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1[[foldercontrol]]
2
3[[folder:In General]]
4* AdultsAreUseless: In the novels, pretty much every animal designated with an "adult" personality is a KnowNothingKnowItAll and often spend more time bickering among themselves who knows best. Especially prevalent in ''Return to the Hundred Acre Wood'' where they all take it upon themselves to teach the other animals, and quickly find themselves in over their head. This is played with in the Disney adaptations, since some of the "adult" animals, especially Eeyore and Kanga, aren't nearly as pompous and argumentative as they are in the books.
5* AdaptationalNiceGuy: While the original books were already fairly light hearted, the characters could sometimes be rather sardonic or passive aggressive towards each other. The Disney works tend to soften the edges of the cast and make their innocent, well meaning qualities more prevalent, revolving the large bulk of humour more around their InnocentlyInsensitive habits. Eeyore is the most prominent example, though Kanga, Owl and even Pooh himself undergo this to some degree. Even Rabbit, the one character who retains his nastier side, has his softer redeeming qualities shown much more often.
6* AnimalStereotypes: Their personalities typically either play this straight or subvert it. For example, Pooh plays on the stereotype of bears not being very bright, whilst Owl subverts the stereotype of owls being wise and clever (though he thinks he plays it straight).
7* BlackBeadEyes: A good chunk of them have black dot eyes.
8* BookDumb: Most of them are uneducated. However Christopher Robin is getting an education and is smarter and more knowledgeable than the others. Inverted for Owl, who ''is'' educated, but still "hasn't exactly got brain". Also, depending on the adaptation, Rabbit may also have some book smarts.
9* BreakTheCutie: Pretty much every character gets a real heartwrenching moment of being put through the wringer, especially in the Disney canon. See their separate entries for more.
10* CharacterFocus: The original novels were already to some degree an EnsembleCast work, though the Disney franchise takes it a step even further, with characters getting whole stories and character studies to themselves. Certain eras also tend to favour particular characters. The 1980/90s ''New Adventures'' series and specials for example gave more appearances to Gopher and Owl, with Kanga and Roo making only sporadic appearances, while the 2000s Disneytoon Studios cartoons by contrast slowly phased out the former two, while Kanga and Roo got pushed more as major characters, almost becoming the main perspective characters over Pooh himself by the end of the run.
11* ChromosomeCasting: Kanga is the only female of the main cast, [[OutOfFocus and usually the least active character]], thus the cast for many stories is often solely male. Spin-offs for both the novels and Disney adaptations tried to introduce some more female additions.
12* {{Cloudcuckoolander}}: They're not exactly the most conventionally clever of characters and sometimes they have wacky notions (like pots of honey can talk).
13* TheDitz: Zigzagged. Most of them are kind of naive and sometimes do dumb things, but they're not outright idiotic, Christopher Robin is quite scholarly and intelligent, though still has the mind of a young child, and Owl, as Piglet puts it, "hasn't exactly got brain, but he knows things."
14* ADogNamedDog: Most of them are named after their species. Piglet, Owl, Rabbit, Kanga and Roo (who each take half of their species names) are all obvious, whilst "Tigger" is a childish pronunciation of "tiger". Averted for Gopher, who goes by [[SpeciesSurname Samuel J. Gopher]].
15* EnsembleCast: Though Pooh is the title character, many stories focus primarily on the other animals. This is especially prevalent in the Disney franchise, where Tigger, Piglet and Rabbit get as much central focus as Pooh, though the Milne universe novels have several stories devoted to the rest of the cast as well.
16* FatalFlaw: Pretty much all of them have a foible that keeps causing antics and misunderstandings; Pooh is gluttonous and thick-headed, Piglet is meek and cowardly, Tigger is hyperactive and has traits of an AttentionWhore, Eeyore is perpetually miserable and insecure, Rabbit is a ControlFreak, Owl is bombastic and prone to delusions of grandeur, Roo is impressionable and almost as reckless as Tigger and Gopher is a destructive {{Workaholic}}. Only Christopher Robin and Kanga tend to lack a clear foible, thus are often the OnlySaneMan, though even for them odd stories sometimes try to give them a defect.
17* FunnyAnimal: Most of them are anthropomorphic animals, although they still have some animal traits and Eeyore walks on all fours.
18* InnocentlyInsensitive: A trademark source of plot for the entire cast; they all mean well and are rather friendly, but their childlike disposition and often scatterbrained perception of the things can make them pretty thoughtless or cause ceaseless panic and harm by accident. This trait is more pronounced in the Disney version, the novel counterparts could be knowingly antipathetic to each other more often.
19* InterspeciesFriendship: A human boy and his animal friends, who are a bear, a pig, a tiger, a rabbit, a donkey, a pair of kangaroos, an owl, and a gopher.
20* LivingToys: Pooh, Piglet, Tigger, Eeyore, Kanga and Roo are based on the real Christopher Robin's stuffed toys. In the Disney franchise, the characters are sometimes reminded as stuffed toys but behave like living animals.
21* MixedAnimalSpeciesTeam: Anytime they work together. There's a bear, a human, a pig, a tiger, a rabbit, a donkey, an owl, a gopher, and two kangaroos.
22* NonStandardCharacterDesign: Pooh, Tigger, Piglet, Eeyore, Kanga and Roo are all [[LivingToy living stuffed animals]] while Rabbit, Owl and Gopher are living, breathing anthropomorphic animals.
23* NotSoImaginaryFriend: The Disney interpretation especially tends to leave a lot of ambiguity to how much Pooh and the others are just products of Christopher Robin's imagination. The toys representing them in the BookEnds segments sometimes come to life, and in cases such as ''New Adventures'' and ''Christopher Robin'', they frequently interacted with the real world, at no point ceasing to be alive.
24* OneOfTheKids: They're Christopher Robin's playthings; naturally, they act more like kids than he does.
25* PoorCommunicationKills: This is a generally negative trope that applies to all of the characters, it is their lack of proper communication in certain scenarios that kicks off several plots.
26* SadClown: A trait more evident in the Disney canon, which will sometimes go for more poignant stories that demonstrate the characters are more self aware of their quirks and failings than they let on. This does sometimes seep into the original books as well though, particularly Christopher Robin who is coming to terms with growing older and distant from his imaginary friends.
27* SimpleMindedWisdom: A recurring trait in all of them. While they have a very childlike level of intellect and awareness of the world around them, they have rather meaningful displays of insight and wit in certain ways.
28* TrueCompanions: All of the main clan do care for each other in spite of their misgivings and are very close. This sentiment is obviously displayed much more vividly in the Disney cartoons, though it's still quite apparent in the novels.
29* VagueAge: All of their ages are a bit ambiguous, with the exception of Christopher Robin, who's six years old. Piglet is mentioned to be perhaps three or four years old in the books.
30[[/folder]]
31
32[[folder:Christopher Robin]]
33!!Christopher Robin
34[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/christopher_8.jpg]]
35[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/disney_cristopher.jpg]]
36[[caption-width-right:250:''[[CharacterCatchphrase "Silly old bear."]]'']]
37
38-->'''Portrayed by:''' Bruce Reitherman (1966); Jon Walmsley (1968); Timothy Turner (1974); Kim Christianson (1981 - 1983); Tim Hoskins (''New Adventures''); Edan Gross (''Christmas Too''); Brady Bluhm (1997–1999); Tom Attenborough (''The Tigger Movie''); Paul Tiesler (''The Book of Pooh''); William Green (''A Very Merry Pooh Year''); Tom Wheatley, Kath Soucie (singing) (''WesternAnimation/PigletsBigMovie''); Struan Erlenborn (''My Friends Tigger & Pooh''); Jack Boutler (''WesternAnimation/WinnieThePooh2011''); Oliver Bell (''WesternAnimation/DocMcStuffins''); Creator/EwanMcGregor (''Film/ChristopherRobin'', [adult]); Orton O'Brien (''Christopher Robin'', [child]), Yoshiya Shirao (Japanese 1977-1983), Yu Hayashi (Japanese, 1988), Kazuhiro Shindo (Japanese, 2000), Sota Murakami (Japanese, 2003), Takuto Wantanbe (Japanese, 2011), Creator/JackieBerger (European French, later 80's-90's)
39
40The only human character to appear in the books, Christopher Robin is the storybook allusion to the RealLife boy Milne wrote the stories for. He is a young boy who spends time with his stuffed animals in the distant Hundred Acre Wood and acts as a mentor and leader most of the time. Later in the series, he attends boarding school.
41----
42* AdaptationDyeJob: In the books, his hair is blond, but in the cartoons, it's brown.
43* AdaptationNameChange: In ''New Adventures'', it's implied that "Robin" is actually his last name, which is explicitly true in the [[Film/ChristopherRobin live-action movie]], instead of Milne like the real person he was based on and his counterpart in the original stories.
44* AdaptedOut: Christopher Robin doesn't appear in the Russian cartoons at all, his role having been taken by Piglet. Some of Disney's adaptations of the novels also omit or at least heavily downplay his role in them. The ''Franchise/KingdomHearts'' series in particular outright replaces his role in the stories with their protagonist, Sora.
45* BigGood: The inhabitants of the Forest certainly view him as one. He's the one they trust with their problems, the one to solve disputes and the one to act as the leader in times of need.
46* ABoyAndHisX: A boy and his teddy bear. The relationship between Christopher Robin and Pooh is the heart and soul of the original books. While the adaptations tend to feature it less prominently, they're still shown to be very close.
47* BoyishShorts: Christopher Robin is always seen in shorts (even when the buckle shoes from the 1920s were updated to sneakers), which characterises him as a sweet six-year-old boy who still engages deeply in imaginative play with the creatures of the Hundred Acre Wood (who are his stuffed animals).
48* CharacterCatchphrase: He frequently says, "Silly old bear" to Pooh.
49* CheerfulChild: He's generally a very upbeat and happy sort of character, though he does have some melancholic moments, especially in the original books.
50* ChildrenAreInnocent: Perhaps the defining trait of his character is that he's a sweet little boy.
51** This becomes the entire point of the ''Film/ChristopherRobin'' movie (set in the Disney canon)
52* CulturalTranslation: Has an American accent in ''WesternAnimation/TheNewAdventuresOfWinnieThePooh''. He used to have one in the first featurette as well (provided by Bruce Reitherman, who also voiced [[WesternAnimation/TheJungleBook1967 Mowgli]]), but after complaints from the fans, it was changed to an English accent from ''Blustery Day'' onward. When the three original Pooh featurettes were collected into the full-feature ''WesternAnimation/TheManyAdventuresOfWinnieThePooh'', Christopher Robin was, for the sake of consistency, overdubbed with his later trademark English accent in the ''Honey Tree'' segment (though you can still clearly hear American Christopher when he sings along with Pooh in the ''Little Black Raincloud'' song).
53* ADayInTheLimelight: Christopher Robin is generally a supporting character at best in Disney's ''Pooh'' stories. ''New Adventures'' however does make him the main protagonist in a handful of episodes, usually focusing on his chores in the real world with Pooh and the others "assisting".
54* DemotedToExtra: Christopher Robin was originally the star of the books; in the poetry books he appears often and has several poems dedicated to him (as opposed to Pooh, who only appears in one poem in ''When We Were Very Young'' and only appears occasionally in ''Now We Are Six''), and while he was moved OutOfFocus for the Pooh stories he remained a central character. In the first Disney featurettes he was also a major character, but in later productions he got smaller and smaller roles, quite often being left out entirely. This ''is'' sort of explained in ''WesternAnimation/TheManyAdventuresOfWinnieThePooh'' (and elaborated upon in ''Pooh's Most Grand Adventure''): He's started school. While the Disney version doesn't seem to be attending boarding school the way his book counterpart is implied to be, it's still reasonable to presume that he isn't around as much because he's busy with schoolwork.
55* EarlyInstallmentCharacterDesignDifference: Before the "My Friends Tigger & Pooh", Christopher Robin had SkintoneSclerae.
