List of Peter Simple characters
Appearance
These are characters created by the columnist Peter Simple (1913–2006) from 1957 onwards. Some of his characters are based on real people and some real people seem to be based on his characters. A few of these links are noted.
Major
- Julian Birdbath — perennially unsuccessful writer and "last citizen of the Republic of Letters". Performed astounding feat of literary detective-work by discovering a fourth Brontë sister, Doreen Brontë, and ghostwrote the autobiography of General "Tiger" Nidgett, but, as always, never received the recognition or payment he deserved. Finally retired to a disused lead mine in Derbyshire to work on a biography of Stephen Spender with only his pet toad, Amiel, for company. Mr Shuttleworth, a poultry farmer and part-time literary agent, is Birdbath's nearest neighbour, and sometimes relays items of literary news by shouting down the mineshaft.
- Trevor Dimwiddie — "underwater motorcycling ace" of varying age, appearance and origins. See also Sir Sid Ballpoint.
- Mrs Dutt-Pauker — immensely rich and privileged Hampstead socialist, admirer of Stalin and rumoured lover of the East German communist leader Walter Ulbricht. She is the mother of Deirdre Dutt-Pauker, and the grandmother of the precociously bearded Maoist toddler and noted political theorist Bert Brecht Mao Rudy Che Odinga (or Mao Banana), and his sister Sus, "whose first thrilling cry as she entered the world, like Bert before her, was 'Boycott South African oranges!' "[1] She employs the Albanian Maoist au pair girl Gjoq. Lives at a palatial Hampstead mansion called "Marxmount", but also owns a house called Leninmore in the west of Ireland, bought at the time of the Cuban Missile Crisis. Named after the communists Palme Dutt and Ana Pauker, she is based on leftist pundits such as the Toynbee family. She anticipated Margaret Hodge. The running joke of the character is that she is, in reality, a bourgeois snob, for example "many of her friends who felt deeply about the future of the world had pointed out that the white Rhodesians as a whole were not merely white and reactionary but rather common as well".[2]
- Alderman Jabez Foodbotham — "the 25-stone, iron-watch-chained, crag-visaged, grim-booted" Lord Mayor of Bradford and "perpetual chairman of the Bradford City Tramways and Fine Arts Committee."[3] Officially died in 1928 but local legend says that, like Charlemagne, he "lies asleep in a mountain cave near Northowram", waiting the summons "to save his city in its hour of supreme danger". Loosely inspired by the Chamberlain dynasty.
- Doreen Gaggs — trend-crazed tabloid and women's magazine journalist and wife of Jack Moron.
- Sir Jim Gastropodi — born in Poggibonsi, conductor of the Stretchford Municipal Symphony Orchestra and obsessive admirer of Mahler, newly discovered symphonies by whom, such as "The Interminable", "The Insufferable" and "The Unendurable", he insists on playing, to the disgust of Ron Spheroyd. Inspired by Sir John Barbirolli. Also from Poggibonsi are Giovanni Botulismo, proprietor of the popular Salmonella restaurant, and the late Giuseppe Fittopaldi, composer of the operas 'Le sorelle Brontë' , 'Bramwell' (sic), 'La Fanciulla del Riding Occidentale' , and 'Alderman Foodbotham di Bradford' , all to libretti by an unidentified author.
- J. Bonington Jagworth — leader of the militant Motorists' Liberation Front and defender of "the basic right of every motorist to drive as fast as he pleases, how he pleases and over what or whom he pleases". Suspicious of his Marxist chief-of-staff Royston Cylinder but good friend of Rev John Goodwheel. Anticipated Jeremy Clarkson by three decades.
- Jack Moron — tabloid journalist and husband of Doreen Gaggs. Writes aggressive articles demanding progress and change or warning of foreign peril.
- The Earl of Mountwarlock — the eight-foot, cyclops-eyed owner of the monster-infested Mountwarlock Estate near Stretchford. See also Phantomsby, Mr Dis, MacAnguish and Ghoulman.
- Lieutenant General Sir Frederick "Tiger" Nidgett — retired commanding officer of the Royal Army Tailoring Corps and maker of inspirational speeches full of fatuous rhetoric. His autobiography, Up Sticks and Away!, was ghostwritten by Julian Birdbath. Alleged mentor of Tony Blair.[5]
- Harry and Janet Nodule — traffic-jam fans of Brassgrove Park in south London and always on the look out for a "good snarl-up".[6]
- King Norman the Good — future head of the Royal Socialist Family. Husband of Queen Doreen, son-in-law of the Queen Gran, father of Princes Barry and Kevin and Princesses Shirley and Tracey, brother-in-law of Duke Len of Erdington.
