LIST OF P. G. WODEHOUSE CHARACTERS


The following is an incomplete 'list of fictional characters' who appear in the novels and short stories of P. G. Wodehouse. Due to overlap between the various classifications of Wodehouse's work, some characters appear more than once.

Contents
Blandings Castle
Threepwood family
Emworth's siblings and their families
Emsworth's children and their families
Distant relations
Domestic staff
Secretaries
House staff
Outdoor staff
Pig staff
Other characters
Golf stories
Jeeves
Jeeves's relatives
Bertie's relatives
Bertie's friends
Bertie's enemies
Romantic interests and fiancées
Domestic staff
Other characters
Mr Mulliner
Psmith and Mike
Ukridge
Uncle Fred
Other
References

Blandings Castle


Threepwood family


★ 'Clarence Threepwood, 9th Earl of Emsworth'
Emworth's siblings and their families


★ 'Hon. Galahad Threepwood', Emsworth's unmarried younger brother

★ ''Hon. Lancelot Threepwood'', Emsworth's deceased brother


Millicent Threepwood, his daughter

★ 'Lady Ann Warblington', Emsworth's sister, sometime châtelaine at Blandings

★ ''Jane'', deceased sister of Emsworth


Angela, daughter of Jane, Emsworth's niece

★ 'Lady Constance Keeble', later Schoonmaker, Emsworth's bossiest sister


Joseph Keeble, her first husband, Phyllis Jackson's stepfather.



Phyllis Jackson, Joe Keeble's step-daughter




Michael "Mike" Jackson, her husband, an old friend of Psmith


James Schoonmaker, Lady Constance's second husband, an American millionaire and an old friend of Uncle Fred



Myra Schoonmaker, his daughter who marries Bill Bailey despite Lady Constance's best efforts

★ 'Lady Charlotte', Emsworth's sister, "a tougher egg even than Lady Constance, or her younger sister, Lady Julia".


★ Jane, her daughter

★ 'Lady Julia Fish', Emsworth's tall and blonde sister


★ ''Maj. Gen. Sir Miles Fish'', her late husband



Ronnie Fish, their son and a member of the Drones Club

★ 'Lady Florence Moresby', another of Emsworth's domineering sisters


★ ''J. J. Underwood'', Lady Florence's deceased first husband


Kevin Moresby, her second husband, from whom she has separated

★ 'Lady Dora Garland', Emsworth's tall and stately sister


★ ''Sir Everard Garland'', K.C.B., her late husband


Prudence Garland, Lady Dora's daughter

★ 'Lady Hermione Wedge', Emsworth's sister, who looks like a cook


Colonel Egbert Wedge, Lady Hermione's husband


Veronica Wedge, the Wedges' beautiful but simple daughter

★ 'Lady Georgiana Alcester', another sister of Lord Emsworth, who owns fourteen dogs


Gertrude Alcester, her daughter

★ 'Lady Diana Phipps', the only one of Emsworth's sisters whom Galahad likes
Emsworth's children and their families



★ 'George Threepwood, Lord Bosham', Emsworth's eldest son and heir to the earldom



Cecily Threepwood, Lord Bosham's wife



James Threepwood, Lord Bosham's eldest son



George Threepwood, Lord Bosham's second son


★ Hon. 'Freddie Threepwood', Emsworth's younger son



Niagara "Aggie" Donaldson, Freddie's wife




Penelope Donaldson, Aggie's younger sister




Mr Donaldson, dog-biscuit king, father of Aggie and Penelope


★ 'Lady Mildred Mant', Emsworth's eldest daughter



Colonel Horace Mant, her husband
Distant relations




Percy, Lord Stockheath, Emsworth's nephew, whose parents are never named




Algernon Wooster, Lord Percy's cousin, implying Bertie Wooster may be a relative too

The Bishop of Godalming, a relative of the Threepwoods
Domestic staff

Secretaries


Rupert Baxter, Lord Emsworth's original, very efficient secretary

Montague "Monty" Bodkin, also Emsworth's secretary for a time

Lavender Briggs, a tall and haughty secretary

Alexandra "Sandy" Callender, an attractive but fiery red-headed secretary

Hugo Carmody, another secretary, and a friend of Ronnie Fish

★ 'Rupert Psmith', Baxter's replacement as secretary

Gerald Anstruther Vail, a thriller-writer, and briefly Emsworth's secretary

Eve Halliday, hired to catalogue the library
House staff


Sebastian Beach, butler


Maudie, his much-married niece

Mrs Twemlow, housekeeper

Merridew, an under-butler

★ ''James'' and ''Alfred'', ''Thomas'' and ''Stokes'', ''Charles'' and ''Henry'', footmen at the Castle
Outdoor staff


