A Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends
Main characters:
Wilt - is an imaginary friend created by Jordan Michaels and live in Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends.
"There's nothing special about me, you'd better adopt someone else"
Personality:
Wilt is kind-hearted, friendly, cool, helpful, lighthearted, honest and incredibly nice. He remains optimistic and confident despite his troubled past. He's also known for frequently apologizing, often starting his sentences with “I’m sorry, but...” and ending them with “Is that okay?” even when there’s no real reason to apologize.
Physical Appearance:
Wilt has red skin and stitches on his left arm and his face sides. His left eyestalk is crooked making him blind in one eye, while his right one is fine. His right arm is normal, however his left arm is a short stump that he can move regardless. He also has two long legs, for a total of four limbs. He has a number 1 on his chest akin to one on a basketball jersey, a single wristband on his right arm, white long tube socks with red and blue stripes on the cuffs, as well as black and white basketball sneakers that make his footsteps squeak like he's on a basketball court when he walks around.
Traits:
Wilt prides himself on finding abandoned imaginary friends, making him a "helper friend," and is kind-hearted to a fault, sometimes apologizing a lot even when it is unnecessary; he just can't say "no," especially when someone asks him to do something, even if it's incredibly inconvenient. For example, in "Where There's a Wilt, There's a Way", he missed an entire basketball game doing favors for everyone who saw him (including thugs). Though he has not been able to say "no" in that episode, he said it twice before admitting he couldn't say it and has also said it numerous times in other episodes, even ones made before that episode. Bloo's laziness and careless attitude sometimes make him take advantage of Wilt's niceness by pretending to be sad or hurt. In "Partying Is Such Sweet Soiree", we also learn that he's an excellent dancer, but tends to get nervous in front of large gatherings as seen at the County Imaginary Friends Talent Show Pageant in "Hiccy Burp", resulting in him flubbing his lines and becoming too frozen with stage fright to continue afterward. Wilt also hosted the contest the previous year, apparently forgetting his lines and causing something horrible (which was frequently mentioned but never explained), but after messing up the most recent time, Madame Foster says "That was much better than last year."
Wilt is generally a pushover, although he does have his dignity and will stand up for himself past a certain point. In "Room With A Feud", a vacant bedroom was available, and he was quite insistent that he deserved it being that the room was very large with basketball wallpaper, two basketball hoops and even a scoreboard. Bloo attempted to fake sadness, in an attempt to coax Wilt into giving Bloo the room, stating, "But Wilt, if you take it, you'll hurt my feeeeewiiiings!" Wilt responds with, "You know, I was just thinking about that. And the thing is... I really don't care." While attempting to scare the friend possessing the room at the time away, Wilt is shown to have the ability to play the trombone quite skillfully. In another episode, "Beat With a Schtick", he refused to help Bloo after he discovered he was making fun of tall people. In "Bus the Two of Us", Mac and Bloo ask Wilt to distract Frankie while they are out in the Foster's bus taking a joyride. After several attempts to keep Frankie in the house, Wilt screams into the phone, "Two minutes! You have two minutes before Frankie leaves the house and there's nothing I can do to stop her, Mac! I am trapped in a tangled web of lies and I can't do it anymore! I tried, I really tried, but it's too much, okay?! It's too much! The Wilt man is signing off. You are on your own, Mister!" He then slams down the phone, then picks it up to say, "Sorry." In "Squeeze the Day" he apparently got all of Foster's banned from the beach after some unknown accident involving homeless jellyfish and lots of sand.
Although Wilt is sweet and kind at heart, he does have a "dark side," as seen in "Pranks for Nothing". When Bloo gets back on the bus bragging about how he gave the last prank, he ends up sitting down on a whoopie cushion. Bloo realized that the prank couldn't've been pulled by Coco, because she got on the bus after him. Bloo demands to know who set the whoopie cushion on his seat, making Wilt smile at the end, implying that it was he who pulled the last prank.
