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1Character page for the 1960s British TV show ''Series/{{The Avengers|1960s}}'' and its revival series, ''Series/TheNewAvengers''.
2
3The [[Film/TheAvengers1998 1998 film]] has [[Characters/TheAvengers1998 its own page]].
4
5For an index of the actors and actresses who have a dedicated page, see [[UsefulNotes/TheAvengersActors here]].
6----
7[[foldercontrol]]
8
9!Original Series Characters
10
11!!!'''Avengers'''
12
13[[folder:David Keel]]
14!!Dr. David Keel
15[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/03_0001_1.jpg]]
16!!!'''Played by:''' Creator/IanHendry (1961), Creator/AnthonyHowell (''The Avengers: The Lost Episodes'' audio dramas)
17
18A medical doctor who investigated the murder of his fiancée and office receptionist Peggy by a drug ring. A stranger named John Steed, who was investigating the ring, appeared and together they set out to avenge her death in the first two episodes, hence the show's title (which would rapidly become an ArtifactTitle afterwards). Steed then asked Keel to partner with him to solve crimes.
19----
20* ChuckCunninghamSyndrome: Disappeared without a trace after the first season. It also doesn't help that only three and a half episodes featuring him have survived to this day.
21* CynicismCatalyst: He starts out as a happy-go-lucky young doctor in a private practice with a beautiful fiancér and ends up a much more cynical, depressive figure following her death.
22* DecoyProtagonist: He was originally the main character with Steed as his cohort
23* {{Expy}}: He's essentially Hendry's character from ''Police Surgeon'' with a different name. Both characters were affable doctors who solved crimes.
24* {{Revenge}}: He's driven by the need to avenge his fiancée in the first two episodes, hence the show's title.
25[[/folder]]
26
27[[folder:John Steed]]
28!!John Wickham Gascoyne Beresford Steed
29[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/9_11.jpg]]
30[[caption-width-right:300:''"Mrs. Peel, we're needed!"'']]
31!!!'''Played by:''' Creator/PatrickMacnee (1961-1977), Simon Oates (1971 stage play), Creator/RalphFiennes (1998 film), Julian Wadham (2010s audio dramas)
32
33A British army veteran of UsefulNotes/WorldWarII and agent working for an unnamed branch of the British secret services. In the first season, he investigated a drug ring and helped to avenge the death of Dr. David Keel's fiancée (hence the series' title, which would quickly become an ArtifactTitle). Steed then asked Keel to partner with him to solve crimes; the first season would subsequently feature the two as co-protagonists, with Steed the charismatic, hard-edged operative (donning, in the earliest episodes, a trenchcoat instead of his iconic bowler hat) to Keel's more affable everyman.
34
35Following Keel's departure, Steed (now cemented as the show's main protagonist) continued to investigate crimes and mysterious cases in the service of Her Majesty with the help of various recurring female partners. He also considerably refined his persona and fashion taste, to the point of becoming a QuintessentialBritishGentleman by Emma Peel's introduction in the fourth season.
36----
37* AgentsDating: Even though nothing overtly romantic ever comes out of it (save for the Tara King era), he regularly invites his female partners on dates, for dinners especially.
38* BadassBookworm: His interests include astrology, numismatic, ornithology, biographies, history, but he also reads philosophical books. He's got several bookshelves in each of his flats or his mansion and he is seen reading in a few books during the series.
39** He owns a Creator/MarcelProust which he had lent to his friend Hal Anderson, got his knowledge about white dwarves from a boys' book about astronomy and bought several astrology books in the same episode.
40* BadassInANiceSuit: Steed is a ''very'' well dressed secret agent, and knows how to kick ass.
41* BadassInDistress: On a few occasions it's up to his female partners to rescue him.
42* BatmanGrabsAGun: It's a myth that he didn't carry or use firearms.
43** In Season 2, he brandished firearms several times. Sometimes the gun is his own, sometimes it's someone else's.
44** Most people who definitely got killed by Steed were shot: Steed's double in "Man with Two Shadows", Abe in "The Gilded Cage", "Napoleon" in "Dressed to Kill", Beardmore in "The Little Wonders", Brandon Storey in "Too Many Christmas Trees", Henry in "How to Succeed....at Murder", Z.Z. Von Schnerk in "Epic", Becker in "Death's Door" (single bullet), Farrer in "Legacy of Death", Osaka in "Homicide and Old Lace", Mark Crayford in "Dead Men are Dangerous" and one of the villains in "Hostage".
45* BattleCouple: With Cathy Gale, then with Emma Peel and finally with Tara King.
46* BewareTheNiceOnes: Unfailingly polite, civil and gentlemanly, but he can and will kick your ass if he has to.
47* BigFancyHouse: In ''The New Avengers'', he lives in a country mansion, often referred to by fans as ''Steed's Stud'', because it has plenty of grounds to exercise his horses.
48* BornInTheWrongCentury: Patrick Macnee described him as a man who operates in the 20th century, but his heart is in the 18th.
49* BreakoutCharacter: He was not the sole main protagonist of the show in the first season, he became this following David Keel's departure.
50* {{Catchphrase}}: "Mrs. Peel, we're needed!" - He uses this to call for Emma Peel's help [[OncePerEpisode at the start of every episode]] in the show's first coloured seasons, as she's always busy with her hobbies. [[RunningGag He always delivers it to Emma in unexpected ways]], be it through signs, arrows or even appearing in her TV. Laurie Johnson composed a [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ES65qPT92Qc special theme]] for this very sequence.
51* CharacterisationClickMoment: In the first season, he was a hard-edged, trenchcoat-wearing operative with ambiguous morality. During the Cathy Gale era, he started to soften a bit, though he had a casually manipulative streak. It wasn't until the Emma Peel era that his familiar sophisticated, dapper gentleman persona kicked in.
52* CharacterizationMarchesOn:
53** During the first season his character was a more rough-and-tumble (if nonetheless charismatic and sympathetic) operative than the suave, sophisticated gentleman he became during the Peel era.
54** He's quite manipulative and unscrupulous in the Cathy Gale era, which led to conflict between the two. It wasn't until the Emma Peel era where he truly became the familiar chivalrous gentleman.
55* ChestOfMedals: "Death of a Batman" shows [[http://www.johnsteedsflat.com/images/img0111.png a picture]] of him in uniform replete with medals.
56* CombatPragmatist: A producer's write-up to guide writers of episodes specifically stated that "Steed fights like a cad and uses every dirty trick in the book".
57* ConsistentClothingStyle: He is always in a dark suit and tie paired with a bowler hat, although the colours tend to vary.
58* CoolCar: Presumably his first car is a Rolls Royce in series one and he obviously used another more downmarket vehicle too, when the Rolls Royce was "too showy". Then he drove four different cars in series two and three: a Greyhound, followed by a Triumph Herald, an Alvis, a Lagonda. A Vauxhall and several different Bentleys are his cars in series four and five. He drove a Bentley and two different Rolls Royces again in series six. During ''The New Avengers'', Steed's cars were a Jaguar and Rovers.
