Andy Dwyer
Andy Dwyer | |
---|---|
Parks and Recreation character | |
First appearance | "Pilot" |
Last appearance | "A Parks and Recreation Special" |
Portrayed by | Chris Pratt |
In-universe information | |
Alias | Burt Macklin, FBI Count Chocula Kip Hackman Andy Radical Tim Buckanowski Brother Nature Johnny Karate Johnathon Karate Sgt. Thunderfist, MD Eagle One Farts McCool |
Gender | Male |
Occupation | Shoeshinist (shoeshiner) Musician Assistant O'possum Tackle Security Officer Star of Johnny Karate's Super Awesome Musical Explosion Show |
Spouse | April Ludgate-Dwyer (m. 2011) |
Significant other | April Ludgate Ann Perkins |
Children | Burt Snakehole Ludgate Karate Dracula Macklin Demon Jack-o-Lantern "Jack" Dwyer (b. 2023) Unnamed Child (b. 2025) |
Andrew Maxwell Dwyer, (/ˈdwaɪ.ər/)[1][2] is a fictional character in the NBC comedy Parks and Recreation portrayed by Chris Pratt. Originally meant to be a temporary character, Andy was so likable that producers asked Pratt back as a series regular. He appears in the first season as Ann Perkins' unemployed slacker boyfriend, then takes a job as a shoe-shiner at Pawnee City Hall in the second season. Andy eventually marries April Ludgate and is later promoted to Leslie Knope's assistant. Pratt was credited as a guest star for the first season, despite appearing in every episode; he is part of the main cast for every season after season one.[3][4]
Andy is one of the few starring characters not to appear in every episode, as he was absent for a multi-episode arc in season six while Pratt was filming Guardians of the Galaxy. He also did not appear in the season 2 episode "Practice Date."[5]
Character overview
Pratt summarized Andy Dwyer as "dim-witted and guileless and a real idiot, but lovable." At the start of the series, Andy Dwyer is dating Ann Perkins. Ann matured faster than Andy did; while Ann entered into a career in nursing, Andy was lazy and unmotivated. After being dumped by Ann, Andy begins living in the pit adjacent to Ann's house.[6]
Andy remained unemployed after school but was the lead singer and guitarist for his rock band, which underwent numerous name changes (starting with "Teddy Bear Suicide" prior to the show's first season), including "MouseRat," "God Hates Figs," "Department of Homeland Obscurity," "Flames For Flames," "Muscle Confusion," "Nothing Rhymes With Orange" (then, "Everything Rhymes With Orange"), "Punch Face Champions," "Rad Wagon," "Puppy Pendulum," "Possum Pendulum," "Penis Pendulum," "Handrail Suicide," "Angel Snack," "Just The Tip," "Jet-Black Pope," "Four-Skin" (later "Three-Skin" when one member quit), "MouseRat" (again), "RatMouse" (without Dwyer), "Scarecrow Boat," "Tackleshaft" and then "MouseRat" (yet again).[7]
Andy later gets work shining shoes at city hall, where he becomes friends with April Ludgate, whom he later marries after one month of dating. Though absentminded and possessing an extremely short attention span, Andy is shown to have a savant-like memory. For instance, he received the highest grade the police academy had ever seen on the written entrance test,[8] has an uncanny ability to remember movies word for word, and is able to memorize a long list of facts for his feminist college class in the episode, "Smallest Park." Andy also had perfect SAT scores, but mentioned it was probably due to broken Scantron machines.