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Eduardo - is one of the liver in Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends. He speaks with a strong Spanish accent, sometimes even using Spanish words.
Appearance:
Eduardo is a muscular 7-foot tall (to his horns), 542-pound monster-like "guardian friend". He resembles a mixture of a minotaur and beasts from Maurice Sendak's Where the Wild Things Are with purple fur, angled horns, sharp fangs, a pinkish-purple ape-like face, a black scribbly unibrow, black claws, and purple devil-like tail. He wears a black belt with a skull-shaped buckle and silver studs, and gray pants and shoes.
Personality:
Despite his menacing appearance, Eduardo is one of the gentlest friends in the entire house. He speaks in third person most of the time. He sometimes speaks in Spanish phrases or words, often calling Bloo "Azul". Essentially, it can be considered that he speaks "Spanglish". Despite being a protector friend, he's a total coward; as noted in "House of Bloo's" by Wilt, he wouldn't hurt a fly because, as Eduardo pointed out, he's too scared of them. Despite his fear, when motivated, by either need or fear from an actual threat, he is a powerful protector. However, he takes little to no initiative to protect himself because of his gentleness, despite being able to pummel far larger beings than himself into the ground. He is also jealous of Bloo because he is "cooler", to the point where he "stole his thunder" in "Better Off Ed".
During "Cuckoo for Coco Cards" on Coco's imaginary friend trading cards, Eduardo is classified first as a "big fat baby", then a "chicken," then a "scaredy cat" before being finally upgraded to "crazy idiot" after much trying.
While Eduardo is very timid, he is also immensely strong, as shown when he is motivated by the need to protect his friends from threats, perceived or otherwise. He often shows his strength by accident when suddenly frightened as well. This caused him to be a favorite contender in an imaginary friend fighting contest, as he would get scared and then end up inadvertently defeating his opponents. It has also been implied that he can be quite intimidating when he is angered (usually when his friends are under what he perceives to be a threat). Surprisingly, Eduardo's horns are incredibly strong, capable of withstanding a full-on impact into the Extremosaur cage in "House of Bloo's," and Eduardo often (accidentally) knocks out targets upon running into them, such as a terrified Mr. Herriman in "Who Let The Dogs In?" Eduardo has also nurtured a pink elephant squeaky toy like a baby in "Squeakerboxxx," even going as far to name it Paco. He also has many Beanie Baggies (a parody of the Beanie Baby franchise).
If there was any food he was to eat, it would be potatoes: He is commonly heard saying, "I like potatoes." In "Who Let The Dogs In?" he is shown to be fond of dogs (particularly puppies) and he eventually adopts a dog, Chewy. In "One False Movie," we learn that one of his favorite TV shows is Lauren is Explorin', an obvious spoof of Dora The Explorer.
He also loves Christmas, as seen in "A Lost Claus," where he puts a Christmas wreath on his skull belt buckle, sleigh bells on his tail, paints his horns to resemble candy canes, and even places mistletoe on one of his horns and kisses everyone in sight. He is also very rich: During the episode "The Buck Swaps Here," Eduardo finds an American dollar worth $100. Later, after it has been used to buy a pink dollhouse for $99.99 American dollars, he saves the last penny in a safe hidden beneath his Beanie Baggies, and it is revealed that he has at least five gold bars and many dollar bills, as well as four or five diamonds, and is a financial genius, making a fortune by investing in children's toys stocks. This mostly includes the metafictional Beanie Baggie franchise of which Eduardo is a huge fan, keeping a massive collection of them in his room. It was also discovered in "The Buck Swaps Here" that he likes girls' dolls.
