead edit

Daphne Dolores Morehead is a fictional character in a Jeeves novel, Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit. She is a young and attractive blonde bestselling novelist. Blue-eyed and curvaceous, she turned the head of Stilton Cheesewright, making him forget about his ex-fiancée Florence Craye and so-called rival Bertie Wooster.[38] She is probably based on Daphne du Maurier.

In the Jeeves and Wooster television series, Morehead herself does not appear. Instead, she is impersonated by Jeeves.

Constable Oates edit

Police Constable Eustace Oates is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories. He is a police officer at Totleigh-in-the-Wold. He is bitten by Stiffy Byng's dog Bartholomew and gets his helmet stolen in The Code of the Woosters, and arrests Bertie in Stiff Upper Lip, Jeeves.[39]

Gwladys Pendlebury edit

Gwladys Pendlebury is a fictional character appearing in the Jeeves short story, "The Spot of Art" (collected in Very Good, Jeeves). A portrait painter, she meets Bertie Wooster at a party in Chelsea. Though Bertie is initially in love with her, she ultimately gets engaged to Lucius Pim, whom she injured with her car. Her portrait of Bertie is used in soup advertisements.[40]

Lucius Pim edit

Lucius Pim is a fictional character appearing in the Jeeves short story, "The Spot of Art". He has five brothers and a sister, Beatrice Slingsby. He is an artist and is initially Bertie Wooster's wavy-haired rival for the affections of fellow artist Gwladys Pendlebury. His leg is injured when he is struck by a car driven by Gwladys, and he is brought to recuperate in Bertie's flat by Gwladys's request. Soon enough, he and Gwladys become engaged. Acting as her agent, he obtains a satisfactory price for her portrait of Bertie.[41]

Stinker Pinker edit

The Reverend Harold "Stinker" Pinker is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories. He went to Oxford with Bertie Wooster. He boxed and played rugby football at Oxford, and later played rugby for England. A kindly and muscular individual, he is described by Bertie as being "a large, lumbering Newfoundland puppy of a chap".[42] Stiffy Byng refers to him as an example of Muscular Christianity.[43] He is prone to tripping and knocking over tables.[44] Bertie says that he "had always been constitutionally incapable of walking through the great Gobi desert without knocking something over".[45]

A curate at Totleigh-in-the-Wold, he is engaged to Stiffy Byng in The Code of the Woosters, appears with her again in Stiff Upper Lip, Jeeves in which he becomes vicar and the prop forward of the local rugby team at Hockley-cum-Meston, and is mentioned as performing well for the team in Aunts Aren't Gentlemen.[46]

Major Plank edit

Major Plank is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories. He was called "Barmy" Plank at school.[47] An elderly and square-faced man, he is an explorer who lives in the village of Hockley-cum-Meston, in a house he inherited from his godfather. Devoted to rugby football, he sometimes has memory trouble due to malaria. He sells an amber statuette he obtained in the Congo to Sir Watkyn Bassett and meets the so-called Alpine Joe in Stiff Upper Lip, Jeeves.[48] He sees Alpine Joe again in Aunts Aren't Gentlemen.

Major Plank may be the Major Brabazon-Plank who appears in the earlier Uncle Fred novel outside the Jeeves canon, Uncle Dynamite.[49]

Catsmeat Potter-Pirbright edit

Claude Cattermole "Catsmeat" Potter-Pirbright is a fictional character in the Jeeves stories. He is a West End actor, a member of the Drones Club, and the brother of Cora "Corky" Potter-Pirbright. Catsmeat also appears in Drones Club stories outside the Jeeves canon.

Oofy Prosser edit

Alexander Charles "Oofy" Prosser is a fictional character mentioned in several Jeeves stories. Being the millionaire member of the Drones Club, he is also a friend of Bertie Wooster. The most wealthy and envied member of the Club, his nickname "Oofy" is British slang for "wealthy".

Oofy Prosser appears briefly in several episodes of the Jeeves and Wooster television series. For instance, he and fellow Drone Barmy Fotheringay-Phipps develop a dance inspired by Gussie Fink-Nottle's demonstration of newt courtship in "The Hunger Strike", and he and Barmy bet each other on how long they can go without smoking, with each trying to smoke in secret in Bertie's flat, in "Will Anatole Return to Brinkley Court?".

Lord Rowcester edit

Bill Belfry, 9th Earl of Rowcester (pronounced "roaster"), is a fictional character introduced in the novel Ring for Jeeves, in which he is the impoverished owner of the near-derelict Rowcester Abbey in Southmoltonshire. He has a sister, Monica "Moke" Carmoyle, and was a Commando in WWII.[12]

In post-WWII Britain, Jeeves temporarily becomes valet to Lord Rowcester whilst Bertie Wooster is away at a school to teach the wealthy classes how to survive in the wake of social revolution. Lord Rowcester, engaged to be married to Jill Wyvern, wishes to find means of earning money to repair his home and thus sell it off to live a happy married life. At the suggestion of Jeeves, Bill sets up as a bookmaker at horse races under the title of Honest Patch Perkins.[50]

Mrs Scholfield edit

Mrs. Scholfield is a fictional character who is mentioned in the Jeeves short story "Bertie Changes His Mind". She is sister to Bertie Wooster, and apparently lives or spends some considerable portion of her time in India.[51] She is never given a first name. Bertie and his sister seem to be on good terms, since Bertie considers buying a house where he can live with his sister and her three young daughters.

When asked by Chuffy in Thank You, Jeeves if he has any sisters, Bertie replies in the negative.[52] This may be a continuity error, though Wodehouse scholars have proposed possible explanations for this inconsistency. Bertie may have preferred not to mention his sister since he was trying to convince Chuffy that he had kissed Pauline Stoker in a brotherly manner,[51] Mrs. Scholfield might have passed away somewhere between the short story and the novel, or Bertie simply preferred not to discuss his family with a man who had threatened him with physical harm.

While Mrs. Scholfield does not appear in person in the original Jeeves canon, she was portrayed by actress Barbara French in an episode of The World of Wooster based on "Bertie Changes His Mind".[53]

Seppings edit

Seppings is a fictional character in the Jeeves stories. He is the butler of Dahlia Travers and Tom Travers at their country house, Brinkley Court.[54] His first name is not given in the stories. He is a dignified and stoic figure, though he has been on friendly terms with Bertie Wooster since Bertie's boyhood. Bertie has enjoyed many a port in his pantry, and they sometimes have conversations, mainly about the weather and Seppings's lumbago.[55] On one occasion, Bertie calls him "Pop Seppings" in a familiar manner.[56]

He is employed alongside the supreme chef Anatole. Like many others, Seppings highly esteems Anatole's cooking. In Right Ho, Jeeves, Bertie describes Seppings when recalling Tuppy pushing away Anatole's cooking at dinner, stating that "Seppings, Aunt Dahlia's butler, a cold, unemotional man, had gasped and practically reeled when Tuppy waved aside those nonnettes de poulet Agnès Sorel".[57] In the same novel, Bertie mentions that Seppings is fond of dances, and Bertie later has trouble getting his attention while Seppings is engrossed in dancing.[58] Seppings makes a brief appearance in The Code of the Woosters, working at the Travers family's town house.

In Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit, Seppings discovers a missing pearl necklace in Jeeves's room, and draws this to Jeeves's attention before reporting it to anyone else. After he does report this, both Seppings and Aunt Dahlia are offended when Mrs Trotter suggests that Seppings stole it.[59] During the events of Jeeves in the Offing, Seppings is away on holiday, at Bognor Regis. When he comes down with a temporary ailment of some sort in Stiff Upper Lip, Jeeves, Jeeves serves as Brinkley Court's substitute butler. Seppings suffers a bout of indigestion after eating too much of Anatole's cooking in Much Obliged, Jeeves, though he soon recovers.[60]

Seppings, along with Bertie Wooster and Jeeves, is featured in the play Jeeves and Wooster in Perfect Nonsense (2013).

Charlie Silversmith edit

Charlie Silversmith is a fictional character who appears in the Jeeves novel, The Mating Season. A large, imposing 16-stone man with a bald head, Silversmith is the austere butler at Deverill Hall. He is Jeeves's uncle and the father of Queenie, who is the parlourmaid at Deverill Hall and engaged to Constable Dobbs.[61] In Much Obliged, Jeeves, Bertie Wooster says that he esteems few men more highly than Jeeves's Uncle Charlie, and when Jeeves is writing a letter to his uncle, Bertie says, "Give Uncle Charlie my love", to which Jeeves replies that he will.[62]

Sippy Sipperley edit

Oliver Randolph Sipperley, called "Sippy" by Bertie, is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories. Sippy is a 24-year-old author who is financially dependent on his Aunt Vera. He is initially a freelance author in "Without the Option" but has become editor of The Mayfair Gazette in "The Inferiority Complex of Old Sippy". He recommends Jeeves's problem-solving abilities to Gussie Fink-Nottle in Right Ho, Jeeves.[63]

Roderick Spode edit

Roderick Spode, 7th Earl of Sidcup, often known as Spode or Lord Sidcup, is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves novels. An "amateur dictator", he is aggressive and intimidating. Spode is usually a threat to Bertie Wooster.