Thorne, the Scottish Head Gardener in ''Something Fresh''

Angus McAllister, the Scottish Head Gardener after Thorne

Slingsby, a chauffeur

Voules, another chauffeur
Pig staff


George Cyril Wellbeloved, Emsworth's first pig man, who defects to the Parsloe-Parsloe camp

James Pirbright, another pig man, Wellbeloved's replacement

Edwin Pott, the pig man in ''Full Moon''

Monica Simmons, a pig girl of Amazonian proportions
Other characters


★ 'Empress of Blandings', Lord Emsworth's beloved black Berkshire sow

★ 'Sir Gregory Parsloe-Parsloe', Bart., neighbour and enemy of Lord Emsworth


Herbert Binstead, Parsloe's butler


The Pride of Matchingham, Parsloe-Parsloe's pig


The Queen of Matchingham, another pig owned by Parsloe-Parsloe

James Bartholomew Belford, a farmer, whom Angela loves

Major Wilfred "Plug" Basham, an old friend of Galahad and feature of his stories

Admiral George J. "Fruity" Biffen, another old friend of Galahad

Rev. Rupert "Beefy" Bingham, Freddie's university pal

"Puffy" Benger, yet another of Galahad's old cronies

Sue Brown, a chorus girl who falls for Ronnie Fish

Edward Cootes, a shard-sharp, in love with Aileen Peavey

Alaric, Duke of Dunstable, an ill-mannered old man, an old friend of Connie


Horace Pendlebury-Davenport, Dunstable's wealthy nephew


Alaric "Ricky" Gilpin, Dunstable's impoverished nephew, a poet

George Emerson, a Hong Kong policeman, in love with Aline Peters

Lord Heacham, a rich landowner, once engaged to Angela

★ 'Frederick Twistleton, Earl of Ickenham', a mischievous old Pelican


★ 'Pongo Twistleton', Fred's ever-embarrassed nephew


Valerie Twistleton, Fred's niece, who loves Horace Pendlebury-Davenport

R. Jones, a fat bookmaker and conman



Bill Lister, Galahad's godson, an artist who loves Prudence Garland

Ashe Marson, a writer, the hero of ''Something Fresh''

Ralston McTodd, a Canadian poet

Aileen Peavey (a.k.a. Smooth Lizzie), an American poetess and crook

Aline Peters, Freddie's fiancée in ''Something Fresh''


J. Preston Peters, Aline's father, a Scarab collector

★ 'Percy Frobisher Pilbeam', head of the Argus Private Inquiry Agency

Tipton Plimsoll, a wealthy American friend of Freddie's, who falls for Veronica Wedge

Claude "Mustard" Pott, another private detective, hired by Lord Bosham


Polly Pott, Mustard's pretty daughter, engaged to Ricky Gilpin

Gloria Salt, an athletic girl, who is engaged to Sir Gregory Parsloe-Parsloe for a time

★ 'George Alexander Pyke, Lord Tilbury', a publisher and pig owner

Orlo Watkins, a tenor with whom Gertrude Alcester becomes infatuated

★ Dame 'Daphne Winkworth', headmistress of a girls' school in Eastbourne; also a friend of Aunt Agatha

Gerald Anstruther Vail, a thriller-writer who loves Penelope Donaldson

Joan Valentine, the heroine of ''Something Fresh''

Orlo, Lord Vosper, a handsome nobleman who visits Blandings in ''Pigs Have Wings''

Augustus Whiffle (or Whipple), author of Lord Emsworth's favorite book, ''The Care of the Pig''

Jane Yorke, a friend of Freddie's wife Aggie

Golf stories



★ The Oldest Member

★ Agnes Flack

★ Sidney McMurdo

★ The Wrecking Crew (The First Grave Digger, The Man with the Hoe, Old Father Time, and Consul the Amost-Human)

★ Felicia Blakeny

★ Chester Meredith

Jeeves



★ 'Reginald Jeeves'