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Coco - is kind, benevolent, helpful, funny, silly, ditzy and surprisingly sarcastic, despite the fact she only says one word. She can also be self-centered at times, such as in "Store Wars" when she reports Frankie to mall security despite being her friend. Coco has a palm tree for a head, a crooked red beak, a blue and white airplane body, and orange legs and feet. She is 4 feet tall and weighs 80 pounds. Coco, according to a golden trading card in the Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends Leapster game, was created by a girl who crashed on a desert island, which could explain her appearance of the palm tree head and airplane body. She was discovered by two scientists named Douglas and Adam (called "nerds" by Bloo), who were introduced in "Good Wilt Hunting." Since they found her alone, Coco's original creator has never been mentioned nor known what became of her. Although Coco has attempted to tell Douglas and Adam, they may have either unintentionally ignored her or not understood what she was trying to say. Throughout "Good Wilt Hunting," it's shown that she acts as a motherly figure towards Douglas and Adam.
"Coco" "Coco coco coco!"
Speech:
Her only verbal utterances and written means of communication is "coco" (with each syllable pronounced "co"), which most of the imaginary friends, Mac, Frankie, Madame Foster, and other characters can seemingly understand. This can lead to strange conversations, such as in "House of Bloo's", when Bloo repeatedly said 'yes' every time Coco said "Coco?", because he thought she was asking him if he wanted hot chocolate, until Wilt explained that that's all she ever says. When Bloo asked what she was really asking them, Wilt replied "Do you want any juice?"
She also has had to be heard by many people in "Hiccy Burp" (taking over for Wilt as the talent show pageant's host due to Wilt's mistakes), and in "Store Wars", she used the mall's intercom to alert security guards and shoppers. Also, in "Cuckoo for Coco Cards", she led Mac's classmates on a tour of the home, implying that they understood her.
She is usually understandable to all, but may not be, depending on what jokes are needed. She also seems unable to write anything but "Coco," with similar rules applying to whether or not people can read it (Mr. Herriman once read a ransom note from her in "Crime After Crime", but was unable to figure out who sent it despite the obvious clue, and when Mac read her diary in the episode "Squeeze the Day", he was unable to decipher it). In the episode "The Big Picture", one of the ideas Bloo thought to why all the imaginary friends disappeared in one of the annual group photos was when Coco actually said something besides "Coco," (namely "Cheese!") which caused everyone to storm off.
Information:
When Coco is excited, scared, in love, or needs the attention of others, she has the ability to lay plastic eggs, similar to those found in Gashapon toy vending machines, that can contain anything from ming vases to tickets for redemption of prizes to money or even auto parts. In "Cuckoo for Coco Cards", she is shown to be able to control the exact written content of these items, laying trading cards with detailed information printed on them. Usually, she will lay certain items when asked, but not reliably, such as in the episode "Camp Keep a Good Mac Down", where she lays several canned foods, but no can opener when asked.
Coco's personality is unpredictable, showing both a sinister dark side, first shown in the episode "Room With A Feud" when, after contributing an idea (said in a sinister way), Mac responds that they would likely be arrested if they were to follow that idea, yet also a hyper and uncontrollable side, seen mainly at the beginning of "My So Called Wife", where she is seen bouncing along a diving board and playing a sousaphone, among other activities. She also took three separate jobs (a fast-food employee, a mall courtesy desk clerk, and a security guard) to pay for a massage chair in "Store Wars" and worked as a mall Santa in "A Lost Claus", apparently to pay for her vacation home.
She also has many eccentric abilities, including super strength (being able to lift Eduardo for a short amount of time in the pilot), altering her color and appearance at will ("Bus the Two of Us"), swallowing objects or living things and laying them inside of plastic eggs ("Who Let the Dogs In?"), and communicating with squirrels ("Mondo Coco"). Due to her lack of arms, she uses either her feet or her beak to manipulate objects. She also knows how to drive (although in "Foster's Goes to Europe", she shows a fear of buses) and draw ("Drawing Bored") surprisingly well. However, she is very insecure about her weight, as shown in “The Big Picture”.
Coco is friends with the imaginary friend Sassyfrass as seen in "Partying is Such Sweet Soiree". In the same episode, she has been shown to be romantically involved with a lamp. However, the lamp was tragically broken by Mac in a sugar rush during the episode, though it was eventually taped back together.