Rupert Steggles edit

Rupert Steggles is a fictional character in three linked Jeeves short stories in The Inimitable Jeeves. The only son of one of the biggest bookies in London, Steggles is an amateur bookmaker of dubious reputation. He is variously described as ferret-faced and rat-faced, and uses underhanded tactics to ensure that he profits from bookmaking. In "The Great Sermon Handicap", Steggles takes bets on the sermon duration of local clergymen near Twing Hall on a given Sunday. In "The Purity of the Turf", he organizes betting on the events at the Twing village school treat held on the grounds of Twing Hall. In "The Metropolitan Touch", Steggles takes bets on who will win the heart of Mary Burgess.[64]

J. Washburn Stoker edit

J. Washburn Stoker, a wealthy American, is a fictional character in the Jeeves novel, Thank You, Jeeves. His young son Dwight Stoker and daughter Pauline Stoker, to whom Bertie Wooster had once been engaged briefly, also appear. Stoker has another daughter, Emerald Stoker, who appears in Stiff Upper Lip, Jeeves.[65]

Rocky Todd edit

Rockmetteller "Rocky" Todd is a fictional character in the Jeeves stories. He is an American poet. Bertie mentions paying him a visit in "Jeeves and the Unbidden Guest". Rocky seeks help from Bertie and Jeeves in "The Aunt and the Sluggard". Both of these short stories are collected in Carry On, Jeeves.[66]

Angela Travers edit

Angela Travers is a fictional character in the Jeeves stories. She is the daughter of Dahlia Travers and Tom Travers, a cousin of Bertie Wooster, and the fiancée of Tuppy Glossop. She is mentioned in several stories and appears in the novel Right Ho, Jeeves.[67] Bertie is very fond of her. When they were children, she used to call herself his little sweetheart.[68]

Dahlia Travers edit

Dahlia Travers (née Wooster) is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories, being Bertie Wooster's bonhomous aunt, as well as the wife of Uncle Tom Travers and the mother of Angela Travers and Bonzo Travers. Aside from Bertie and Jeeves, Aunt Dahlia makes an appearance in more Jeeves stories than any other character, appearing in seven short stories and seven novels.

Tom Travers edit

Thomas "Tom" Portarlington Travers is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories. He is the husband of Dahlia Travers and thus Bertie Wooster's uncle. Travers, known to Bertie as Uncle Tom, made a fortune doing business in the Far East. Although reluctant to part with money, especially for income tax, he provides the funds for her rarely profitable magazine Milady's Boudoir, which he refers to as "Madame's Nightshirt". Travers also suffers from severe digestion problems, which are only allayed by the cooking of his French chef Anatole. Tom Travers's hobby is collecting old silver, in which his biggest rival is Sir Watkyn Bassett. Their rivalry forms a major part of the plot of The Code of the Woosters, in which they are both seeking to purchase a rare eighteenth-century cow creamer.[69]

In addition to being mentioned in many stories, Uncle Tom appears in "Clustering Round Young Bingo", Right Ho, Jeeves, and Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit. Bertie gets a letter from him in Aunts Aren't Gentlemen.

Mr Trotter edit

Mr Trotter (Lemuel Gengulphus Trotter) is a fictional character in a Jeeves novel, Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit. He is a newspaper owner from Liverpool, husband of the domineering Mrs Trotter, and stepfather of her son, the poet Percy Gorringe. Trotter is invited to Aunt Dahlia's country house Brinkley Court to decide on acquiring her literary journal, Milady's Boudoir.[70]

Mrs Trotter edit

Mrs Trotter is a fictional character who appears in one Jeeves novel, Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit, being the domineering and socially ambitious wife of Liverpool newspaper owner Mr Trotter and the mother by a former marriage of poet Percy Gorringe.[70]

Aubrey Upjohn edit

The Reverend Aubrey Upjohn is a fictional character who is mentioned in several Jeeves stories and appears in the novel Jeeves in the Offing. He was formerly the stern headmaster of Malvern House Preparatory School, the school attended by Bertie Wooster and several of his friends. Upjohn is 5' 7" tall, though he seemed to be 8' 6" tall to Bertie when Bertie was a child.[71] In Jeeves in the Offing, Upjohn has retired and grown a moustache. He is the widower of Jane Mills, who was a friend of Aunt Dahlia, and stepfather of Jane's daughter Phyllis Mills. He hopes to stand for Parliament as the Conservative candidate in Market Snodsbury.[72] He becomes the target of a libellous article by Kipper Herring. He threatens to initiate a litigation, but Jeeves, as usual, smooths things out. In some books the name of Bertie's headmaster is given as "Arnold Abney", but he appears to be the same person.

Aubrey Upjohn is also a minor Drones Club character. He is the headmaster of St. Asaph's preparatory school in Bramley-on-Sea, which Freddie Widgeon attended in the past, in "Bramley Is So Bracing". In the story, Freddie inadvertently leaves Bingo Little's baby in Upjohn's study.[72] St. Asaph's may be another name for Malvern House.

Upjohn is mentioned in The Code of the Woosters, The Mating Season, and "Jeeves and the Greasy Bird". He is also mentioned in the Drones Club story "The Editor Regrets".

Bobbie Wickham edit

Roberta "Bobbie" Wickham is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories, being a redheaded girl enamoured of practical jokes. She also appears in Mr. Mulliner stories and other stories outside the Jeeves canon.

Uncle Willoughby edit

Uncle Willoughby is a fictional character appearing in the Jeeves short story, "Jeeves Takes Charge". He is Bertie's uncle and resides in Easeby Hall;[73] his surname is not stated. Bertie is initially financially dependent on Willoughby, though this is not true in later works. As he does not appear in later stories, it is speculated that Willoughby passed away and Bertie inherited from him.[74] It is also possible that Willoughby was the trustee of Bertie's inheritance and Bertie obtained full access to his inheritance after reaching a certain age.

Ginger Winship edit

Harold "Ginger" Winship is a fictional character appearing in the Jeeves novel, Much Obliged, Jeeves. He is a friend of Bertie Wooster and was Bertie's neighbor at Magdalen College at the University of Oxford. He has ginger hair and was a heavyweight boxer for Oxford. At one point, he is engaged to Florence Craye, though he ultimately marries Magnolia Glendennon.[75] His former valet Brinkley was also Bertie's valet for a time when Jeeves had briefly left his service.

Bertie Wooster edit

Bertram "Bertie" Wooster is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories, being the master of said Jeeves.

Claude and Eustace Wooster edit

Claude and Eustace Wooster are fictional characters in the Jeeves semi-novel The Inimitable Jeeves, being the cousins of Bertie Wooster and the twin sons of Henry Wooster and Emily Wooster. They appear in "Sir Roderick Comes to Lunch", "The Great Sermon Handicap" and "The Delayed Exit of Claude and Eustace".[76] They are about half a dozen years younger than Bertie[77] and are full of energy, able to stay out all night revelling; much to the dismay of the more subdued Bertie, who considers them "more or less generally admitted to be the curse of the human race".[78] Introduced as students at Oxford, they steal a multitude of items in an effort to join the school's Seekers club - inadvertently breaking up Bertie's engagement to Honoria Glossop - and are later expelled for pouring soda water on the Senior Tutor.[77] They later ship out to South Africa to join the firm of a family friend at Aunt Agatha's direction.

Emily Wooster edit

Emily Wooster is a fictional character mentioned in one Jeeves semi-novel, The Inimitable Jeeves. She is Bertie Wooster's Aunt Emily, the widow of Henry Wooster, and the mother of Claude and Eustace Wooster.[79]

George Wooster edit

George Wooster, Lord Yaxley, is a fictional character in the Jeeves stories. He frequents many gentlemen's clubs, and is said to have discovered, well before modern medical thought, that alcohol was a food.[79] He is Bertie's uncle and apparently inherits his title, as he seems unlikely to have earned it. He eventually marries an ex-barmaid.[80] He plays an important role in "The Delayed Exit of Claude and Eustace" and appears in "Indian Summer of an Uncle".

Henry Wooster edit

Henry Wooster is a fictional character mentioned in the Jeeves semi-novel The Inimitable Jeeves, being Bertie Wooster's Uncle Henry, and the brother of Bertie's late father. Though Bertie thought he was extremely decent, Uncle Henry did strange things like keep eleven pet rabbits in his bedroom. He ended up in some sort of home, though his sister, Bertie's Aunt Agatha, claims he was merely eccentric.[81] He died sometime before the stories take place, leaving behind a wife, Emily Wooster, and his twin sons, Claude and Eustace Wooster.