★ 'Bertie Wooster'
Jeeves's relatives


★ his niece Mabel, a chorus girl ("The Rummy Affair of Old Biffy" from ''Carry on Jeeves'')

★ his cousin Egbert, constable of Beckley-in-the-Moor ("Without the Option" from ''Carry on Jeeves'')

★ his uncle Charlie Silversmith, butler at Deverill Hall in Hampshire (''The Mating Season'')


★ Queenie, niece of Silversmith, maid at Deverill Hall (''The Mating Season'')
Bertie's relatives


★ his aunt Dahlia Travers


★ her husband Tom Travers



★ George Travers, Tom's brother


★ Bonzo Travers, their son


Angela Travers, their daughter

★ his aunt Agatha Gregson, later Lady Worplesdon


Spenser Gregson, her first husband


Thomas Gregson, (Thos.), their son


Percy Craye, Earl of Worplesdon, her second husband



★ Lady Florence Craye, Lord Worplesdon's daughter



Edwin Craye, his son, a Boy Scout



★ Zenobia "Nobby" Hopwood, his ward

★ his uncle Willoughby Wooster, Bertie's initial trustee, resident of a country seat in Shropshire, notable for his scandalous Reminiscences

★ his uncle Henry Wooster, a very personable 'looney' who kept pet rabbits in his bedroom


★ Emily Wooster, his widow


Claude and Eustace Wooster, his troublesome twin sons

★ his uncle George Wooster, Lord Yaxley, who has devoted his entire life to the pleasures of the table, and "discovered that alcohol was a food well in advance of modern medical thought"


★ Maud Wilberforce, a former barmaid and Yaxley's former fiancée, who he ends up marrying

★ his sister Mrs. Scholfield, who lives in India with her three daughters
Bertie's friends


★ Harold "Beefy" Anstruther, Bertie's friend from Oxford, engaged to Hilda, a friend of Madeline Bassett

★ Cyril Bassington-Bassington

★ Francis "Bicky" Bickersteth, a young Englishman sent to make his fortune in New York


★ The Duke of Chiswick, Bicky's wealthy and displeased uncle

★ Charles Edward "Biffy" Biffen, a fellow member of the Drones Club, who is extremely absent-minded

★ The Rev. Rupert "Beefy" Bingham, a school friend

★ Freddie Bullivant, another Drones Club member


★ Elizabeth Vickers, the girl whom Freddie loves

Marmaduke, 5th Baron "Chuffy" Chuffnell, a school friend


★ Lady Myrtle Chuffnell, Chuffy's aunt



★ Seabury, Lady Myrtle's son and Chuffy's cousin

★ Bruce "Corky" Corcoran, a New York portrait painter turned cartoonist


★ Alexander Worple, Corky's wealthy uncle


★ Muriel Singer, first Corky's fiancée and later Mrs Alexander Worple

Augustus "Gussie" Fink-Nottle, lover of newts

George Webster "Boko" Fittleworth, author of plays and fiction

Hildebrand "Tuppy" Glossop, Sir Roderick Glossop's nephew


★ Cora Bellinger, an opera singer whom Tuppy loves

Reginald "Kipper" Herring, former fellow inmate of Malvern House, their preparatory school.

Bingo Little, renowned in the early days for his ability to fall in love with every girl he meets, later marries novelist Rosie M Banks and becomes editor of ''Wee Tots'' magazine


★ Rosie Little, née Rosie M. Banks, Bingo's wife


★ Algernon Aubrey Little, Bingo's son


★ Lord Bittlesham, formerly Mortimer Little, Bingo's uncle and provider of his allowance

★ Gussie Mannering-Phipps, Bertie's cousin in New York


★ Ray Denison, Gussie's fiancée and music hall performer

★ Rev. Harold "Stinker" Pinker, curate in Market Snodsbury.