56* EverybodyHatesMathematics: Downplayed. He more sees mathematics as unimportant than lousy; he describes the eleven times tables as not mattering and describes knights as being "not as grand as royalty but grander than factors". Given that he's the only one who brings arithmetic up and Pooh thinks Factors is a ''person'', this trope as a whole is downplayed for the ''Winnie-the-Pooh'' franchise.
57* TheEveryman: He's not particularly great in any one field, but he's got enough universal talents to cover where he's needed.
58* FullNameBasis: At least if you go by ''New Adventures'' canon, where "Robin" is hinted to be his surname. Rarely, if ever, is he called just "Christopher".
59* GrowingUpSucks:
60** More implied than directly stated in the books, but the hints are definitely there in ''The House At Pooh Corner'', where he's leaving to attend boarding school and won't be around in the Forest anymore. The hints are even stronger in ''Return to the Hundred Acre Wood'', when he comes back to the Forest for his first summer holiday, but knows he's just there for the summer and there are several hints that he doesn't fit in quite as well with his beloved animal friends as he once did.
61** Downplayed by comparison in the Disney version. While he does begin school at the end of ''The Many Adventures of Winnie-the-Pooh'' it's not boarding school, so there's less focus on how things are different when he leaves, and even if some subsequent productions (primarily ''Pooh's Most Grand Adventure'') do touch upon the animals having to deal with seeing less of him, it's less melancholy than in the books.
62** The live-action movie has this in full-force. As an adult, he's distressed by the fact that his job forces him to spend time away from his wife and daughter and his boss is making him fire several employees despite him promising the workers good jobs... to say nothing of [[BreadEggsMilkSquick coming back from World War 2 emotionally scarred by three years of endless killing.]]
63* KidsHateVegetables: In "Pooh Oughta Be in Pictures" he hates eating carrots and broccoli.
64* LazyBum: Downplayed. While he does say that "what he likes doing best is nothing" and he's often described as saying/doing things "carelessly", he doesn't seem to mind ''not'' doing nothing.
65* TheLeader: Even though he's only six years old, he's seen as the leader of the group. Case in point, when Tigger arrives, one of the first things Pooh asks is if Christopher Robin knows who he is.
66* MinorLivingAlone: In most versions he seems to live by himself in the woods. Averted in ''WesternAnimation/TheNewAdventuresOfWinnieThePooh'' and ''The Book of Pooh'', where his mother sometimes appears.
67* NiceGuy: He is cheerful, compassionate and caring.
68* NotSoAboveItAll: While generally the most level-headed of the bunch, he does occasionally say things that [[InsaneTrollLogic don't make sense]], like "he's Winnie ''ther'' Pooh! Don't you know what 'ther' means?!".
69* TheSmartGuy: The most intelligent character, bar none. Both Owl and Rabbit view themselves as being the brains of the Forest, while Kanga is CloserToEarth but still susceptible to childlike naiveté, but Christopher Robin is the only one who consistently sees through the follies and absurdities of their lives, and frequently the only one who knows what's ''really'' going on.
70* TokenHuman: He's the only human character in the group. Justified; the Hundred Acre Wood is created out of his backyard and his toys.
71* YoungerThanTheyLook: His animated counterpart especially. Despite chronologically remaining six years old, Christopher Robin can definitely pass for a preteen a few years older.
72[[/folder]]
73
74[[folder:Winnie the Pooh]]
75!!Winnie the Pooh
76[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/pooh_0.jpg]]
77[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/pooh9.jpg]]
78[[caption-width-right:250:''[[CharacterCatchphrase "Oh, bother."]]'']]
79-->'''Voiced by:''' Creator/SterlingHolloway (1966-1977); Creator/HalSmith (1981-1986); [[Creator/JimCummings1952 Jim Cummings]] (1988 - present), Creator/ShunYashiro (Original Japanese voice of Pooh until his death 2003, ''Pooh's Hunny Hunt''), Sukekiyo Kameyama (Japan, 2005 - 2011), Mitsuaki Kanuka (2018 - Present),
80
81The title and main character. A naive and soft-spoken teddy bear who lives in the trunk of a tree under the name of 'Sanders' written over his door. He utterly loves "hunny" and his home is filled with "hunny" pots of all sizes.
82----
83* AdaptationalIntelligence: In the Gold Key comics, Pooh, while still rather absent-minded, sometimes shows himself to be more crafty and even a bit of a DeadpanSnarker.
84* AdaptationalJerkass:
85** Pooh's childlike insensitivity is [[{{Flanderization}} Flanderized]] to extreme levels in the newspaper comics, where an enormous number of strips revolve around him being rude, selfish and blunt to everyone around him.
86** A downplayed case in the Soviet ''Vinni Pukh'' adaptions, where he's still fairly jovial and has some kind moments, but still a bit more self-absorbed than his original counterpart, being fairly bossy to Piglet and pathetically transparent in regarding Rabbit as [[AllTakeAndNoGive anything more than someone who feeds him]].
87* AdaptationalWimp: Zigzagged. While the Disney rendition has plenty of his own unique heroic moments, most adaptations of the original stories where Pooh holds the SmartBall (eg. rescuing Piglet from the flood, or finding the "North Pole" to recover Roo) are altered so he is an AccidentalHero.
88* AdaptationDeviation: The original books describe him as having a "growly" voice. His Disney version changes it to a soft, sleepy tenor.
89* AdaptationNameChange: His name is actually spelled with hyphens in the original books, as "Winnie-the-Pooh"; Creator/{{Disney}} avoids the hyphens and spaces the words.
90* AffectionateNickname: The books note that his nicknames of "Pooh" and "Poohbear" were orignally derived from Christopher Robin's befriended wild swan, but in-universe the reason others call him "Pooh" is because Pooh often either spaces out or takes naps outside, and since his face is often sticky from honey when this happens [[ToiletHumour flies like to buzz around and land on his head.]]
91* AstonishinglyAppropriateInterruption: When he sings the tummy song, he says, "A Pooh has a knack for finding a snack unless all the honey is...", then sees he's out of honey and says, "Gone?".
92* TheBard: In the books, Pooh was very fond of poetry, or at least ''attempting'' poetry. This is seen less often with the Disney version, (most of his penchants for rhyming are expressed more via musical numbers), though this does appear at odd times such as ''A Day For Eeyore''.
93* BearyFriendly: Benevolent, loyal friend, especially to Christopher Robin and Piglet.
94* BearyFunny: A Bear of Very Little Brain, his naivety and appetite is the source of much comedy.
95* BigBrotherInstinct: Despite his rather clueless and docile demeanor, he cares a lot about Piglet.
96* BigEater: Especially if honey's involved, though anything sweet will do.
97* BigThinShortTrio: The Big to Tigger's Thin and Piglet's Short.
98* BreakTheCutie: ''Pooh's Grand Adventure'' deals with Pooh coming to terms with the fact that Christopher Robin won't be by his side forever. He becomes heartbroken trying to find him again, until finally understanding his earlier words that he is always with him in spirit, along with Christopher Robin making a return visit in person.
99* CharacterCatchphrase: "Oh, bother!".
100* CrouchingMoronHiddenBadass: The "moron" part is obvious -- there's a reason he's consistently described as being a Bear of Very Little Brain. But, when he needs to, Pooh can be surprisingly clever in his own way, and often ends up resolving the various problems troubling the woods. For example, taming Wooster in ''The New Adventures'' when the rest of the animals are scared stiff of the giant woozle.
101* DeadpanSnarker: The comics have him make some beautiful comebacks. The 2011 movie to some extent, though its ambiguous whereas they're intentional [[HanlonsRazor or if its his ditziness making him seem like he's trash talking]] [[InnocentlyInsensitive when he doesn't actually mean it]]. This is also the case now and then in ''WesternAnimation/TheManyAdventuresOfWinnieThePooh'', since Creator/SterlingHolloway was a master at deadpan snarking:
102-->'''Rabbit''': (''when Pooh is stuck in his front door'') Well, it all comes from eating too much!
103-->'''Pooh''': It all comes of not having front doors big enough.
104* DependingOnTheWriter: It varies from installment to installment whether Pooh is a total wide-eyed innocent or has enough wit to be a DeadpanSnarker now and then (see above), and his level of practical intelligence varies too. Creator/SterlingHolloway's Pooh in [[WesternAnimation/TheManyAdventuresOfWinnieThePooh the original cartoons]] makes some dryly witty remarks that would have seemed out of character for [[Creator/JimCummings1952 Jim Cummings]]' more purely innocent Pooh in the later ''[[WesternAnimation/TheNewAdventuresOfWinnieThePooh New Adventures]]'' series, although Cummings' Pooh gained some snarking ability by the time of [[WesternAnimation/WinniethePooh2011 the 2011 film.]] Meanwhile, Creator/HalSmith's Pooh of ''Series/WelcomeToPoohCorner'' has some AdaptationalIntelligence that makes him a better role model for that EdutainmentShow's preschool target audience.
105* {{Determinator}}: As the narrator notes in ''Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree'', Pooh Bear is "not the sort to give up easily. Once he put his mind to something, he stuck with it." This is especially evident when he's trying to get honey, or when [[WesternAnimation/PoohsGrandAdventure he set out to find Christopher Robin]].
106* TheDitz: Granted, most of the cast is a bit thick at times, but Pooh really takes the cake. [[note]][[LiteralMinded Especially if it has pink sugar frosting]][[/note]]. There are times he can be the [[OnlySaneMan Only Sane Bear]] however.
107* DoesNotLikeSpam: Mentions not liking cheese at one point. Understandably, since it's not sweet.
108* EarlyBirdCameo: In 1924, one full year before the first Pooh story was written (and two years before the first full book was published), Pooh appeared in the book ''When We Were Very Young,'' as the main character in the poem ''[[http://allpoetry.com/poem/8518985-Teddy_Bear-by-A.A._Milne Teddy Bear]].'' Throughout most of the poem, he's simply referred to as "Teddy Bear" or "Teddy," but in the later stages of the poem, he's directly addressed as "Mr. Edward Bear," which of course is Pooh's original name.
109* EarlyInstallmentWeirdness: As noted in "''When We Were Very Young,'' "Pooh" was originally the name of a wild swan the real Christopher Robin tried to tame whose personality and name got transposed onto a bear after Christopher Robin became fascinated with Canadian bears.
110* FatAndProud: He once sings that he's "short, fat and proud of that".
111* FatIdiot: Downplayed; more "naive" than an "idiot" and more "cutely chubby" than outright "fat."
112%%* [[FourTemperamentEnsemble Five Temperament Ensemble]]: He's the Phlegmatic member of the five main characters.
113* FurryReminder: To ''stuffed animals'', no less. Pooh's stitches will sometimes burst at the seams, and at other times his head will do a 270 degree turn before returning to its base position.
114* GenderBlenderName: Defied. He's a boy, so you can't call him just Winnie, it's Winnie "the" Pooh.
115* GeniusDitz: He writes spur-of-the-moment songs and poetry for the fun of it, completely unaware that from a literary standpoint he would be considered quite skilled. None of the other characters have this talent, and Eeyore's attempt to emulate it inevitably falls flat.
116* GrowlingGut: The iconic "Rumbly in his tumbly."
117* HalfDressedCartoonAnimal: In the Disney films, Pooh wears only a red shirt. The books have Pooh wearing the shirt only in the winter, going au naturel otherwise.
118* HelpImStuck: One story focuses on him getting stuck in Rabbit's front door[[note]]"It all comes from eating too much."[[/note]].
119* TheHero: He's not only the clear series protagonist, but also a genuinely nice guy.
120* HeterosexualLifePartners: His relationship with Piglet. They're almost always seen together and playing together, and they stand up for each other in their own way.
121* HypocriticalHumor: As often as he relentlessly leeches honey off of Rabbit and others, he is often rather reluctant to share his own. ''Return to Hundred Acre Wood'' has a SwappedRoles situation where a HeroicBSOD-ridden Rabbit crashes at Pooh's house, while Pooh is polite about it, he is quietly mournful after Rabbit snacks on most of his honey.