Uncle Henry's story gives Sir Roderick Glossop concerns about Bertie Wooster's sanity in "Sir Roderick Comes to Lunch". He is likely the same Uncle Henry who gave Bertie the profitable tip that Bertie repeats to an audience of girls in "Bertie Changes His Mind".[82]

Lord Worplesdon edit

Percival "Percy" Craye (later Earl of Worplesdon) is a fictional character in the Jeeves stories. He has a daughter, Florence Craye, and a son, Edwin Craye. Lord Worplesdon is also the guardian of Zenobia "Nobby" Hopwood.[83] He is a former employer of Jeeves,[84] and later returns to Jeeves for advice.[85] When stirred by a strong emotion, Worplesdon has a tendency to start shouting "What? What? What?" repeatedly.[86]

He was nearly Agatha Gregson's first husband, though Agatha broke the engagement after he was thrown out of a Covent Garden ball and taken to Vine Street Police Station.[87] After gaining the title Lord Worplesdon, he becomes her second husband and Bertie's Uncle Percy. He once chased the fifteen-year-old Bertie "for five miles across difficult terrain" with a hunting crop, after finding him smoking one of his special cigars.[84] Worplesdon is later amused by the memory and gives one of his cigars to Bertie.[88]

Lord Worplesdon was mentioned in the short story "Jeeves Takes Charge", in which it is stated that he was once thrown out of a music hall with Bertie Wooster's Uncle Willoughby.[89] It is also said in this story that he sat down to breakfast one morning, cried "Eggs! Eggs! Damn all eggs!", and ran out of his house, "never again to return to the bosom of his family" – this incident is never referenced again, however.[84] He later appears in Joy in the Morning, in which he wants to have a clandestine meeting with an American businessman, Chichester Clam. In the same novel, Nobby Hopwood obtains her guardian's permission to marry Boko Fittleworth.

An early version of the character appeared in the Reggie Pepper story, "Disentangling Old Percy". In this story, his first name is not given, though the younger of his two sons is named Percy (in the British edition of the story).

See also edit

References edit

Notes
  1. ^ Wodehouse (2008) [1934], Right Ho, Jeeves, chapter 20, pp. 235-26.
  2. ^ a b Ring & Jaggard (1999), pp. 2-3.
  3. ^ Cawthorne (2013), p. 213.
  4. ^ Ring & Jaggard (1999), p. 22.
  5. ^ Wodehouse (2008) [1963], Stiff Upper Lip, Jeeves, ch. 8, p. 66.
  6. ^ "Frogs" may refer to a type of fastening (see frogs), but Bassett's garment is shown with a pattern of yellow frogs on the back cover of the Folio Society edition of Stiff Upper Lip, Jeeves, and on an audiobook cover of Stiff Upper Lip, Jeeves read by Jonathan Cecil.
  7. ^ Cawthorne (2013), p. 225.
  8. ^ Garrison (1991), p. 11.
  9. ^ Garrison (1991), p. 20.
  10. ^ Ring & Jaggard (1999), p. 40.
  11. ^ Ring & Jaggard (1999), pp. 31-32.
  12. ^ a b Garrison (1991), p. 16.
  13. ^ Ring & Jaggard (1999), p. 35.
  14. ^ Cawthorne (2013), pp. 221-222.
  15. ^ McCrum, Robert (2004). Wodehouse: A Life. New York: W. W. Norton & Company Ltd. pp. 130. ISBN 0-393-05159-5.
  16. ^ Wodehouse (2008) [1963], Stiff Upper Lip, Jeeves, chapter 24, p. 210.
  17. ^ Ring & Jaggard (1999), p. 47.
  18. ^ a b Cawthorne (2013), pp. 203-204.
  19. ^ Wodehouse (2008) [1963], Stiff Upper Lip, Jeeves, chapter 3, p. 29.
  20. ^ Ring & Jaggard (1999), p. 49.
  21. ^ Cawthorne (2013), pp. 217-218.
  22. ^ Garrison (1991), p. 45.
  23. ^ Wodehouse, P. G. (1974) [1972]. "Chapter 11". Pearls, Girls and Monty Bodkin (Reprinted ed.). London: Penguin Books. p. 171. ISBN 9780140038354.
  24. ^ Ring & Jaggard (1999), p. 58.
  25. ^ Garrison (1991), p. 47.
  26. ^ Cawthorne (2013), pp. 185-186.
  27. ^ Garrison (1991), p. 48.
  28. ^ Ring & Jaggard (1999), pp. 66–67.
  29. ^ Ring & Jaggard (1999), p. 90.
  30. ^ Ring & Jaggard (1999), p. 100.
  31. ^ Garrison (1991), p. 105.
  32. ^ Garrison (1991), p. 271.
  33. ^ Garrison (1991), p. 85.
  34. ^ Garrison (1991), p. 90.
  35. ^ Cawthorne (2013), p. 219.
  36. ^ Ring & Jaggard (1999), p. 120.
  37. ^ Garrison (1991), pp. 106-107.
  38. ^ Garrison (1991), p. 124.
  39. ^ Garrison (1991), p. 134.
  40. ^ Ring & Jaggard (1999), p. 191.
  41. ^ Ring & Jaggard (1999), p. 197.
  42. ^ Wodehouse (2008) [1938], The Code of the Woosters, chapter 4, pp. 90-91.
  43. ^ Wodehouse (2008) [1963], Stiff Upper Lip, Jeeves, chapter 16, p. 141.
  44. ^ Wodehouse (2008) [1963], Stiff Upper Lip, Jeeves, chapter 2, p. 22.
  45. ^ Wodehouse (2008) [1938], The Code of the Woosters, chapter 9, p. 171.
  46. ^ Ring & Jaggard (1999), pp. 197-198.
  47. ^ Wodehouse (2008) [1974], Aunts Aren't Gentlemen, chapter 3, p. 24.
  48. ^ Ring & Jaggard (1999), p. 199.
  49. ^ Garrison (1991), p. 32.
  50. ^ Cawthorne (2013), pp. 123-126.
  51. ^ a b Ring & Jaggard (1999), p. 221.
  52. ^ Wodehouse (2008) [1934], Thank You, Jeeves, chapter 6, p. 75.
  53. ^ "P.G. Wodehouse's The World of Wooster: 2: Jeeves and a Change of Mind". BBC Genome. 2019. Retrieved 15 August 2019.
  54. ^ Garrison (1991), p. 170.
  55. ^ Jeeves in the Offing, chapter 1, and Much Obliged, Jeeves, chapter 16.
  56. ^ Wodehouse (2008) [1954], Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit, chapter 17, p. 173.
  57. ^ Wodehouse (2008) [1934], Right Ho, Jeeves, chapter 11, pp. 125–126.
  58. ^ Wodehouse (2008) [1934], Right Ho, Jeeves, chapter 22, pp. 268 and 277.
  59. ^ Wodehouse (2008) [1954], Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit, chapter 21, pp. 211–212.
  60. ^ Wodehouse (2008) [1971], Much Obliged, Jeeves, chapters 5 and 9.
  61. ^ Ring & Jaggard (1999), p. 230.
  62. ^ Wodehouse (2008) [1971], Much Obliged, Jeeves, chapter 15, pp. 161-166.
  63. ^ Ring & Jaggard (1999), p. 232.
  64. ^ Ring & Jaggard (1999), p. 240.
  65. ^ Ring & Jaggard (1999), pp. 240-241.
  66. ^ Ring & Jaggard (1999), p. 250.
  67. ^ Ring & Jaggard (1999), pp. 251-252.
  68. ^ Wodehouse (2008) [1934], Right Ho, Jeeves, chapter 12, p. 144.
  69. ^ Ring & Jaggard (1999), pp. 255-256.
  70. ^ a b Garrison (1991), p. 194.
  71. ^ Ring & Jaggard (1999), pp. 265-266.
  72. ^ a b Garrison (1991), p. 201.
  73. ^ Ring & Jaggard (1999), p. 264.
  74. ^ Cawthorne (2013), p. 179.
  75. ^ Garrison (1991), p. 218.
  76. ^ Ring & Jaggard (1999), pp. 290-292.
  77. ^ a b Wodehouse (2008) [1923], The Inimitable Jeeves, chapter 16, p. 210-211.
  78. ^ Wodehouse (2008) [1923], The Inimitable Jeeves, chapter 13, p. 138.
  79. ^ a b Ring & Jaggard (1999), p. 292.
  80. ^ Usborne (2003), p. 74.
  81. ^ Wodehouse (2008) [1923], The Inimitable Jeeves, chapter 7, p. 75.
  82. ^ Ring & Jaggard (1999), p. 261.
  83. ^ Cawthorne (2013), p. 186.
  84. ^ a b c Wodehouse (2008) [1925], Carry On, Jeeves, chapter 1, p. 14.
  85. ^ Wodehouse (2008) [1947], Joy in the Morning, chapter 4, p. 38.
  86. ^ Wodehouse (2008) [1947], Joy in the Morning, chapter 14, p. 134.
  87. ^ Wodehouse (2008) [1947], Joy in the Morning, chapter 24, p. 230.
  88. ^ Wodehouse (2008) [1947], Joy in the Morning, chapter 22, p. 211.
  89. ^ Wodehouse (2008) [1925], Carry On, Jeeves, chapter 1, pp. 18-19.
Sources
  • Cawthorne, Nigel (2013). A Brief Guide to Jeeves and Wooster. London: Constable & Robinson. ISBN 978-1-78033-824-8.
  • Garrison, Daniel H. (1991) [1989]. Who's Who in Wodehouse (Revised ed.). New York: Constable & Robinson. ISBN 1-55882-087-6.
  • Ring, Tony; Jaggard, Geoffrey (1999). Wodehouse in Woostershire. Chippenham: Porpoise Books. ISBN 1-870-304-19-5.
  • Usborne, Richard (2003) [1961]. Plum Sauce: A P. G. Wodehouse Companion (Fifth ed.). New York: The Overlook Press. ISBN 1-58567-441-9.
  • Wodehouse, P. G. (2008) [1923]. The Inimitable Jeeves (Reprinted ed.). London: Arrow Books. ISBN 978-0099513681.
  • Wodehouse, P. G. (2008) [1925]. Carry On, Jeeves (Reprinted ed.). London: Arrow Books. ISBN 978-0099513698.
  • Wodehouse, P. G. (2008) [1934]. Thank You, Jeeves (Reprinted ed.). London: Arrow Books. ISBN 978-0099513735.
  • Wodehouse, P. G. (2008) [1934]. Right Ho, Jeeves (Reprinted ed.). London: Arrow Books. ISBN 978-0099513742.
  • Wodehouse, P. G. (2008) [1947]. Joy in the Morning (Reprinted ed.). London: Arrow Books. ISBN 978-0099513766.
  • Wodehouse, P. G. (2008) [1954]. Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit (Reprinted ed.). London: Arrow Books. ISBN 978-1-78033-824-8.
  • Wodehouse, P. G. (2008) [1960]. Jeeves in the Offing (Reprinted ed.). London: Arrow Books. ISBN 978-0099513940.
  • Wodehouse, P. G. (2008) [1963]. Stiff Upper Lip, Jeeves (Reprinted ed.). London: Arrow Books. ISBN 978-0099513957.
  • Wodehouse, P. G. (2008) [1971]. Much Obliged, Jeeves (Reprinted ed.). London: Arrow Books. ISBN 978-0099513964.