★ Stephanie "Stiffy" Pinker, née Byng, his wife

Claude Cattermole "Catsmeat" Potter-Pirbright, a school friend


★ Cora "Corky" Pirbright, his sister


★ The Rev. Sidney Pirbright, Catsmeat's and Corky's uncle; vicar of King's Deverill

★ Oliver Randolph "Sippy" Sipperley, an impecunious aspiring author


★ Vera Sipperley, his aunt and means of financial support


★ Professor Pringle, his daughter Heloise, and aunt Jane, friends of Aunt Vera


★ Gwendolen Moon, a poetess with whom he is in love

★ Rockmetteller "Rocky" Todd, a poet who lives on Long Island and hates New York City


★ Isabel Rockmetteller, Rocky's fun-loving aunt
Bertie's enemies


★ Sir Watkyn Bassett, CBE, a magistrate in Bosher Street


Madeline Bassett, his daughter


Butterfield, his butler


★ Stephanie "Stiffy" Byng, his niece

Major Brabazon-Plank, who wanted to call the police on Bertie

★ D'Arcy "Stilton" Cheesewright

★ Sir Roderick Glossop, a 'nerve specialist' in Harley Street, became Bertie's good friend in 'Thank You, Jeeves'


Lady Glossop, his wife


Hildebrand "Tuppy" Glossop, his nephew


Honoria Glossop, his daughter


★ Oswald Glossop, his son

Roderick Spode, 8th Earl of Sidcup, an amateur dictator and designer of women's underclothing


★ Mrs. Wintergreen, his aunt


★ Col. H. H. Wintergreen, late husband of Mrs. Wintergreen

Aubrey Upjohn, Bertie's former headmaster at Malvern House.
Romantic interests and fiancées


Madeline Bassett, Sir Watkyn Bassett's daughter

Daphne Braythwayt, Honoria Glossop's friend

★ Stephanie "Stiffy" Byng, later Mrs. Harold Pinker, Watkyn Bassett's niece

★ Lady Florence Craye, Lord Worplesdon's daughter and Bertie's first fiancée

Honoria Glossop, Sir Roderick Glossop's daughter

★ Aline Hemmingway, Soapy Sid's partner in crime

Gwladys Pendlebury, an artist who paints Bertie's portrait

★ Pauline Stoker


★ J. Washburn Stoker, her father, an American millionaire


★ Dwight Stoker, Washburn's son and Pauline's younger brother


★ Emerald Stoker, Pauline's sister


★ Benstead, valet to George Stoker, Washburn's late cousin; a friend of Jeeves

★ Lady Cynthia Wickhammersley, daughter of Lord Wickhammersley

Roberta "Bobbie" Wickham, enamoured of practical jokes


★ Lady Wickham, Bobbie's mother; an old friend of Aunt Agatha


★ Clementina, Bobbie's cousin
Domestic staff


★ Meadowes, Jeeves's predecessor as Bertie's valet

★ Brinkley (renamed Rupert Bingley) Bertie's valet commissioned when Jeeves gives notice, soon sacked for his insane behavior

★ Maple, Lord Worplesdon's butler

★ Mulready, Sir Reginald Witherspoon's butler

★ Oakshott, Uncle Willoughby's butler

★ Purvis, Aunt Agatha's butler

★ Seppings, one of the Travers' butlers at Brinkley Court

★ Waterbury, the chauffeur at Brinkley Court

Anatole, chef extraordinaire
Other characters


Anatole, chef extraordinaire

★ Meadowes, Jeeves's predecessor as Bertie's valet

★ Mr Anstruther, an elderly man who holds a Good Conduct competition between Thomas Gregson and Bonzo Travers

★ Mr. Blumenfeld, producer of musicals

★ Comrade Butt, a Marxist revolutionary

★ The Rt. Hon. A. B. Filmer, a Cabinet Minister

★ Esmond Haddock, a man dominated by his aunts


★ Charlotte, Emmeline, Harriet, and Myrtle Deverill, and Dame Daphne Winkworth, his aunts

★ Sidney "Soapy Sid" Hemmingway, a con man

★ Aline Hemmingway, Soapy Sid's partner in crime

★ The Rev. Francis Heppenstall, a long-winded vicar


★ Mary Burgess, his niece

★ Peggy Mainwaring, a student at Miss Tomlinson's school

Miss Mapleton, headmistress of a girls' school in Bingley

★ McIntosh, Aunt Agatha's terrier

★ Sebastian Moon, a detestable young boy with golden curls

★ Daphne Dolores Morehead, an attractive blonde bestselling novelist

★ Eustace Oates, constable at Totleigh-in-the-Wold

★ Wilmot, Lord Pershore, a sheltered young man


★ Lady Malvern, his over-protective mother

★ Rhoda Platt, a barmaid whom Lord Yaxley thinks he loves

★ Lucius Pim, an artist who loves Gwladys Pendlebury


★ Beatrice Slingsby, his sister


★ Alexander Slingsby, Beatrice's husband

★ Laura Pyke, a nutrition-obsessed schoolmate of Rosie M. Banks

★ Charlotte Corday Rowbotham, a Marxist with whom Bingo Little falls in love

★ Jane Snettisham, Aunt Dahlia's friend, who attempts to win Anatole from her in a bet