122* IdiotHoudini: While he's not rampantly destructive as many other examples, Pooh tends to get away with a lot of InnocentlyInsensitive behaviour, especially around Piglet and Rabbit.
123* IHaveManyNames: His real name is Edward Bear. He's known as either Winnie-the-Pooh or Pooh Bear, but everyone calls him Pooh for short. And that's not counting Tigger's [[TheNicknamer nicknames]].
124** He also lives under the name of Sanders— but this just means he [[LiteralMetaphor has the name written over the door of his home, and lives under it.]]
125** The real-life explanation for his names is that Christopher Robin's teddy bear, Edward Bear was renamed after Christopher Robin became fascinated with a Canadian bear named Winnipeg and merged that with the name of his befriended wild swan, Pooh. In-universe the "Winnie" part is never explained but the [[ToiletHumor "Pooh"]] part of his name comes from his tendency to [[ThePigPen attract flies from often being slow and covered in honey.]]
126* InnocentlyInsensitive: Being a bear of very little brain Pooh is iconically sweet natured but thoughtless. A lot of his quotes from throughout the franchise could be interpreted as dry insults, if Pooh wasn't nearly always saying them with utter innocent sincerity.
127* InSeriesNickname: His real name is Edward, but he has a host of nicknames: "Winnie the Pooh", "Pooh", "Pooh Bear", "Bear", etc.
128* JerkassBall: '''Big time''' in the official 1980s comic strip from King Features Syndicate. [[https://imgur.com/gallery/RLIHm See for yourself]].
129* KindheartedSimpleton: Most of the supporting cast aren't far off, but Pooh is the most noticable as being an equally brainless and sweet-natured character.
130* TheKlutz: Pooh, being not very bright and rather rotund, has a tendency to trip, tumble, bump into things or get stuck.
131* MellowFellow: Generally a laid-back character who lets nothing get him down. He's never even gotten ''angry''.
132* NeverLearnedToRead: Few of the animals in the Hundred Acre Wood are that grammar fluent but Pooh is consistently the worst. Even in ''Book Of Pooh'' which has many a ReadingIsCoolAesop tends to often convey that Pooh needs Owl's help to understand written words.
133* NiceGuy: The most sincerely sweet and friendly member of the woods.
134* OnlyKnownByTheirNickname: Just by the end of the first page of the first story, we are introduced to Edward Bear, also known as Winnie-the-Pooh. When the narrator asks Christopher Robin about the name "Winnie", what with him being a boy bear, Christopher Robin explains that he's Winnie-ther-Pooh and asks the narrator if he knows what ''ther'' means. By page 2, the story proper has begun, and it begins by stating that Winnie-the-Pooh lived in the forest all by himself under the name of Sanders. (It's quickly revealed to mean he ''literally'' lives under it, as it's written in gold letters over the entrance to his home.) So he's Edward Bear, his house is the Sanders residence, and he's known as Winnie-ther-Pooh, frequently shortened to just Pooh.
135%%* OnlySaneMan: On the rare occasion Rabbit or Eeyore aren't picking up this role, it's him.
136* OutOfFocus: In the Disneytoon Studios films, he tends to play a supporting role more often, due to numerous [[ADayInTheLimelight character orientated features]] and [[BreakoutCharacter Tigger and Roo often taking the main character role more often]].
137* PingPongNaivete: Often completely clueless of the goings on around, other times however, he is well aware of the stupidity of his friends.
138* ThePollyanna: Nothing really manages to keep Pooh down for long, and he's quick to both cheer up and to cheer others up.
139* RedIsHeroic: He wears a red shirt and is TheHero of the franchise.
140* SeriousBusiness: "Hunny". He will go to great lengths to get it.
141* SickEpisode: In "Darby, Solo Sleuth" from ''My Friends Tigger and Pooh'', he catches a cold, along with Tigger and Roo.
142* SimpleMindedWisdom: Despite being a dimwitted character, he often has surprisingly clear thoughts and moments of brilliance.
143* SmartBall: Of all the inhabitants of the Forest, Pooh is by far the most likely to get sudden flashes of brilliance. For someone who is so consistently portrayed as dull and slow-witted, he has surprisingly many good ideas when they're needed, to the point where he almost borders on GeniusDitz at times. This is mostly prevalent in the original novels, but the Disney version definitely has his moments as well.
144* SpeaksFluentAnimal: In ''The Book of Pooh'', more than one episode shows that he can communicate with bees.
145* SpeciesSurname: Apparently, his real name is Edward ''Bear''.
146* SweetTooth: Mainly eats "hunny", but seems very keen on most sweet things.
147* TemporaryBulkChange: Zigzagged. He gets stuck in Rabbit's front door, then apparently gets thinner and comes out, but he never looks fatter or thinner.
148* ThinkingTic: He taps his paw against the side of his head and goes, “Think, think, think…”
149* TrademarkFavoriteFood: Again, "Hunny." He's absolutely ''nuts'' for the stuff.
150* VagueAge: Christopher Robin states that Pooh will be 99 when he's a hundred. Christopher Robin is six now, making Pooh five. Except, while he is naive, Pooh does not seem like a child, and he lives alone.
151[[/folder]]
152
153[[folder:Tigger]]
154!!Tigger
155[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/tigger_4.jpg]]
156[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/tigger.jpg]]
157[[caption-width-right:250:''[[CharacterCatchphrase "But the most wonderful thing about Tiggers is I'm the only one!"]]'']]
158
159-->'''Voiced by:''' Creator/PaulWinchell (regularly 1968-1983, 1988-1989; occasionally 1990-1999); Sam Edwards (Disneyland Records); Will Ryan (''Welcome to Pooh Corner''); [[Creator/JimCummings1952 Jim Cummings]] (regularly 1990-1991, 2000-present; occasionally 1989, 1996-1999), Tessho Genda (Japanese)
160
161Hyperactive stuffed tiger with a fondness for bouncing. Known to grate on others' nerves (especially Rabbit) with his tendency to bounce head on into others as a form of welcome. Initially found somewhat intimidating or annoying by the other members of the Hundred Acre Wood upon his arrival, Pooh and the others eventually warmed up to him and consider him a close friend, especially Roo.
162----
163* AgeLift: While it's hard to tell exactly how old the animals are in books or cartoons, Tigger at least is ''clearly'' a lot older in the Disney version. In the books he's more clearly a child who needs someone to look after him, and who ends up adopted by Kanga. (In ''Return to the Hundred Acre Wood'', he's unable to say how old he is, but when Rabbit guesses that he's about twelve years old he's all on board with that -- because having an age means he can have a birthday.) The Disney version, by contrast, lives on his own and speaks in a very adult baritone voice, even if his childlike personality remains largely the same.
164* AmbiguousSituation: In "Eeyore Gets Bounced", it's never revealed if he did intentionally "bounce" Eeyore into the river as a joke, or if he really did just accidentally push him into the river while coughing.
165* AnthropomorphicShift: In the books, Tigger goes around on all fours, like Eeyore. In the Disney adaptations, he still occasionally walks on all fours, but has shifted to frequent bipedalism.
166* AscendedExtra: He didn't appear in the first book at all, and though he gets to play a prominent role in four of the ten chapters in the second book, it was the Disney version that really made him the major character he's known as today. Tie-in media following the novel canon still took this to heart and often use Tigger more prominently.
167* AttackHello: Bouncing/Pouncing on anyone is his way of saying hello, and it can happen at any time and anywhere to anyone.
168* AttentionDeficitOohShiny: Sometimes comes across as having a severe case of this, especially in the Disney version.
169* BadassAdorable: He's a cute plush toy like the rest of his friends, but he's also the first of them to charge into danger or try to fight if it looks like it needs to happen.
170* BigBrotherInstinct: To Roo, especially in later features.
171* BigEntrance: Expect him to literally bounce you the moment he first appears.
172* BigThinShortTrio: The Thin to Pooh's Big and Piglet's Short.
173* BrooklynRage: Sorta, Disney's Tigger is voiced with a vaguely Brooklyn-esque accent, and is slightly more obnoxious and rambunctious than most of the Hundred Acre Wood's other residents, though he's rather [[ThePollyanna cheerful and harmless overall]].
174* BreakoutCharacter: Tigger wasn't really a major character in the books, appearing only in the second book, ''The House At Pooh Corner''. In the Disney adaptations, he got bigger and bigger roles until he ended up as the franchise's main star apart from Pooh himself.
175* BreakTheCutie: Even for Tigger this happens in agonising doses in the Disney canon:
176** In ''Tigger Too'' he becomes despondent after he is forbidden to bounce out of a promise. The others are so heartbroken by this sight that they take it back and want the old bouncy Tigger again (though Rabbit takes a little convincing).
177** In the ''New Adventures'' episode "Stripes" he suffers an identity crisis after his stripes are washed off and his friends can no longer recognise him. This is resolved when Eeyore points out he is still Tigger regardless and his stripes are restored.
178** ''The Tigger Movie'' does this ''brutally'' to Tigger, who becomes increasingly desperate and heartbroken when he can't find any Tigger family to speak of. It hits worse when his friends try to pose as Tiggers out of sympathy and he realises they were lying to him, [[HeelRealization hitting them with this trope in turn]].
179* BroughtToYouByTheLetterS: In some winter episodes of ''New Adventures'', he wears a sweater with the letter "T" for "Tigger".
180* CatsHateWater: Zigzagged. He hates baths, but claims he's a good swimmer (possibly mirroring how real tigers are good swimmers). Then again, he doesn't like being pushed into the water, but hating being pushed into water is pretty normal. He's also the only cat, which makes it hard to tell if this trope applies.
181* CartoonyTail: In the Disney version, which explains that his bouncing is done by using his tail as a pogo stick.
182* CharacterCatchphrase: "Hoo-hoo-hoo-hoo!" and "[[ButNowIMustGo TTFN: Ta-Ta For Now!]]". Also his signature growl.
183* CharacterSignatureSong: "The Wonderful Thing About Tiggers" is his his personal anthem and most well-known song.
184* CheerfulChild: He can be said to be this in the original novels, as he is clearly very young and inexperienced and needs someone to look after him. He was aged up for the Disney version (even if his demeanor is much the same).
185* CloudCuckoolander: Very wacky, thinking all sorts of strange thoughts like he can fly or the tablecloth was a monster.
186* CoolBigBro: He is this in Roo's eyes. It varies, though he definitely has his moments, especially the Disney rendition.
187* CordonBleughChef: ''The Book of Pooh'' has him making peanut butter sandwiches that include various other ingredients such as pickles, showing he has some odd taste in foodstuffs.
188* DoesNotLikeSpam:
189** "Tiggers don't like honey!"
190** In the original books, notably his debut in ''The House at Pooh Corner'', he doesn't like haycorns or thistles either. In fact, he's a downright PickyEater who has huge problems finding something he actually likes to eat.
191* EveryoneHasStandards: Some Disney works such as ''The Great Honey Pot Robbery'' and ''The Search for Christopher Robin'' have him protecting hunny despite his dislike of the stuff.
192* FamilyOfChoice: In the Tigger movie, Tigger realizes that the other members of the Hundred Acre Wood love him (and each other) like one big family despite their differences.
193--> '''Tigger''': ''*surprised*'' You mean... you fellas are my family?
194--> '''Pooh''': ''*sad*'' I'm afraid we have nothing better to offer...
195--> '''Tigger''': ''*looks pensive, then breaks out in an excited smile*'' Well, of course not, Pooh boy! 'Cause there's nothing better than the best!
196* FishOutOfWater: Initially, he doesn't really fit in with the rest of the residents of the Hundred Acres. He gets over this over time.
197* {{Flight}}: Subverted. He thinks Tiggers can fly, but finds out they can't.
198%%* [[FourTemperamentEnsemble Five Temperament Ensemble]]: He's the Sanguine member of the main cast.
199* TheGlomp: His entire shtick is to "bounce" people, usually from out of nowhere, as his standard form of greeting.
