List of Minor Characters in Beavis and Butt-head - Local Residents

Local Residents

  • Mr. Stevenson: Stewart's father, a middle-aged male. In early episodes, he is a teacher at Highland High (No Laughing, Citizen Butt-head). Later he is a businessman, judging from his cell phone and references to "the office" (Prank Call). He is a regular victim of Beavis and Butt-head's destructive shenanigans, such as having his house blown up (Stewart's House) or vandalized (Stewart Moves Away), wrecking and overturning his car when B&B simultaneously wave through traffic on both intersecting streets during a blackout (Blackout!), or having his own phone forcefully inserted into his rectum (Prank Call) when Beavis and Butt-head accidentally lead prank-call victim Harry Sachz to his house. He tries to come off as a caring and responsible family man, but he reveals his cowardly nature in times of distress, invariably trying to shift blame to Stewart. He has a large collection of pornographic magazines, which Beavis and Butt-head know the exact location of. It is implied that he is impotent in Sperm Bank when he visits a sperm bank with his wife. In A Very Special Episode he rushes B&B to the animal hospital when they find a wounded baby bird. He takes them to a park to release the bird when, against their wishes, its condition improves. Butt-head flips it into the air, and it promptly falls to the ground as the pair walk away. Voiced by Mike Judge.
  • Mrs. Stevenson: Stewart's mother and good-natured housewife, who is depicted as an airhead. She enlists the duo's help when Stewart disappears (Stewart Is Missing), and she trusts them to take his homework to school for him when he is sick (The Great Cornholio). She believes that Beavis and Butt-head are good friends of her son, being oblivious to their antics and their negative influence on him. In Plate Frisbee she shows incredible trust (misplaced, of course) by serving cookies to Stewart and the boys on a plate she describes as "17th Century antique". B&B throw the plate back and forth like a frisbee, and it eventually breaks in Stewart's hand after a series of unlikely mishaps that should break it but don't. In TV Violence she finally displays some anger toward the two. The Stevensons buy a satellite dish and B&B gravitate toward the violent programs. She tires of their protests when she repeatedly changes the channel to less violent programs and throws them out of the house. The duo pay her little respect or attention except in regard to her breasts. In Stewart's House she has a Southern accent, but for the rest of the series she possesses a thick Upper Midwestern accent. Voiced by Tracy Grandstaff.
  • Lolita and Tanqueray: Two skimpily-dressed trailer-trash vamps, always introduced with the line "I'm Lolita, and this here's Tanqueray" in a heavy Texas accent. Lolita has dark hair and Tanqueray is a blonde. In Date Bait they exploit their sexuality to manipulate the duo out of their money and movie tickets, promising to let them in the back door (which they never do as B&B wait outside in the rain). Over the course of the series the two drastically change appearance, with Lolita originally having much darker skin. In Teen Talk they want to make out with B&B, but the show host bothers them with questions long enough that two members of the production crew beat them to it. Also in Teen Talk, it is revealed that Lolita (and possibly Tanqueray) starred in a pornographic video which her principal rented. In Tornado, Lolita and Tanqueray allow Beavis and Butthead to have sex with them during a tornado, but Lolita and Tanqueray end up being blown away to the Land of Oz (Beavis and Butthead assumed the two girls died in the tornado and forget their existence).
  • Redneck woman: This unnamed woman appears a number of times. She is usually sitting in a messy trailer with rollers in her hair, unshaven legs, circular bandages over the corns on her feet and often a cigarette hanging out of her mouth. She has an old husband who smokes and wears shorts (his appearance could be considered a prototype for King of the Hill character Dale Gribble), and a sallow-looking son with a distinct Southern accent. In 1-900-BEAVIS she makes money by imitating a sexy female on a phone-sex hotline. In Temporary Insanity and Whiplash, a character of very similar appearance but different voice appears as Beavis and Butt-head's school bus driver. In Tired she sits in front of her trailer in a lawn chair with her feet propped up on a cardboard box as Beavis rolls down a hill in a giant tire and Butt-head runs past chasing him. In Radio Sweethearts she is shown in the same lawn chair listening to the radio when the boys guest DJ.