list, jeeves, characters, following, list, recurring, notable, fictional, characters, featured, jeeves, novels, short, stories, wodehouse, contents, anatole, rosie, banks, madeline, bassett, watkyn, bassett, biffy, biffen, rupert, bingley, blumenfeld, butterfi. The following is a list of recurring and notable fictional characters featured in the Jeeves novels and short stories by P G Wodehouse Contents 1 Anatole 2 Rosie M Banks 3 Madeline Bassett 4 Watkyn Bassett 5 Biffy Biffen 6 Rupert Bingley 7 Mr Blumenfeld 8 Butterfield 9 Stiffy Byng 10 Stilton Cheesewright 11 Lord Chuffnell 12 Clementina 13 Edwin Craye 14 Florence Craye 15 Gussie Fink Nottle 16 Boko Fittleworth 17 Tuppy Glossop 18 Honoria Glossop 19 Lady Glossop 20 Roderick Glossop 21 Percy Gorringe 22 Agatha Gregson 23 Thomas Gregson 24 Francis Heppenstall 25 Kipper Herring 26 Jeeves 27 Bingo Little 28 Mortimer Little 29 Daphne Dolores Morehead 30 Constable Oates 31 Gwladys Pendlebury 32 Lucius Pim 33 Stinker Pinker 34 Major Plank 35 Catsmeat Potter Pirbright 36 Oofy Prosser 37 Lord Rowcester 38 Mrs Scholfield 39 Seppings 40 Charlie Silversmith 41 Sippy Sipperley 42 Roderick Spode 43 Rupert Steggles 44 J Washburn Stoker 45 Rocky Todd 46 Angela Travers 47 Dahlia Travers 48 Tom Travers 49 Mr Trotter 50 Mrs Trotter 51 Aubrey Upjohn 52 Bobbie Wickham 53 Uncle Willoughby 54 Ginger Winship 55 Bertie Wooster 56 Claude and Eustace Wooster 57 Emily Wooster 58 George Wooster 59 Henry Wooster 60 Lord Worplesdon 61 See also 62 ReferencesAnatole editAnatole is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories being the supremely skilled French chef of Aunt Dahlia at her country house Brinkley Court He is mentioned in many of the stories and is often praised as God s gift to the gastric juices A small rotund man Anatole has a large moustache Bertie Wooster notes that the ends of Anatole s moustache turn up when he is happy and droop when he is upset Originally from Provence Anatole speaks English with a mixed fluency having learned much of his English from Bingo Little and an American chauffeur from Brooklyn 1 Anatole previously worked for the Littles but entered Aunt Dahlia s employment in Clustering Round Young Bingo The only cook known to be able to make food that agrees with Tom Travers s digestion he was relied on to such an extent that Tom Travers postponed a Mediterranean trip because Anatole was ill with influenza in The Spot of Art Anatole is described as being temperamental to the point of nearly resigning in Right Ho Jeeves when several people at the dinner table push his food away in bids to catch their loved ones attention 2 Many characters esteem Anatole s cooking and try to hire him away from the Travers household including Jane Snettisham The Love That Purifies Sir Watkyn Bassett The Code of the Woosters and Mrs Trotter Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit In Much Obliged Jeeves Bertie comments that Anatole suffers from mal au foie liver problems and is apt to discuss the subject at length 3 Rosie M Banks editMain article Rosie M Banks Rosie M Banks is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories being an author who writes romance novels She also appears in Drones Club stories outside the Jeeves canon She is married to Bingo Little Madeline Bassett editMain article Madeline Bassett Madeline Bassett is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories She is the daughter of Sir Watkyn Bassett and is a rather mushy sentimental girl Bertie Wooster is briefly engaged to her Watkyn Bassett editSir Watkyn Bassett CBE is a fictional character who appears in two Jeeves novels He is the father of Madeline Bassett and the uncle and guardian of Stephanie Stiffy Byng 4 He wears a pince nez and is described as a small man who makes up for his height by wearing clothes that are striking in appearance including a prismatic checked suit in The Code of the Woosters In Stiff Upper Lip Jeeves he wears a striking dressing grown As Bertie states regarding Bassett He was a small man you got the impression seeing him that when they were making magistrates there wasn t enough material left over when they came to him and for some reason not easy to explain it nearly always happens that the smaller the ex magistrate the louder the dressing grown His was a bright purple number with yellow frogs and I am not deceiving my public when I say that it smote me like a blow rendering me speechless 5 6 When he first meets Bertie Wooster Sir Watkyn is the magistrate at Bosher Street Police Court Shortly afterward he inherits a great deal of money from a distant relative and retires to live in Totleigh Towers where he is a Justice of the Peace 7 As a magistrate Bassett fined Bertie 5 for stealing a policeman s helmet on Boat Race Night and Bertie thinks that the fortune Sir Watkyn inherited actually derived from pocketing fines while a magistrate Sir Watkyn is a noted collector of antique silver and his collection rivals that of Bertie s uncle Tom Travers Each tries to obtain the silver cow creamer in The Code of the Woosters In that novel it is mentioned that Sir Watkyn is engaged to a widow named Mrs Wintergreen She is the aunt of Sir Watkyn s friend Roderick Spode who is often at Totleigh Towers 8 However she is not mentioned again In Stiff Upper Lip Jeeves he obtains a black amber statuette In the Jeeves and Wooster television series adapted from Wodehouse s stories Sir Watkyn is Florence Craye s uncle which was not the case in the original Jeeves canon Biffy Biffen editCharles Edward Biffy Biffen is a fictional character who appears in the Jeeves short story The Rummy Affair of Old Biffy An absent minded friend of Bertie Wooster Biffy is engaged to a woman named Mabel who is Jeeves s niece 9 Rupert Bingley editRupert Bingley also known as Brinkley is a recurring fictional character who appears in two Jeeves novels He is a smallish man who is thin in his first appearance but has become plump by his second appearance In his first appearance in Thank You Jeeves he is a valet called Brinkley He has extreme left wing views and threatens Bertie Wooster 10 In Much Obliged Jeeves Jeeves informs Bertie that his name is Bingley and not Brinkley By the time of this novel Bingley has inherited a large sum of money and retired from being a valet His views become extremely right wing after he becomes a man of property He resorts to theft and blackmail to increase his wealth Bingley is a member of the Junior Ganymede Club and retains his membership after retiring 11 As a valet he was employed at different times by Ginger Winship L P Runkle and Bertie Wooster 12 Mr Blumenfeld editBlumenfeld is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories His name first appears as Blumenfield in Jeeves and the Chump Cyril in The Inimitable Jeeves but is later Blumenfeld in Episode of the Dog McIntosh in Very Good Jeeves 13 He is an American theatrical manager with a young son Neither of their first names are stated though Bertie Wooster jokingly calls Blumenfeld s unfriendly son Sidney the Sunbeam 14 Blumenfeld was inspired by Abraham Lincoln Erlanger a dictatorial American theatrical producer who produced the 1916 musical Miss Springtime which Wodehouse contributed to as lyricist Erlanger employed a twelve year old boy to second guess his creative judgments on the grounds that this was the mental age of the average Broadway audience this is similar to Blumenfeld who relies on the opinions of his twelve year old son for the same reason 15 Butterfield editButterfield is the butler of Totleigh Towers Sir Watkyn Bassett s country house located in Totleigh in the Wold Butterfield s first name is not stated in the novels In Stiff Upper Lip Jeeves Bertie Wooster guesses that Butterfield is a hundred and four years old and Jeeves agrees that he is well stricken in years 16 In The Code of the Woosters while airing Stiffy Byng s dog Bartholomew Butterfield sees Bertie drop Constable Oates s helmet out of a window and retrieves it At the end of Stiff Upper Lip Jeeves Bertie agrees to let Jeeves give Butterfield his blue Alpine hat with a pink feather which Butterfield thinks will help him court a widowed lady in the village 17 Stiffy Byng editStephanie Stiffy Byng is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories The niece and ward of Sir Watkyn Bassett she initially lives with him in Totleigh Towers She is short and has blue eyes 18 She wears a wind swept hairstyle 19 and has an Aberdeen terrier named Bartholomew Stiffy often gets bright ideas that end up making trouble for others and she is not above using blackmail to induce Bertie Wooster to do errands for her 20 In The Code of the Woosters she is engaged to the Rev Harold Stinker Pinker She appears with Harold Pinker in Stiff Upper Lip Jeeves and they have married by Much Obliged Jeeves 18 