200* HappilyAdopted: By Kanga, in the original novels. In the Disney version, he lives on his own (but frequently hangs around Kanga and Roo).
201* HatesBaths: Was forcibly bathed twice in the second TV series and hated it both times. The first time, the bath resulted in [[spoiler: his stripes being washed off]], and he was seen coughing and sputtering throughout, but on the second occasion, he finally admitted that they weren't so bad, while adding that he'd wait until "maybe next year" for another one.
202* IconicSequelCharacter: As noted above under BreakoutCharacter, he was ''completely absent'' from the original book, debuting in the second story of ''The House at Pooh Corner''. He's actually the only book character to make his debut in the second book rather than the first. This is also the case in Disney's original featurettes, as he doesn't appear in ''Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree'', but makes his debut in ''Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day''.
203* IdiotHoudini: Similar to Pooh, a lot of Tigger's chaotic or foolish antics tend to avoid repercussions (as much as Rabbit ''tries'' to reel him in, he nearly always fails). He does sometimes get punishment when his actions risk leaning him into {{Jerkass}} territory however.
204* InconsistentColoring: Much like Eeyore, the white parts of Tigger's fur are colored yellow in merchandise and promo art.
205* InnocentlyInsensitive: He means well but his chaotic playfulness and oblivious attitude can sometimes make him seem very inconsiderate. He drives Rabbit crazy with this behaviour in particular.
206* JerkassBall: He's as nice as they come; but he does have moments where he's quite thoughtless and inconsiderate. The book version's jerkishness is usually limited to pouncing on people when they're not expecting it, but the Disney version can get surprisingly (though unintentionally) mean at times. This is most prominent in the ''[[WesternAnimation/TheNewAdventuresOfWinnieThePooh New Adventures]]'' series, but is definitely there in the original featurettes too.
207* {{Keet}}: He's extremely hyperactive and never stops ''doing'' something.
208* TheLancer: Pooh may be the main protagonist, but Tigger follows closely behind him in terms of being the leader. With his hyperactivity, in fact, he tends to be the driver for many plots in follow-up media, given Pooh's own fairly placid and passive nature.
209* LastOfHisKind: "But the most wonderful thing about Tiggers is I'm the only one!" Only in ''The Tigger Movie'' does he show any true concern over this.
210* ALizardNamedLiz: His name is a misspelling of "Tiger" ("T-I-double guh-err").
211* MadLibsCatchphrase: "[X] is what Tiggers do best." X can be any activity relevant to the plot.
212* {{Malaproper}}: In some series, particularly the "Learning with Pooh" series, though some of them may have actually been intentional.
213--> "And time's fun when you're having flies!"
214* ManChild: Despite being one of the largest members of the gang, he is playful and irresponsible.
215* MilesGloriosus: [[DependingOnTheWriter On occasion]]. Other times [[FearlessFool he's too oddball to really care about his own well being]]. His rather fickle nature can lead him to interchange between cowardly to suicidally fearless in a matter of seconds.
216* NiceGuy: Despite his JerkassBall moments and being InnocentlyInsensitive, Tigger is extremely cheerful and friendly.
217* TheNicknamer: In the Disney version, he's got a nickname for everyone, and ''loads'' of them for Rabbit. Examples include: Pooh - "Buddy Bear" / "Buddy Boy", Rabbit - "Long Ears" / "Ra-Ra" / "Bunny Boy", Piglet - "Piglet, Old Pal" / "Pigaletto", Eeyore - "Donkey Boy", Owl - "Buddy Bird", Roo/Lumpy - "Little Roo-ster / "Lumpster".
218* NightmareFetishist: In many of the Disney cartoons, he can't get enough of scary stuff, and he even sings an awesome DisneyAcidSequence about his nightmare fetishism in the Halloween special.
219* OddFriendship: Tigger and Eeyore couldn't be more opposite in terms of personality, but that doesn't stop Tigger from considering the old donkey one of his best buddies.
220* AnOddPlaceToSleep: Sometimes he sleeps in a drawer.
221* OOCIsSeriousBusiness: Tigger is very hard to bring down and an eternal NiceGuy. But when he discovers his friends' disguised themselves as his family (long story) in ''The Tigger Movie'', he vents an uncharacteristic moment of TranquilFury before heading out to find his "family", making it obvious they've hurt him pretty badly.
222** In fact, almost all of the climax of the movie relies on Tigger being out of character; during the blizzard scene, he actually ''talks back'' at Rabbit when the latter, who was leading his friends to rescue Tigger, was berating him for wandering out at such a time, when he would normally take Rabbit's rants in stride. It's a jarring scene that shows that even ''Tigger'' [[BewareTheNiceOnes has his limits.]]
223* PawprintStamping: In the final story, Tigger's signature, rendered in the text as "BLOT", is just a pawprint.
224* PickyEater:
225** In the original novel, this is actually one of his defining traits, combined with his usual MilesGloriosus over-enthusiasm. His introduction chapter has him and Pooh searching for something that Tiggers actually like to eat. Tigger cheerfully claims that Tiggers like everything, and whatever Pooh suggests, he'll say it's his very favorite... that is, until he actually tastes it, after which he'll say that Tiggers like everything in the world ''except'' what he just had. The list of exceptions to what Tiggers like keeps growing all through the chapter, until he finally comes across the one thing he ''does'' like to eat: extract of malt, Roo's "strengthening medicine."
226** The Disney version does include a ShoutOut to this when establishing Tigger's dislike of honey (which comes and goes DependingOnTheWriter), but the desperate search for something he can actually eat doesn't happen and extract of malt is never mentioned.
227* ThePigPen: In addition to hating baths, Tigger likes bouncing around in the mud. At one point, he even rhetorically asks, "What's wrong with being dirty?"
228* RedOniBlueOni: The red to Rabbit's blue, being all impulse and enthusiasm in comparison to Rabbit's patient thoughtfulness.
229* SadClown: Tigger is usually hyperactive and infallibly cheerful. When he is truly brought down however, it is a rather tragic sight. Utilized in universe, all the others are insistant on "un-bouncing" Tigger, [[HeelRealization though are so heartbroken by the depressed shell remaining when they succeed they immediately go back on it.]]
230* SayingSoundEffectsOutLoud: "{{GASP}}!"
231%%* SensitiveGuyAndManlyMan: His manly man to Piglet's sensitive guy.
232* SickEpisode: The episode "Darby, Solo Sleuth" of ''My Friends Tigger and Pooh'' has him catch a cold, along with Pooh and Roo.
233* SignatureLaugh: In the cartoons, he has a "hoo hoo hoo" laugh.
234* SingleSpecimenSpecies:
235** He refer to "Tiggers" as if that is his species, but as he puts it in his song, "But the most wonderful thing about Tiggers is I'm the only one!" Possibly justified, since he's a living stuffed animal.
236** Some works contradict this, He mentions his mom in ''New Adventures'', and a picture of his parents appears in ''Pooh's Heffalump Movie''. In ''Return to the Hundred Acre Wood'', Christopher Robin tells him that he's a tiger and that there are other tigers in Asia (though he says nothing about other ''Tiggers'').
237* SixthRanger: In the books. He is the only major character introduced in ''The House at Pooh Corner''.
238* SmallNameBigEgo: Bragging's what Tiggers do best.
239* SpeechImpediment: Speaks with a lisp.
240* TookALevelInKindness: The Disney version, post- ''The Tigger Movie.'' While it's not too blatant, he does go through a bit of CharacterDevelopment in that movie, learning to be more considerate towards his non-Tigger friends. This development actually sticks, because in productions after that, his JerkassBall moments and MilesGloriosus tendencies are toned down considerably -- though his hyperactive enthusiasm hasn't dropped one bit, nor has he become any more inclined to think before he acts, so he remains the most chaotic element in the Hundred Acre Wood.
241* TrademarkFavoriteFood: In the original novels, it's extract of malt, which is one of the few things he likes. ''The Book of Pooh'' gives him a love of peanut butter sandwiches. In one episode of ''Series/WelcomeToPoohCorner'', he also became obsessed with spaghetti, but got over it after eating too much gave him a stomachache.
242* VibrantOrange: Tigger is an orange-colored, hyperactive stuffed tiger who loves to bounce.
243* VitriolicBestBuds: With Rabbit in the Disney works. The vitriol is mostly on Rabbit's side, since Tigger's carefree habit of knocking him over or trampling through Rabbit's garden irritates the bunny.
244* VocalEvolution: Listen to Paul Winchell as Tigger in the ''Many Adventures'' shorts, then compare it to ''New Adventures''. They hardly even sound like the same person, as Winchell's voice had gotten raspier by the time of ''New Adventures'', and his lisp is stronger too. This evolution is why Jim Cummings took over the role permanently from ''The Tigger Movie'' onwards, who himself has gotten much more gruff and better at mimicking Winchell's "mannerisisms" for the character compared to when he started filling in for him in ''New Adventures''.
245* YourSizeMayVary: In most Disney adaptations, he is about the same height as Pooh or only slightly taller than him, however in Disneytoon Studios works and especially "My Friends Tigger & Pooh", he is taller than Pooh by a head.
246[[/folder]]
247
248[[folder:Piglet]]
249!!Piglet
250[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/piglet_1.jpg]]
251[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/piglet.jpg]]
252[[caption-width-right:250:''[[CharacterCatchphrase "Oh, dear. Oh, d-d-d-d-dear, dear!"]]'']]
253
254-->'''Voiced by:''' John Fiedler (1968-1983, 1988-2005); Phil Baron (''Welcome to Pooh Corner''); Travis Oates (2005-present); Nick Mohammed (''Christopher Robin''), Kiyoshi Komiyama (Original Japanese voice until his death in 2003), Mitsuru Ogata (current Japanese voice, alternated with Kioyshi Komiyama in 2001-2003); Santiago Ziesmer (Germany, currently)
255
256Extremely timid stuffed piglet. Being someone of such little size makes Piglet rather paranoid and fearful often needing the support of his friends, nevertheless he's very gentle and caring little guy all in all and will face his fears for the sake of others.
257----
258* AdaptedOut: Attempted but failed. Disney omitted Piglet from ''The Honey Tree'', with Gopher intended to take his place in their take on the franchise. Fans of original stories complained however, leading Piglet to be introduced in ''A Blustery Day'' and become a central character from that point on.
259* BewareTheNiceOnes: It's very downplayed, but there are sporadic occasions where Piglet's very long fuse will finally wear out. One key example is in the ''New Adventures'' episode "Piglet's Poohetry" where he initiates a HumiliationConga onto an exceptionally inconsiderate Tigger in their ImagineSpot gone wild. He is also driven to an outburst a handful of times in ''The Book of Pooh''. Even when still in his usual better moods, Piglet, when compelled enough, can be one of the most courageous and unflappable animals in the wood, as demonstrated in ''Piglet's Big Movie''.
260* BigThinShortTrio: The Short to Pooh's Big and Tigger's Thin.
261* ButtMonkey: Things just always seem to go wrong for Piglet, which is played for laughs.
262* CharacterCatchphrase: "Oh dear" (usually said with a stammer).
263* CharacterDevelopment: Arguably, he's the only character in the original novels who goes through genuine CharacterDevelopment. He starts out as a timid dreamer who, in his desperate attempts to appear big and brave, usually blows his chances when he gets them and is blind to the positive qualities he ''does'' possess. In the latter parts of the second novel, he learns to recognize and appreciate his own strengths, and in the end becomes the big hero of the book. You could say that he starts out as a LovableCoward but turns into a CowardlyLion. Averted with the Disney version, who is a CowardlyLion from the get-go due to the later stories being adapted earlier.
264* CharacterExaggeration: Inverted in ''The Book of Pooh'', where Piglet is still somewhat timid and naive, but more prone to stand up for himself or act as the voice of reason, and in a handful of cases even shows signs of a temper towards the others.
265* CheerfulChild: In the Soviet ''Vinni Pukh'' adaptions, Piglet is a much cheerier and less timid character.
266* TheChewToy: If it can go wrong for Piglet, it probably will go wrong for Piglet.