Andy also possesses a wild imagination,[9] which helps him become a children's performer named Johnny Karate and then get his own children's television show. Occasionally, Andy goes into character as his alter ego, FBI agent Burt Macklin, whenever he and April role play or to solve local mysteries.[10]
Andy is a huge fan of the Indianapolis Colts and was married wearing Reggie Wayne's jersey.[11]
Storyline
Season one
Before the start of the first season, a drunken Andy fell into a large construction pit and broke both his legs while attempting to retrieve a discarded toaster from the bottom of the pit. Ann is at first unaware that Andy was drunk at the time of the fall,[12] and the incident inspires her to attend Parks and Recreation meetings to advocate for filling in the pit. It is at these meetings that Ann first befriends Parks Deputy Director Leslie Knope.[13]
With both of Andy's legs in casts, Ann pampers him, bringing him food and letting him play video games all day. When the doctors inform Andy that the casts can be removed, he delays their removal for several weeks so he can continue receiving this treatment from Ann. After the casts are removed, Ann discovers the truth and furiously breaks up with Andy.[14]
Season two
Andy moves into a tent pitched in the pit and watches Ann, claiming to be protecting her. He makes many failed attempts to reconcile with Ann. After Mark Brendanawicz begins dating Ann, Andy grows to hate him, but pretends to like him whenever Ann is around.[15] Andy is injured in the pit a second time when Leslie arranges to have it filled with dirt, unaware that Andy is still in the pit. Andy considers suing the town with the hopes of getting money and winning Ann back, but Leslie convinces him to settle out of court in exchange for having the pit filled in.[16] Leslie gives Andy a job as the shoe-shiner at the Pawnee City Hall as part of his settlement.[17] April Ludgate, the parks department intern, begins to develop a crush on Andy, but he is for a long time unaware of her feelings toward him.[18] As time goes on, Andy begins to develop feelings for April, though he is unsure about dating her due to their age difference and his own unresolved feelings for Ann. Simultaneously, Ann begins to show similar feelings for Andy. At the end of the season, having broken up with Mark, Ann kisses Andy, who does not reciprocate. This later causes him problems with April, who continues to believe he is still in love with Ann.
Season three
Andy has been unsuccessfully trying to get in touch with April. When she finally returns from Venezuela, she arrives with a new boyfriend, Eduardo. Leslie encourages Andy to not give up. In the episode "Time Capsule", Andy befriends Eduardo at the advice of Chris Traeger. As a result, April begins hating her new boyfriend, and he moves back to Venezuela. Andy also becomes the new coach of one of the two youth basketball teams, with Ron serving as the other coach. Andy's coaching style is much lazier than Ron's strict style. He is also briefly Ron's receptionist in "Flu Season". In the episode "Media Blitz", April leads Andy to believe that if he completes the tasks she hates every day for a month, she will consider being with him. In the same episode, it is hinted at that he has a cousin called Clara Dwyer. This, however, was never expanded upon further. Although she begins this as a bluff, after seeing Andy complete even the most humiliating of these tasks happily, she kisses him. In the episode "Andy and April's Fancy Party" Andy reveals that he had proposed to April a day earlier after only one month of dating to which April replied, "Fine." They are married at the end of the episode in a surprise ceremony.
Season four
At the beginning of season four, Tom asks Andy to join his new company. He declines Tom's offer and instead joins Leslie's campaign as her assistant and head of security, a role he enjoys very much. At the end of the season, he is encouraged by April to pursue a career as a police officer as all his "dream jobs," with the exception of rock star, revolve around law enforcement.
Season five
During the fifth season, Andy continues to pursue his ambition to become a police officer and seeks help from others to better his chances of passing the police academy entrance exams. He asks Chris to help him get fit enough to pass the police physical. His marriage to April is not strained by the distance between them: they exchange care packages and he visits her in Washington, DC.
Andy earns a perfect score on the written portion of the police officers' exam. When he fails the personality portion of the exam, he gets a rousing pep talk from Chris. Ben then gives Andy a job working with him at the Sweetum's charity foundation.
Season six
Andy's role is reduced in the sixth season, as Chris Pratt was busy with filming commitments to Guardians of the Galaxy. Andy spends the early part of season 6 in England attending to Sweetum's charity work. Before he went to England, he loses 50 pounds after giving up beer. He briefly visits Pawnee and does not want to return to England, but April convinces him to go back. Once he returns, he becomes part of a committee in the Parks department in charge of organising a concert to unite the recently merged towns of Pawnee and Eagleton. In the season finale, Andy reunites with MouseRat and sings a Li'l Sebastian memorial song at the Pawnee Unity concert.
Season seven
Andy remains married to April Ludgate, and the two have become responsible adults, to their horror. He has a TV show on public access, The Johnny Karate Super Awesome Musical Explosion Show, where he is knighted by Lord Edgar Covington in its final episode, and later works part-time at the National Parks service. His friendship with Tom has grown since the previous seasons.[19] After April decides to leave for a new job in Washington, D.C., Andy goes with her.