59* CulturedBadass: He kicks much ass throughout the series while remaining a refined and well-mannered gentleman, being knowledgable on a wide range of subjects, enjoying fine wines and collecting old-fashioned cars.
60* CunningLinguist: Many episodes prove that he speaks Italian and French, as he's reading some Tintin et Milou comics in French, talks French in "The Golden Fleece" and to "Napoleon" in "Honey for the Prince": "Je vous en prie, monsieur; pardon, mon general, mon brave general... je cherche M. Hopkirk".
61** He speaks in Russian "For Peace" in the Nutski's office in "The Correct Way to Kill".
62** He also speaks German, as he went several times over the Wall; that is because he worked as an agent in East-Germany, but he speaks German less fluent than Dr. Keel.
63** He at least understands modern Greek and has learned Latin and classic Ancient Greek at school.
64* DashinglyDapperDerby: Perhaps the most famous bowler hat wearer in the history of TV fiction.
65* DeadpanSnarker: He always exchanges witty quips with his female partners, especially with Emma Peel.
66* DoesntLikeGuns: While he'll occasionally use guns if he has to, he doesn't like doing so. This is a trait shared by [=Macnee=] as a result of his wartime experiences.
67* DorkKnight: He's quite funny and adorable when he fails at doing something mundane while Emma Peel watches and laughs. He's also a fan of ''ComicBook/{{Tintin}}''.
68* GentlemanSnarker: He never runs out of elegant wit.
69* GreatDetective: He can go to holmesian lengths to solve a case, even though it can lead him nowhere.
70* GuileHero : Rather than use brute force, he tends to use clever tricks.
71* HatDamage: He's lost quite a few bowlers:
72** In "Death at Bargain Prices", it gets shot off during a fight.
73** In "Castle D'eath", it gets squashed in a bed.
74** In "A Surfeit of Hâ‚‚O", it gets squashed in a wine press.
75** In "Small Game for Big Hunters", it gets stabbed.
76** In "From Venus with Love", it gets bleached a lovely shade of white with a laser.
77** In "The Fear Merchants", it gets damaged during a fight in a gravel pit.
78** In "The Bird Who Knew Too Much", it gets destroyed in an explosion.
79** In "Death's Door", it gets shot twice.
80** In "Game", it gets cut in half.
81** In "Whoever Shot Poor George Oblique Stroke XR40?" and "The Tale of the Big Why", it gets shot twice.
82** In "The Curious Case of the Countless Clues", he steps on it when sliding down Tara's fireman pole.
83** In "Killer", it gets squashed by Remak.
84* HeroesLoveDogs: He's had several dogs. The animals lived in his flats, but they were not present in all episodes. It's unknown if the animals were Steed's dogs or if they did belong to friends or if he took just care of them. Each dog appeared only in a few episodes, then they "disappeared" into thin air.
85** He already had a dog, a Great Dane called Puppy, in series one as seen in "Ashes of Roses", where a big dog enters Dr. Keel's surgery with Steed. This first Great Dane - the dog's real name was "Juno"- was female like all other dogs of Steed. Later in the episode, Keel asks an injured Steed if he can do anything for him. Steed answers:
86-->Well, not for me old boy. ''(Looks at dog)'' There is a little thing. She usually has, er...goes for a walk about this time, you know.
87-->''Keel looks at the dog. Puppy looks back expectantly at him''.
88** During the Cathy Gale era, he owned four different dogs: Freckles and Sheba were Steed's pets in series 2, followed by another Great Dane (Junia, the sister dog of Juno from series 1) and the third Great Dane Katie in series 3.
89** His dog was mentioned for the last time in "The Outside-In Man" when Quilpie brings two dozen shin bone for the dog (only in the script) to Steed's flat.
90** From series 1 to 4 he was a great friend of dogs and he still said in "The £50,000 Breakfast" that he is an "Englishman, therefore...a dog lover", but the dogs were not longer allowed to live in his flat from series 5 on.
91** He once owned another dog, a Borzoi, a Russian wolfhound, as he told Clover, the butler in "The £50,000 Breakfast":
92-->What a marvellous dog. I used to have one myself. They need an awful lot of exercise of course.
93** In "Take Me to Your Leader", he tells Tara that there is no room in his flat for the wonder dog Fang.
94* HeroesPreferSwords: Steed carries a SwordCane disguised as an umbrella and far prefers it to firearms.
95* HerosClassicCar: He has a nice collection of vintage cars. From the fourth season on, Steed's signature cars were six vintage green 1926–1928 Bentley racing or town cars, including Blowers and Speed Sixes (although, uniquely, in "The Thirteenth Hole" he drives a Vauxhall 30-98). In the final season he drove two yellow Rolls Royces -- a 1923 Silver Ghost and a 1927 New Phantom.
96* IconicOutfit: His tailor-made costumes, bowler hat and umbrella.
97* ImprovisedWeapon: Most of the time, he uses whatever is in hand for a weapon: from a shoe to the telephone, he's pretending to have an explosive cigarette, smashes his opponent with a giant bridge card, a comic posters, a pot of hot coffee, dust wiper, the hood of a car, a pot of boiling oil, a book or a spear...
98* LastNameBasis: Everyone always addresses him by "Steed" or "Mr. Steed".
99* MajorlyAwesome: He served in the British Intelligence Corps in UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, earning the rank of Major.
100* ManOfWealthAndTaste: He enjoys very refined (and expensive) things in life, such as fine wines (Champagne in particular), and he owns an old cars collection.
101* MarriedToTheJob: He's unmarried and clearly dedicated to his job. In "House of Cards", he says:
102-->Did I ever tell you about my marriage, my one and only marriage? I married a job, I married a profession. I've been very faithful.
103* MassiveNumberedSiblings: According to a fictionalized biography by Roger Davies in fanzine On Target Volume 2, Issue 4, pages 3, he was the youngest of eight children, and he had seven older sisters.
104** Plus, there's this dialogue from the script of "The White Dwarf":
105-->'''Cathy''':...What would you do if someone came bursting in here and accused your brother of perpetrating a swindle?
106-->'''Steed''': I only had sisters.
107* MasterSwordsman: He's quite adept at fencing, though most of the time he isn't doing it for fun, but has to defend himself with everything, such as a rapier, a sword, a foil, a saber, a fly whisk...
108* MeaningfulName: Given his last name, he loves horses. He plays polo, had some polo ponies and a few other horses. His mansion Steed Stud Farm has its own stables, which can be seen in "To Catch a Rat".
109** Obviously, he owned some price winning jumping or racing horses, as there is a collection of rosette ribbons visible which are fixed at the photos of his horses in "House of Cards". The horses were awarded a first price (blue ribbon) and with two prices for the second place (red rosettes).
110* MustHaveCaffeine: He takes it black in "The Removal Men" but with sugar in other episodes.