267* CompositeCharacter: Perhaps one reason for Piglet's cheerier attitude in the Soviet ''Vinni Pukh'' adaptions is that he's used as the stand-in character for Christopher Robin, who doesn't appear in the cartoons at all. Since the stories closely follow the book plots, Piglet is the one who says and does all the things that Christopher Robin did in the books, something which certainly alters his characterization a bit.
268* CowardlyLion: Will perform impressive acts of bravery when a push becomes a shove, though he's more likely to do this in the Disney version than in the original novels.
269* DemotedToExtra: {{Subverted}}. The Disney version occasionally tries to put him on sidelines, but it never seems to last; Piglet is simply too popular a character, even gaining his own movie at one point. This is even more notable considering [[WhatCouldHaveBeen Piglet wasn't even intended to appear in the Disney adaptions initially]].
270* EarlyInstallmentCharacterDesignDifference: A curious example, but take a look at Piglet's one-second appearance in the original intro song (the "there's Rabbit, and Piglet, and there's Owl" part). Someone at Disney must have done some ''heavy'' redesigning before Piglet made his "official" animated debut in the second featurette.
271* ExtremeDoormat: Because he's so gentle and so timid, he's easily overawed or unwittingly bullied into doing whatever the others want.
272* ExpressiveEars: His ears go downwards whenever nervous or sad.
273%%* [[FourTemperamentEnsemble Five Temperament Ensemble]]: He fits the Leukine template of the main characters.
274* HatesBaths: In one story in the book he replaces Roo and Kanga gives him a bath. The first thing he does when he drops the act is rolling in the dirt. The Disney version zig-zags this, for example in "Fish Out of Water" he is seen taking a bath, while in "Piglet's Big Movie" (which actually adapted a chapter from the original book) he prefers to be cooked rather than bathed.
275* HeightAngst: In the Disney version especially, Piglet frequently has low self esteem over being a very small animal:
276** A plot pivot in ''WesternAnimation/PigletsBigMovie'', where in spite of Piglet's SelfDeprecation, it's discovered he's recurrently managed to be vital to the gang's agendas.
277** The episode "Biglet" from ''Series/TheBookOfPooh'' features Piglet getting fed up with being short, and starts wearing stilts, giant gloves, and a amplifier in his mouth.
278** In ''A Perfect Little Piglet'' from the Disney picture book series ''Out and About With Pooh'', he is upset about his height after knocking down some honey pots from Pooh's shelves from being too small to reach. Then later he gets Eeyore's tail from under a bush, admiring the view while doing so, and feels better after Eeyore comments on how wonderful it must be to be small.
279* HeterosexualLifePartners: With Pooh, who eventually offers to share his home after [[spoiler:Piglet gives his up to Owl]].
280* HiccupHijinks: In "To Catch a Hiccup", he gets the hiccups and it takes ''all day'' to make them go. The suggested cures are water, standing upside down with someone on top of him, and scaring the hiccups away.
281* LovableCoward: He may be a scaredy-cat of a character, but he's also one of the most lovable and likeable characters.
282* MessyPig: Shows signs of this: when Kanga gives him a bath, he doesn't feel comfortable until he can roll in the dirt again. In a subversion, he's also a bit of a NeatFreak. The Disney version eliminates this altogether.
283* MinorLivingAlone: Zigzagged. In the books, he starts out living alone, but ends up moving in with Pooh. Despite ''Blustery Day'' adapting this plot point, the later Disney cartoons keep Piglet in his original home. His age is unknown (although he ''thinks'' he might be three or four) but his name ''is'' "Piglet", so he's probably a kid.
284* NeatFreak: Mostly in the Disney cartoons, instead of being a MessyPig like in the books. In his first scene, [[EstablishingCharacterMoment he's trying to sweep fallen leaves from his property and is bothered by the wind blowing in more]].
285* NervousWreck: He's afraid of just about everything new or potentially dangerous.
286* NiceGuy: Along with Pooh, Piglet is probably the most compassionate and caring member of the Hundred Acre Wood gang.
287* NoRespectGuy: Being a very small animal (and an ExtremeDoormat at that), Piglet commonly gets pushed around or ignored by the others, [[InnocentlyInsensitive accidentally or not]]. The Disney version, of course, is more liable to [[ThrowTheDogABone get vindication of some sort]] (as exemplified in ''Piglet's Big Movie'').
288* OOCIsSeriousBusiness: When ''Piglet'' gets pissed off, you know it's serious.
289** The same applies to when he's genuinely depressed, to the point ''[[TheEeyore Eeyore]]'' once lampshaded it in "Chez Piglet".
290* SecondEpisodeIntroduction: Since Disney originally intended to replace Piglet with the more "American" Gopher, Piglet's debut in the Disney franchise was delayed until ''The Blustery Day'' after fan outcry forced Walt's hand.
291* SensitiveGuyAndManlyMan: Of Pooh's two best friends, he is the sensitive guy to Tigger's manly man. Pooh himself is in-between.
292* ShrinkingViolet: Shy and timid, Piglet tends to withdraw into himself.
293* SickeninglySweet: In-Universe, Piglet, or rather what he's into, occasionally causes this reaction from Tigger in ''New Adventures''. When Piglet attempts to read a poem in "Piglet's Poohetry" or tell a story in "The Monster Frankenpooh", Tigger is utterly sickened by how overly saccharine it is and decides to change it to suit [[NightmareFetishist his own tastes]].
294* TrademarkFavoriteFood: Acorns, also called "haycorns" by Pooh.
295* VagueAge: In the Disney version at least, despite being a [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin "piglet"]] his matured voice and arguably more sensible personality than many of the others leaves it ambiguous as to whether he is much younger than Pooh. {{T|heNicknamer}}igger referring him to both "kiddo" and "ol' pal" at times certainly doesn't help.
296* VocalEvolution: John Fiedler's Piglet voice got breathier from ''New Adventures'' until his death in 2005.
297[[/folder]]
298
299[[folder:Eeyore]]
300!!Eeyore
301[[quoteright:337:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/eeyore_9.jpg]]
302[[quoteright:337:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/eeyore9.jpg]]
303[[caption-width-right:337:''[[CharacterCatchphrase "Thanks for noticin' me."]]'']]
304
305-->'''Voiced by:''' Ralph Wright (1966-1983); Ron Feinberg (1981); Ron Gans (1983-1986); Creator/PeterCullen (1988-2010, 2017-present); Creator/BradGarrett (''VideoGame/DisneysAnimatedStorybook'', ''Film/ChristopherRobin'', ''WesternAnimation/RalphBreaksTheInternet''); Creator/GreggBerger (''WesternAnimation/WinnieThePoohSingASongWithPoohBear'', video game appearances, ''Mini Adventures'' dubs (''WesternAnimation/PigletsBigMovie'', ''WesternAnimation/PoohsHeffalumpMovie'')); Bud Luckey (2011-2017), Jim Meskimen (''Once Upon a Studio''); Creator/ThurlRavenscroft (Disneyland Records), Creator/HenryDjanik (European French, 1977-2000), Taro Ishida (Original Japanese voice until 2013), Isamu Ishizuka (current Japanese voice)
306
307Stuffed donkey with a deeply cynical and borderline mentally depressed view of life. Often around to share a negative, down-in-the-dumps view of things, though is also rather philosophical and can give great wisdom at times.
308----
309* AccessoryWearingCartoonAnimal: He wears a bow on his tail in the cartoons and ''occasionally'' in the books.
310* AdaptationalIntelligence: In addition to being more mellow and wholesome, the Disney take on Eeyore tends to have more spurts of sagely wisdom and observation, compared to the books Eeyore who was often as much of a KnowNothingKnowItAll as Rabbit and Owl.
311* AdaptationalNiceGuy: His Disney incarnation is ''far'' nicer and more sympathetic than the snarky and grumpy Eeyore of the original books.
312* AdaptationalPersonalityChange: In the Gold Key comics, Eeyore is much more emotive and actually very prone to excitement or fear, a total contrast to his DullSurprise characterization in nearly every other Disney work.
313* AdvertisedExtra: Although he is a secondary character in the series and doesn't play a major role, he appears in merchandising almost as often as Pooh, Tigger or Piglet, and sometimes even more often than the latter.
314* TheBigGuy: One of the bigger members of the Hundred Acre Wood.
315* BirthdayEpisode: One story focuses on Piglet and Winnie-the-Pooh giving him birthday presents.
316* CharacterCatchphrase: "Thanks for noticing me."
317* TheChewToy: He sometimes gets the short end of the stick, though not nearly as much [[TheEeyore as he views himself]].
318* CivilizedAnimal: He walks on all fours and eats thistles, but he can talk and he lives in a house (albeit a makeshift house).
319* TheCynic: Eeyore's main personality is being a pessimistic and gloomy sad-sack.
320* DeadpanSnarker: Eeyore is good at this, much more so in the novels than in the Disney version (not that the latter doesn't have his moments however, especially in ''The Book of Pooh'' and the 2011 movie).
321* DemotedToExtra: During the 2000's, he was relegated to much smaller roles (especially as stories began to focus more on Tigger, Piglet or Roo). Especially evident during the Heffalump movies where he's only around for a handful of scenes each and in the first one, he's completely forgotten by the others. He bitterly lampshades it, for once, with some genuine poignancy.
322-->'''Eeyore''': [[SarcasmMode Don't let me hold you up]].
323* TheEeyore: The TropeNamer. He's perpetually pessimistic and negative, and his most famous catchphrase is "Thanks for noticing me". Ironically, during one episode of the cartoon series, the entire cast notices Eeyore, just sitting on a hill and staring and try to cheer him up. The episode ends with Piglet asking Eeyore why he was so sad while Eeyore is still sitting on the hilltop, watching a beautiful sunset, and Eeyore simply asks "What makes you think I'm sad?"
324* FlatJoy: The Disney version occasionally shows this, especially from ''New Adventures'' and onward. It's always PlayedForLaughs.
325** In the original books, he does this as well.
326--> "Ha-ha," said Eeyore bitterly. "Merriment and what-not. Don't apologize. It's just what ''would'' happen."
327%%* [[FourTemperamentEnsemble Five Temperament Ensemble]]: Melancholic
328* HatesEveryoneEqually: The biggest difference between the novels and Disney version is that while the Disney version is merely SelfDeprecating and miserable about himself, the novel version is disdainful about everyone and everything ''around him'' too.
329* HiddenDepths:
330** Some stories in both works show Eeyore desiring to socialise despite his usual aloofness. A few episodes of ''New Adventures'' in particular show Eeyore resenting his anti-social personality, and wanting to emulate Pooh or Tigger's happy personalities [[IJustWantToHaveFriends so he could fit in]]. Most of the time, the others were more off-put by the StepfordSmiler Eeyore and insisted he was fine being his usual miserable self.
331** In ''Return to the Hundred Acre Wood'', after an attempt at starting a school, pretty much everyone designated a teacher bails on the idea after the disastrous first day. Though surprisingly Eeyore seemed rather taken to being headmaster, and could sometimes still be seen wearing his cape.
332* {{Hypochondria}}: Not normally, but in 2011 film, when he thinks Owl has a cold, he says, "I'll probably catch it too" and later claims he has a cold when he clearly does not. He also thinks he has a cold in the ''My Friends Tigger and Pooh'' episode "Darby, Solo Sleuth". In the episodes "Donkey for a Day" and "My Hero" he wanted to call a doctor.
333* InconsistentColoring: Most modern promotional artwork and merchandising depicts Eeyore with blue fur and a flesh-colored muzzle (including the image on the right), likely to give him a more florescent and noticeable design compared to his grey scheme, thus making him more appealing to young children (granted however [[{{Pun}} "blue"]] suits his character in a sense).
334* IncrediblyLameFun: He finds joy in taking a popped balloon in and out of an empty honeypot.
335* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: In the books. While he may be snarky and aloof his heart's still in the right place.
336* JumpingToConclusionsDiagnosis: When he thinks Owl has sneezed, he decides that Owl must have a cold and he will catch one too.