In a series of flash-forwards in the final episode, April and Andy ask Leslie and Ben for advice regarding the prospect of having children, which Andy very much wants but April does not. They decide to try for it and their son, Burt Snakehole Ludgate Karate Dracula Macklin Demon Jack-o-Lantern "Jack" Dwyer, is born on Halloween 2023. By 2025 the couple is expecting their second child.
Development and production
Chris Pratt was credited as a guest star throughout the entire first season, but was promoted to the main cast in the second season.[20] The Andy character was originally supposed to appear only in the first season, but the producers liked Pratt so much that almost immediately after casting him, they decided to make Andy a regular character.[21]
As the focus of the series was supposed to be on local city government, the writers came up with ideas to keep Andy's character in the show after his breakup with Ann. He eventually gets a job at City Hall, first as a shoeshiner and then as Leslie Knope's assistant during her campaign, and later Ben Wyatt's assistant at the Newport Foundation. Showrunner Michael Schur said that during the second season, the writers had an idea that "if we stayed with him for a long time he was going to be this real Horatio Alger kind of guy - a guy pulling himself up, like a Charles Dickens character or something. At one time early on in Season 2, we were like, 'The end of the show is Andy is the mayor!' That was what we thought because he was going to shine people's shoes, and everyone was going to love him, and he was going to get to know everyone. That's why we kind of we kept we hung onto that for a long time. We had him be people's assistants, and it was like, 'Oh, he's meeting people,' and everyone who meets him loves him. At one point like in Season 2, Season 3, we were like, 'Andy is going to be the mayor someday,' and he was going to be this real like old-timey 19th century [scenario], like, 'He started as the shoeshine boy!'"[22]
Pratt purposely gained weight for the role during the first season, which he felt was right for the character of Andy Dwyer. "I'm not saying that fat is funny, but misplaced confidence is funny, and Andy is someone who is not fit but walks around like he is. So I went back the next day, and I told Mike Schur I wanted to gain 20 to 30 pounds. He said great."[23] However, the weight gain nearly prevented Pratt from getting film roles, first as baseball player Scott Hatteberg in Moneyball (2011) and then as Star-Lord in Guardians of the Galaxy (2014). After crash dieting for Moneyball, he got into much better shape to play a Navy SEAL in Zero Dark Thirty; but subsequently regained the weight to resume portraying Andy. His weight loss for Guardians of the Galaxy was written into the script, when Andy claims he lost 50 lbs. in one month by giving up beer.[24]
Pratt took a hiatus from the show during the sixth season in order to film Guardians of the Galaxy. The sixth-season opener, "London," partially took place in London in order to accommodate Pratt's filming schedule, as well as explain Andy's absence from Pawnee after he gets a temporary job offer in England.
In the second season, Pratt did a scene with Amy Poehler and Rashida Jones in which Andy shows up at Ann's house totally naked. Pratt wore skin-tone briefs which were supposed to be pixelated for television to imply he was naked. After several takes of Poehler opening the door to see him naked, Pratt felt that Poehler did not seem convincingly surprised, so he took off the briefs. Poehler's reaction was so genuine that this was the take later aired on TV. However, Pratt was formally reprimanded for the prank in a letter from NBC.[6][25][26]
Although Pratt became a movie star by the end of the series, he said he never considered leaving the show.[22]
References
- ^ Busis, Hillary (April 15, 2011). "'Parks and Recreation': I now pronounce you man and... wait, seriously?". Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on June 23, 2011. Retrieved April 17, 2011.
- ^ Kandell, Steve (April 15, 2011). "'Parks and Recreation' Recap: A Wedding". New York. Retrieved April 23, 2011.
- ^ Collis, Clark (July 11, 2014). "How Chris Pratt Went from Zero to Hero". Entertainment Weekly. pp. 24–31. Retrieved February 2, 2015.
- ^ Sepinwall, Alan. "Parks and Recreation: Interviewing co-creator Mike Schur". The Star-Ledger. Newark, N.J. Retrieved July 13, 2013.