  • Billy Bob: An early recurring character who appears much less often in later seasons. An obese redneck, Billy Bob is often shown wearing only a cowboy hat and briefs. He appears fully clothed in Heroes as the owner of a skeet shooting establishment. He wears stereotypical redneck clothes such as a tight-fitting green T-shirt, white jeans and cowboy boots. He often smokes a cigar. In Bedpans & Broomsticks he is shown walking on a treadmill, dressed only in briefs and a cowboy hat, puffing a cigar and fantasizing about food while a doctor and nurse watch. When B&B steal his scooter he chases after them, then he collapses after suffering an apparent heart attack. B&B revive him by shocking him with an electrical cord. They steal $11 out of his wallet. Billy Bob is not to be confused with the similar (and similarly named) character Bill. Voiced by Mike Judge.
  • Biker Lady: An attractive yet gruff-looking female biker who appears in Friday Night. She uses the boys as accessories to shoplift items at Maxi-Mart. The boys cooperate in hopes that they will "score" with her. Once the owner suspects, she escapes by throwing hot coffee in his face and taking the boys along for a ride on her chopper before abandoning them to seek her own adventures.
  • Mistress Koura Anthrax: An elderly dominatrix who is featured in Door to Door. When the boys ring her doorbell requesting charity money, she invites them in only to ambush them, chain them to the wall, and begin whipping and dominating them. In exchange for the time the boys spend with her, she donates a check for $100. She writes a letter to Mr. Van Driessen (which he reads aloud to the whole class) saying that he can send Beavis and Butt-head over to her place any time they need more "donations". She appeared twice more in the spin-off comics, both owning a strip club and being headmistress of a private school, and also answered a letter's page; she didn't recognise the lads though. In the comics, her first name was spelt "Cora".
  • Harry Sachz: A tall, physically imposing man with a receding hairline and mullet, he suffers through at least a month and two weeks when Beavis and Butt-head harass him through a series of prank calls, which involve the flushing of a toilet and other scatological noises (Prank Call). The duo find his name amusing and refer to him as "Hairy Sack". Sachz eventually purchases a caller ID and uses it to track their phone number. He then calls Beavis and Butt-head, offering to deliver a free pizza to see where they live, but they could not remember their address. When Sachz asks them to read the address off their mail, Butt-head reads Stewart's name and address off some mail he and Beavis stole from Stewart's mailbox, and Stewart's father suffers the consequences of their actions. In Nothing Happening he is shot by police when they think he is armed and his body is shown being carried away on a stretcher. In Butt Flambe a character with the same appearance, who has been shot three times, is sitting in the waiting room at the hospital. He is referred to as Mr. Borman. He later dies then Butt-head, pretending to be a doctor, takes the bullets removed from his body. He appears in the episode "Doomsday" when Beavis and Butthead are living in his house and attacks Beavis and Butthead for trespassing and "Garage Band" in the crowd.
  • Marcie Anderson: Tom Anderson's wife, who appears mainly in Beavis and Butt-head Do America, but has cameos in a few episodes. She and Tom are shown holding hands walking past the church where a wedding is taking place in Here Comes the Bride's Butt. In Good Credit she accompanies Tom to a war veterans reunion where he cannot check into the hotel because B&B have his credit card and are charging multiple animals at a pet store. In Shopping Cart she and Tom are shown getting into their RV in a grocery store parking lot. B&B, who have come up with the idea of deliberately getting hit by cars to make money, see their scheme go awry when the cart gets caught on the trailer hitch and they are dragged behind the RV at high speed until the cart is flung off into a tree when the Andersons round a corner.

Read more about this topic:  List Of Minor Characters In Beavis And Butt-head

Famous quotes containing the words local and/or residents:

    Wags try to invent new stories to tell about the legislature, and end by telling the old one about the senator who explained his unaccustomed possession of a large roll of bills by saying that someone pushed it over the transom while he slept. The expression “It came over the transom,” to explain any unusual good fortune, is part of local folklore.
    —For the State of Montana, U.S. public relief program (1935-1943)

    Most of the folktales dealing with the Indians are lurid and romantic. The story of the Indian lovers who were refused permission to wed and committed suicide is common to many places. Local residents point out cliffs where Indian maidens leaped to their death until it would seem that the first duty of all Indian girls was to jump off cliffs.
    —For the State of Iowa, U.S. public relief program (1935-1943)