Stilton Cheesewright editG D Arcy Stilton Cheesewright is a recurring fictional character in two Jeeves novels being an intermittent but jealous fiance of Florence Craye and thus a menacing rival of Florence s ex fiance Bertie Wooster who does not actually want to marry Florence His nickname is probably derived from Stilton cheese A member of the Drones Club Stilton is a hulking chap with a large head compared to a pumpkin and a face that looks like a slab of pink dough 21 Stilton went to private school Eton and Oxford with Bertie 22 He was Captain of the Boats at Eton and rowed four years for Oxford In Joy in the Morning Stilton was the local policeman at Aunt Agatha s rural village Steeple Bumpleigh and was engaged to Florence Craye who was in residence there In this novel Stilton and Florence temporarily end their engagement because she does not want him to be a policeman They reconcile after Stilton resigns from the police force when the local Justice of the Peace refuses to let him make an arrest In Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit the engagement between Stilton and Florence is threatened because Stilton refuses to grow a moustache and Florence goes to a night club with Bertie Stilton leaves Florence for good and becomes romantically interested in the novelist Daphne Dolores Morehead 2 Stilton is mentioned in Pearls Girls and Monty Bodkin Strong language was no novelty to Monty he had once been present when somebody had slammed a car door on the finger of D Arcy Stilton Cheesewright of the Drones 23 In the television series Jeeves and Wooster Daphne Dolores Morehead does not appear but is impersonated by Jeeves in drag Stilton falls in love with this Daphne Dolores Morehead and is never made aware that this was actually Jeeves and not the real Morehead in the episode Stilton goes to New York City at the end of the episode having heard that Daphne Dolores Morehead lives there Lord Chuffnell editMarmaduke Lord Chuffnell nicknamed Chuffy is a fictional character in the Jeeves novel Thank You Jeeves He went to private school Eton and Oxford with Bertie Wooster 24 Chuffy is a Drones Club member He becomes engaged to Pauline Stoker and they have married by Stiff Upper Lip Jeeves 25 Chuffy s aunt Myrtle Dowager Lady Chuffnell appears in Thank You Jeeves She has a young son Seabury and is romantically involved with Sir Roderick Glossop Her engagement to Glossop is threatened but saved in Jeeves and the Greasy Bird 26 In the television series Jeeves and Wooster Myrtle is Chuffy s sister Mrs Pongleton and her son Seabury is therefore Chuffy s nephew Clementina editClementina is a fictional character in the Jeeves short story Jeeves and the Kid Clementina She is Bobbie Wickham s cousin 27 Edwin Craye editThe Hon Edwin Craye is a fictional character in the Jeeves stories The fourteen year old son of Lord Worplesdon and younger brother of Lady Florence Craye he is a bothersome Boy Scout who seeks to perform daily acts of kindness though he is more concerned with performing daily acts than actually being helpful He always causes trouble for others with his meddlesome actions especially after he has fallen behind with his daily acts of kindness and is trying to catch up He appears in Jeeves Takes Charge and Joy in the Morning A prototype of Edwin Craye appears in the Reggie Pepper story Disentangling Old Percy This early version of Edwin is a meek adult He has the title Lord Weeting in the British edition of the story 28 Florence Craye editMain article Florence Craye Lady Florence Craye is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories being the beautiful intellectual and serious daughter of Percy Craye Lord Worplesdon A novelist in Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit 1954 she is engaged to Oxford educated muscular ex policeman G D Arcy Cheesewright Gussie Fink Nottle editMain article Gussie Fink Nottle Augustus Gussie Fink Nottle is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories He is a teetotaller and studies newts Boko Fittleworth editGeorge Webster Boko Fittleworth is a fictional character in a Jeeves novel being an author with a unique dress sense a member of the Drones Club and a good friend of Bertie Wooster In Joy in the Morning even the normally unflappable Jeeves was strongly affected at the sight of Boko who dresses like a tramp cyclist According to Bertie after Jeeves first saw him Jeeves winced and tottered off to the kitchen probably to pull himself together with cooking sherry Boko is engaged to Zenobia Nobby Hopwood He once shared a flat with Harold Ginger Winship and employed Magnolia Glendennon as his stenographer as mentioned in Much Obliged Jeeves 29 Tuppy Glossop editMain article Tuppy Glossop Hildebrand Tuppy Glossop is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories The nephew of Sir Roderick Glossop Tuppy is a Drones Club member and the fiance of Bertie Wooster s cousin Angela Travers Honoria Glossop editMain article Honoria Glossop Honoria Glossop is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories She is the athletic and brainy daughter of Sir Roderick Glossop Lady Glossop editLady Glossop is a fictional character in the Jeeves stories being the wife of well known nerve specialist Sir Roderick Glossop mother to Oswald and Honoria and an acquaintance of Bertie s fearsome Aunt Agatha She is mentioned but does not appear in the stories and dies before the events of Thank You Jeeves 30 In the first and second seasons of the television series Jeeves and Wooster Lady Glossop makes appearances and entertains as much suspicion of Bertie s sanity as her husband In the fourth season Jeeves instead states to Bertie that Lady Glossop eloped with a bus conductor and also says that Sir Roderick was anxious to remarry Roderick Glossop editMain article Roderick Glossop Sir Roderick Glossop is a recurring fictional character in the comic novels of P G Wodehouse He is the father of Oswald and Honoria as well as the uncle of Tuppy Glossop Sometimes referred to as the noted nerve specialist or the loony doctor he is a practitioner of psychiatry He also appears in a Blandings Castle novel outside the Jeeves canon Percy Gorringe editPercy Gorringe is a fictional character in a Jeeves novel being a side whiskered poet and writer the stepson of newspaper owner Mr Trotter and the son of Mrs Trotter He gets engaged to Florence Craye and is intent on producing her novel Spindrift as a play in Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit but is dumped by Florence after the play is a flop as mentioned in Much Obliged Jeeves 31 He writes mystery novels under the name Rex West 32 Agatha Gregson editMain article Aunt Agatha Agatha Gregson nee Wooster later Lady Worplesdon is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories being Bertie Wooster s fearsome Aunt Agatha and mother of Thomas Thos Gregson Thomas Gregson editThomas Thos sometimes written Thos Gregson is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories The troublesome son of Agatha Gregson and her first husband Spenser Gregson he first appears in Jeeves and the Impending Doom in which he is being tutored by Bingo Little His next appearance is in The Love That Purifies In this story he is stated to be fourteen years old In the novel The Mating Season he procures the cosh that ultimately ends up in Jeeves s possession Bertie mentions reluctantly taking his cousin Thos to the theatre at the request of his Aunt Agatha in several stories 33 Francis Heppenstall editThe Reverend Francis Heppenstall is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories He is the vicar at the village church at Twing He is one of the entries in The Great Sermon Handicap manages the annual village school treat in The Purity of the Turf and is the uncle of Mary Burgess in The Metropolitan Touch He also has two sons 34 Kipper Herring editReginald Kipper Herring is a fictional character in a Jeeves novel being a childhood friend of Bertie Wooster from Malvern House 35 In Jeeves in the Offing Kipper is employed as a journalist at the Thursday Review in which capacity he writes a scathing review of a book on preparatory schools by his former headmaster Aubrey Upjohn He is engaged to the mischievous Bobbie Wickham 36 Jeeves editMain article Jeeves Reginald Jeeves usually referred to as Jeeves is a recurring fictional character in the eponymous stories being the valet of Bertie Wooster Bingo Little editMain article Bingo Little Richard P Bingo Little is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories A member of the Drones Club and a close friend of Bertie Wooster Bingo often falls in love in the early stories Bingo also appears in Drones Club stories outside the Jeeves canon Mortimer Little editMortimer Little later Lord Bittlesham is a fictional character