★ Jack, Lord Snettisham, Jane's husband

Rupert Steggles, a crooked bookie

★ Mrs. Tinkler-Moulke, a patient of Sir Roderick Glossop

★ [Miss Tomlinson, the headmistress of a girls' school

★ The Rev. Aubrey Upjohn, headmaster of Malvern House, where Bertie went to school

★ Lord Wickhammersley, a friend of Bertie's late father


★ Lady Cynthia Wickhammersley, his daughter

★ Dame Daphne Winkworth, Aunt Agatha's friend and Madeline Bassett's godmother; also an acquaintance of Lord Emsworth


★ Gertrude Winkworth, her daughter

★ Sir Reginald Witherspoon, Bart., husband of Uncle Tom's sister Katharine


★ Augustus "Gus" the cat, who intensely dislikes being disturbed from his sleep and, unlike most cats, dislikes being scratched under the ears.

Mr Mulliner



★ 'Mr Mulliner', pub raconteur with a large family


Rev. Augustine Mulliner, his nephew

Psmith and Mike



★ 'Psmith', an immaculately dressed, monocle-sporting young man. His name is 'Rupert Psmith' in his early appearances, but is changed to 'Ronald Psmith' in ''Leave it to Psmith'' (a Blandings story), presumably to avoid confusion with Rupert Baxter


Mr Smith, Psmith's father, an eccentric

★ 'Mike Jackson', best friend of Psmith

Burgess, captain of the Wrykyn cricket team

"Gazeka" Firby-Smith, head of Mike's house at Wrykyn

Bob Jackson, Mike's elder brother, also at Wrykyn

★ ''Trevor'' and ''Clowes'', friends of Bob and keen cricketers

Wain, master of Mike's house at Wrykyn


Wyatt, Wain's step-stop, who shares a dorm with Mike at Wrykyn

★ ''Neville-Smith'', a day boy at Wrykyn, a good fast bowler

★ Strachan, the boy who took Mike's place as IX Cricket Captain

Mr Outwood, master of Mike and Psmith's house at Sedleigh

Mr Downing, master of another house at Sedleigh

Adair, very keen cricket captain at Sedleigh

Tom Jellicoe, a boy in Outwood's house, who shares a dorm with Mike and Psmith

★ ''Spiller'', another boy in Outwood's, whose study Psmith steals

Stone, another boy in Outwood's, a ragger

Robinson, another boy in Outwood's, Stone's henchman

★ ''Dunster'', a Sedleigh old boy and famed ragger

★ ''Sergeant Collard'', portly school sergeant as Sedleigh

John Bickersdyke, head of the New Asiatic Bank

Mr Rossiter, Head Postage at the Bank, a football fan


★ ''Bannister'', Mike's forerunner in Postage


★ ''Bristow'', Mike's successor there

Mr Waller, Head of the Cash Department, an amiable sort but secret socialist

★ Mr Preble, an unintelligible socialist orator

★ ''Joe Jackson'', one of Mike's brothers, an M.C.C. player

★ Reggie Jackson, another cricket playing brother

Billy Windsor, a New York journalist befriended by Psmith


Pugsy Maloney, the office-boy at Windsor's paper

Kid Brady, a boxer boosted by Psmith in New York

Bat Jarvis, a New York gangster befriended by Psmith


★ ''Long Otto'', one of Jarvis' henchmen, a stringy, silent young man

★ ''Spider Reilly'', another gang boss, head of the "Three Points" gang


Jack Repetto, a thug in Reilly's gang, who ruins Psmith's hat

★ ''Dude Dawson'', head of the "Table Hill" gang, Reilly's main rival

Francis Parker, a sinister, well-dressed man

Ukridge



★ 'Stanley Featherstonehaugh Ukridge', entrepreneur


Julia Ukridge, his aunt



Oakshott, one of Julia Ukridge's many butlers



Dora Mason, Julia Ukridge's secretary for a time


Millie, Ukridge's wife



Lady Elizabeth Lakenheath, Millie's aunt and guardian before her marriage


Charles Percy Cuthbertson, who calls himself "Uncle Percy", a distant step-relation of Ukridge

James "Corky" Corcoran, a writer friend of Ukridge, the narrator of all the Ukridge shorts.


