List of The Tick characters
This article details the characters found in all four versions of The Tick.
Main characters
The Tick
The Tick is a superhero in a blue bug suit. He is the main protagonist of the Tick franchise.Arthur
Arthur is The Tick's sidekick. He is formally introduced in The Tick #4, but appears as a mysterious flying figure in the background of earlier issues of that series. Trained as an accountant, Arthur purchased his moth suit at an auction, and decided to pursue the life of a superhero. After rescuing a powerful ninja artifact and helping The Tick and Oedipus defeat the ninjas, Arthur decides to become The Tick's sidekick. As a running joke, Arthur is often mistaken for a bunny. His doughy physique, shy manner, lack of self-confidence, and hesitation in the face of danger is often played for comic contrast against the attitudes and tendencies of the other characters. Arthur is ethnically Jewish, and his family would strongly prefer he leave the superhero lifestyle and return to accounting. Arthur's apartment serves as his and The Tick's superhero headquarters. The 2016 TV series reveals Arthur's full name to be "Arthur Everest", but it is unknown if this is his full name in any other media.In the 1994 cartoon series, Arthur is voiced by Micky Dolenz in Season One and by Rob Paulsen in Seasons Two and Three. In the 2001 TV series, Arthur is portrayed by David Burke. In the 2016 TV series, Arthur is portrayed by Griffin Newman.
Main allies of The Tick
The Tick has different main allies in each of his media appearances:- American Maid – Exclusive to the 1994 series, American Maid is the World's Most Patriotic Domestic and has a love/hate relationship with Die Fledermaus, though there are hints at a past romance. She is possibly the only competent superhero in the animated series apart from The Tick and Arthur, with whom she occasionally teams up. American Maid is a skilled acrobat and can throw her tiara and stilettos with extreme accuracy. Her name is a pun on "American made".
- Batmanuel – Exclusive to the 2001 TV series, Batmanuel is a Latino parody of Batman who teams up with The Tick and Arthur. Although he claims to be a superhero, Batmanuel doesn't have any special powers and is shown to be a cowardly, shady, and lecherous superhero. He has a love/hate relationship with Captain Liberty.
- Captain Liberty – Exclusive to the 2001 TV series, Captain Liberty is a parody of Wonder Woman who teams up with The Tick and Arthur. She is a serious and somewhat sarcastic superhero who works for the CIA. Despite acting tough to other people, she occasionally has relationship issues and woman problems. She has a love/hate relationship with Batmanuel.
- Die Fledermaus – Exclusive to the 1994 TV series, Die Fledermaus has a love/hate relationship with American Maid, though there are hints at a past romance. Die Fledermaus is usually the first superhero to run away from danger except on specific occasions. He is also egotistical and obsessed with beautiful women. Die Fledermaus' equipment consists of a roof swinging grappling line gun, utility belt and exoskeleton, and articulated cape. Die Fledermaus means "the bat" in German, literally "the flitter-mouse". Another parody of Batman.
- Sewer Urchin – A sea urchin-themed superhero who has a luxurious apartment, largely furnished with salvage from the sewers. However, he has relatively few guests. Sewer Urchin has super stench slime secreting spikes on his suit that enable him to stick on any surface. He is also equipped with lemon grenades, butter shooters, bars of soap, and other various apparel to aid him in his underground endeavor. In addition, he has an oxygen tank and mask which allow him to breathe in the thickest of sewer sludge.