337* ALizardNamedLiz: He is named after the noise a donkey makes.
338* NiceGuy: In the Disney movies. He's lovable, helpful, sweet, and loyal despite his still cynical and depressed outlook on life.
339* OddFriendship: Stoic, pessimistic Eeyore and energetic, cheerful Tigger.
340* OnlySaneMan: Often shows the most common sense over the others, such as the episode "Stripes" from ''New Adventures'', where Eeyore's the only one to recognize Tigger after his stripes were washed off.
341* PersonalRaincloud: Sometimes, when he is very depressed, a rain cloud appears over him.
342* PunnyName: [[invoked]] His name is meant to resemble the onomatopoeic sound of a donkey's braying ([[AccentDepundent though it's a bit more obvious when pronounced with a British accent]], as Creator/AAMilne would have said it).
343* RetCanon: ''Return To the Hundred Acre Wood'' makes him a bit less of a {{Jerkass}} and he shows more signs of a hidden jovial side, much like his Disney counterpart. Incidentally his Disney counterpart became more sarcastic and grouchy akin the original novels over the years, essentially meaning both takes on Eeyore almost met halfway and became identical.
344* SapientSteed: He's the only quadrupedal member of the group and sometimes serves as a mount for the other characters, like when he serves as the Masked Bear's noble steed in ''New Adventures''.
345* SmallNameBigEgo: In the books, Eeyore is surprisingly entitled, believing he should be beloved by the others despite barely welcoming any time they show their affection. He believes Pooh's party is in fact for him and begins an acceptance speech confusing everyone, and boasts about learning to spell "A", only to throw a tantrum after finding out Rabbit can too.
346* TheStoic: Ironically enough. Despite his trademark depressive personality, Eeyore is usually the least likely to become highly fearful or upset in a dire situation, his usual emotional range usually never straying past being somewhat glum and negative. Whatever makes his life is so miserable, he is at least accustomed to it.
347--> '''Pooh:''' Are you alright, Eeyore?
348--> '''Eeyore:''' Been better. Been worse too.
349* SurroundedByIdiots: Milne's suggested reason for his depressed attitude in the original novels. In the Disney adaptions, he's a much friendlier guy, just ''very'' negative in the most simplistic of terms, though he does have bouts of this trope at times, especially being TheChewToy.
350* TalkingToPlants: In "Eeyi Eeyi Eeyore", he talks to the plant he is taking care of and even sings songs to it.
351* TrademarkFavoriteFood: Thistles. This is mostly prominent in the original novels, but the Disney version has been known to chow down on a thistle or two as well.
352* VocalEvolution: Peter Cullen's Eeyore voice has gone through several over the years. When he first started in ''The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh'' the voice was a bit higher-pitched and less breathy. In the late 90's, it became breathier, and in his most recent appearances as Eeyore, it deepened and became near-identical to original Eeyore Ralph Wright. Meanwhile, Gregg Berger's take started off rather high-pitched in ''WesternAnimation/WinnieThePoohSingASongWithPoohBear'' but by ''VideoGame/KingdomHeartsII'' sounded much more like Peter Cullen's take.
353* WhenHeSmiles: Every now and then, the others succeed in getting an earnest smile out of him. It nearly always makes for some of the most heartwarming moments in the franchise. It's since been toned down since almost all modern merchandise now conveys Eeyore with a smile (if a characteristically subtle and weary one).
354[[/folder]]
355
356[[folder:Rabbit]]
357!!Rabbit
358[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rabbit_5.jpg]]
359[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rabbit9.jpg]]
360[[caption-width-right:250:''[[CharacterCatchphrase "Oh, my!"]]'']]
361
362-->'''Voiced by:''' Junius Matthews (1966-1977); Ray Erlenborn (1981); Will Ryan (1983-1986); Ken Sansom (1988-2010); Creator/TomKenny (2011-present), Creator/PeterCapaldi (''Christopher Robin'') Naoki Tatsuta (Current Japanese voice), Kei Tomiyama (1988)
363
364Grouchy [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin rabbit]] that is obsessed with getting order and peace in the Hundred Acre Wood. Often finds himself bothered by the antics of the other residents usually Pooh and Tigger, though granted he himself often takes wacky extremes to deal with problems.
365----
366* AdaptationDyeJob: Weirdly enough, he's a pale ''green'' color in ''WesternAnimation/TheNewAdventuresOfWinnieThePooh'', as opposed to yellow in all the other Disney productions[[note]]probably a mistake on the part of the ink-and-paint department[[/note]]. And in the original novels, he's brown. At least according to E. H. Shepard's color illustrations. He's also brown in ''Christopher Robin''.
367* AdaptationalNiceGuy:
368** Disney's Rabbit, while still a grouchy egomaniac, is far more prone to openly soft or humble moments than his novel counterpart.
369** The Soviet ''Vinni Pukh'' Rabbit is portrayed as a fairly polite and mild tempered individual, and something of an ExtremeDoormat about Pooh's scrounging.
370* AdaptationalSympathy:
371** Disney's Rabbit is still often a grumpy vindictive jerk, but much more of a ButtMonkey as a result of the others' bungling, making his lashing out seem more justified. He also tends to repent a lot more often following his crueler moments.
372** ''Vinni Pukh's'' is similarly quite put upon and even lacks his temper from other interpretations to offset it. Also compared to the books and Disney Pooh's gluttonous but friendly personality around Rabbit, the Soviet Pooh couldn't make it more obvious he is only interested in Rabbit so long as he has honey.
373* AmbiguouslyGay: Fitting to a T. Right down to the fact that it is played up for laughs (his high-pitched voice, his pink robe and hair curlers, multiple frilly aprons, the aptitude for ballet dancing as seen in ''WesternAnimation/PoohsGrandAdventure'', the latter of which he also called them "my dears" in, etc), it is never addressed/confirmed, nor implied that he has any interest in the opposite sex. Or either sex, for that matter. Averted in the 2011 film, in which he fantasizes himself as being surrounded by female rabbits.
374* AnthropomorphicShift: While the books' Rabbit was pretty much a normal if sapient rabbit, ''Vinni Pukh's'' Rabbit is a FunnyAnimal with a complete suit and spectacles. The Disney adaptation is also a downplayed cartoon FunnyAnimal.
375* BreakTheCutie: He suffers BreakTheHaughty moments very often, though in several cases, his downfalls are meant to be quite sympathetic:
376** In the ''New Adventures'' episode, "Find Her Keep Her", he raises a bluebird, Kessie as a baby, and struggles with the prospect of her growing up, and no longer needing him. He finally overcomes this when assured she loves him regardless.
377** In ''Pooh's Grand Adventure'' he leads the others in his usual by-the-book way, insisting on trusting the map over their own intuition. After realising it has only gotten them lost, he breaks down and mourns having failed the group. He later breaks out of it in the Skullasaurus cave to use his own wits to save the day.
378* BunniesForCuteness: He doesn't look at all unattractive, we'll give you that.
379* ButtMonkey: Just like with Piglet, bad things tend to happen to him. A lot. Perfectly capsulized by him in one line in ''Tigger Too'':
380-->'''Rabbit''': Why does it always have to be me? Why, oh, why, oh, why?
381* CampStraight: He's pretty campy, but in the 2011 film, he's shown fantasizing about having a harem of lady rabbits.
382* CharacterExaggeration: He became even more persnickety and grouchy in the Disney works. Also, his rivalry with Tigger only really lasted for one chapter in the books, with them usually only having sporadic, non-antagonistic interactions afterwards. Meanwhile, it's one of the most iconic dynamics of the Disney take.
383* TheChewToy: The various mishaps and scrapes he gets into are always played for laughs.
384* TheComicallySerious: The fact he's so strict, stern and serious is played for nothing but comedy.
385* ControlFreak: His obsession with keeping everything quiet, peaceful and orderly is his most defining characteristic.
386* DependingOnTheArtist: In ''Tigger Too'' Rabbit was given a slightly more worn down look and gained a more prominent jaw and buck teeth. Later Disney works drift in and out between using this or his earlier younger, buck teeth-less look from the previous two shorts.
387* DependingOnTheWriter: Is he a real rabbit or a stuffed one? He's the former in the books, but the Disney version zig-zags this. He certainly looks like a real animal, having real fur and no stitching, but in the ''New Adventures'' episode "How Much Is The Rabbit In That Window", he's a LivingToy like the other animals. Possibly serves as a MythologyGag, while a toy version of Rabbit appears in the live action framing devices, the real Christopher Robin didn't own a toy of Rabbit (or Owl, who is similarly organically designed).
388* DisproportionateRetribution: Hey, Tigger messed up his garden - that shit don't fly in the Hundred Acre Wood.
389* DitzyGenius: He's one of the smarter members of the Hundred Acre Wood, but he still can have his silly moments.
390* FantasticRacism: In the original book, he dislikes Kanga and Roo because they're foreign and conspires with Pooh and Piglet to kidnap the latter in order to get them to leave.
391* [[FourTemperamentEnsemble Five Temperament Ensemble]]: His temper and hostility marks him as the Choleric one.
392* TheFinickyOne: He's not easy to please, and that's a fact.
393* GenderFlip: He was portrayed as a female in the Disney Junior short series "Playdate with Winnie the Pooh".
394* GreenAndMean: He sports green fur in ''New Adventures'' and as usual, can be a jerk quite often.
395* HairTriggerTemper: Loses his temper when it comes to someone messing up his garden and/or Tigger's shenanigans.
396* HelicopterParents: With his adoptive daughter Kessie, to the point that he won’t let her learn how to fly. When Kessie returns as an adult, Rabbit still treats her like she were a helpless chick and mollycoddles her.
397* HiddenDepths:
398** Some of the Disney works imply Rabbit, despite his pomposity, is actually [[InferioritySuperiorityComplex rather insecure about how others feel about him]]. Not only does he often get extremely offended when he thinks he isn't appreciated, but the ''New Adventures'' episode "Rabbit Marks The Spot" has him convince himself that the others will hate his guts after he pulls a rather mean spirited prank. This is also primarily the plot of the ''"Springtime with Roo"'' movie [[spoiler:Where Rabbit, feeling hurt and insulted by everyone having an Easter Egg hunt without him. Upset that everyone would find him "bossy" and would have fun without him, he just outright cancels Easter on following years and institutes a Spring Cleaning Day instead to avoid ever dealing with this again.]]
399** ''The Book of Pooh'' reveals that most of the crops in his garden (that which he is vigorously protective of and constantly chastises Tigger and others for ruining) [[JerkWithAHeartOfGold end up being given to the other inhabitants of the wood.]]
400** On numerous occasions with Disney (especially towards Tigger), there are times where Rabbit is somewhat harsh on someone or expresses dismissive annoyance towards another. Despite this, he will often show compassion (in his own way), and expresses remorse when his actions have an unintended consequence of putting someone in harms way. ''The Tigger Movie'''s climax where Rabbit joins the group to find Tigger in a snowstorm, or the episode of ''New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh'' ''"Find Her Keep Her"'' help demonstrate the compassion that lies underneath his annoyed exterior.
401* IAmVeryBritish: Downplayed. Every Disney adaptation has him voiced with a slight British accent, and he certainly retains [[BritishStuffiness certain of his British quirks from the source material]]; ''Honey Tree'' in particular shows a stereotypically British top hat and scarf hanging by his front door.
402* JerkassToOne: To Tigger in the classic featurettes, where he sees Tigger as nothing but a nuisance and a troublemaker. He schemes to lose Tigger in the woods to traumatize the bounce out of him, and when Tigger gets stuck in a tree, he'd rather just leave him there. In later cartoons, they're more like VitriolicBestBuds.
403** To some extent also to Owl.
404* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: Often cynical and hostile but will take steps to take care of his friends in the end.