- ^ "Parks And Recreation: "The Practice Date"". TV Club. Retrieved June 5, 2020.
- ^ a b BBC America (June 5, 2015). "Chris Pratt gets NAKED on Parks and Rec - The Graham Norton Show". YouTube. Retrieved December 10, 2017.
- ^ Ditzian, Eric (September 17, 2009). "'Parks and Recreation' Star Chris Pratt Talks Amy Poehler, Adorableness and Cracking Some Beers". MTV News. Archived from the original on April 7, 2010. Retrieved September 22, 2009.
- ^ Gandert, Sean (February 15, 2013). "Parks and Recreation Review: "Emergency Response" (Episode 5.13)". Paste. Retrieved December 10, 2017.
- ^ Sanoff, Rachel (September 29, 2016). "Chris Pratt remembers one of the best scenes in "Parks and Rec," makes us miss the show even more". HelloGiggles.com. Retrieved December 10, 2017.
- ^ Harley, Nick (January 8, 2014). "Parks and Recreation: The Many Faces of Andy Dwyer (and Chris Pratt)". Den of Geek. Retrieved December 10, 2017.
- ^ Brinson, Will (March 1, 2015). "'Parks & Rec' put Reggie Wayne/Colts tribute in Johnny Karate disclaimer". CBS Sports. Retrieved December 10, 2017.
- ^ Brown, Brigid (April 23, 2009). "TV Recap: Parks and Recreation - The Reporter". Cinema Blend. Archived from the original on April 26, 2009. Retrieved April 26, 2009.
- ^ Phipps, Keith (April 9, 2009). "Parks and Recreation: Season 1 : Episode 1: "Pilot"". The A.V. Club. Archived from the original on April 12, 2009. Retrieved April 13, 2009.
- ^ Fowler, Matt (May 15, 2009). "Parks and Recreation: "Rock Show" Review". IGN. Archived from the original on May 19, 2009. Retrieved May 15, 2009.
- ^ Fog, Henning (October 2, 2009). ""Parks and Recreation" recap: Herstory lessons". Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on October 8, 2009. Retrieved October 20, 2009.
- ^ Fog, Henning (October 23, 2009). ""Parks and Recreation" recap: Kaboom!". Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on January 22, 2011. Retrieved October 27, 2009.
- ^ Fowler, Matt (November 6, 2009). "Parks and Recreation: "Ron and Tammy" Review". IGN. Archived from the original on November 10, 2009. Retrieved November 6, 2009.
- ^ Heisler, Steve (November 19, 2009). "Parks and Recreation: "Hunting Trip"". The A.V. Club. Archived from the original on November 22, 2009. Retrieved November 22, 2009.
- ^ "Parks and Recreation Season 7 Premiere Review: Back to the Future". TV.com. CBS Interactive.
- ^ "Rashida Jones and Chris Pratt Talk Parks and Recreation". MovieWeb. October 30, 2009. Archived from the original on November 7, 2009. Retrieved December 8, 2009.
- ^ Sepinwall, Alan (September 17, 2009). "Parks and Recreation: Interviewing co-creator Mike Schur". The Star-Ledger. Retrieved January 1, 2010.
- ^ a b Goldman, Eric (January 16, 2015). "Chris Pratt On Why He Never Left Parks and Recreation and Why He Hates Comments". IGN. Retrieved December 10, 2017.
- ^ "Chris Pratt Gets Honest In 'Men's Fitness' Interview – 'I've Benefitted From Having Almost Zero Critical Thinking And A Very Low Bar For Success'". Radar Online. June 25, 2014. Archived from the original on July 1, 2014. Retrieved December 10, 2017.
- ^ Cohen, Rich (January 3, 2017). "Cover Story: Chris Pratt's Call to Stardom". Vanity Fair. Retrieved December 10, 2017.
- ^ "Chris Pratt Improvised a Parks and Rec Scene by Going Naked – and Scaring Amy Poehler". People. July 31, 2014. Retrieved March 3, 2017.
- ^ "Watch Chris Pratt Explain The Nude Stunt That Got Him Into Trouble With NBC". Cinema Blend. June 8, 2015. Retrieved March 3, 2017.