appearing in the Jeeves semi novel The Inimitable Jeeves He devotes himself almost entirely to eating and is very fat He is the uncle of Bingo Little who is dependent upon him for an allowance In Jeeves Exerts the Old Cerebellum Bingo s stratagem suggested by Jeeves to get his allowance increased backfires by inducing Old Mr Little to marry his cook Miss Watson He acquires the title Lord Bittlesham by the time he appears in Comrade Bingo and also appears in Bingo and the Little Woman 37 Daphne Dolores Morehead editDaphne Dolores Morehead is a fictional character in a Jeeves novel Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit She is a young and attractive blonde bestselling novelist Blue eyed and curvaceous she turned the head of Stilton Cheesewright making him forget about his ex fiancee Florence Craye and so called rival Bertie Wooster 38 She is probably based on Daphne du Maurier In the Jeeves and Wooster television series Morehead herself does not appear Instead she is impersonated by Jeeves Constable Oates editPolice Constable Eustace Oates is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories He is a police officer at Totleigh in the Wold He is bitten by Stiffy Byng s dog Bartholomew and gets his helmet stolen in The Code of the Woosters and arrests Bertie in Stiff Upper Lip Jeeves 39 Gwladys Pendlebury editGwladys Pendlebury is a fictional character appearing in the Jeeves short story The Spot of Art collected in Very Good Jeeves A portrait painter she meets Bertie Wooster at a party in Chelsea Though Bertie is initially in love with her she ultimately gets engaged to Lucius Pim whom she injured with her car Her portrait of Bertie is used in soup advertisements 40 Lucius Pim editLucius Pim is a fictional character appearing in the Jeeves short story The Spot of Art He has five brothers and a sister Beatrice Slingsby He is an artist and is initially Bertie Wooster s wavy haired rival for the affections of fellow artist Gwladys Pendlebury His leg is injured when he is struck by a car driven by Gwladys and he is brought to recuperate in Bertie s flat by Gwladys s request Soon enough he and Gwladys become engaged Acting as her agent he obtains a satisfactory price for her portrait of Bertie 41 Stinker Pinker editThe Reverend Harold Stinker Pinker is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories He went to Oxford with Bertie Wooster He boxed and played rugby football at Oxford and later played rugby for England A kindly and muscular individual he is described by Bertie as being a large lumbering Newfoundland puppy of a chap 42 Stiffy Byng refers to him as an example of Muscular Christianity 43 He is prone to tripping and knocking over tables 44 Bertie says that he had always been constitutionally incapable of walking through the great Gobi desert without knocking something over 45 A curate at Totleigh in the Wold he is engaged to Stiffy Byng in The Code of the Woosters appears with her again in Stiff Upper Lip Jeeves in which he becomes vicar and the prop forward of the local rugby team at Hockley cum Meston and is mentioned as performing well for the team in Aunts Aren t Gentlemen 46 Major Plank editMain article Major Plank Major Plank is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories He was called Barmy Plank at school 47 An elderly and square faced man he is an explorer who lives in the village of Hockley cum Meston in a house he inherited from his godfather Devoted to rugby football he sometimes has memory trouble due to malaria He sells an amber statuette he obtained in the Congo to Sir Watkyn Bassett and meets the so called Alpine Joe in Stiff Upper Lip Jeeves 48 He sees Alpine Joe again in Aunts Aren t Gentlemen Major Plank may be the Major Brabazon Plank who appears in the earlier Uncle Fred novel outside the Jeeves canon Uncle Dynamite 49 Catsmeat Potter Pirbright editMain article Catsmeat Potter Pirbright Claude Cattermole Catsmeat Potter Pirbright is a fictional character in the Jeeves stories He is a West End actor a member of the Drones Club and the brother of Cora Corky Potter Pirbright Catsmeat also appears in Drones Club stories outside the Jeeves canon Oofy Prosser editMain article Oofy Prosser Alexander Charles Oofy Prosser is a fictional character mentioned in several Jeeves stories Being the millionaire member of the Drones Club he is also a friend of Bertie Wooster The most wealthy and envied member of the Club his nickname Oofy is British slang for wealthy Oofy Prosser appears briefly in several episodes of the Jeeves and Wooster television series For instance he and fellow Drone Barmy Fotheringay Phipps develop a dance inspired by Gussie Fink Nottle s demonstration of newt courtship in The Hunger Strike and he and Barmy bet each other on how long they can go without smoking with each trying to smoke in secret in Bertie s flat in Will Anatole Return to Brinkley Court Lord Rowcester editBill Belfry 9th Earl of Rowcester pronounced roaster is a fictional character introduced in the novel Ring for Jeeves in which he is the impoverished owner of the near derelict Rowcester Abbey in Southmoltonshire He has a sister Monica Moke Carmoyle and was a Commando in WWII 12 In post WWII Britain Jeeves temporarily becomes valet to Lord Rowcester whilst Bertie Wooster is away at a school to teach the wealthy classes how to survive in the wake of social revolution Lord Rowcester engaged to be married to Jill Wyvern wishes to find means of earning money to repair his home and thus sell it off to live a happy married life At the suggestion of Jeeves Bill sets up as a bookmaker at horse races under the title of Honest Patch Perkins 50 Mrs Scholfield editMrs Scholfield is a fictional character who is mentioned in the Jeeves short story Bertie Changes His Mind She is sister to Bertie Wooster and apparently lives or spends some considerable portion of her time in India 51 She is never given a first name Bertie and his sister seem to be on good terms since Bertie considers buying a house where he can live with his sister and her three young daughters When asked by Chuffy in Thank You Jeeves if he has any sisters Bertie replies in the negative 52 This may be a continuity error though Wodehouse scholars have proposed possible explanations for this inconsistency Bertie may have preferred not to mention his sister since he was trying to convince Chuffy that he had kissed Pauline Stoker in a brotherly manner 51 Mrs Scholfield might have passed away somewhere between the short story and the novel or Bertie simply preferred not to discuss his family with a man who had threatened him with physical harm While Mrs Scholfield does not appear in person in the original Jeeves canon she was portrayed by actress Barbara French in an episode of The World of Wooster based on Bertie Changes His Mind 53 Seppings editSeppings is a fictional character in the Jeeves stories He is the butler of Dahlia Travers and Tom Travers at their country house Brinkley Court 54 His first name is not given in the stories He is a dignified and stoic figure though he has been on friendly terms with Bertie Wooster since Bertie s boyhood Bertie has enjoyed many a port in his pantry and they sometimes have conversations mainly about the weather and Seppings s lumbago 55 On one occasion Bertie calls him Pop Seppings in a familiar manner 56 He is employed alongside the supreme chef Anatole Like many others Seppings highly esteems Anatole s cooking In Right Ho Jeeves Bertie describes Seppings when recalling Tuppy pushing away Anatole s cooking at dinner stating that Seppings Aunt Dahlia s butler a cold unemotional man had gasped and practically reeled when Tuppy waved aside those nonnettes de poulet Agnes Sorel 57 In the same novel Bertie mentions that Seppings is fond of dances and Bertie later has trouble getting his attention while Seppings is engrossed in dancing 58 Seppings makes a brief appearance in The Code of the Woosters working at the Travers family s town house In Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit Seppings discovers a missing pearl necklace in Jeeves s room and draws this to Jeeves s attention before reporting it to anyone else After he does report this both Seppings and Aunt Dahlia are offended when Mrs Trotter suggests that Seppings stole it 59 During the events of Jeeves in the Offing Seppings is away on holiday at Bognor Regis When he comes down with a temporary ailment of some sort in Stiff Upper Lip Jeeves Jeeves serves as Brinkley Court s substitute butler Seppings suffers a bout of indigestion after eating too much of Anatole s cooking in Much Obliged Jeeves though he soon recovers 60 Seppings along with Bertie Wooster and Jeeves is featured in the play Jeeves and Wooster in Perfect Nonsense 2013 Charlie Silversmith editCharlie Silversmith is a fictional character