405* KarmaHoudini: The chapter "In Which Kanga and Roo Come to the Forest" is one of ''very'' few occasions [[CantGetAwayWithNuthin where Rabbit]] isn't punished for being a {{Jerkass}}. Paranoid about Kanga and Roo, he drafts Pooh and Piglet (somewhat unwillingly) in a scheme to kidnap Roo. However after finally running off with Roo, he starts to bond with him and forgets all about the plan, leaving Piglet alone to suffer Kanga's wrath. Naturally the Disney adaptation [[{{Disneyfication}} downplays this]] by making Rabbit a BadlyBatteredBabysitter and ending on a happier note for the whole group.
406* KnowNothingKnowItAll: Perhaps best summed up by Pooh and Piglet in the original novel:
407-->"Rabbit's clever," said Pooh thoughtfully.\
408"Yes," said Piglet, "Rabbit's clever."\
409"And he has Brain."\
410"Yes," said Piglet, "Rabbit has Brain."\
411There was a long silence.\
412"I suppose," said Pooh, "that that's why he never understands anything."
413* LargeHam: His neuroses and pompous grandstanding lean him into this half the time, especially in the 2011 movie.
414* NeatFreak: Loves to keep things neat and organized.
415* NervousWreck: Rabbit's an obsessive and high-strung character who takes things TOO seriously.
416* NotSoAboveItAll: He does have his fair share of [[{{Pun}} harebrained schemes]].
417* ObsessivelyOrganized: Rabbit is obsessed with order and tidiness and can turn almost any minor fun activity into a highly regimented work routine (usually resulting in a nervous breakdown when the others screw it up).
418-->'''Rabbit:''' Have you all gone mad?!? You can't possibly do things...''out of order!''
419* OnlySaneMan: Though admittedly he himself has rather [[{{Pun}} hare brained]] [[NotSoAboveItAll ideas at times.]] Also, see SanitySlippage below.
420* ThePerfectionist: Rabbit is very uptight and bossy and is infamous for his Type-A personality.
421* RedOniBlueOni: His common sense and serious nature marks him as the blue to Tigger's red.
422* RetCanon: Though ''Return to the Hundred Acre Wood'' is a sequel to the original novels and not connected to the Disney canon, Rabbit's character in particular seems to seep in several {{Mythology Gag}}s to his Disney counterpart, particularly his affinity for vegetable gardening and his more prominent InferioritySuperiorityComplex.
423* SanitySlippage: He has experienced this at various times in the Disney franchise, often having to do with Tigger. His speech gets, every once in a while, to a baffled version of {{Angrish}}. His thinking he has seven years bad luck because of a broken mirror in "Luck Amok" from ''WesternAnimation/TheNewAdventuresOfWinnieThePooh'' is just one of many, many examples. Given that is other tropes include ButtMonkey, TheChewToy, TheFinickyOne, and WellIntentionedExtremist, this doesn't come as much of a surprise. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NTLo1L6KDXc&ab_channel=BobLettuceTobbs Just a few examples]] from ''New Adventures'' alone.
424* {{Schemer}}: Being the smartest of the main cast, if only in his own head, he tends to be the one most likely to cook up ideas, either for the group or for himself.
425* ShesAManInJapan: The 1967-1975 German dubs of the original shorts (Honey Tree, Blustery Day, etc.) made the character a female.
426* SitcomArchNemesis: When not just VitriolicBestBuds, Rabbit is often warring with Tigger in the Disney adaptations. ''New Adventures'' also had recurrent packs of crows or bugs that he tried to fend his garden from.
427* SmallNameBigEgo: He tends to think of himself as the smartest and the leader of the group, but really he's not that much better than them.
428* TheSmartGuy: For all his faults, he is usually more on the ball than his friends. The climax of ''Pooh's Grand Adventure'' and ''The Tigger Movie'' particularly show him put his real smarts to use within the group.
429* StockAnimalDiet: Subverted. While Rabbit does grow carrots in his garden, he's rarely, if ever seen eating them, and has a variety of vegetables planted as well. In ''Series/WelcomeToPoohCorner'', he reveals in the song "Try a Little Something New" that he used to [[PickyEater just eat carrots]], but then learned to love other vegetables too.
430* SupportingLeader: When Christopher Robin's not around, Rabbit usually takes charge, but the only work where he's TheProtagonist is ''Springtime with Roo'', which focuses on him alone instead with the group.
431* SuspiciouslySpecificDenial: In ''WesternAnimation/PigletsBigMovie'', he denies remembering the incident where he came up with a plan to make Kanga and Roo move out of the Hundred Acre Wood after seeing how nice they were.
432* TalkingToPlants: Sometimes he talks to his vegetables in the garden and even gives them names.
433* TokenMinority: Of sorts; he is one of the only main characters, along with Owl and Gopher, to be a real flesh-and-blood animal rather than a stuffed toy.
434* TrademarkFavouriteFood: Carrots. Mostly restricted to the Disney version, though ''Return to the Hundred Acre Wood'' seeps in his carrot garden as a MythologyGag.
435* {{Troll}}: Unexpectedly for his usual character, a lot of Rabbit's retaliations to feeling annoyed or at harm from another animal are to play sometimes mean-spirited pranks on them to keep them in line. He infamously tried to take Tigger down a peg by getting him lost in the wood (though it backfired on him horribly), while in ''Return to Hundred Acre Wood'', after getting fed up with Owl's obsession with writing a monograph of his Uncle Robert (and the anti-social behaviour stemming from it), he pretends to be the ghost of his Uncle Robert ordering Owl not to write about him. ''New Adventures'' also has him recurrently play pranks on the other animals after they cross him, though they often backfire in some way.
436* VitriolicBestBuds: With Tigger, mostly because Tigger insists on [[CrashIntoHello tackling him to say hi]] and is otherwise a hyperactive, chaotic individual. This is largely more evident in the Disney version, in the books Rabbit bickers more often with Owl.
437* VocalEvolution: Ken Sansom's voice for Rabbit was initially closer to Junius Matthews' take and much more gruff and less effeminate sounding when he started in ''New Adventures''.
438* WellIntentionedExtremist: Merely wants to maintain order in the Hundred Acre Wood, but resorts to somewhat extreme measures such as kidnapping or traumatizing residents in order to do so (granted however, it hardly ever works).
439* ZanyScheme: Despite everything, he's cooked up a few of these himself.
440[[/folder]]
441
442[[folder:Kanga]]
443!!Kanga
444[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/kanga.jpg]]
445[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/winnie_the_pooh_characters_main_characters_kanga_1.jpg]]
446
447->''Do be careful, dear!''
448
449-->'''Voiced by:''' Barbara Luddy (1966-1977); Julie [=McWhirter=] (''Day for Eeyore''); Diana Hale (''Welcome to Pooh Corner''); Patricia Parris (''New Adventures''); Creator/TressMacNeille (1994-1999, Kingdom Hearts); Creator/RussiTaylor (1994-1998); Creator/KathSoucie (2000-2010); Kristen Anderson-Lopez (2011-present); Sophie Okonedo (''Christopher Robin''), Tomie Katoka (Japanese)
450
451Docile mother kangaroo. Often acts a gentle mother figure to the others.
452----
453* AdaptationalDumbass:
454** Reconstructed. The Disney version drops her usual AdaptationalIntelligence in the 2011 film, which conveys her as just as childish and clueless as the other animals, even sharing an AdultsAreUseless moment with Owl and Rabbit where they think they've caught the Backson.
455** The Gold Key comic book also tended to involve Kanga in the misadventures more often ([[TheDragAlong albeit often against her will]]), with her often panicking over the same superstitions as everyone else.
456* AdaptationalIntelligence: While Kanga was relatively smarter in the novels, she still often joined in on the others' foolish antics. The Disney version of Kanga however is a genuinely lucid and sensible character, with only isolated moments of silly behaviour.
457* AdaptationalNiceGuy: Whatever lingering fussy or argumentative traits the novels' Kanga had, the Disney version near abolishes. Also while it's left on a rather ambiguous note in the books, the Disney adaptation makes it perfectly clear that [[DefeatEqualsFriendship Kanga became close friends with Piglet after their vitriolic first meeting]]. In the 2011 movie, however, she comes across as vain, naive and impatient, if still mostly well meaning, making her little better than the other InnocentlyInsensitive characters, though is still less gruff than her novel counterpart sometimes is.
458* AgeLift: In ''Playdate with Winnie the Pooh'' she is retooled into a young child much like the other characters adapted into the show. This means she lacks Roo, and is given [[GenkiGirl a more energetic playful personality]], while retaining CoolBigSis traits.
459* AscendedExtra:
460** The 70s/80s Gold Key comic book is among the few Disney works where Kanga ''isn't'' OutOfFocus and is regularly with the main group and even supplies a lot of the front cover gags. Naturally this often came at the expense of her AdaptationalIntelligence.
461** ''Playdate with Winnie the Pooh'', due to retooling her to be the same age as the other characters, meaning she essentially takes Roo's place, and gets, for perhaps the first time, given ADayInTheLimelight like everyone else.
462* BewareTheNiceOnes: Usually rather docile and sweet in tone (to the point of being a borderline ExtremeDoormat), though let's say she's rather sporting to the odd scheme or prank (Piglet found this out the hard way).
463* BreakTheCutie: In the ''New Adventures'' episode "Babysitter Blues", she spends a whole night searching frantically for Roo before breaking down sobbing (unaware he is just playing Hide and Seek in their house).
464* CharacterDevelopment: Subtle case in the books, where she starts off rather aloof and passive aggressive, preferring to be beside herself and Roo. As stories pass, she becomes more sociable and her motherly nature extends to the other residents, culiminating in her adopting Tigger. Expanded further in ''Return to Hundred Acre Wood'', where she shows a much more jovial streak and ends the book bouncing happily with Tigger during the farewell party. Averted in the Disney works, where she is consistently serene and motherly.
465* CharacterExaggeration: In the books, Kanga was the TeamMom, as best examplified by adopting Tigger, but often liked to be beside herself and Roo, and could be rather blunt or disinterested when socialising with others. The Disney version by comparison is extremely serene and motherly as her main characteristic. She's straight up ThePollyanna in the 2011 movie, with things like sleeping babies and warm hugs ever on her mind.
466* CloserToEarth: The Disney version at least. The book version is slightly more sensible too but shares the others' occasionally brainless demeanor. Not so much in the 2011 movie, where she's definitely not above the others in terms of responsibility, sanity and intelligence, she eats up the story of the Backson as readily as the rest of the cast and offers as equal a share of goofy, silly moments.
467* CreatorCameo: In the 2011 film, Kristen Anderson-Lopez (who co-wrote the 2011 film's songs with her husband Robert Lopez) voices Kanga. Ironic when Kanga stops the song and asks for silence when she wins the honey pot (temporarily).
468* DefrostingIceQueen: Downplayed case in the books. She's not a {{Jerkass}} per se, but isn't interested in socialising with the other animals in her first appearance, and pays out Piglet harshly for crossing her. She becomes noticably nicer to the others by the second book, especially after adopting Tigger, and by ''Return to the Hundred Acre Wood'' she acts rather playful on several occasions (though still keeps a bit more of a temper than her Disney counterpart).
469* DemotedToExtra: Kanga made only scant appearances in the ''New Adventures'' TV series and featurettes throughout the 90s.
470* DependingOnTheArtist: In her first Disney appearances in the ''Honey Tree'' and ''Blustery Day'', she's proportioned almost exactly like her book counterpart and even had visible sclerae in some shots (albeit SkintoneSclerae apposed to her usual BlackBeadEyes). She was anthropomorphised slightly ''Tigger Too'' onwards. She reverts back to a more angular take of her first design in the 2011 movie.
471* FlawlessToken: The Disney version to some level. She is at least the only female of the main group and the one often lacking a personality-establishing flaw. This is more prevalent in the Disneytoon Studios era, where she was nearly always the OnlySaneMan and seldom ever joined in the group shenanigans, some other works like the 2011 film do try to give her some quirks and silly qualities. Her novel counterpart is relatively more stable, but can at times still be as clueless and standoffish as Rabbit and Owl.