111* NamedByTheAdaptation: The "Wickham Gascoyne Beresford" parts of his name were never pronounced in the series. They originated in the 1971 stage play that was written by Brian Clemens and Terence Feely and starred Simon Oates as Steed.
112* NeverGetsDrunk: The now-defunct gamerjargon.com website defined "John Steed" as "to consume insane quantities of alcohol in a short period of time and not be in the least affected"
113* NiceGuy: A genuinely charming, polite and well-mannered QuintessentialBritishGentleman... but if you're one of the bad guys, BewareTheNiceOnes.
114** Benson and Sons Ltd, now Arthur Benson, made some of his bowlers. He also bought some from Hemming's and Paul in St. James for 10 Guineas the hat and from Herbert Johnson & Sons (the brown bowler in series 5), London, and from Barnaby and Sons.
115* {{Old Friend}}s: He knows a lot of old acquaintances, and they're generally doomed.
116* OutdatedOutfit: He wears a bowler hat and old-fashioned suits, to match his classic cars and generally old-fashiond style.
117* ParasolOfPain: Steed's iconic umbrella conceals a SwordCane, but he doesn't always feel the need to draw it.
118* PlatonicLifePartners: Especially blatant with Emma Peel.
119* QuintessentialBritishGentleman: British, polite, charming and [[CulturedBadass a force to be reckoned with]].
120* RealMenCook:
121** He makes salad for Cathy in "The White Dwarf" and "The Gilded Cage".
122** In "Death à la Carte", he goes undercover as a chef de viande named Sebastian Stonemartin. While Sebastian's specialities are supposed to be "Canard d'organe" and "Faisan a la langue docienne", eggs seems to be the only food that Steed is capable to prepare as he serves the emir poached eggs instead of scrambled.
123** In "Death at Bargain Prices", he describes a Stilton recipe while he's flirting with the girl at the cheese shop:
124-->I'll take half an ounce (of Stilton), one tomato, two egg whites, handful of chives, half an onion, and a squeeze of lemon. Pour in pint and half of Burgundy, add three pounds of best steak and leave to marinate
125** He served Emma turtle soup and oysters in "The Winged Avenger" and used his Rolls Royce's engine to cook the fillet for Tara in "All Done With Mirrors".
126* ResemblanceReveal: In Mrs. Peel's last episode, her missing husband turned out to be still alive. He didn't appear in person until the final scene, at which point he was revealed to look exactly like Steed. What this might imply about Emma's reasons for hanging around with Steed for years was left as an exercise for the viewer.
127* RevolversAreJustBetter: When he did use guns, he favoured a Smith and Wesson Revolver.
128* SharpDressedMan: According to the book ''Reading between Designs'' by Piers D. Britton and Simon J. Barker, Patrick Macnee himself designed Steed's suits with the help of tailor Bailey and Weatherill of Regent Street (London).
129* ShoePhone: His umbrella contains knock-out gas.
130* SleekHighRiseApartment:
131** In seasons two and three, he lives at No. 2, 5 Westminster Mews. Based on the view outside the window it has to be at least on the third or fourth floor of the building. It consists of a spacious living room, a small kitchen and a bedroom. The living room has a fireplace; on the same level, there is a coffee table, several different chairs or armchairs, at times even a rocking chair or a couch. A service hatch connects the living room with a small kitchen. In front of the kitchen wall stands Steed's fold-out desk. Above the level of the living room is a platform through which Steed reaches the bedroom and the front door. A few steps lead to this platform from the living room. Embedded in the pedestal is a sofa, often covered with a tiger rug. Typical for the equipment are unique items, many nautical instruments, that have a relation to the Navy or the sea, such as several model ships, an hourglass, a compass, an octant, binnacle, navigation lights, paintings of ships, anchor lamps or a telescope or the woolie at the wall.
132** In season four, he lives at 4 Queen Anne's Court, Tothill Street Westminster near Parliament. From his living room window one can see the Parliament and Big Ben over Parliament Square and St. Margaret's Street. Judging by the view to Big Ben, the flat has to be at least on the third floor of a building. The flat consists of three rooms: a spacious living room with a fireplace, a large kitchen and Steed's bedroom.
133** In seasons five and six, he lives at 3 Stable Mews, London. It has two floors with a living room, a storage room with Steed's sport equipments, a kitchen and a guest room. Upstairs there has to be the bedroom, bathroom and possibly a study.
134* SmartPeoplePlayChess:
135** In "The White Elephant", a chess game appeared for the first time in one of Steed's flats.
136** "Concerto" is the only episode where Steed is playing twice a chess game with different partners in Mrs. Gale's flat. He sits over a game of chess with Mrs Gale at the beginning of the episode, and has another game with his Russian colleague.
137** He owns an ebony chess set.
138* StiffUpperLip: When he's facing a firing squad in "The Living Dead", he actually lights a cigarette for the man who's about to shoot him, stating, "It's important to do these things well."
139* SupremeChef: In "Death à la Carte", he goes undercover as a famous chef and proves quite adept.
140* SwordCane: He has a sword concealed within his umbrella.
141* TookALevelInKindness: In the first three seasons, he was quite ruthless and unscrupulous, willing to manipulate and withold information from his assistants. He gradually became the chivalrous well-mannered gentleman we know and love.
142* TrademarkFavouriteDrink: Champagne, his favourite vintage being the fictional Meudon & Heim. He's also fond of brandy.
143* UniversalDriversLicence: In addition to his love of classic cars, he flew Lancaster bombers during UsefulNotes/WorldWarII and knows how to fly a helicopter.
144* WarHero: He served in the British Intelligence Corps during UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, rising to the rank of major. He earned a The Military Cross for single-handedly taking a German machine-gun post.
145* WeaponizedHeadgear: His bowler hat is steel-lined, which makes it useful as a bludgeon.
146[[/folder]]
147
148[[folder:Cathy Gale]]
149!!Dr. Catherine "Cathy" Gale
150[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/9_11_5.jpg]]
151 [[caption-width-right:300:''"So much for the 'homme fatal'..."'']]
152!!!'''Played by:''' Creator/HonorBlackman (1962-1964)
153
154John Steed's first regular female partner. A native of London, married a farmer in Africa and there learned to hunt, fight and take care of herself. When her husband was killed, Gale returned to London to earn a [=Ph.D.=] in anthropology.
155
156She was the curator of a museum when she first encountered Steed and decided to work alongside him. She is also engaged in charities.
157----
158* ActionGirl: Even though she's much less remembered, she came before Emma Peel and she's very much an UrExample of this for western television. She has a black belt in jujutsu.
159* AmateurSleuth: When partnering with Steed, she helps him solve mysteries, in spite of the fact it's not her primary profession.
160* BadassBookworm: She has a P.H.D. in anthropology.
161* BadassInDistress: Dr. Gale does happen to get into those difficult situations where she needs Steed to help her or to rescue her.
162* BootsOfToughness: In addition to her leather outfits, she wore knee-high boots.
163* BoundAndGagged: Ms. Gale would find herself in those many occasions where she would be caught in a bind and needed a little help.