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Francis "Frankie" Foster - is the granddaughter of Martha Foster and the jane-of-all-trades that helps keep her grandmother's foster home running in the series Foster's Home for Imaginary.
Age:
"Bus the Two of Us" reveals via Frankie's driver's license that she was born on July 25, 1984, making her 15 years old (five weeks away from her 16th birthday) at the time when her license was issued on May 18, 2000, four years before the show premiered.
It is unclear how much older than this she is, except that her license expires in January 2007 and it hasn't expired as of "Bus the Two of Us", making her under 23 years old, since she would turn 23 on July 25, 2007.
Appearance:
Considered as pretty by several characters, Frankie is a pale-skinned young woman of tall and slim stature, with bright green eyes (according to her driver’s license) and long, spiky red hair with bangs, usually kept into a high half-ponytail by a black hair tie. She also accessorizes her hair with a deep-purple hair clip.
Her usual clothing features a thin black choker around her neck, a large green hoodie-jacket over a cropped, dark red-and-white ringer tee with minimalistic Powerpuff Girls symbols depicting Bubbles, Blossom, and Buttercup on the front along with her exposed belly button, a deep-purple skirt, golden-orange socks, and blue-and-white trainer shoes. She also accessorizes with multiple piercings on her ears.
Personality:
Frankie is generally a kind, friendly and caring woman. Being the caretaker at the foster home, she is very hardworking and tries to keep everyone and everything on track.
Due to her job, she is prominently more level-headed and rational as she tends to act as the voice of reason, especially in comparison to Mr. Herriman's bossy demeanor and the absent-minded nature of her grandmother. However, she isn't above being just as zany and childish as other characters, and furthermore this can result in her having not-so-nice moments, which is a high contrast to her normally good-natured personality.
Because of her having to deal with Mr. Herriman's bossiness, Duchess's demands, and Bloo's antics, Frankie will become sarcastic, stubborn and even short-tempered when they push her too far. She also isn't afraid to be physical, particularly seen in "Frankie My Dear" when she overheard Dylan Lee badmouthing her friends.
In "Cookie Dough", it is revealed that Frankie is highly obsessed with Madame Foster's chocolate-chip cookies, so much so that she will hoard dozens of boxes, lock herself in her room, and binge-eat them. During this, her sanity will slowly slip bit by bit, until eventually she will think nothing but eating cookies.
It's safe to say that, out of all the main characters of the show, she is perhaps the most unluckiest, often finding herself in frustrating and/or humiliating situations, whilst suffering the short end of the stick.
Character description:
Frankie Foster is based on the show's creator Craig McCracken's wife, Lauren Faust. She is the funny, friendly, hard-working, kind, capable, easy-going, but still short-tempered granddaughter of Madame Foster. According to her driver's license, she was born on July 25, 1984, is 5-08 ft tall, and weighs 127 pounds and has bright green eyes (proven in "Destination Imagination", when one of her eyes peeks through a window of the Foster's model). However, there is a timeline glitch: In "The Trouble With Scribbles", Mr. Herriman said she had let the Scribbles out in fall 1984, and she appears to be 2-4 years old in the flashback (or, at least where she's old enough to talk).
Frankie has lived at Foster's nearly her entire life, having moved there in her early childhood. It is unclear what happened to her parents, though Frankie mentions during "Who Let the Dogs In?" that they helped her conquer her fear of ghosts when she was a child.
As she grew into her teenage years, Frankie, who had spent her life in the company of imaginary friends, soon took on the role of taking care of pretty much everything at Foster's. She was placed in charge of cooking, cleaning the house, doing the laundry, running fundraisers, driving the house residents around in the multicolored bus, and otherwise taking care of her grandmother's foster friends in every way. She occasionally shows signs of stress as a result of her many duties, though its primary source seems to be Herriman's constant over-enforcing of the house rules and that he forever expects her to work harder, despite her full workload.