who appears in the Jeeves novel The Mating Season A large imposing 16 stone man with a bald head Silversmith is the austere butler at Deverill Hall He is Jeeves s uncle and the father of Queenie who is the parlourmaid at Deverill Hall and engaged to Constable Dobbs 61 In Much Obliged Jeeves Bertie Wooster says that he esteems few men more highly than Jeeves s Uncle Charlie and when Jeeves is writing a letter to his uncle Bertie says Give Uncle Charlie my love to which Jeeves replies that he will 62 Sippy Sipperley editOliver Randolph Sipperley called Sippy by Bertie is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories Sippy is a 24 year old author who is financially dependent on his Aunt Vera He is initially a freelance author in Without the Option but has become editor of The Mayfair Gazette in The Inferiority Complex of Old Sippy He recommends Jeeves s problem solving abilities to Gussie Fink Nottle in Right Ho Jeeves 63 Roderick Spode editMain article Roderick Spode Roderick Spode 7th Earl of Sidcup often known as Spode or Lord Sidcup is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves novels An amateur dictator he is aggressive and intimidating Spode is usually a threat to Bertie Wooster Rupert Steggles editRupert Steggles is a fictional character in three linked Jeeves short stories in The Inimitable Jeeves The only son of one of the biggest bookies in London Steggles is an amateur bookmaker of dubious reputation He is variously described as ferret faced and rat faced and uses underhanded tactics to ensure that he profits from bookmaking In The Great Sermon Handicap Steggles takes bets on the sermon duration of local clergymen near Twing Hall on a given Sunday In The Purity of the Turf he organizes betting on the events at the Twing village school treat held on the grounds of Twing Hall In The Metropolitan Touch Steggles takes bets on who will win the heart of Mary Burgess 64 J Washburn Stoker editJ Washburn Stoker a wealthy American is a fictional character in the Jeeves novel Thank You Jeeves His young son Dwight Stoker and daughter Pauline Stoker to whom Bertie Wooster had once been engaged briefly also appear Stoker has another daughter Emerald Stoker who appears in Stiff Upper Lip Jeeves 65 Rocky Todd editRockmetteller Rocky Todd is a fictional character in the Jeeves stories He is an American poet Bertie mentions paying him a visit in Jeeves and the Unbidden Guest Rocky seeks help from Bertie and Jeeves in The Aunt and the Sluggard Both of these short stories are collected in Carry On Jeeves 66 Angela Travers editAngela Travers is a fictional character in the Jeeves stories She is the daughter of Dahlia Travers and Tom Travers a cousin of Bertie Wooster and the fiancee of Tuppy Glossop She is mentioned in several stories and appears in the novel Right Ho Jeeves 67 Bertie is very fond of her When they were children she used to call herself his little sweetheart 68 Dahlia Travers editMain article Aunt Dahlia Dahlia Travers nee Wooster is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories being Bertie Wooster s bonhomous aunt as well as the wife of Uncle Tom Travers and the mother of Angela Travers and Bonzo Travers Aside from Bertie and Jeeves Aunt Dahlia makes an appearance in more Jeeves stories than any other character appearing in seven short stories and seven novels Tom Travers editThomas Tom Portarlington Travers is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories He is the husband of Dahlia Travers and thus Bertie Wooster s uncle Travers known to Bertie as Uncle Tom made a fortune doing business in the Far East Although reluctant to part with money especially for income tax he provides the funds for her rarely profitable magazine Milady s Boudoir which he refers to as Madame s Nightshirt Travers also suffers from severe digestion problems which are only allayed by the cooking of his French chef Anatole Tom Travers s hobby is collecting old silver in which his biggest rival is Sir Watkyn Bassett Their rivalry forms a major part of the plot of The Code of the Woosters in which they are both seeking to purchase a rare eighteenth century cow creamer 69 In addition to being mentioned in many stories Uncle Tom appears in Clustering Round Young Bingo Right Ho Jeeves and Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit Bertie gets a letter from him in Aunts Aren t Gentlemen Mr Trotter editMr Trotter Lemuel Gengulphus Trotter is a fictional character in a Jeeves novel Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit He is a newspaper owner from Liverpool husband of the domineering Mrs Trotter and stepfather of her son the poet Percy Gorringe Trotter is invited to Aunt Dahlia s country house Brinkley Court to decide on acquiring her literary journal Milady s Boudoir 70 Mrs Trotter editMrs Trotter is a fictional character who appears in one Jeeves novel Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit being the domineering and socially ambitious wife of Liverpool newspaper owner Mr Trotter and the mother by a former marriage of poet Percy Gorringe 70 Aubrey Upjohn editThe Reverend Aubrey Upjohn is a fictional character who is mentioned in several Jeeves stories and appears in the novel Jeeves in the Offing He was formerly the stern headmaster of Malvern House Preparatory School the school attended by Bertie Wooster and several of his friends Upjohn is 5 7 tall though he seemed to be 8 6 tall to Bertie when Bertie was a child 71 In Jeeves in the Offing Upjohn has retired and grown a moustache He is the widower of Jane Mills who was a friend of Aunt Dahlia and stepfather of Jane s daughter Phyllis Mills He hopes to stand for Parliament as the Conservative candidate in Market Snodsbury 72 He becomes the target of a libellous article by Kipper Herring He threatens to initiate a litigation but Jeeves as usual smooths things out In some books the name of Bertie s headmaster is given as Arnold Abney but he appears to be the same person Aubrey Upjohn is also a minor Drones Club character He is the headmaster of St Asaph s preparatory school in Bramley on Sea which Freddie Widgeon attended in the past in Bramley Is So Bracing In the story Freddie inadvertently leaves Bingo Little s baby in Upjohn s study 72 St Asaph s may be another name for Malvern House Upjohn is mentioned in The Code of the Woosters The Mating Season and Jeeves and the Greasy Bird He is also mentioned in the Drones Club story The Editor Regrets Bobbie Wickham editMain article Bobbie Wickham Roberta Bobbie Wickham is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories being a redheaded girl enamoured of practical jokes She also appears in Mr Mulliner stories and other stories outside the Jeeves canon Uncle Willoughby editUncle Willoughby is a fictional character appearing in the Jeeves short story Jeeves Takes Charge He is Bertie s uncle and resides in Easeby Hall 73 his surname is not stated Bertie is initially financially dependent on Willoughby though this is not true in later works As he does not appear in later stories it is speculated that Willoughby passed away and Bertie inherited from him 74 It is also possible that Willoughby was the trustee of Bertie s inheritance and Bertie obtained full access to his inheritance after reaching a certain age Ginger Winship editHarold Ginger Winship is a fictional character appearing in the Jeeves novel Much Obliged Jeeves He is a friend of Bertie Wooster and was Bertie s neighbor at Magdalen College at the University of Oxford He has ginger hair and was a heavyweight boxer for Oxford At one point he is engaged to Florence Craye though he ultimately marries Magnolia Glendennon 75 His former valet Brinkley was also Bertie s valet for a time when Jeeves had briefly left his service Bertie Wooster editMain article Bertie Wooster Bertram Bertie Wooster is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories being the master of said Jeeves Claude and Eustace Wooster editClaude and Eustace Wooster are fictional characters in the Jeeves semi novel The Inimitable Jeeves being the cousins of Bertie Wooster and the twin sons of Henry Wooster and Emily Wooster They appear in Sir Roderick Comes to Lunch The Great Sermon Handicap and The Delayed Exit of Claude and Eustace 76 They are about half a dozen years younger than Bertie 77 and are full of energy able to stay out all night revelling much to the dismay of the more subdued Bertie who considers them more or less generally admitted to be the curse of the human race 78 Introduced as students at Oxford they steal a multitude of items in an effort to join the school s Seekers club inadvertently breaking up Bertie s engagement to Honoria Glossop and are later expelled for pouring soda water on the Senior Tutor 77 They later ship out to South Africa to join the firm of a family friend at Aunt