Philip J. Fry

Futurama character
Philip J. Fry
Age Physically 25-33 (chronologically 1000's of years older)[1]
Species Human
Planet of Origin Earth, specifically Brooklyn, New York City, New York
Job Interplanetary Delivery Boy for Planet Express
First Appearance Space Pilot 3000
Voiced by Billy West

Philip J. Fry (c. 1974, New York) is the protagonist of animated sci-fi sitcom Futurama, and is voiced by Billy West. He is usually referred to by his family name, "Fry".

Contents

Fictional character biography

Born in 1974, Fry is an average, thoroughly unremarkable, 25-year-old pizza delivery boy who, during the last ten seconds of New Year's Eve 1999, accidentally falls into a cryogenic freezing tank while delivering pizza on a prank call. He subsequently remains frozen for a thousand years, finally thawing out on the last day of 2999, when he meets the one-eyed career officer Turanga Leela, and a cigar smoking, booze fueled, kleptomaniac robot Bender. Together, they are employed by Fry’s great-great-great...(etc.) nephew, the senile and demented old scientist Prof. Hubert J. Farnsworth, as the spaceship crew of his delivery company. In his old life Fry had an older brother, Yancy, and a girlfriend, Michelle, who dumped him in the first episode, "Space Pilot 3000", just before he was frozen. Having been subsequently left by her new boyfriend, Michelle froze herself and re-appears in the season two finale "The Cryonic Woman".

Early life

Fry was born in New York City in 1974, and was named for the Philips head screwdriver. He had an elder brother named Yancy, with whom he always fought. In high school, he claims to have suffered three heart attacks from drinking 100 cans of cola each week. After dropping out of Coney Island College, he took three years off watching television continuously, knowing someday it would help him to save the world. He then got a job as a delivery boy at Panucci's Pizza.

Personality

Characterised as simple, sweet, naïve and immature, Fry regards Bender as his closest friend, despite the latter's often violent criminal tendencies. He also has strong feelings for Leela, although he lacks the intelligence required for articulating his emotions; thus, his love remains (sometimes coldly) unreciprocated, though not entirely without hope. She does occasionally return his interest, but because of her high expectations of men, his immaturity, and sometimes sheer idiocy, proves a consistent obstacle for any potential romance.

In the episode "The Why of Fry", Leela's seemingly oblivious pet Nibbler reveals himself as the reason for Fry's cryogenic freezing; because of Fry's uniquely inferior mental characteristics (he lacks the Delta brainwave, the cause of his stupidity and the result of becoming his own grandfather) he can withstand the intellect-draining onslaught of the evil Brainspawn. Nibbler's people, the Nibblonians, deem him "The Mighty One". Through prediction (on the eve of 1999, as the Nibblonians lack the ability to travel through time), they guessed that Fry would be the one to save the world from the evil Brainspawn; since his natural lifespan would not extend to the right millennium, however, Nibbler is sent to make the aforementioned hoax delivery call and push an unsuspecting Fry into the cryogenic tube, to re-emerge in the year 3000.

It is a recurring theme that Fry can smell or taste the colors of radiation; in "Roswell That Ends Well", when immersed in microwave radiation depicted as being blue, he remarks, "What smells blue?", and in "The Why of Fry", when his memory is wiped by Nibbler, he says to himself, "Did everything just taste purple for a second?". One talent that Fry does excel at is playing video games, hence his asking what the world would be like if it were like a video game in Anthology of Interest 2. Due mainly to this talent, Fry is also a very good shot and an excellent marksman, often serving as the gunner on the Planet Express ship with uncharacteristic skill. In Godfellas, he is shown using an arcade game screen as a targeting device.

While showering, he often sings "Walking on Sunshine" by Katrina and the Waves.

Character development

Creation

The name "Philip" was given to Fry by Matt Groening as a homage to the then recently murdered Phil Hartman, for whom the role of Zapp Brannigan was created.[2] The "J" is akin to the "J" in Bullwinkle J. Moose, Rocket J. Squirrel, Bartholomew J. Simpson and Homer J. Simpson, in tribute to Jay Ward, creator of The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show.

According to Groening, Fry's character developed over time while still keeping his qualities as a loser and the characteristics which writers hoped would make him appeal to the target young male audience.[3] Fry's character is essentially a bungling, stubborn slob with a heart of gold that cannot get ahead in the world, yet he does have a slight glimmer of hope.[3]

Casting

Fry is voiced by Billy West, who also voices Doctor Zoidberg, Professor Farnsworth and various other characters in the show. After West's original audition he did not get the role of Fry; however, after a casting change he was offered the job.[2] The voice West uses for Fry has been described as that of a "generic Saturday-morning good guy".[4] West admits that he intentionally made Fry sound similar to his own real voice claiming that keeping the "cartoony" aspects out of it would make it harder for someone else to imitate the same voice.[2] West also voices Lars Fillmore, a time travel duplicate of Fry with an injured larynx, in Bender's Big Score with a slightly altered voice. The producers initially considered having a different voice actor do Lars' voice in order to keep viewers from guessing his true identity, though they decided it would not make sense if anyone besides West did the voice.[5]

See also

References

  1. Fry was frozen for 1000 years in "Space Pilot 3000" and another 1007.95 years in Bender's Big Score.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Joel Keller (2006-06-15). "Billy West: The TV Squad Interview". TV Squad.com. Retrieved on 2007-06-09.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Sterngold, James (1999-07-22). "Bringing an Alien And a Robot to Life; The Gestation of the Simpsons' Heirs". New York Times. Retrieved on 2008-06-20.
  4. Wertheimer, Ron (1999-03-26). "TV WEEKEND; A Feeling We're Not in Springfield . . .". The New York Times. Retrieved on 2008-06-19.
  5. This is mentioned on the DVD commentary of Bender's Big Score.

External links