Characters in the comic book
Superheroes
Superheroes in The Tick include:Super-villains
Supervillains in The Tick include:Characters in the animated series
Superheroes
Sidekicks
Character | Notable powers | Notes | Voice Actor |
Blitzen | Éclair's sidekick, superheroine of Belgium, named after the German word for lightning, not the reindeer. Drives a cool motorcycle. | Candi Milo | |
Fire Me Boy | Human Bullet's son who fires the cannon that Human Bullet is shot out of. | N/A |
Supervillains
Character | Notable powers | Notes | Voice Actor |
The Angry Red Herring | Also referred to as simply "The Red Herring", he can rub petroleum jelly on himself to escape the grasps of superheroes. He also has machine guns in place of eyes in his fish costume. | Real identity is Milton Roe, who is a fishmonger and jewel thief | Kevin Schon |
Baron Violent | Has a belt he uses to adjust his muscular mass, and in turn, his strength, often to overblown proportion | Without the belt enhancement, he is not over five feet tall. | Brian Peck |
Barry Hubris | Has a shield with a conductor in it that allows Barry to crush things he wouldn't be able to normally. | He uses the name "the Tick", unaware that a hero exists with the same name. He claims to be a hero himself, but is only in it for the fame. | Jim Cummings |
Betty: Queen of the Ants | Speech and Sentience | Basically a normal ant that can talk | Cathy Moriarty |
Brainchild | Super intelligence, Inventor | Gave himself a glass skull to show off his large brain. He acts as a villain on principle alone, and has no real motivation other than causing chaos in ways such as attempting to gravitate the Moon into colliding with Earth. In some way, he is a spoof of Leader. | Rob Paulsen, Stuart Stone |
The Breadmaster | Creates baked goods that are used as weapons | Expelled from baking college for "pursuing perverse baking experiments". | Roddy McDowell, Jess Harnell |
Chairface Chippendale | A crime lord and evil mastermind who has a chair for a head. He is also an expert at fencing. | Tony Jay | |
The Deadly Bulb | Has a light socket on the top of his head in which a giant light bulb usually sits. As transport, he uses a hot air balloon in the shape of a skull. | Inexplicably has a living pig on the end of his right leg—which serves as the basis for his later name, Pigleg | Maurice LaMarche |
The Deadly Nose | Has the double-barrel muzzle of a gun for a nose | N/A | |
Dinosaur Neil | Can turn into a giant dinosaur | Although not technically evil, Dinosaur Neil was originally a paleontologist who got exposed to dinosaur DNA and must take a special medicine to keep himself from transforming and going on thoughtless rampages. He later marries Arthur's sister, Dot. | Danny Mann |
Dr. Julius Pendecker | Crazy inventor | A mumbling mad scientist and rival of Mr. Mental | Mark Hamill |
Dyna-mole | A man resembling a mole who is continually ensconced in sticks of dynamite. His voice is an impersonation of Peter Lorre | Pat Fraley | |
Eastern-Bloc Robot Cowboy | A cyberneticist who transferred his brain to a walking, talking vending machine. Has an unfortunate weakness to quarters. | Pat Fraley | |
El Seed | Knows how to make chemicals that manipulate plants | An anthropomorphic sunflower wearing a green matador uniform. His name is a play on the historic Spanish hero El Cid. | Ed Gilbert |
The Evil Midnight Bomber What Bombs at Midnight | Explosives expert | A crazed bomber who tries to blow up establishments of all sorts, preferably places where superheroes are known to gather, such as the Comet Club. Rarely goes a second without mumbling to himself recollections of snippets of conversation with an unknown second party, some glorifying himself, others suggesting a bad end between the two. He is frequently identified as a fan favorite. | Maurice LaMarche |
Eyebrows Mulligan | A gangster with long eyebrows | Townsend Coleman | |
The Fin | He has super-intelligence | A talking dolphin who formerly performed in Reno, Nevada, who turns to evil after being annoyed constantly by his trainers Soren and Frederica | Maurice LaMarche |
The Guy With Ears Like Little Raisins | A gangster who has ears like little raisins | N/A | |