Agatha s direction Emily Wooster editEmily Wooster is a fictional character mentioned in one Jeeves semi novel The Inimitable Jeeves She is Bertie Wooster s Aunt Emily the widow of Henry Wooster and the mother of Claude and Eustace Wooster 79 George Wooster editGeorge Wooster Lord Yaxley is a fictional character in the Jeeves stories He frequents many gentlemen s clubs and is said to have discovered well before modern medical thought that alcohol was a food 79 He is Bertie s uncle and apparently inherits his title as he seems unlikely to have earned it He eventually marries an ex barmaid 80 He plays an important role in The Delayed Exit of Claude and Eustace and appears in Indian Summer of an Uncle Henry Wooster editHenry Wooster is a fictional character mentioned in the Jeeves semi novel The Inimitable Jeeves being Bertie Wooster s Uncle Henry and the brother of Bertie s late father Though Bertie thought he was extremely decent Uncle Henry did strange things like keep eleven pet rabbits in his bedroom He ended up in some sort of home though his sister Bertie s Aunt Agatha claims he was merely eccentric 81 He died sometime before the stories take place leaving behind a wife Emily Wooster and his twin sons Claude and Eustace Wooster Uncle Henry s story gives Sir Roderick Glossop concerns about Bertie Wooster s sanity in Sir Roderick Comes to Lunch He is likely the same Uncle Henry who gave Bertie the profitable tip that Bertie repeats to an audience of girls in Bertie Changes His Mind 82 Lord Worplesdon editPercival Percy Craye later Earl of Worplesdon is a fictional character in the Jeeves stories He has a daughter Florence Craye and a son Edwin Craye Lord Worplesdon is also the guardian of Zenobia Nobby Hopwood 83 He is a former employer of Jeeves 84 and later returns to Jeeves for advice 85 When stirred by a strong emotion Worplesdon has a tendency to start shouting What What What repeatedly 86 He was nearly Agatha Gregson s first husband though Agatha broke the engagement after he was thrown out of a Covent Garden ball and taken to Vine Street Police Station 87 After gaining the title Lord Worplesdon he becomes her second husband and Bertie s Uncle Percy He once chased the fifteen year old Bertie for five miles across difficult terrain with a hunting crop after finding him smoking one of his special cigars 84 Worplesdon is later amused by the memory and gives one of his cigars to Bertie 88 Lord Worplesdon was mentioned in the short story Jeeves Takes Charge in which it is stated that he was once thrown out of a music hall with Bertie Wooster s Uncle Willoughby 89 It is also said in this story that he sat down to breakfast one morning cried Eggs Eggs Damn all eggs and ran out of his house never again to return to the bosom of his family this incident is never referenced again however 84 He later appears in Joy in the Morning in which he wants to have a clandestine meeting with an American businessman Chichester Clam In the same novel Nobby Hopwood obtains her guardian s permission to marry Boko Fittleworth An early version of the character appeared in the Reggie Pepper story Disentangling Old Percy In this story his first name is not given though the younger of his two sons is named Percy in the British edition of the story See also editList of P G Wodehouse characters in the Jeeves stories a categorized outline of characters List of P G Wodehouse locations a list of locations including those in the Jeeves stories List of Jeeves and Wooster characters a list of characters in the television seriesReferences editNotes Wodehouse 2008 1934 Right Ho Jeeves chapter 20 pp 235 26 a b Ring amp Jaggard 1999 pp 2 3 Cawthorne 2013 p 213 Ring amp Jaggard 1999 p 22 Wodehouse 2008 1963 Stiff Upper Lip Jeeves ch 8 p 66 Frogs may refer to a type of fastening see frogs but Bassett s garment is shown with a pattern of yellow frogs on the back cover of the Folio Society edition of Stiff Upper Lip Jeeves and on an audiobook cover of Stiff Upper Lip Jeeves read by Jonathan Cecil Cawthorne 2013 p 225 Garrison 1991 p 11 Garrison 1991 p 20 Ring amp Jaggard 1999 p 40 Ring amp Jaggard 1999 pp 31 32 a b Garrison 1991 p 16 Ring amp Jaggard 1999 p 35 Cawthorne 2013 pp 221 222 McCrum Robert 2004 Wodehouse A Life New York W W Norton amp Company Ltd pp 130 ISBN 0 393 05159 5 Wodehouse 2008 1963 Stiff Upper Lip Jeeves chapter 24 p 210 Ring amp Jaggard 1999 p 47 a b Cawthorne 2013 pp 203 204 Wodehouse 2008 1963 Stiff Upper Lip Jeeves chapter 3 p 29 Ring amp Jaggard 1999 p 49 Cawthorne 2013 pp 217 218 Garrison 1991 p 45 Wodehouse P G 1974 1972 Chapter 11 Pearls Girls and Monty Bodkin Reprinted ed London Penguin Books p 171 ISBN 9780140038354 Ring amp Jaggard 1999 p 58 Garrison 1991 p 47 Cawthorne 2013 pp 185 186 Garrison 1991 p 48 Ring amp Jaggard 1999 pp 66 67 Ring amp Jaggard 1999 p 90 Ring amp Jaggard 1999 p 100 Garrison 1991 p 105 Garrison 1991 p 271 Garrison 1991 p 85 Garrison 1991 p 90 Cawthorne 2013 p 219 Ring amp Jaggard 1999 p 120 Garrison 1991 pp 106 107 Garrison 1991 p 124 Garrison 1991 p 134 Ring amp Jaggard 1999 p 191 Ring amp Jaggard 1999 p 197 Wodehouse 2008 1938 The Code of the Woosters chapter 4 pp 90 91 Wodehouse 2008 1963 Stiff Upper Lip Jeeves chapter 16 p 141 Wodehouse 2008 1963 Stiff Upper Lip Jeeves chapter 2 p 22 Wodehouse 2008 1938 The Code of the Woosters chapter 9 p 171 Ring amp Jaggard 1999 pp 197 198 Wodehouse 2008 1974 Aunts Aren t Gentlemen chapter 3 p 24 Ring amp Jaggard 1999 p 199 Garrison 1991 p 32 Cawthorne 2013 pp 123 126 a b Ring amp Jaggard 1999 p 221 Wodehouse 2008 1934 Thank You Jeeves chapter 6 p 75 P G Wodehouse s The World of Wooster 2 Jeeves and a Change of Mind BBC Genome 2019 Retrieved 15 August 2019 Garrison 1991 p 170 Jeeves in the Offing chapter 1 and Much Obliged Jeeves chapter 16 Wodehouse 2008 1954 Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit chapter 17 p 173 Wodehouse 2008 1934 Right Ho Jeeves chapter 11 pp 125 126 Wodehouse 2008 1934 Right Ho Jeeves chapter 22 pp 268 and 277 Wodehouse 2008 1954 Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit chapter 21 pp 211 212 Wodehouse 2008 1971 Much Obliged Jeeves chapters 5 and 9 Ring amp Jaggard 1999 p 230 Wodehouse 2008 1971 Much Obliged Jeeves chapter 15 pp 161 166 Ring amp Jaggard 1999 p 232 Ring amp Jaggard 1999 p 240 Ring amp Jaggard 1999 pp 240 241 Ring amp Jaggard 1999 p 250 Ring amp Jaggard 1999 pp 251 252 Wodehouse 2008 1934 Right Ho Jeeves chapter 12 p 144 Ring amp Jaggard 1999 pp 255 256 a b Garrison 1991 p 194 Ring amp Jaggard 1999 pp 265 266 a b Garrison 1991 p 201 Ring amp Jaggard 1999 p 264 Cawthorne 2013 p 179 Garrison 1991 p 218 Ring amp Jaggard 1999 pp 290 292 a b Wodehouse 2008 1923 The Inimitable Jeeves chapter 16 p 210 211 Wodehouse 2008 1923 The Inimitable Jeeves chapter 13 p 138 a b Ring amp Jaggard 1999 p 292 Usborne 2003 p 74 Wodehouse 2008 1923 The Inimitable Jeeves chapter 7 p 75 Ring amp Jaggard 1999 p 261 Cawthorne 2013 p 186 a b c Wodehouse 2008 1925 Carry On Jeeves chapter 1 p 14 Wodehouse 2008 1947 Joy in the Morning chapter 4 p 38 Wodehouse 2008 1947 Joy in the Morning chapter 14 p 134 Wodehouse 2008 1947 Joy in the Morning chapter 24 p 230 Wodehouse 2008 1947 Joy in the Morning chapter 22 p 211 Wodehouse 2008 1925 Carry On Jeeves chapter 1 pp 18 19 SourcesCawthorne Nigel 2013 A Brief Guide to Jeeves and Wooster London Constable amp Robinson ISBN 978 1 78033 824 8 Garrison Daniel H 1991 1989 Who s Who in Wodehouse Revised ed New York Constable amp Robinson ISBN 1 55882 087 6 Ring Tony Jaggard Geoffrey 1999 Wodehouse in Woostershire Chippenham Porpoise Books ISBN 1 870 304 19 5 Usborne Richard 2003 1961 Plum Sauce A P G Wodehouse Companion Fifth ed New York The Overlook Press ISBN 1 58567 441 9 Wodehouse P G 2008 1923 The Inimitable Jeeves Reprinted ed London Arrow Books ISBN 978 0099513681 Wodehouse P G 2008 1925 Carry On Jeeves Reprinted ed London Arrow Books ISBN 978 0099513698 Wodehouse P G 2008 1934 Thank You Jeeves Reprinted ed London Arrow Books ISBN 978 0099513735 Wodehouse P G 2008 1934 Right Ho Jeeves Reprinted ed London Arrow Books ISBN 978 0099513742 Wodehouse P G 2008 1947 Joy in the Morning Reprinted ed London Arrow Books ISBN 978 0099513766 Wodehouse P G 2008 1954 Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit Reprinted ed London Arrow Books ISBN 978 1 78033 824 8 Wodehouse P G 2008 1960 Jeeves in the Offing Reprinted ed London Arrow Books ISBN 978 0099513940 Wodehouse P G 2008 1963 Stiff Upper Lip Jeeves Reprinted ed London Arrow Books ISBN 978 0099513957 Wodehouse P G 2008 1971 Much Obliged Jeeves Reprinted ed London Arrow Books ISBN 978 0099513964 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of Jeeves characters amp oldid 1210289434 Lord Worplesdon, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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