164* CharacterizationMarchesOn: The first episode Blackman filmed was "Death Dispatch", where she's rather tolerant of Steed's sexist attitude towards her, which would have been unthinkable in her later episodes.
165* CommutingOnABus: In "Too Many Christmas Trees", she sends a Christmas card to Steed, while she worked in The United States at Fort Knox, a nod to Blackman's role in ''Film/{{Goldfinger}}''.
166* CoolCar: She drives a sports car, an MGA [=MK1=] Roadster from 1960 (Licence plate RVB 115).
167* CunningLinguist: She speaks several languages, including Latin, French, and Spanish.
168* DamselInDistress: Dr. Gale's impulsiveness on cases would get her in many dangerous situations where she would find herself captured and in very dangerous traps and situations.
169* DarkAndTroubledPast: Her husband was believed to have been killed in the early fifties during the Mau Mau uprisings in Kenya, where they lived on a farm. Since she still wears her wedding ring years later, one can surmise that they were HappilyMarried. Plus, if Creator/SydneyNewman is to believed, she had children who died in the uprising.
170* DeadpanSnarker: She has a very dry sense of humour and a wit to match Steed's.
171* DefrostingIceQueen: A very no-nonsense woman who expresses irritation at Steed's eccentricities, though she does warm to him and can match him in quips.
172* EyepatchOfPower: She wears one in "The Medicine Men" after getting a black eye in a fight.
173* GoodWithNumbers: In "Trojan Horse", her prospective employer is blown away by her mind-boggling mental capacity as she rattles off an almost too-long string of complex calculations.
174* HellBentForLeather: She has a strong penchant for leather suits. So much so that some versions of the series' title, the French one most notably, mention "Leather Boots".
175* IceQueen: Very uptight, professional and dry-witted, though she does have a playful side.
176* IconicOutfit: Her leather suits.
177* TheLancer: She is a serious character, but most important overall, she is a philanthropist who is very open-minded and forms a distinct counterpoint to Steed's frequent cynicism, his unwillingness to compromise and she constantly questions Steed on the ethics of his actions.
178* MsFanservice: In addition to strutting around in black leather, "Death Dispatch" has a risque scene of her in a black bra, "The Medicine Men" has her get a massage and a shower afterwards and in "Man with Two Shadows", Steed arrives early and finds her still clad in just her navy underwear.
179* OutlivingOnesOffspring: If Creator/SydneyNewman is to be believed, she and her husband had children who were also killed in an uprising in Kenya.
180* PartTimeHero: She's not a professional secret agent, she's more of a "talented amateur" who maintains her own career between outings with Steed.
181* PlatonicLifePartners: Her partnership with Steed never went overtly romantic. It was her who taught him to respect women, actually.
182* PutOnABus: When she gets nearly killed in a fire in "Lobster Quadrille", she decides to end her work with Steed and travels for some months to the Bahamas.
183* RenaissanceWoman: She's very well educated and interested in different topics: photography, finance, history, science, literature, languages and so on. She lectures frequently on various topics, but is particularly interested in humanitarian projects and has also worked with aid organizations.
184* SugarAndIcePersonality: Her personality is quite rare, she can be smiling and seductive or dark, cold and mysterious.
185* TrademarkFavouriteDrink: She's fond of the odd gin and tonic.
186* TrophyRoom: In her first apartment are numerous hunting trophies including lions, antelopes, water buffalos, crocodiles, or rhinos.
187* WallOfWeapons: In her first apartment, she has a small collection of old guns from the 18th or 19th century.
188[[/folder]]
189
190[[folder:Emma Peel]]
191!!Emma Peel, née Knight
192[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/9_11_3.jpg]]
193[[caption-width-right:300:''"I suppose Mother warned you about women like me?"'']]
194!!!'''Played by:''' Creator/DianaRigg (1964-1968), Sue Lloyd (voice, 1977), Creator/UmaThurman (1998 film), Olivia Poulet (2010s audio dramas)
195
196The daughter of an English industrialist, Sir John Knight. A certified genius, she specializes in chemistry and had success in industry at the helm of her family's company in her 20s. Her husband, Peter Peel, was a pilot whose plane disappeared over the Amazonian forest. She is a master of martial arts and a formidable fencer.
197
198Her hobbies include various combat sports and a penchant for artistic activities... as well as mystery and action, as John Steed regularly calls her to work with him on mysterious or improbable cases. Thus she became Steed's second regular female partner, and the most famous.
199----
200* ActionGirl: One of western television's first and prime examples. She is a skilled martial artist, as many villains she faces find out the hard way.
201* AmateurSleuth: Like Cathy Gale before her, helping Steed solve mysteries while it's not her primary profession makes her a non-professional detective of sorts.
202* AttractiveBentGender: In "Too Many Christmas Trees" she [[https://www.dissolute.com.au/the-avengers-tv-series/series-4/images/trees4b.jpg dressed as]] Literature/OliverTwist, while in "A Sense of History" [[https://www.dissolute.com.au/the-avengers-tv-series/series-4/fashion/histcos.jpg she dresses as]] Myth/RobinHood and in "Silent Dust", [[https://www.dissolute.com.au/the-avengers-tv-series/series-4/fashion/dustout6em.jpg Steed hallucinates her dressed as a Wild West sheriff]].
203* BadassBookworm: It's likely that she attended Oxford or Cambridge, however all that's revealed about her education is that she "wasn't at Roedean or Somerville".
204* BoundAndGagged: Happens to Mrs. Peel quite frequently. Doesn't faze her in the bit though.
205* BrainyBrunette: She has degrees in chemistry and ran her family's industries with much success when she was barely in her 20s. Furthermore, she's very helpful to Steed when it comes to solve mysteries and whatever problem gets in their way.
206* BreakoutCharacter: Without much doubt the most iconic and adored character of the show. So much so that the [[Film/TheAvengers1998 1998 film]], the ''Steed and Mrs. Peel'' comics and most other ''Avengers'' tie-in media reprised her as Steed's partner.
207* CharacterizationMarchesOn: The first episode Rigg filmed was "The Murder Market", where it's clear that the character hadn't clicked just yet. Instead of her usual bright, razor-sharp wit, she is low-key, almost sultry. Other anomalies include her uncharacteristic, rather Cathy-ish lashing-out at Steed and her awkward catfight with the female baddie. It's worth noting that this was the episode that Elizabeth Shepherd originally filmed before being re-cast.
208* CommutingOnABus: In ''Series/TheNewAvengers'' episode entitled "K is for Kill", she briefly speaks with Steed over the phone and mentions that her last name isn't Peel anymore. Steed replies "You'll always be Mrs. Peel to me". [[invoked]][[TheOtherDarrin Sue Lloyd]] provided her voice instead of Diana Rigg.