Harriet Curse | A villain with dark powers. | She resembles Oedipus' mother from the comics. | N/A |
Headless Henderson | A villain with no head | N/A | |
The Heys | A nihilistic race who worship nothing. For a peculiar reason, they all wear suits exactly like Arthur's moth suit. | Hank Saroyan and Steve Susskind | |
The Hotel Manager | A man from the distant future who opens up a restaurant in the distant past. | Maurice LaMarche | |
The Human Ton and Handy | The Human Ton has super-strength. Handy can speak while The Human Ton's mouth is otherwise preoccupied, such as when biting the head of the Tick | An enormous dim-witted man, who is the parody of the Blob from the X-Men comics and his verbose, much more intelligent hand puppet who longs to be "a real boy". Handy apparently has an affinity for encouraging people to read literature rather than watch television; his catchphrase, fittingly, is therefore "Read a book!" Handy is a parody of Batman villain Scarface. | Maurice LaMarche |
The Idea Men | A group of men wearing suits, white gloves, and large metal masks that muffle their voices to the point that their ransom demands cannot be heard. They travel via zeppelin. | Ed Gilbert | |
The Indigestible Man | Incapable of being digested | An associate of Chairface Chippendale with wild white hair. Navigates large bodies like Dinosaur Neil's body. | Ed Gilbert |
Jack Tuber: Man of a Thousand Faces | Has a potato for a head | He is likely based on the Mr. Potato Head toy of fame | Kevin Schon |
Jim Rage | A special agent with Project S.H.A.V.E. that has been pursuing an elusive mustache—so much so that his S.H.A.V.E. allies ultimately end up ending their affiliation with him. He wears an eyepatch—not because he is missing an eye, but rather because he thinks it makes him look cool. Likely a parody of Nick Fury | Brad Garrett | |
Joseph Stalin | In actual history, Joseph Stalin was the dictator of Russia. In this show, Joseph Stalin was one of the Terror's cronies whose Atomic Robot Zombie Cronies that he used in his plans to conquer Earth were thwarted by the Decency Squad. Many years later, the Terror mistook Stalingrad as the actual Stalin until Stalingrad corrected him. | Joseph Stalin is a silent character. | |
Lava-Man | Beings made entirely of lava, and the enemy of the Mole people. | One in particular was sent to terminate the Mole King. | Townsend Coleman |
Lou Salazar: The Sewer Czar | A corrupt civil agent turned evil and enemy of Sewer Urchin. | John Mariano | |
The Man-Eating Cow | A cow capable of eating humans | Despite her name, she has never actually been seen eating anyone. | Townsend Coleman |
Mr. Mental | Mind control | Despite his plans to use his mind control to take over Earth, Mr. Mental is often thwarted due to either bad luck or having the lack of competent help. | Canned Walla, Jim Cummings |
The Mother of Invention | Super intelligence | An androgynous man dressed as a stereotypical mother who creates a time helmet to steal the credit for every invention ever made by kidnapping Leonardo da Vinci, Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Edison, Johannes Gutenberg, George Washington Carver, and a cavewoman named Wheel, who allegedly invented the wheel. He would then completely eradicate the past and re-invent the inventions in the future | Paul Williams |
Multiple Santa | Being shocked by high-voltage currents creates electric clones of him | He was a criminal who was "granted" his power after stealing a charity worker's Santa Claus suit in an attempt to escape from the police and being accidentally chased off the roof of a building and into a large electric billboard by the Tick. | Jim Cummings |
Octo-Paginini | From Belgium; has three sets of arms, for a total of eight limbs; can play several violins simultaneously | Xander Berkeley | |
Octo Raymond | An octopus-themed enemy. He served as the conductor for the Mollusk Band and provided music at the Enemy Awards | N/A | |
Omnipotus: The Devourer of Worlds | A parody of the Marvel character Galactus. He is an enormous being that feeds on celestial bodies. Although Tick doesn't really consider Omnipotus himself evil, he does consider eating planets an evil act, according to the book "Mighty Blue Justice!". He has oddly small feet for his size. After Tick convinced him not to eat Earth, he did end up taking a large bite out of the Moon, which remained in that state for the rest of the series' run. | Ron Feinberg | |