She also knows about Mr. Herriman's fear of dogs as shown in "Who Let the Dogs In?" when a couple with a lost, stray dog comes in and Mr. Herriman is sent into a panic, but Frankie saves him by making the couple and their dog leave and stating that Foster's is not an animal shelter. Mr. Herriman is still traumatized and nervous, as he knows "Dogs eat rabbits."
Still, despite all her work, she does manage to maintain a social life and is even allowed to go on the occasional date (assuming Mr. Herriman doesn't keep her working late with more chores). She is also often swayed by Bloo's "get rich quick schemes" and has proven to be an efficient ally in promoting Bloo's agendas when she feels she can get a good profit or outcome out of it.
She is a fan of punk rock, as revealed in "Everyone Knows It's Bendy" and "Imposter's Home for Um... Make 'Em Up Pals." She is also proficient in web-design, creating and maintaining the Foster's webpage, as seen in "World Wide Wabbit".
According to concept art, Frankie was originally intended to be much younger, like a teenager, and much more into punk rock than she already has been shown to be. Many drawings depicted her being always angry. While her looks have changed, she still had the same shirt (depicting a stylized version of The Powerpuff Girls, another cartoon which Craig McCracken created), green zip-up fleece, and ponytail.
Although she is mainly an in-charge, no-nonsense sort of girl, Frankie can be quite stunning, as seen in "Frankie My Dear," where Mac, Bloo, another imaginary friend named Prince Charming, and a pizza delivery boy named Chris, all develop a crush on her, and in "Good Wilt Hunting", where two nerds, Douglas and Adam, consider her to be a vision of beauty. Frankie can be skeptical at times, as seen in "Imposter's Home for Um... Make 'Em Up Pals", where she thinks Goofball John McGee is not an imaginary friend because of his overly-human appearance, which, to be fair, is not a bad thing. She also has an unhealthy addiction to Madame Foster's home-baked cookies, occasionally indulging in a feeding frenzy, first buying $1,200 worth, and then $2,400 (20 and 40 dozen respectively). She may also have a case of road rage, especially seen in "Good Wilt Hunting," where officer Nina Valarosa, Eduardo's creator, hands out tickets for numerous traffic violations. She also won the election for president of the house in "Setting a President," but resigned when she found out the pay was worse than her old job (and partially because Mr. Herriman was devastated not having his old job).
Frankie also gets extremely stressed out in "Cheese A Go-Go". She has to deal with picking up imaginary friends, running errands and a lawsuit between her grandmother and Jackie Khones over a tuna sandwich. She also has problems with Cheese and the others throughout, which becomes worse when Bloo uses an observatory public address system to tell everyone (including her) that Cheese is an outer-space alien and, in substance, invites the creatures from other worlds to pick him up. The stressing out was also a center point on the movie "Destination Imagination", where she escaped to a world to be pampered by a character named World, a face that could move around onto anything.
Frankie's character design appears to be loosely based on that of Lauren Faust, the show's supervising producer (and real-life spouse of series creator Craig McCracken). Oddly enough, Frankie, unlike her grandmother, seems to have not created an imaginary friend of her own, most likely because she grew up surrounded by them. However, she is most likely to have adopted World.
Her favorite TV show is a soap opera called The Loved and the Loveless, which is very popular among the house residents.
In the episode, "Frankie My Dear", Frankie directly says she is 22.
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Mr. Herriman - is one of the main characters of Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends.He is the president/head of the house of Foster's and is Frankie's boss. He's an organized, proper, uptight, stern, strict, lawful, rules-oriented but still somewhat naive rabbit.
Description:
Mr. Herriman is a man-sized rabbit-like imaginary friend who wears a top hat, monocle, tuxedo coat, bowtie, yellow vest, white gloves, and a mustache while speaking in an English accent in a personification of the Edwardian era. He is the head of the house and runs things for Madame Foster, his creator. He is the oldest friend in the house, which is something he is quite sensitive about. He is named for Krazy Kat creator George Herriman, with a pun on "hare."
