Breakout character

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A breakout character is a fictional character in different episodes, books or other media (TV, comics, literature, games etc) that evolves from a minor role to a major role, sometimes becoming the main character of the show. In television programs, movies and other episodic media, a character that becomes the most popular, talked about, and imitated is a breakout character.[1] Most often a breakout character in a series captures audience's imagination and popularizes it, sometimes inadvertently. Breakout characters are known to come from intended single appearances.

In some instances, particularly television, when characters have broken out from minor roles to become the center of the action, viewers have felt they received too much focus and were detrimental to the show,[2] sometimes leading it to jump the shark.

Contents

[edit] Examples

[edit] Television

[edit] Movies

[edit] Comics

  • Snoopy in Peanuts became, in the strip's later years, the focus of the strip, displacing Charlie Brown, as his character began to do more and more fantastic things, got his own sidekick, Woodstock, and proved to be a huge seller in the strip's merchandising. In the 1970s he was practically synonymous with the strip.[24][25]
  • Dick Grayson/Robin/Nightwing was introduced as the first kid sidekick superhero in comic book history in 1940. After forty-four years as Robin, his popularity in the Teen Titans series and his increasing popularity in the Batman monthly books caused him to extend beyond his sidekick role and become solo hero Nightwing. Many have called him the "heart and soul" of the DC universe.[26]
  • Mary Jane Watson was introduced in The Amazing Spider-Man as a flighty rival of Gwen Stacy for the affections of Peter Parker. However, Mary Jane's energetic and confident personality drew considerably more reader interest than expected and she evolved into one of the central supporting characters of Spider-Man. [27]
  • Wolverine began as an enemy of the Incredible Hulk. He shortly after joined the X-Men but editors decided that he and Thunderbird were too similar in abilities and temperament and almost killed off Wolverine instead of Thunderbird. Even after, he was a minor character, but he grew in popularity to become one of Marvel Comics' most popular and marketable characters.[28]
  • Opus the Penguin, of Bloom County, Outland, and the strip of the same name was originally intended to last for only a week upon his introduction in Bloom County, after which he would disappear only to be found dead some years later. After receiving a large amount of fan mail supporting the character, along with being personally pleased at how well the character seemed to mesh with the strip, Berkeley Breathed decided to keep him on as a permanent character, eventually supplanting the original cast as the focus of the strip and its subsequent sequels.[29]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Raymond Weschler (2000). Man on the Moon. English Learner Movie Guides.
  2. ^ Break-out characters discussion thread at Sitcoms Online, started May 10, 2006; retrieved July 28, 2006.
  3. ^ Ron Miller. My Happy Days with "Happy Days": They really were a great bunch of happy people. TheColumnists.
  4. ^ missingauthor. HappyDays. TV Land.
  5. ^ Allen Johnson (2006-02-27). An Ode to Barney. News and Record.
  6. ^ solis. "[http://forum.happytreefriends.com/showthread.php?t=18807&page=113 The Happy Tree Friends' Writers' Questions and Answers Topic - Page 113 - Happy Tree Friends The HTF writers Q&A]", happytreefriends.com, 2007-09-31. Retrieved on 2007-09-31. 
  7. ^ solis. "The HTF Favorite Character Poll", happytreefriends.com, 2007-09-31. Retrieved on 2007-09-31. 
  8. ^ Template:Jamie J Weiman 'All You Need Is One' MacLeans Canada, Oct 5, 2007,http://forums.macleans.ca/advansis/?mod=for&act=dip&pid=79438&tid=79438&ref=rss&eid=29
  9. ^ ""Heroes': Sylar Here To Stay!"", www.acesshollywood.com, 2007-6-13. Retrieved on 2007-08-28. 
  10. ^ Moore, Frazier; September 15, 2005;Hurricane made TV see the underclass; Associated Press; retrieved at MSNBC.com July 28, 2006.
  11. ^ "Bad Times on the Good Times Set", Ebony, September 1975
  12. ^ Mitchell, John L.; April 14, 2006; Plotting His Next Big Break; Los Angeles Times; retrieved July 26, 2006.
  13. ^ What Larry Hagman Brought to the Character, J.R. Ewing! discussion thread at soapchat; started December 22, 2002; retrieved July 28, 2006. This discussion thread refers to J.R. as the show's breakout character.
  14. ^ Froth, fear, and fury - The Boston Globe
  15. ^ August 3, 2005; Movie File: Jon Heder, Ryan Reynolds, Alyson Hannigan, Mike Judge & More; MTV Movie News; text refers to Spike as a breakout character.
  16. ^ Joel Keller, The TV Squad Interview: Fred Goss and Nick Holly of Sons & Daughters, TV Squad, 2006-05-14.. Fred Goss and Nick Holly, creators of Sons & Daughters, describe their hopes that that show's Carrie will be "our breakout character ... our Urkel"
  17. ^ missingauthor, Hangin' with Mr. Cooper, MSN Movies, [[]]. This MSN review of the DVD set of second-season episodes of Hangin' with Mr. Cooper refers to "Marquise Wilson, a new regular who was evidently intended to be the series 'breakout' character, a la Urkel on Family Matters".
  18. ^ Nathan Rabin (2005-01-26). Seth MacFarlane. The A.V. Club.
  19. ^ Gail. Dines, Jean McMahon Humez (2003). Gender, Race, and Class in Media: A Text-reader. Sage Publications Inc. ISBN 076192261X. 
  20. ^ About the Actors: Roger Howarth. soapcentral.com. Retrieved on 2007-08-26.
  21. ^ ""Reflections by Jill" - A Weekly Commentary on One Life to Live", About.com, 2003-09-15. Retrieved on 2007-08-28. 
  22. ^ Mark Phillips. The History of Lost In Space, Part I. Official Series Site.
  23. ^ Derek M. Germano (2004). The Pink Panther film collection. The Cinema Laser DVD Review.
  24. ^ comment by lastangelman; March 5, 2006; The Barber Shop 3: The Funny Pages Ain't Funny No More; All kinds of stuff; retrieved September 10, 2006.
  25. ^ Author not identifiable; undated; cb; Roseville Times Online; retrieved September 10, 2006
  26. ^ Hardback release of Infinite Crisis, as stated in an interview by Geoff Johns.
  27. ^ Spider-Man 2 DVD, Disk 2, "Women in Spider-Man" segment, stated by Stan Lee.
  28. ^ DeFalco, Tom. Comic Creators on X-Men. Titan, 2006. Pg. 110
  29. ^ Breathed, Berkeley. One Last Little Peek, 1980-1995: The Final Strips, the Special Hits, the Inside Tips. Little Brown & Co, 1995.