The Ottoman Empress | Ability to control furniture | Also known as simply The Ottoman; she is a beautiful red-head woman who falls in love with Die Fledermaus in an attempt to convert him to evil | Mary Kay Bergman |
Pineapple Pokopo | Above-average strength | The leader of a small nation known as Pokoponesia that is known for two things: sharks and pineapples. His head resembles a pineapple | Dorian Harewood |
Proto-Clown | Superhuman strength | The product of genetic engineering by a clowning engineer named Bud Frontier in his attempt to make a super-clown with the capacity to amuse and entertain more people than a normal clown. He hates being laughed at, however, and if he is laughed at, it usually results in him going on a destructive, violent rampage. Loosely based on The Incredible Hulk. | Kevin Schon |
Sheila Eel | A female villain that wears an electric eel as a garment | She once shocked the Guy With Ears Like Little Raisins when he got too close. Her name is a reference to the singer Sheila E. | N/A |
Stalingrad | Encyclopedic knowledge of Stalin | A graduate student who looks like and bases his villainy on the work of Joseph Stalin. The Terror constantly gets the two confused as he knew the real Stalin. Stalingrad later falls in love with Tuun-La: Not of This Earth and they later leave Earth together. | Jim Cummings |
The Sub-Human | A Golden Age villain that fought the Decency Squad. He wears a miniature submarine on his head. | Jess Harnell | |
The Swiss Industrial Spies | A group of Swiss spies that targeted the notebook of Dr. J.J. Eureka Vatos, and even stole the pants from Arthur's moth suit in an attempt to replicate the suit. | Various voices | |
The Terror | Inventor, super-strong in his youth | "The greatest villain of the 20th century... and maybe some of the 19th". He once punched out President Teddy Roosevelt. He is approximately 117 years old according to the book "Mighty Blue Justice!" | Rob Paulsen |
Terry | The son of the Terror and a retired insurance adjuster who tries a brief stint walking in his father's footsteps. | Peter Bergman | |
Thrakkorzog | An alien creature from Dimension 14B. He had an apartment across the hall from Arthur and the Tick. His voice is an impersonation of James Mason | Jim Cummings | |
Tuun-La, Not of this Earth | Can apparently tuck in her legs and shoot flame from where they were. | An alien that is a brief ally of the Terror alongside Stalingrad, Human Ton and Handy, and Man-Eating Cow. Tuun-La: Not of This Earth later falls in love with Stalingrad and they later leave Earth together. | Pat Musick |
Uncle Creamy | Being made of ice cream, he can shoot ice cream from his hands, forming it into the shapes he wants, and is very difficult to hurt physically | A result of an industrial accident. Spoof of Clayface and Sandman. May not be a villain at heart as he once quoted "I'm not a villain, I'm vanilla". | Bobcat Goldthwait |
Uncle Creamy II | He can fly with his rocket boots and has a missile launcher on his left arm | A former KGB agent. Spoof of the many Clayfaces | Kevin Schon |
Venus | Hypnotizes men to become her love slaves and do whatever she wants | Bears some resemblance to the Venus of Willendorf. Venus' wimpy husband Milo is her sidekick | Linda Gary |
Wally Head | The leader of the Deertown Aztecs, a baseball team gone bad. He and his baseball team have a lifestyle similar to the Aztecs, constantly adding the phrase "Itlan" to whatever they say. | Phil Austin | |
Whirling Scottish Devil | He can spin at high speeds | Pat Fraley | |
The Yes Men | N/A | N/A | N/A |
Henchmen
Character | Notable powers | Notes | Voice Actor |
Arthur Clone | A clone of Arthur created by Thrakkorzog. | Micky Dolenz | |
Bee Twins | Bee-themed female villains that are El Seed's henchmen. | Pat Musick | |
Boils Brown | One of Chairface Chippendale's henchmen, whose face is covered in boils. | N/A | |
Buttery Pat | Can slip through tight spaces due to being made of butter. | The Breadmaster's sidekick | Pat Fraley |