Bowles, Corky's landlord

George Tupper, a friend of Ukridge and Corky from Wrykyn days

B. V. "Boko" Lawlor, an ex-Wrykynian who stands for Parliament

J. G. "Looney" Coote, another ex-Wrykynian friend

"Battling" Billson, a boxer managed by Ukridge


Flossie, Billson's girl

Teddy Weeks, once a friend of Ukridge and Corky, who becomes a movie star

Joe "the Lawyer", an unsavoury associate of Ukridge

Izzy Previn, another untrustworthy type

Beale, Ukridge's man in ''Love Among the Chickens''

Professor Derrick, Ukridge's Irish neighbour in ''Love Among the Chickens''


Phyllis Derrick, the professor's daughter, admired by Jeremy Garnet


Tom Chase, a friend of the Derricks

Jeremy Garnet, another writer friend of Ukridge, who narrates ''Love Among the Chickens''

Harry Hawk, a large local in ''Love Among the Chickens'', who aids Garnet in a plot

Uncle Fred



★ 'Frederick Altamont Cornwallis Twistleton, 5th Earl of Ickenham', familiarly known as Uncle Fred


★ Jane, Lady Ickenham, Uncle Fred's wife, who went willingly to the Caribbean


Pongo Twistleton, nephew of Uncle Fred


★ Valerie Twistleton, Pongo's sister

Other


''Introduced in rough order of the book in which they first appear''

Clarence MacAndrew Chugwater, a Boy scout, hero of ''The Swoop''

Roland Bleke, hero of the ''A Man of Means'' shorts, a young man who finds money brings trouble

James Willoughby Pitt, the hero of ''A Gentleman of Leisure'' (U.S. title: ''The Intrusion of Jimmy'')


Molly McEachern, the girl Jimmy Pitt falls for.



John McEachern, Molly's father, a policeman


Arthur Mifflin, an actor, an old friend of Pitt

"Spennie", Earl of Dreever, who McEachern hopes Molly will marry


Lady Julia Blunt, Spennie's imperious aunt


Sir Thomas Blunt, her wealthy husband

Spike Mullins, a New York thief who becomes Jimmy Pitt's valet for a time

★ ''Charteris'', a keen organiser of amateur theatre

★ ''Hargate'', a card-sharp who preys on Lord Dreever

William Paradene West, known to all as Bill, of ''Bill the Conqueror'' fame


Cooley Paradene, Bill West's uncle, a wealthy businessman and collector of rare books



★ ''Otis Paradene'', Cooley's sponging brother



★ ''Jasper Daly'', Cooley's sponging brother-in-law



★ ''Evelyn Paradene-Kirby'', Cooley's baby-talking, sponging niece



Horace French, an unpleasant youth adopted by Paradene




★ ''Sherman Bastable'', Horace's tutor




Professor Appleby, Horace's white-bearded mentor




★ ''Joe the Dip'', a member of Appleby's gang



Wilfred Slingsby, Paradene's man in London

Judson Coker, Bill West's best friend, a devout drinker


Alice Coker, Judson's doting sister, adored by Bill


★ ''Prudence Stryker'', a New York chorus girl, old friend of Judson Coker

George Alexander Pyke, Lord Tilbury, media mogul, who first appears in ''Bill the Conqueror'' and later visits Blandings


Roderick Pyke, Pyke's droopy son


Frances Hammond, Pyke's doting sister



Sinclair Hammond, Frances' husband, an archaeologist




Felicia "Flick" Sheridan, Hammond's orphaned niece, who adores Bill but is engaged to Roderick

Percy Frobisher Pilbeam, Roderick's deputy on ''Society Spice'', later editor and detective

Sam Shotter, a somewhat eccentric American, hero of ''Sam the Sudden'' (US title: ''Sam in the Suburbs'')