209* ContrastingReplacementCharacter: She has a few things in common with Cathy - they're both widows (though Emma's husband was eventually revealed to be alive) and they both kick ass while wearing black leather. That said, Emma is lot more easy-going and less uptight than Cathy, as well as having a more playful, flirtatious relationship with Steed. Whereas Cathy's fighting style was judo, Emma was into kung-fu and karate. Whereas Cathy was motivated by a desire to help the innocent, Emma just loves the adventure and adrenaline.
210* CoolCar: Her [[http://www.lotustalk.com/forums/attachments/f3/195941d1353546963-lotus-did-mrs-peel-drive-avengers-avengers_1.jpg Lotus Elan convertibles]] (a white 1964 and a powder blue 1966), which, like her clothes, emphasized her independence and vitality.
211* CreateYourOwnVillain: Professor Keller (from "The House that Jack Built") was already a nutcase before Emma fired him from her company because of his unethical and downright mad projects. He then plotted a diabolical revenge against her.
212* DamselInDistress: Emma would find herself in positions where the villains would get the upper hand and leave her in all manner of perils and traps. Being Emma Peel she managed to keep a poker face throughout.
213* DamselOutOfDistress: Is able to still survive the many traps and perils she's put in and turn the tables on her captors.
214* DeadpanSnarker: The series has become particularly renowned for the witty quips exchanges between her and Steed.
215* DefiantCaptive: Even when tied to a chair or facing a gun and hearing a villain patter off a monologue, Mrs. Peel still manages to keep her cool and simply uses her wit to frustrate her captors.
216* EarlyBirdCameo: At the end of the third season, right after Cathy departs, Steed is on the phone to a woman about a job that needs doing. It's very possible that he's talking to Emma.
217* GivenNameReveal: Her maiden name, 'Knight', is revealed in the 1965 episode "The House That Jack Built".
218* HellBentForLeather: Continuing the trend initiated by Cathy Gale, she occasionally wore leather suits in her black and white seasons, before shifting to flashier suits made from other materials in her colour seasons.
219* IconicOutfit: Her leather suits and leather boots in the black-and-white episodes, then her avant-garde fashion in the following colour seasons.
220** She only wore it once, but her Queen of Sin costume from "A Touch of Brimstone" is also fondly remembered. Diana Rigg designed it herself.
221* IconicSequelCharacter: It's easy to forget that she didn't appear until the ''fourth'' season, yet she's without a doubt the most iconic of Steed's partners.
222* JumpedAtTheCall: She never hesitates to help Steed, particularly when he calls for her help ("We're needed!") in her colour era.
223* LadyOfAdventure: 1960s version. Her main motivation to work on cases with Steed seems to be a need for adventure.
224* LovingDetails: When she departs in "The Forget-Me-Knot", she meets her replacement, Tara King, in the stairs. A little wistfully, Emma tells Tara about Steed "He likes his tea stirred anticlockwise".
225* MasterSwordswoman: In addition to martial arts, she is also a skilled fencer.
226* MeaningfulName: One can read "appeal" in her name quite easily.
227* MsFanservice: Much like her predecessor, she was fond of wearing leather outfits, while "A Touch of Brimstone" has her decked out as The Queen of Sin. In "Silent Dust", she wraps herself in a sheet while posing for a drawing.
228* NiceGirl: Just like Steed, she's well-mannered and always polite, and the couple they form showcases perfect chemistry without ever becoming too romantic.
229* NonIdleRich: She's from a family of rich industrialists and never hesitates to help Steed investigate.
230* OfCorsetsSexy: Famously sported one in "A Touch of Brimstone" as part of her Queen of Sin outfit.
231* PartTimeHero: Like Cathy Gale before her, she's more of a "talented amateur". She's shown pursuing numerous hobbies that suggest she is rather lonely since the disappearance of her husband -- no wonder she always looks happy to be solving mysteries with Steed.
232* PassingTheTorch: Her staircase scene with Steed's new partner in "The Forget-Me-Knot", Tara King, can be considered as one.
233* PlatonicLifePartners: Her perfect chemistry with Steed never went overtly romantic. She eventually departed when she found out her husband was still alive.
234* PunnyName: Her name is a play on the phrase "Man Appeal" or "M. Appeal", which the production team stated was one of the required elements of the character.
235* PutOnABus: She left Steed when her husband turned up alive.
236* RenaissanceWoman: Emma is a scientist, industrialist, artist, fencer, martial artist, amateur detective...you name it.
237* SleekHighRiseApartment: In season four, she lived in a penthouse flat in Hampstead and in season five a studio flat near Primrose Hill.
238* SpyCatsuit: One of the earliest examples in spy fiction, even though it has more to do with her personal fashion tastes than with mission purposes.
239* UnlimitedWardrobe: She never wears the same outfit twice between episodes. Heck, she's very much a walking mid-[[TheSixties 1960s]] avant-garde clothing catalog on her own.
240[[/folder]]
241
242[[folder:Tara King]]
243!!Tara King / Agent 69
244[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/10_1_1.jpg]]
245 [[caption-width-right:300:''"Mother sent me!"'']]
246!!!'''Played by:''' Creator/LindaThorson (1968-1969), Emily Woodward (2010s audio dramas)
247
248John Steed's last female partner in the original series, and the youngest. Unlike Steed's previous partners, very few things are known about her background. She enlisted at an early age in the Intelligence Service as a trainee, under the number 69.
249
250She considers Steed as an idol, and she is very much infatuated with him.
251----
252* ActionGirl: She can kick butt just like Steed's previous partners, even if she's a bit clumsier. The episode that showcases it the most is perhaps "Noon Doomsday".
253* AgentsDating: Unlike the partnerships with Cathy Gale and Emma Peel, Steed and Tara were shown in unambiguously romantic scenarios, and both actors have indicated their belief that the two were in an off-screen MayDecemberRomance.
254* BoundAndGagged: Tara would often find herself in quite a bind...
255* BoyishShortHair: Occasionally. Most notably in the show's opening credits of her era with the suits of armour, in which she sports the same short haircut and clothes as in the episode "Noon Doomsday".
256** This was due to the harsh dye and bleaching used in early episodes, causing her to cut her natural hair very short
257* ChuckCunninghamSyndrome: What happened to her between the end of the series and ''The New Avengers'' is never explained.
258* ContrastingReplacementCharacter: She's significantly younger and less experienced than either Cathy Gale or Emma Peel. Whereas they were equal partners with Steed who enjoyed a bit of flirtatious banter, Steed took on a teacher/father role to Tara. She's also sported the shortest haircuts out of the three partners of Steed. Whereas both Cathy and Emma were both widows, Tara was single woman who hero-worshipped Steed.
259* CoolCar: She drives either a red Lotus Europa, a red Lotus Elan or a Maroon AC 428 Convertible.
260* DamselInDistress: She gets regularly kidnapped (either [[TapOnTheHead bludgeoned]] or [[InstantSedation sedated with choloroform]]). It doesn't prevent her from regularly being a DamselOutOfDistress though.
261* HandbagOfHurt: She puts a brick in her handbag and uses it to great effect against mooks in "The Forget-Me-Knot".