The Crease | Has a large facial crease that covers his eyes | Kevin Schon, Pat Fraley | |
Dean | Super-strength | Chairface Chippendale's henchman who has a butterfly nut for a head. Referred to as "The Butterfly-Nutcase" in comics and other media. | N/A |
Filth | Lou Salazar's henchmen | David Lander and Chuck McCann | |
The Forehead | One of Chairface Chippendale's henchmen who has a large forehead. | Rob Paulsen | |
Fortissimo Brothers | They have the strength of 10 men where Tick was uncertain whether that means 5 men apiece or twenty altogether | Octo Paganini's henchmen. | Philip Proctor |
Gingerbread Men | A bunch of Gingerbread Men created by Breadmaster. They can be rendered immobile upon becoming stale. | The Gingerbread Men are silent characters. | |
Hooks Horowitz | A henchman of Chairface Chippendale who has hooks for hands. His face is never seen. | N/A | |
Mad Nanny | Wears robotic armor | Miriam Brunch is Brainchild's babysitter whom he brainwashed and outfitted in a robotic armor. | Pat Musick |
Milo | Venus' husband and sidekick who's inventing mind created a ray that made the Tick and Arthur's arms fall off and placed them on the crudely-made Evil Tick and Arthur robots which were used to frame them | Gerrit Graham | |
Mucus-Tick | A clone of Tick created by Thrakkorzog. | N/A | |
Mynda | The sidekick and girlfriend of Mr. Mental. | Jennifer Darling | |
Professor Chromedome | Inventor | Chairface Chippendale's mad scientist henchman who wears a tight metal helmet covering his scalp. | Hamilton Camp |
Rosebud | Super-strength | Rosebud is a large rose monster created by El Seed to help steal the 400 Year Bloom. | N/A |
Skippy | Originally Brainchild's dog, his brain was placed in a robotic dog body after he was hit by a car while chasing another car. | Roger Rose | |
Socket and Watt | Deadly Bulb's henchmen | Paul Eiding and Jess Harnell | |
Tick-Bot and Arthur-Bot | Crudely-made robot look-a-likes of the Tick and Arthur that were created by Milo and had the stolen arms of Tick and Arthur, whom they were used to frame for various crimes | N/A | |
Zipperneck | One of Chairface Chippendale's henchmen. The zipper on his neck can be unzipped to reveal the interior of his esophagus, which is so grotesque that heroes will cease fighting just to avoid looking at it. He was also once mentioned on the 2001 live action show. | Pat Fraley |
Civilians
In the 1994 TV series, there are different civilians that live in The City:Characters in the 2001 live-action series
Superheroes
Supervillains
Characters in the 2016 live-action series
Superheroes
Supervillains
Character | Notable powers | Notes | Actor |
The Terror | The world's most feared supervillain and nemesis of Superian. Believed dead by the public, though the belief he's still alive is a major conspiracy theory. That is until it is revealed that he is, in fact, alive. The Tick and Arthur defeat him in the season 1 finale. | Jackie Earle Haley | |
Miss Lint/Janet/Joan of Arc | Electricity manipulation | The Terror's most trusted lieutenant. After the Terror's apparent death, she became a lieutenant in the Pyramid Gang. She reunites with The Terror after it is revealed that he is alive. However, she betrays him in the season one finale to control The City for herself. She later takes on a superhero persona of Joan of Arc in season two, revealed in the season two finale as a scheme to rob AEGIS headquarters. | Yara Martinez |
Ramses IV | Leader of the Pyramid Gang, the dominant crime organization in The City. Despite his Egyptian themes in the gang, he comes from Minnesota. Killed by Miss Lint in episode 6. | Michael Cerveris | |
Donnelly Brothers | A group of bank robbers from New England. | Danny Donelly: Hunter Emery Denny Donnelly: Brian Faherty Donny Donnelly: Happy Anderson Dougie Donnelly: Lucas Nixon | |
Lobstercules | Super strength and aquatic physiology | A humanoid lobster. While not technically a supervillain, she was forced to be a villain by the Donnelly Brothers because they kidnapped her children. | Niko Nedyalkov Liz Vassey |
The Duke aka Doctor Agent Hobbes | Genius-level intellect | Hates superheroes and how they've "infested" AEGIS. Wants the human race to survive and doesn't think superheroes are the answer to that. | John Hodgman |