- Phantomsby — butler and factotum of the Earl of Mountwarlock and "one of the few practising werewolves left in the Midlands". Has a sharp-toothed but infectious smile.
- Old Seth Roentgen — scientific farmer at the Ohm Farm who grows money and share-certificates directly from the soil and regularly disturbs or even kills his neighbours with agricultural experiments.[8] Father of buxom, dark-eyed, lab-coated Hephzibah. Not to be confused with Old Seth the Wasp-Keeper.
- Dr Spacely-Trellis — progressive Bishop of Bevindon in the Stretchford Conurbation, where his domestic chaplain is the mischief-making Rev. Peter Nordwestdeutscher (a parody of Anglican peace activist Paul Oestreicher). He is almost always referred to as 'the go-ahead Bishop of Bevindon'. Anticipated and strongly resembles David Jenkins, Richard Harries, Rowan Williams and many other Anglican clerics.
- Sir Herbert Trance — head of the British Boring Board of Control based at Lethargy House. World-famous bores competing in competitions organized by the BBBC (and chronicled by Narcolept) include Antonin Bvorak from Czechoslovakia, Jean-Pierre Cafard from Canada, Grant Coma Jr from America, Shloime ben Chloroform from Israel (aka "Glorious Shloime"), R.S. Nattacharya from India and Ron Stupor from Australia.
Minor
- Prem Bakshi — Diminutive Pakistani triangle player in the Stretchford M.S.O.
- Sir Sid Ballpoint — "Supreme Manager-in-Chief of the British Underwater Motorcycling Federation". See also Trevor Dimwiddie.
- S. J. Barstow (1886–1929), the only hydro-electrical engineer to be a member of the Bloomsbury Group. Took part with D. H. Lawrence at a combined poetry-reading and hydro-electrical engineering demonstration in Oxford, where he was introduced to Lady Ottoline Morrell. His letters to Leonard Woolf requesting payment for repairs to a table lamp are profoundly moving and foreshadow his later suicide by auto-electrocution.[9]
- Blazeaway — column's shooting correspondent. Lists bags of left-wing student, ecologist and social scientist, some of whom end up on the tables at the trendy West End restaurant Au Petit Coin Anthropophage.
- Boggs Motor Company — columnnar vehicle manufacturer. Product line includes such cars as the Boggs Assassin, Boggs Yobbo, Boggs Super-Oaf and (the vehicle of choice for Harry and Janet Nodule) the Boggs Snail.
- Dr Kev Burst — headmaster of Stretchford Comprehensive School. Runs extensive car-hire, pornography and other businesses with the labour and cash he extracts from his huge student community.
- E. S. Canister (1886–1980) — litterateur (as in litter) who was "the first to leave a rusting bedstead on the summit of Scafell Pike". His later works include "Vandalised Grand Piano and Two Tons of Toffee Papers on Ben Nevis" (1920) and "Four Tons of Miscellaneous Litter on the Sierra Nevada" (1927). Inspiration for the Friends of Litter.[10]
- Jeremy Cardhouse — originally a "progressive" Conservative Party MP, later defected to the Labour Party and became a Peter Mandelson-worshipping Euro MP. Compared by A. N. Wilson to the eventual Conservative leader and Prime Minister David Cameron.
- Dr Abdul Ngong Castrumba — "freelance, all-purpose revolutionary leader". Based on Fidel Castro, Patrice Lumumba and other 1960s revolutionaries.
- Chocolate Meringue Narthex — A highly successful rock group led by the Bishop of Bevindon.
- Mungo Clange — Sentimental and optimistic columnist who shares his 'tidings of joy' with readers. Specialises in mawkish stories about lovable ordinary folk, and in sharing the simple joy of the elderly mothers of such characters as Leonid Brezhnev and Ayatollah Khomenei. Modelled on Godfrey Winn.
- Attila Craggs — ruthlessly resolute chief of the Television Licence Evaders' Liberation Army, or TELELA. Oversees his fanatical Telelistas from a secret hideout "somewhere in South London" and speaks a special and sometimes confusing dialect of commercial Spanish.