262* ImprovisedWeapon: She often uses whatever things she can get her hands on to fight, to great effects. Such as a brick in a handbag.
263* LegFocus: Many of her outfits are just excuses to showcase her nice legs. Steed's previous partners' legs never had as much screentime as hers, if they were shown at all.
264* SequelNonEntity: There's no mention of her at all in ''The New Avengers''. Both her predecessors got mentions after they left.
265* UnlimitedWardrobe: Much like Emma Peel was a walking mid-[[TheSixties 1960s]] avant-garde clothing catalog, Tara is one for the late 1960s.
266[[/folder]]
267
268!!!'''Supporting Characters'''
269
270[[folder:Mother]]
271!!Mother
272[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/03_0001.jpg]]
273!!!'''Played by:''' Patrick Newell (1968-1969), Creator/JimBroadbent (1998 film)
274
275The chief of the British secret service John Steed and Tara King belong to. He was introduced in the 1968 episode "The Forget-Me-Knot", at the time of Emma Peel's departure, and would appear throughout the Tara King era.
276----
277* CodeName: "Mother" is a code name, naturally.
278* CoolCar: Occasionally appeared in a silver Rolls-Royce.
279* TheGhost: He was referred to since at least Emma Peel's first episode in late 1964 but appeared much later, in "The Forget-Me-Knot" in 1968, becoming a recurring character of the Tara King era.
280* HomeBase: He sometimes summons Steed in what could be best described as "excentric" headquarters, such as a [[UnderwaterBase base under a river]] or in a double-decker bus.
281* LargeAndInCharge: He is fat, and he is the head of a secret service.
282* NonIndicativeName: The CodeName is "Mother"... and he's a man.
283* RememberTheNewGuy: Steed chats with him like he has always been part of the show (he was actually mentioned as early as Emma Peel stepped in), but he was one of the latest additions to the original show.
284[[/folder]]
285
286[[folder:Rhonda]]
287!!Rhonda
288[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/01123.jpg]]
289!!!'''Played by:''' Rhonda Parker (1968-1969)
290
291Mother's personal aid.
292----
293* ActionGirl: She doesn't get as many chances to shine as the regulars but she definitely fits. In one episode she takes out two armed goons simultaneously.
294* TheSpeechless[=/=]TheVoiceless: She never speaks.
295* StatuesqueStunner: She's six feet tall.
296[[/folder]]
297
298!!!'''Notable Villains'''
299
300[[folder:Dr. Armstrong]]
301!!Dr. Clement Armstrong
302[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/00000000_2.png]]
303[[caption-width-right:300:''"Exactly. Government by automation!"'']]
304!!!'''Played by:''' Creator/MichaelGough
305!!!'''Appears in:''' "The Cybernauts"
306
307A genius scientist in the fields of automation and burgeoning computer science. He also created the [[KillerRobot Cybernauts]], and intends to establish a rule of machines over humanity.
308----
309* EvilCripple: He moves around in an automatic wheelchair.
310* EvilGenius: A brilliant and visionary automation scientist, with very unethical projects.
311* HoistByHisOwnPetard: He is killed by one of his own Cybernauts.
312* MadScientist: He thinks computers make "better decisions" than human beings.
313* StraightEdgeEvil: As pointed out by Gilbert:
314-->'''Gilbert:''' Given a choice between [[Creator/GinaLollobrigida Lollobrigida]] and an electronic calculator, he would choose the equation every time.
315* SuperWheelchair: He has all sorts of buttons on his wheelchair, which allows him to control various things in his automated office and factory, such as music, elevators, sliding doors and the Cybernauts.
316* VillainousBreakdown: He has one as he finds out he can't control his Cybernauts anymore once Steed tricks them into fighting each other. [[TooDumbToLive He gets too close of the fight]] trying to stop them, leading to his death.
317* VillainsWithGoodPublicity: He is a renowned genius and the head of a renowned automation company.
318* VisionaryVillain: He basically intends to establish a dictature of artificial intelligence to rule over humanity and sees it as a logical path to follow. He also has plans to design small, complex computers, [[invoked]][[TechnologyMarchesOn which was seen as visionary science fiction back then]].
319[[/folder]]
320
321[[folder:Cybernauts]]
322!!The Cybernauts
323[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/00000000_0.png]]
324[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/avengerscybernaut.jpg]]
325[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lastofthecybernauts.jpg]]
326!!!'''Appear in:''' "The Cybernauts" | "Return of the Cybernauts" | "The Last of the Cybernauts" (''The New Avengers'')
327
328->''"I think you will agree, the automated assassin was a stroke of genius. Loyal, obedient and extremely efficient."''
329-->-- '''Dr. Clement Armstrong'''
330
331Cybernauts are humanoid robots created by Dr. Clement Armstrong to serve him. They are mostly employed for assassinations and kidnappings, and they are quite unstoppable.
332----
333* AttackDrone: Roger, the first Cybernaut, is compared to a "guided missile" in that it is programmed to kill targets who carry a pen with a concealed homing device Armstrong offered to them beforehand. In "The Last of the Cybernauts", they are practically walking drones since Kane remote-controls them.
334* BadassLongcoat: When Cybernauts are sent on operation outside, they are always dressed with a black longcoat, a black hat and [[CoolShades sunglasses]] to conceal them as much as possible.
335* ChromeChampion: They look like chromed humanoids.
336* ImmuneToBullets: By virtue of being made of steel.
337* ImplacableMan: When they're searching for a target, virtually nothing can stop them.
338* KillerRobot: A karate chop-like strike of their steel arms on the neck is enough to kill or knock out their targets.
339* NoSell: See ImmuneToBullets.
340** In "The Last of the Cybernauts", Mike Gambit tries to karate-chop the head of Kane's remote-controlled Cybernaut. Needless to say, this ends rather painfully for Gambit's hand.
341* TheRemnant: A few years after Armstrong's death, Paul Beresford finds a Cybernaut and plans revenge on John Steed and Emma Peel with it. A decade later, Felix Kane finds out Armstrong had a whole secret cache of remote-controlled Cybernauts and uses them to plan his revenge on Steed and the New Avengers for his crippling.
342* SignatureSoundEffect: They emit a distinctive "swish" sound when chopping with their arms, to emphasize their strength and the real threat they are.
343* [[invoked]]TechnologyMarchesOn: Over the course of the three episodes they appear in, the Cybernauts' technology evolves. In the first one, Roger needed a homing device concealed in a pen to seek its targets (the other one didn't, however). The one from "Return of the Cybernauts" just needs an electronic card with a portrait of the target. The final generation seen in "Last of the Cybernauts" is remote-controlled.
344* UpgradeVsPrototypeFight: Roger (Armstrong's first Cybernaut) needs a [[TrackingDevice homing device]] on his target to follow and kill it while the second one Armstrong created has a "brain of its own". Steed tricks them into fighting each other by putting the homing device pen on the second Cybernaut. Roger gains the upper hand by kicking the "electronic brain" out of the other Cybernaut's head, and Armstrong is killed in the brawl.