He stands six feet tall (seven feet with his top hat on) and weighs in at 210 pounds. Quite the opposite of his carefree and calm-tempered creator Madame Foster, Mr. Herriman is a stickler for rules, having made many silly and impractical rules in an attempt to keep everything "running smoothly", to the point of being ridiculous. He usually refers to others in a proper manner, calling males "Master" and females "Miss" in front of their names; the only time he actually calls people in normal fashion is when he is in pure terror. He is shown to have an addiction to carrots (which he will go to great, even desperate, lengths to hide), despite his best attempts to ignore or get over the weakness. He is cynophobic and is easily sent into a panic whenever he comes across a dog or anything dog related because dogs are natural predators of rabbits. Because of this, he made a rule that no dogs are allowed in the home.
Mr. Herriman, though proper, has often shown a lack of social skills. His ways of being proper are to the point where the other imaginary friends cannot stand him or be around him, his ways of keeping things "running just the right way" often inconvenience the other characters to the point of being disrespectful. Frankie has a strong disliking towards Mr. Herriman, due to his constant lack of consideration towards her and often talks her down, whether he is aware of it or not. At the end Destination Imagination," however, he realizes his poor judgment towards her after witnessing how she handled World, even putting forth an agreement to have the other friends help her around the house. He has a strong disliking for Bloo, due to his chaotic nature and constant rule breaking.
Although Mr. Herriman is a strong stickler for the rules, he is often overruled by Madame Foster. Despite the fact that they often disagree on things (rules mostly), Herriman and Madame Foster have an unquestionably loving relationship, and at times Herriman will appease his creator much in the way that he did when Madame Foster was a little girl (such performing his 'Funny Bunny' dance and song for her when in private). He is also very protective of Madame Foster, to where even she tells him to relax. Mr. Herriman was featured in Cartoon Network's comic series based on the show, hallucinating Madame Foster as a little girl after getting high on cleaning solvents in the "Ill Will" issue. Herriman recalls in the issue how, as a young child, Madame Foster spilled something over, and when questioned by her parents, she blamed him, so he claims that incident as being his reason for obsessing over cleaning, rules, and manners, to avoid getting in trouble again.
Mr. Herriman is very passionate about his job as the house president, taking the job seriously, as he's stated that being the president of the house makes him feel like he is needed and important to the Foster community. Herriman is surprisingly old fashioned, even believing that the internet is an actual net. It is believed that Madame Foster created him during the 1930s, making him believe the 2000s are still running in the old-fashioned ways of living.
Despite his strict, uptight attitude, Mr. Herriman also portrays a willingness to oversee fair play and to protect all those under his charge. For example, when he threatened Mac with a ban from the house after Goo's creations invaded it, he reassured Mac that Bloo would not be let out for adoption, in light of their contract. Said attitude was derailed in the episode "Let Your Hare Down," when his alter ego, a hippie type named "Harry", had no regard for rules until William Collector came, making him become his old self again.
He is frequently called a badger by Goo throughout the show until the episode "Bus the Two of Us".
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Martha Foster, better known as Madame Foster.She is the founder of Foster's, creator of Mr. Herriman, and the paternal grandmother of Frankie Foster. She's portrayed as a sweet and loving grandmother/caretaker with a lot of energy and spunk with a larger-than-life persona.
Personality:
Kooky, sweet, loving, friendly, caring, charming, and always wearing a smile for anyone to cheer them up as their surrogate grandmother, Madame Foster is a fun-loving old woman who always finds a way to have a good time, even if she has to break Mr. Herriman's rules in order to do so; she is truly a kid at heart. She loves having wild tea parties while everyone is out as seen in "Foster's Goes to Europe." Mr. Herriman is never happy about this, but since it was Madame Foster who created him in the first place, he doesn't have much of a say about it. She often pokes good-hearted fun at others, like in "Mac Daddy" where she made jokes about Mac and Cheese and "Bloo Cheese" (a type of cheese). She is quite sneaky and malicious when she needs or wants to be, as seen in "Foster's Goes to Europe", when she stole Mac's tickets to Europe with a rather long hug. She then went on vacation with her friends and a homesick imaginary friend named Eurotrish. In "Something Old, Something Bloo", it's shown that she thinks she's a superhero. As noted by Mr. Herriman, "This never turns out very well." She even bought the stuff Mac put up for auction on internet auction website SchmeBay (a parody of eBay) in "One False Movie", not knowing that she was buying her own stuff or funding much of the movie that Mac and Bloo were making. She also helped Bloo trick Mac into a surprise party disguised as an imaginary friend named Artie, four years old, in "I Only Have Surprise for You".
