Penny and Aggie/Characters: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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[[Category:Web Comics/Characters]]
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[[Category:Penny And Aggie]]
[[Category:Penny and Aggie]]
[[Category:Characters]]
[[Category:Characters]]

Revision as of 01:28, 2 March 2014


Penny Levac

  I don't really need the perfect shoes. It's just fun to pretend that I do.

Aggie D'Amour

  Sometimes doing the right thing hurts. But that's when you have to.

Karen Duvall, Penny's and Aggie's rival and Marshall's girlfriend

  Pretty people get to do what they want!

Sara Velte, Penny's best and oldest friend

  My identity is not for them to define. And it's not for you.

Michelle Brown, Penny's other closest friend

  Ignorance is bliss. Well, usually.

Lisa Winklemeyer, Aggie's best friend

  I'm just...open. Whatev, you know? Screw labels.


Duane Teague, Aggie's friend and Penny's platonic boyfriend

  If you're gonna dream a hopeless dream...go all out.

Daphne Brooks, friend to Aggie, Lisa and Fred; Sara's girlfriend

  I'm not always a great person, but my friends make me better.

Fred Rudolph, friend to Aggie, Lisa and Daphne

  This feeling's always been with me, that things will be all right. I like it too much to fight it.

Marshall Gryvanski, Karen's boyfriend and Aggie's first crush

  I like weights. If a weight is about to crush your heart, you can feel the pressure. You know it's coming. With people, you're never sure.

  • Abusive Parents (his hedonistic mother verbally berates him in public for being an obstacle to her)
  • Bishonen (subverted and deconstructed)
  • Chick Magnet (The only girl never attracted to him, even momentarily, is Penny. Even Sara finds him attractive prior to her discovering she's gay)
  • Disappeared Dad (he has no idea who his dad even is)
  • Let's Wait A While

Rich Diggle, Penny's first love

  I think what's important is for a man to stop takin' the world's crap and start pushin' back.

Stan Larson, Rich's wingman and Penny's rival/FriendlyEnemy

  No, wait! I don't have a complex psychology! I'm just in it for fun, chicks, praise and bling!

Jack Kirk, Stan's best friend and Rich's other wingman

  I think I can be a good man for her. I think so. Get close to her level, at least.

Katy-Ann Williams, Penny's friend and Jack's girlfriend

  We put so much passion into these day-to-day dramas, and the decisions that tell us who we are... those go almost unnoticed.

  • Genki Girl
  • Saintly Church (a one-person embodiment and the diametric opposite of Charlotte's intolerant, near-psychotic fundamentalist nature, although sometimes her religiosity can be a source of angst as well as friction with others)
  • Wise Beyond Their Years (a teenage example of the trope, she's easily the most mature character apart from Aggie's father Nick)

Brandi Jones, Penny's friend and Stan's girlfriend

  I understand boys. Boys show what they feel. Boys' friends are their friends. Girls are the ones to watch out for.

Cyndi Kristoffer, Karen's onetime collaborator, and the comic's main villain after "The Popsicle War"

  I do like to play.

Samantha Evans, collaborator, at one time or another, with Karen and Cyndi

  Maybe offence just comes naturally to a spoiled rich girl.

Meg Macomb, Penny's onetime rival, Cyndi's friend, collaborator with Karen

  I've outgrown this. I've outgrown you.

Helen Tomalin, downbeat friend, at one time or another, of Penny, Charlotte, Aggie, and Karen

  If I'm being used...at least I have a use.

  • Abusive Parents/The Unfavorite: (her parents favor her older sister; in her childhood her father tells her he doesn't love her "right now" when she fails to complete an age-inappropriate task)
  • Bitch in Sheep's Clothing/False Friend: Helen is a sympathetic example of these tropes, and tends to surround herself with examples of same, some less sympathetic than others.
  • Attention Whore: Downplayed eventually, in a very literal fashion. Helen desperately wants acceptance, approval, and attention, no matter the source; she believes that letting herself be used is the only way to achieve these ends. This culminates in a Heroic BSOD/Villainous Breakdown when she realizes she slept with resident skeezoids Bob and Elmer while under the influence of alcohol.
  • Broken Bird See above.
  • Driven By Envy/The Resenter: Helen drifted apart from Penny's group of friends in middle school, and resents them for excluding her from their clique. She is implied to have been envious of Penny's social status in childhood, as well.
  • Extreme Doormat (She wants people to use her and is at a loss whenever no one needs to.)
    • I Just Want to Be Loved/I Just Want to Have Friends: Very downplayed; after remembering her rape and overhearing Brandi and Stan's healthy sexual relationship, Helen realizes she has heretofore been unable to differentiate between being loved and getting screwed, and has a breakdown.
  • Ineffectual Sympathetic Villain (in "The Popsicle War," to some extent)
  • The Mole (in Aggie's clique throughout the first half of "The Popsicle War")
  • Never My Fault: Helen's need to be used often motivates her to put her morals aside.
  • Professional Butt-Kisser: Of every clique she's been in:

 (Helen's inner monologue:) "Please keep believing I'm going to heaven, Charlotte."

Charlotte Simms, onetime friend of Aggie and Helen, later friends with Duane

  Sin is everywhere. This world is filth.

Nick and Melody D'Amour, Aggie's parents

Rob Levac, Penny's father

Lynda Levac, Penny's mother

Charisma Gryvanski, Marshall's mother and Nick's girlfriend