345[[/folder]]
346
347[[folder:John Cartney]]
348!!The Honorable John Cleverly Cartney
349[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/johncartney.jpg]]
350!!!'''Played by:''' Creator/PeterWyngarde
351!!!'''Appears in:''' "A Touch of Brimstone"
352
353An aristocrat who heads the Hellfire Club, an organization based upon dressing up in old costumes and engaging in orgiastic rituals and which thrives in "ultimate sins".
354----
355* AristocratsAreEvil: An upper class man who's a threat to international relations and leads an evil orgy cult.
356* TheCasanova: He's a suave womanizer.
357* DisneyVillainDeath: He falls down a TrapDoor to his death after triggering his own "Circle of Justice" trap.
358* HoistByHisOwnPetard: Falls to his death victim of his own "Circle of Justice" TrapDoor after accidentally pulling its torch lever with his whip while trying to whip Emma.
359* ThePrankster: He sets up various pranks to ridicule important international figures.
360* SelfDisposingVillain: Kills himself with his own "Circle of Justice" TrapDoor when Emma performs a DeadlyDodging that makes him grab and pull a lever hidden as a torch while he was standing on the trap door.
361* VillainousCrush: He is attracted to Emma Peel at first.
362* WhipOfDominance: Tries to kill/harm Emma with a whip, in addition to the UsefulNotes/{{BDSM}} theming of Emma's ouftit and his decadent lifestyle.
363* WickedCultured: He's a ManOfWealthAndTaste, plays the piano and he's [[AffablyEvil well-mannered]].
364[[/folder]]
365
366[[folder:Professor Keller]]
367!!Professor Jack Keller
368[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/00000_00.jpg]]
369[[caption-width-right:300:''"The machine is not only man's equal, but his superior! I will prove it to you!"'']]
370!!!'''Played by:''' Michael Goodliffe
371!!!'''Appears in:''' "The House that Jack Built"
372
373A deranged automation technology engineer with a colossal grudge against Emma Peel, who fired him back when she was the head of Knight Industries. He turned a house into a giant computerized mousetrap to drive Emma insane.
374----
375* BestServedCold: It took him more than a decade to put his revenge in motion.
376* EvilGenius: Just as Dr. Armstrong, he is a brilliant and visionary automation / computer science engineer with very unethical goals.
377* MadScientist: He firmly believes in the replacement of man by machines.
378* {{Revenge}}: He patiently plotted one against Emma after she fired him from her company.
379* RubeGoldbergHatesYourGuts: He turned a house into a giant automated / computerized trap for Emma Peel. He designed it to [[DrivenToMadness drive her insane]] and even built a GasChamber in case she would consider [[DrivenToSuicide killing herself]] rather than being slowly driven mad.
380* StalkerWithoutACrush: He amassed a lot of informations about Emma, pictures of her as well as objects that belonged to her, and built a creepy exhibition for Emma with them inside the house, going as far as putting an obituary for her at the end of it.
381* TheTapeKnewYouWouldSayThat: [[spoiler:He designed computers to answer to Emma after his death should she ask questions, and the first ones she meets answer quite accurately to her questions with pre-recorded videos and Keller's voice.]]
382* ThanatosGambit: [[spoiler:He is [[DeadAllAlong already dead]] and [[DeadGuyOnDisplay mummified in a glass box]] when Emma steps into the house.]]
383* VisionaryVillain: He is not unsimilar to Dr. Armstrong with his ideas to replace / dominate man with machines.
384[[/folder]]
385
386[[folder:Paul Beresford]]
387!!Paul Beresford
388[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/04_2_2.jpg]]
389!!!'''Played by:''' Creator/PeterCushing
390!!!'''Appears in:''' "Return of the Cybernauts"
391
392An upper class man who befriends Steed and Emma Peel, and even flirts with the latter. Unbeknownst to them, he is the brother of Dr. Clement Armstrong, and plots a diabolical revenge against them for his brother's death, using one of the latter's creations, a Cybernaut, and {{Kidnapped Scientist}}s.
393----
394* AvengingTheVillain: Wants to avenge the death of his brother.
395* DirtyOldMan: As he [[PeoplePuppets controls Emma like a puppet]], he says she is now submitted to "his every will, his every wish". God only knows what he means...
396* FauxAffablyEvil: He is cultured, witty, charming, and all around seems like the perfect gentleman, but in reality he is a twisted man who only cares about revenge and desires a FateWorseThanDeath for Steed and Emma.
397* HoistByHisOwnPetard: Steed tricks the scientists into putting the mind-controlling bracelet on the Cybernaut's arm, which sends the robot on an uncontrolable frenzy. The Cybernaut ends up killing Beresford with a deadly BearHug.
398* MindControlDevice: One of the scientists he kidnapped designs a mind-controlling bracelet, basically turning anyone who wears it into a [[PeoplePuppets zombified puppet]], a "human Cybernaut" in Beresford's words.
399* RememberTheNewGuy: Nothing hinted at the fact that Armstrong had a brother in the episode "The Cybernauts".
400* TheReveal: He is the brother of Clement Armstrong.
401* {{Revenge}}: He uses a Cybernaut and [[KidnappedScientist kidnaps a bunch of scientists]] to plot a diabolical revenge against the Avengers.
402* WhyDontYouJustShootHim: He could have opted to simply kill Emma and Steed with the Cybernaut, but he wanted a more cruel and sadistic fate for them. Which led him to his demise.
403[[/folder]]
404
405[[folder:The Winged Avenger]]
406!!Arnie Packer / The Winged Avenger
407[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/0_111.jpg]]
408[[caption-width-right:300:''"I am the ideal of vengeance against those who the law cannot touch!"'']]
409!!!'''Played by:''' Neil Hallett
410!!!'''Appears in:''' "The Winged Avenger"
411
412A comic book author who was wronged by his publisher and went mad, becoming the very comic book character he created. He goes on a killing spree against {{Corrupt Corporate Executive}}s, his publisher being his first victim.
413----
414* AnimalMotifs: A bird of prey.
415* BecomingTheMask: He's become so mad that he practically thinks he is the comic book avenger he created.
416* BloodlessCarnage: Since he claws people to death, one would expect to see blood. [[ViolenceIsDisturbing The show's nature didn't allow for it]], of course.
417* DisneyVillainDeath: Falls down to his death from a window after Steed hits him with a comic cardboard.
418* EatTheRich: He attacks {{Corrupt Corporate Executive}}s, mainly.
419* FeatheredFiend: A SerialKiller with a giant bird of prey disguise.
420* {{Revenge}}: Against publishers who stripped him of any profit on his own comic book.
421* SerialKiller: Kills several people who wronged him in a row.
422* ShoutOut: The episode as a whole is a spoof of the very popular and campy ''Series/{{Batman|1966}}'' series which aired at the same time as the seasons in colours of ''The Avengers'', right down to a MusicalPastiche of that series' theme tune and {{Written Sound Effect}}s.
