From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- Warner Brothers animated character Porky Pig
- South Park characters Jimmy and Butters
- Ken Pile in A Fish Called Wanda. Ken Pile was played by Michael Palin, who has done a considerable amount of work to support charities which work to help people who stutter.
- Claudius in I, Claudius
- John Dall's character Brandon Shaw in Rope by Alfred Hitchcock
- Smiley, played by Roger Guevneur Smith in Do the Right Thing by Spike Lee.
- Duh-Duh Man, played by Bill Nunn in New Jack City by Mario Van Peebles.
- Professor Quirrell, character in Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, by J.K. Rowling.
- Stuttering Bill Denbrough, character in the novel It by Stephen King.
- Arkwright in the British sitcom Open All Hours (played by Ronnie Barker) - "Ger-Granville! Fer-fetch a cloth!"
- World Wrestling Entertainment superstar Matt Morgan began using a stuttering gimmick in his second stint with the company.
- Extreme Championship Wrestling superstar Buh Buh Ray Dudley used a stuttering gimmick in the company and continued to use it during the start of his work in WWE.
- Billy Bibbitt in Ken Kesey's novel One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (played by Brad Dourif in the 1975 movie adaptation)
- Doctor Nitrus Brio of the Crash Bandicoot videogame series
- Jasper Gein from the videogame Silent Hill 4
- M*A*S*H character Henry Blake (in the book and film) and Charles Winchester's sister Honoria
- Willy Wonka from Tim Burton's 2005 film Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (mostly blocks, but some repetitions and pauses appear)
- Luigi Lemonjello in K.P. Bath's The Secret of Castle Cant
- Tin from DC Comics "Metal Men."
- John Gibbons, the public defender in the 1992 film My Cousin Vinny (played by Austin Pendleton, who overcame a stutter in real life).
- Star Trek: The Next Generation character Reginald Barclay