List of Minor Characters in Peanuts - The Little Red-Haired Girl

The Little Red-Haired Girl

Little Red-Haired Girl
Heather
Peanuts character
First appearance November 19, 1961
Last appearance 1998 (comic strip)
Information
Gender Female

The Little Red-Haired Girl is a female character who has red hair and is Charlie Brown's unrequited love interest through most of the strip. She is not shown for most of the strips and is known simply as The Little Red-Haired Girl. She appears in the specials It's Your First Kiss, Charlie Brown (1977) and Happy New Year, Charlie Brown! (1986), however, and her name is given as Heather. She also makes a brief appearance in the 1988 special Snoopy!!! The Musical.

Read more about this topic:  List Of Minor Characters In Peanuts

Famous quotes containing the words red-haired girl, the little, red-haired and/or girl:

    1946: I go to graduate school at Tulane in order to get distance from a “possessive” mother. I see a lot of a red-haired girl named Maude-Ellen. My mother asks one day: “Does Maude-Ellen have warts? Every girl I’ve known named Maude-Ellen has had warts.” Right: Maude-Ellen had warts.
    Bill Bouke (20th century)

    Let us, then, take our compass; we are something, and we are not everything. The nature of our existence hides from us the knowledge of first beginnings which are born of the nothing; and the littleness of our being conceals from us the sight of the infinite. Our intellect holds the same position in the world of thought as our body occupies in the expanse of nature.
    Blaise Pascal (1623–1662)

    1946: I go to graduate school at Tulane in order to get distance from a “possessive” mother. I see a lot of a red-haired girl named Maude-Ellen. My mother asks one day: “Does Maude-Ellen have warts? Every girl I’ve known named Maude-Ellen has had warts.” Right: Maude-Ellen had warts.
    Bill Bouke (20th century)

    Miss Caswell: Now there’s something a girl could make sacrifices for.
    Bill: And probably has.
    Miss Caswell: Sable.
    Max: Sable? Did she say sable or Gable?
    Miss Caswell: Either one.
    Joseph L. Mankiewicz (1909–1993)