★ ''Mr John B. Pynsent'', American Export-Import millionaire, Sam's uncle


Clarence "Hash" Todhunter, an old seafaring pal of Sam's, who becomes his cook

Kay Derrick, a pretty young girl, whose photograph Sam falls in love with


Mr Matthew Wrenn, Kay's uncle and guardian



Claire Lippett, their fiery maid

Willoughby Braddock, a schoolfriend of Sam and an old neighbour of Kay


Mrs Martha Lippett, Claire's mother, housekeeper to Braddock

Alexander "Chimp" Twist, a.k.a. J Sheringham Adair, a crook employed by Lord Tilbury


Thomas "Soapy" Molloy, an old comrade of Twist, a conman



Dora "Dolly" Gunn, Molloy's girl, a skilled pick-pocket

★ The late Edward "Finky" Finglass, a bank robber, once a resident of Valley Fields

Claude Winnington-Bates, an unpleasant Wrykyn old boy


★ ''Mrs Winnington-Bates'', mother of Claude, Kay's demanding employer

Mr Cornelius, a white-bearded esate agent and historian, a friend of Mr Wrenn

Ogden Ford, an obnoxious child, a popular target of kidnappers and thus known as ''The Little Nugget''


Elmer Ford, Ogden's wealthy and commanding father


Mrs Nesta Ford (later Mrs Ford Pett), his doting mother

Peter Burns, a well-to-do young man, who tries to kidnap Ogden for Mrs Ford


Cynthia Drassilis, the ambitious fiancée of Peter Burns



Mrs Drassilis, Cynthia's even more ambitious mother

Audrey Sheridan, Ogden's governess, once Peter Burns's first love

Arnold Abney, the mild and pompous headmaster of Sanstead House


Mr Glossop, an irascible master at Sanstead


White, butler at Sanstead, soon found to be undercover


★ ''Mrs Attwell'', matron as Santead

"Smooth" Sam Fisher, an intellectual crook who kidnaps Ogden Ford

Buck MacGinnis, a gang leader and arch rival of Smooth Sam Fisher

Lord Mountry, a nervous young noble


Augustus Beckford, a pupil at Sanstead, cousin of Lord Mountry

Tankerville Gifford, an unpleasant socialite

★ ''Miss Benjafield'', barmaid at the ''Feathers'' an inn near the school

★ Peter Pett, Millionaire and wife to Nesta Ford

★ Anne Chester, Mr Pett's niece and beloved of Jimmy Crocker

★ Jimmy Crocker, wild socialite on the mend

★ Eugenia Crocker (Formerly van Brunt), dissapproving stepmother of Jimmy and Nesta Ford's sister.

★ Bingley Crocker, his father, enthusiastic baseball fan

★ Skinner, Chicago Ed (Various Aliases of Bingley Crocker)

★ Jerry Mitchell, Mr Pett's physical instructor

★ Willie Partridge, Nesta Ford's nephew and inventor of the explosive Partidgite

★ Lord Wisbeach (Actually Jack the Gentleman), thief after the explosive

★ Lord Wisbeach (The Real One) Piccadilly Jim's friend

★ Mr Sturgis, head of a detctive agency

★ Miss Trimble, private detective and ardent socialist

★ Bud Smithers, owner of a dogs' home thought appropriate for Ogden by several conspirators

★ Lord Percy Whipple, the man who fights Piccadilly Jim in a club

Monty Bodkin, a member of the Drones Club who appears in a number of novels and is one of Lord Emsworth's many secretaries


★ Gertrude Butterwink, the girl to whom Monty was engaged.


★ John G. Butterwick (J. B. Butterwick in 'Pearls'), Gertrude's father, uncle to Ambrose and Reggie, demands that Monty hold a job for one year



★ Ambrose Tennyson, cousin of Gertrude Butterwick, elder brother of Reggie, novelist engaged to Lotus Blossom


★ Reggie Tennyson, cousin of Gertrude Butterwick, younger brother of Ambrose, Drones Club member and friend of Monty


★ Sandy Miller, Monty's secretary in California, the girl he marries.

Reggie Pepper, the hapless protagonist of several stories; Bertie Wooster's prototype

Oofy Prosser, the richest member of Drones Club.


★ ''Myrtle Prosser'', Oofy's wife.

Pillingshot, schoolboy

References



Plum Sauce: A P. G. Wodehouse Companion, Usborne, Richard, , , The Overlook Press, 2003, ISBN 1-58567-441-9

Bibliography Kuzmenko, Michel

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves
List of P. G. Wodehouse characters Travel Deals