- Royston Cylinder — ambitious crypto-Marxist chief-of-staff of J. Bonington Jagworth, leader of the Motorists' Liberation Front.
- Mr Dis — taciturn, dark-visaged manager of the Home Farm on the Mountwarlock Estate. Expert in the growing of mandrakes.
- Ron Frabb — teen idol kept permanently drugged by his manager Cliff Rampton.
- Dr F. Gestaltvogel — Chief Consultant Psychiatrist at Nerdley General Hospital. Often gives expert advice in court cases overseen by Dr Ellis Goth-Jones, recommending abreactive therapy or electroshock therapy for the accused and offering euthanasia at his own clinic if this fails.
- Ghoulman — chief warden of the safari park on the Mountwarlock estate, where he cares for the wyverns, basilisks, gorgons and other monsters and ensures that their incineratory or petrifactory powers are always working at their peak.
- Gjoq — Albanian au pair of Mrs Dutt-Pauker. Forms a sometimes fractious anti-Stalinist alliance with Mrs Dutt-Pauker's Maoist grandson Bert.
- Rev John Goodwheel — the "Apostle of the Motorways"; a good friend of J. Bonington Jagworth, he is "the motorists' padre" . Drives a mobile Romanesque cathedral.
- Goth-Joneses — nepotistic family in the Stretchford conurbation. Llewellyn Goth-Jones is a fanatic advocate of contraception, abortion and "universal sexual intercourse". Sir Aylwin Goth-Jones is "the genial, unpopular Chief Constable of Stretchford", fanatically devoted to the detection and arrest of drink drivers. Dr Ellis Goth-Jones, 59, is the chairman of Nerdley magistrates' court, overseeing cases initiated by Detective Sergeant J. B. MacKenzie of Nerdley Special Branch and receiving the expert advice of Dr F. Gestaltvogel. Dr Harry Goth-Jones is the vice-chancellor of St Oicks University in Stretchford, where "more than 105 per cent of entrants achieved honours degrees mostly in such subjects as skateboarding studies and Belgian pastry studies".
- Mr Grylls — former clergyman and authority on ecclesiastical law, now attends to Ughtred St John Mainwaring, the column's well-bred computer. Wears special uniform and forswears animal food while in attendance.
- Squire Haggard — hard-drinking, xenophobic and lecherous 18th-century squire and diarist, invented and written for the column by the humorist Michael Green. Always armed with a fowling-piece, he is the perpetual foe of "Whigs, Jacobites, Papists, Frenchmen and Scotchmen". Has a butler named Grind. Later portrayed in a Yorkshire Television / ITV series by Keith Barron.
- Mr. Harrison; kindly old shop steward at the panel-beating plant of the Boggs motor factory in Nerdley, where he supervises the three chums Jim, Fred and Rashid Patel.
- Supt. J.S. Harrogate — chief of police operations against the deadly Housewives' Clubs of the Stretchford conurbation. Is believed to write the anonymous preface to the Annual Directory of Typical Housewives' Fan Clubs of Stretchford (Viper and Bugloss).
- Housewives' Fan Clubs — fanatical, schismatic and constantly battling fan clubs in the Stretchford conurbation. All are descended from the Our Jackie Kennedy fan club of the 1960s. Police operations against them are overseen by Supt. J.S. Harrogate.
- Morag Ironheart — famous for her Clackmannanshire terriers, bred at her kennels at Brig O' Dread in their eponymous county.
- MacAnguish — Scottish head gardener on the Mountwarlock estate. In charge of the Great Garden of Terror and the Deadly Upas Tree.
- Detective Sergeant J. B. MacKenzie — star officer of Nerdley Special Branch who is continually making arrests on Kandahar Road while on "routine search for certain substances". See also Dr Ellis Goth-Jones.
- Ughtred St John Mainwaring — column's well-bred computer. Has "carved mahogany case" and "subdued lighting as of finest wax candles". Easily angered by breaches of etiquette and protocol. Attended by the devoted Mr Grylls.
- Narcolept — column's boring correspondent. Reports tournaments organized by the British Boring Board of Control under Sir Herbert Trance.
- Rev. Peter Nordwestdeutscher — mischief-making domestic chaplain of Dr Spaceley-Trellis, the go-ahead Bishop of Bevindon. Name clearly inspired by Canon Paul Oestreicher, 'veteran peace campaigner' and the sometime amanuensis of Bertrand Russell.