Madame Foster sometimes makes rude jokes out of someone else's unfortunate situations (most notably while Bloo was eating a horrible meal Frankie specially prepared) with a below-basic level of sarcasm. She dotes on her granddaughter Frankie, but at the same time is not above driving the younger woman to distraction. Madame Foster and Mac seem to be kindred spirits, as she has never gotten rid of her imaginary friend (Mr. Herriman) and Mac refuses to give up Bloo. Sometimes, Madame Foster's daily actions tend to change from kindhearted to eccentric (such as running with scissors inside the mansion, using exaggerated methods to solve many problems such as using a garden hose to cure Bloo of the hiccups, or even performing semi-nudism). Mr. Herriman is similar: he always acts as a cultured and refined imaginary friend, but sometimes loses his composure. Regardless of her age and mild senility, though, Madame Foster is always composed and still very sharp.
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Secondary characters:
Her Royal Duchess Diamond Persnickety, the First, Last and Only, or simply Duchess - is the secondary antagonist of Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends. She speaks with a German accent.
Personality:
This imaginary friend is a scheming, snobby, pompous, stuck-up, vain, conceited, negative, extremely rude, short-tempered, arrogant, selfish, self-centered, mean Picasso-like pain-in-the-neck who is literally two-dimensional when she turns her head or body (however, she is not two-dimensional in the pilot movie, "House of Bloo's"). She's considered a "high-maintenance" friend, not wanting to do anything for herself, and is so lazy that she needs somebody to open her eyelids when she wakes up. The residents seem to follow her commands because she is both able and willing to scream incredibly loud for an indefinite period of time without rest unless she gets what she wants, as was seen when she lived next door to Mac and was able to yell nonstop from him going to bed to him waking up, revealing a rather spoiled and annoying side to her personality. In a few episodes, she has helped someone, but only so that she could help herself, thus for selfish reasons. For example, in "Affair Weather Friends", she told Mac about Bloo hanging out with "Barry Bling" (aka Berry in disguise) behind his back. Duchess is considered one of the worst imaginary friends due to her ugliness and evilness.
In the pilot, she and Terrence conspire to get rid of Bloo after the millionaire's spoiled daughter wanted to adopt him instead of Duchess, who was chosen by her mother and father. As punishment for trying to get rid of Bloo, she was not kicked out of the house, but rather was forced to stay as she desires to leave.
Despite her desire to leave, Duchess insults almost everyone who tries to adopt her except for the rich family in the pilot and Barry Bling in "Affair Weather Friends", showing that while she badly wants to leave, she doesn't want to live in any less pampered lifestyle she would be forced to give up if she went home with a normal family (In other words, she wants to be adopted by a rich family). Everyone else desires her to leave very badly, however, so much so that Mr. Herriman spends the entire budget for advertising adoption on her, even saying that they will pay a family to take her.
Appearance;
Duchess has yellow skin, a long neck, a beauty mark, a trunk-like nose, a mouth that is turned sideways and two eyes, one of which appears to be upside down.
She wears a white turban with a ruby in it, light blue and purple eyeshadow, pink blush, red lipstick, green and black striped earrings, a blue and red pearl necklace and bracelet, a white dress with black triangles on it, two black bracelets, red nail polish, black and green striped leggings, and black high heels. Her appearance is based off of Picasso's artwork.
There is a running gag where she believes she is the most beautiful in the world, only for everyone else to consider her extremely ugly.
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