423* WallCrawl: He uses special adhesive boots that allow their wearer to walk on walls and even on ceilings.
424[[/folder]]
425
426[[folder:Professor Frank N. Stone Duplicate]]
427!!Professor Frank N. Stone Duplicate
428[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/vlcsnap_2015_06_30_16h09m13s714.png]]
429!!!'''Played by:''' Creator/ChristopherLee
430!!!'''Appears in:''' "Never, Never Say Die"
431
432A robot created by Professor Frank N. Stone and modelled after himself. The robot and other Duplicates go rogue and lock up the professor and his collaborators.
433----
434* AchillesHeel: Radio waves disturb the Duplicates' A.I. and can paralyze them.
435* AIIsACrapshoot: The Duplicates gained a will of their own and rebelled in evil ways against their creator.
436* DeceptivelyHumanRobots: Looks very human, if not for his stern face.
437* DrFakenstein: The name of the duplicates' creator, Professor Frank N. Stone, obviously spoofs Literature/{{Frankenstein}}.
438* ImplacableMan: There's nothing Steed can do when the Duplicate goes after him.
439* KillerRobot: The two Duplicates try to kill Steed and Peel in the climax, only saved in the nick of time by the secretary who uses the radio wave remote control to paralyze them.
440* NoSell: About as tough as Cybernauts were, surviving being ran over by a car and not budging one bit when Steed attacks him with a chair (the chair breaks when hitting him).
441* RobotMe: Professor Frank N. Stone created him to look like a carbon copy of himself.
442* SuperStrength: Effortlessly breaks Steed's table in two just like a Cybernaut would.
443* SuspiciouslySimilarSubstitute: The Duplicates are as tough and unstoppable as the Cybernauts, although they're more of a case of AIIsACrapshoot than mindless robots, and they look [[DeceptivelyHumanRobots convincingly human]] vs the Cybernauts being {{chrome|Champion}}d.
444* TurnedAgainstTheirMasters: The Duplicates rebel against Professor Frank N. Stone, lock him up and decide to replace humans with more of themselves.
445[[/folder]]
446
447[[folder:Z. Z. von Schnerk]]
448!!Z. Z. von Schnerk
449[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/zzvonschnerk.jpg]]
450!!!'''Played by:''' Kenneth J. Warren
451!!!'''Appears in:''' "Epic"
452
453A mad producer and film director who is obsessed with Emma Peel and wants to create a SnuffFilm starring her.
454----
455* AffablyEvil: He is full of reverence and admiration for Emma Peel, and plans to kill her for his art.
456* BaldOfEvil: He is hairless and plans to kill Emma.
457* LastWords: As he's fatally shot, he puts his hand on his camera, utters "Cut!" and dies.
458* MadArtist: A mad filmmaker.
459* NoCelebritiesWereHarmed: His job, germanity, mannerisms and general look are pretty clearly a spoof of director Creator/ErichVonStroheim.
460* NoNameGiven: There's no indication of what his double "Z" means.
461* SnuffFilm: He wants to film an epic starring Emma... with real danger coming to her, and wants her to die for real as an apotheosis for the film.
462* StalkerWithoutACrush: His obsession about Emma is driven by a need of magnifiying her on screen, then providing her a DyingMomentOfAwesome for real.
463* TheVonTropeFamily: '''von''' Schnerk.
464[[/folder]]
465
466[[folder:Stewart Kirby]]
467!!Stewart Kirby
468[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/stewartkirby.jpg]]
469!!!'''Played by:''' Creator/PeterWyngarde
470!!!'''Appears in:''' "Epic"
471
472A washed up actor who helps out Z. Z. von Schnerk on his SnuffFilm project starring Emma Peel.
473----
474* ChangingClothesIsAFreeAction: He changes costumes and makeups pretty fast between the various film scenes Emma is forced into.
475* CoDragons: Forms the two underlings of von Schnerk with Damita Syn.
476* IronButtmonkey: Gets his ass kicked by Emma in several of the movie scenes Emma is forced into, and yet he keeps coming back as different characters while von Schnerk films it all.
477* LargeHam: He hams it up in practically every movie scene he has to play for von Schnerk.
478[[/folder]]
479
480[[folder:Basil & Lola]]
481!!Basil & Lola
482[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/14279787063_e41c6f505c_b.jpg]]
483%%[[caption-width-right:300:some caption text]]
484!!!'''Played by:''' Creator/FreddieJones and Patricia Haines / Creator/PatrickMacnee and Creator/DianaRigg (swapped bodies)
485!!!'''Appear in:''' "Who's Who???"
486
487Two enemy secret agents who get a hold of an experimental machine that swaps minds between two persons.
488----
489* FreakyFridayFlip: Using an experimental machine, Basil swaps minds with John Steed and Lola does the same with Emma Peel.
490* UnholyMatrimony: They're two evil lovers. It gives us the one and only onscreen French kiss ever featured in the series between Patrick Macnee and Diana Rigg, though only because the minds of Steed and Emma have been swapped with Basil's and Lola's.
491[[/folder]]
492
493!New Avengers Characters
494
495!!!'''New Avengers'''
496[[folder:Purdey]]
497!!Purdey
498[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/03_0003.jpg]]
499!!!'''Played by:''' Creator/JoannaLumley
500
501A British intelligence agent and former ballet dancer, Purdey is a martial arts (learned, according to her, during her time with the Royal Ballet, of which she was expelled for being, still according to her, "too tall") and marksmanship expert.
502
503Purdey sees Steed as an attractive, yet fatherly figure, and there is also ongoing banter and playful flirting between her and Mike Gambit (although the series never indicated anything more in her relationship with either man).
504----
505%%* ActionGirl: Like all of Steed's previous partners.
506* BoyishShortHair: The bowl cut is one of her most distinctive features. It was requested by Joanna Lumley herself.
507* CompositeCharacter: She is essentially a combination of all of Steed's previous female partners.
508* DanceBattler: She has a very balletic fighting style that was inspired by the obscure French martial art Panache.
509* TheGunslinger: She is an expert markswoman.
510* MeaningfulName: Joanna Lumley is credited with suggesting the character be named Purdey after James Purdey & Sons, a famous shotgun manufacturer.
511* OnlyOneName: During the two-year run of ''The New Avengers'', no other name was ever given to her and it was never revealed on screen whether "Purdey" was her first or last name.
512* ShowSomeLeg: She is often called upon to use her feminine attributes to distract villains.
513%%* UnresolvedSexualTension: With Gambit.
514[[/folder]]
515
516[[folder:Gambit]]
517!!Michael "Mike" Gambit
518[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/03_0001_3.jpg]]
519!!!'''Played by:''' Gareth Hunt
520
521A former Major in the Parachute Regiment who also had a short-lived career as a race car driver.
522----
523* BattleCouple: Often fights back-to-back alongside Purdey.
524* UnresolvedSexualTension: With Purdey, very much so.
525[[/folder]]

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