- Redshank — the column's nature diarist (parodying the Country Diary in The Guardian and similar features in other newspapers). Chronicled the oddly incompetent bird the Dotterel and the doings of such characters as Old Seth the Wasp-Keeper.
- Old Seth the Wasp-Keeper — preserver of the custom of "telling the wasps" (cf Telling the bees), whereby his charges are kept informed of "actual and grievous bodily harm, rape, fraud and the formation of new gangs of hooligans of ever-increasing ferocity" in his village. Author of Through A Waspkeeper's Window, Waspkeeping My Destiny and A Waspkeeper Remembers. Chronicled by the column's nature diarist Redshank.
- Len Spheroyd (1920–1976) — fattest fireman in history, at over thirty-two stone, and distant relation of Ron Spheroyd. Regularly late on duty due to non-stop eating of pork pies and carrying of other emergency rations, and found it very difficult to travel to the scene of a fire. Eventually achieved his dearest wish and extinguished a fire when he sat on his own dangerously burning chip pan, but ruined chips and lost his own life.[14]
- Ron Spheroyd — tuba player and shop steward in the Stretchford M.S.O. under Sir Jim Gastropodi. Plays a fortissimo bottom B flat, signalling "All out", when a newly discovered Mahler symphony ("The Interminable" or "The Unendurable") has gone on for more than two hours. A soul-mate of militant British unionists of the 1970s and 1980s such as Mick McGahey and distant relation of Len Spheroyd, the world's fattest fireman.
- Stretchford — principal city of the Stretchford Conurbation. Famous, inter alia, for "lovely, sex-maniac-haunted" Sadcake Park, with its own council-employed naked sadhu, a permanently ineffectual football team, Stretchford United, and a vast network of fanatical, ever-battling Housewives' Clubs. Possibly from Stechford, a genuine area of Birmingham once represented in Parliament by Roy Jenkins, a figurehead of the political ideas that Wharton despised.
- Supergoth — column's vandalism correspondent. Covered the Stretchford Vandals' League and the exciting battle for league and cup glory between such teams as the Bog Lane Wanderers, the Soup Hales Iconoclasts and the Lampton Huns.
Notes
- ^ Peter Simple's World (1988), p. 17.
- ^ The Daily Telegraph, page 16, 9 September 1964
- ^ Peter Simple's World (1988), p. 31.
- ^ Peter Simple's World (1988), p. 69.
- ^ 'Lovers of oratory have often remarked on the abiding influence on Tony Blair of Gen Sir Frederick ("Tiger") Nidgett, supreme orator, veteran war hero and creator of the Royal Army Tailoring Corps'.Way of the World column mentioning General Nidgett's influence on Tony Blair.
- ^ Way of the World column featuring the Nodules.[dead link ]
- ^ Peter Simple's World (1988), p. 45.
- ^ Peter Simple's World (1988), p. 208-9.
- ^ Peter Simple's World (1988), pp. 227-8.
- ^ cf following press article: "Piano found on Britain's highest mountain" (Scottish Press Association, Wednesday 17 May 2006); A musical mystery today surrounded Britain's highest mountain after a piano was discovered near its summit. Volunteers clearing stones from the 4,418ft peak were astonished when they discovered the musical instrument on Ben Nevis. An appeal has now been launched to find out how and why the piano came to be within 200 metres of the top of the mountain. The piano was recovered at the weekend by 15 volunteers from the John Muir Trust, the conservation charity which owns part of Ben Nevis. [A] biscuit wrapper with a best before date of December 1986 was found under the piano, giving a clue as to when it was taken there, but not why.":The Guardian
- ^ Peter Simple's World (1988), pp. 152-3.
- ^ The origin of "The Master of Paddington".
- ^ Peter Simple's World (1988), p. 171.
- ^ Peter Simple's World (1988), pp. 217-8.
References
Compilations of Peter Simple's work:
- Way of the World (1) (1957)
- Way of the World (2) (1963)
- Peter Simple in Opposition (1965)
- More of Peter Simple (1969)
- The Thoughts of Peter Simple (1971)
- The World of Peter Simple (1973)
- The Stretchford Chronicles: 25 Years of Peter Simple (1980)
- The Best of Peter Simple (1984)
- Peter Simple's World (1988). London: Daily Telegraph. ISBN 9780863671784
- Peter Simple's Century (1999)
- Peter Simple's Domain (2003)