472* FriendToAllChildren: Especially in the Disney interpretation, where she acts as TeamMom. In the Gold Key comics she actually runs a nursery in the wood, while in the 2011 movie she knits the header for the production babies as a CreditsGag. Her novel counterpart is usually this trope as well, but a bit more gruff, and quickly decided the teacher role was a bit too much for her liking in ''Return to the Hundred Acre Wood''.
473* GoodParents: Regardless of depiction, she is a competent and ever gentle mother towards Roo.
474* HatesSmallTalk: In her first appearance in the books, Pooh and Rabbit try to distract her so they can swap Roo with Piglet. This proves harder than they expected since an irritated Kanga quickly tries to bail with Roo.
475* HiddenDepths:
476** In the 2011 film, the cast list down all the potential horrible things the Backson can do to them (most of them being rather in-character phobias and superstitions). Kanga mostly lists down expected fears like [[MamaBear waking up babies]], but also fears the Backson stealing her youth, her ImagineSpot self even screaming terrified when her beauty vanishes and shrivels before a mirror.
477** She usually keeps out of the group's WindmillCrusader schemes, when not [[OnlySaneMan the one outright trying to talk them out of it]]. Amusingly, as also seen in the 2011 film, when finally put into one even she believes is real, she ends up almost [[SeriousBusiness as militant]] about it as Rabbit.
478** In ''The Book of Pooh'' episode, "Do The Roo" she is revealed to have been a prize-winning dancer.
479* HystericalWoman: Usually averted, as Kanga is more prone to keep a level head than the others. Played more straight in the Gold Key comics however, where Kanga is as superstitious as everyone else and actually starts several group-wide panics after seeing something that ''kinda'' looks like a monster.
480* KangaroosRepresentAustralia: A few times. The books make no specific mention of Kanga being Australian, though some audiobooks utilise this trope, and ''Return to the Hundred Acre Wood'' notes she has Australian relatives. In the Disney adaptation she is consistently given an American accent, though her house sometimes has Australian memorabilia for background humour. Furthermore, in ''Sing A Song With Pooh Bear,'' one suggestion Roo makes to do their song and dance number "The Kanga-Roo Hop" well is "pretend you're in Australia."
481* KangarooPouchRide: Often seen riding Roo in her pouch. This ends up a plot point in her first appearance. The Gold Key comics also routinely used her pouch as a gag.
482* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: She's a mild case in the books, where she's usually still pleasant and motherly, but can be a bit [[HatesSmallTalk anti-social]] and [[BrutalHonesty blunt]], particularly when someone comes between her and Roo. Piglet and Owl both met Kanga's more prickly side. This is downplayed heavily in the Disney canon, where Kanga is BewareTheNiceOnes at worst.
483* JerkassBall:
484** Normally very genial in the novels, although she is quite rude to Piglet in her first appearance and scolds Roo for ''accidentally'' falling in the water in the North Pole story. She also criticised Owl's housekeeping after his house fell down, leading them to exchange insults. Naturally the Disney adaptations downplay these moments if not omit them altogether.
485** In the Disney book "Tigger Bounces Into Fall", she's among the animals that angrily shoos Tigger away for bouncing recklessly (in this case [[MamaBear with Roo]]). Granted this was from her own account [[MyGodWhatHaveIDone after a long period of Tigger]] [[WasTooHardOnHim being worryingly absent]].
486* ALizardNamedLiz: Her name is part of the word "kangaroo".
487* MamaBear: Much more gentle than usual examples, but is obviously rather protective of her son, and the few times she gets ratty with the others often concern Roo's well-being. She also almost instantly decides she must care for Tigger upon their first meeting in the novels.
488** The trope is even pointed out by Piglet in the original novel:
489--> "There's just one thing," said Piglet, fidgeting a bit. "I was talking to Christopher Robin, and he said that a Kanga was Generally Regarded as One of the Fiercer Animals. I am not frightened of Fierce Animals in the ordinary way, but it is well known that if One of the Fiercer Animals is Deprived of Its Young, it becomes as fierce as ''Two'' of the Fiercer Animals."
490* NiceGirl: Very motherly and caring.
491* NotSoAboveItAll:
492** She takes part in the others' TooDumbToLive antics more than usual in the 2011 movie, being just as paranoid of the Backson as everyone else and generally acting a lot goofier than usual.
493** The ''Book of Pooh'' episode, "Hare and Share Alike" marks one of very few times where Kanga actually pivots the usual ComicallyMissingThePoint plot line, thinking all of Rabbit's crops had failed to grow after he had just harvested all of them from his garden and spearheading everyone to help him. She also willingly [[OneOfTheKids takes part in many of the group's antics and music numbers]] in the show more often than in other interpretations.
494** The Gold Key comics also had a more superstitious and accident-prone Kanga. In "Giant At Large" for example, she similarly starts the plot misunderstanding about a giant attacking the wood and, after finding out it was Piglet's doing, is among the mob of angry animals chasing after him.
495** Even Kanga gets her moment of InsaneTrollLogic in ''Return to the Hundred Acre Wood''. When the gang play cricket, she puts Roo in her pouch while playing and tries to claim double points. After a few turns, Owl decides it is likely against the rules and disqualifies Roo, with Kanga also getting disqualified for arguing with the umpire over it.
496* OneOfTheKids: In the novel canon, while being the TeamMom and a literal Mom to Roo, she still shared the others' naive outlook at times. Downplayed for the Disney canon, where she's more mature and more often keeps out of the others' shenanigans, though some works like ''The Book of Pooh'', the 2011 movie and the Gold Key comic series still play this straight.
497* OnlySaneMan: What many of her other tropes amount to her being at times. Justified, since she's the "motherly one" and the rest are essentially children. Some stories imply she's OnlySaneByComparison however, especially in the books.
498* OutOfFocus: Out of the regular cast, Kanga seldom gets ADayInTheLimelight in either interpretation besides her introductory story, usually playing TeamMom or TheStraightMan at best. This hits worse in the Disney interpretation, as a key part of her role in the later novels (adopting Tigger) is cut due to the latter's AgeLift. This reached such a point that she completely vanished from the franchise midway through ''New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh'', not appearing again until ''Seasons of Giving'' a decade after, though Roo's elevated screentime ensured she stayed a key supporting character from that point on.
499* ThePollyanna: In the 2011 movie, she's more ditzy and eccentric, but still the affectionate and high spirited [[TheHeart Heart]] of the group, suggesting things like "a warm hug" for their prize over Eeyore's tail (much to Roo's disgust).
500* TheSmurfettePrinciple: She's the ''only'' female member of the cast at all, except in certain spin-off media.
501* TeamMom: Because she's Roo's mother, she naturally applies the same maternal attitudes and instincts to the rest of the group.
502* VagueAge: Her age is even harder to decipher than the others since she is actually Roo's mother, while interpretations like ''The Book of Pooh'' and the 2011 movie make her OneOfTheKids.
503* VanityIsFeminine: One of her concerns about the Backson in the 2011 movie is that it will drain her youth. She's the only character besides Tigger to show any concern for her image.
504* WomenAreWiser: Though this simply may be because she's older and a mother, and thus is naturally more mature and, individually at least, stacks up ''far'' less antics and misunderstandings than the more childlike male characters throughout the franchise.
505* YourSizeMayVary: She ranges anywhere from just barely Owl's height to being the tallest animal in the Hundred Acre Wood. In ''Piglet's Big Movie'' she's made ''huge'' to emphasise Piglet's small stature.
506[[/folder]]
507
508[[folder:Roo]]
509!!Roo
510[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/roo_0.jpg]]
511[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/roo_9.gif]]
512
513-->'''Voiced by:''' Creator/ClintHoward (1966-1977); Dori Whitaker (1974-1977); Dick Billingsley (''A Day for Eeyore''); Kim Christianson (''Welcome to Pooh Corner''); Nicholas Melody (''New Adventures''); Nikita Hopkins (1999–2005); Jimmy Bennett (''Springtime with Roo'', ''Pooh's Heffalump Halloween Movie'', ''Kingdom Hearts''); Max Burkholder (2007–2009); Wyatt Dean Hall (''Winnie the Pooh''); Sara Sheen (''Christopher Robin''), Kyohei Tanaka (Japanese, 1977-1983), Masaya Sugimoto (Japanese, 2006), Eru Yamada (Japanese, 2011), Kosei Kimura (Japanese, 2018)
514
515Hyperactive joey of Kanga. Shares Tigger's fondness for bouncing and looks up to him like a big brother. Later befriends heffalump Lumpy.
516----
517
518* AdaptedOut: He's not featured in the Disney Junior short series "Playdate with Winnie the Pooh" due to the adult characters especially his mother being children, although he was shown as a toy.
519* AdorablyPrecociousChild: Despite his young age, Roo is capable of expressing thoughts and feelings that make him seem wiser than his years. In fact, on occasion Roo seems even wiser than many of the older characters.
520* AmbiguouslyAbsentParent: We have no idea where his dad is.
521* AscendedExtra:
522** A side character in the original novels and Disney featurettes, almost as prominent as Pooh and Tigger in some of the 2000s Disney works.
523** Similar to Kanga, he tended to also appear more often in the Gold Key comics.
524* AscendedFanboy: He was promoted to SupportingProtagonist in ''The Tigger Movie'', and then got larger and larger roles in most of the Disneytoon Studios Pooh features afterward.
525* BadassAdorable: Being a protégé of sorts to Tigger, he's naturally one in training (especially in ''The Tigger Movie'').
526* BigBrotherWorship: Of the surrogate sorts, especially in the Disney cartoons. He views Tigger as a big brother (a sentiment that is returned in ''The Tigger Movie'') and idolizes him for his feats ([[FanOfTheUnderdog that most others find aggravating]]), even going as far as frequently imitating his every move and word.
527* BlueIsHeroic: He wears a blue shirt, and is cheerful.
528* BorrowedCatchphrase: Imitates a lot of Tigger's tics and catchphrases. A running gag in the Disney features also involves a character being bounced by Tigger, getting back up on their feet, only to be bounced by Roo in turn.
529** In ''The Book of Pooh'' he sometimes addresses Rabbit as "Rabby," which was Kessie's nickname for him in the earlier works.
530* BreakoutCharacter: In the Disneytoon Studios Pooh animations, he goes from being just Kanga's little baby who shows up as a bit-part character in some stories to a recurring character, almost a secondary member of the cast. In ''Springtime for Roo'' and ''Pooh's Heffalump Movie'' he is the lead protagonist.
531** And much like fellow BreakoutCharacter Tigger, he's a "newcomer" that isn't there from the start of the first book, though unlike Tigger he and Kanga arrive in the first book (Chapter 7 out of 10).
532* BreakTheCutie: Poor Roo is left in tears when Tigger angrily leaves the Hundred Acre Wood in ''The Tigger Movie''.
533* CharacterDevelopment: Initially a [[{{Keet}} mindless infant]] similar to his novel counterpart, his upgraded role in the Disney adaptions has led to stories being played a lot more from his perspective, [[AscendedFanboy his idolization of Tigger being expanded upon and even gaining a surrogate "little brother" of his own through Lumpy]]. He has also became more emotional and aware of the surrounding issues, even acting as a CowardlyLion on occasion.
534* CheerfulChild: The physically and mentally youngest member of the group, and cheerful to the point of foolishness, especially in the novels.
535* DemotedToExtra: Roo only appeared slightly more often than Kanga in ''New Adventures'' and the specials spun off from it. From ''The Tigger Movie'' onwards however, Disney [[BreakoutCharacter made up for lost time]].
536* DisappearedDad: Kanga is a single mother, we don't know about his father. Since he's a stuffed animal, he likely never had one.
537* ExpressiveEars: ''Pooh's Heffalump Movie'' is a good film to see him demonstrating this quite a few times.
538* HalfDressedCartoonAnimal: Wears only a shirt in the Disney canon.
539* HatesBaths: A whole episode of ''The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh'', "The Old Switcheroo", revolves around Roo trying to avoid bath time with Tigger. [[spoiler: At the end of the episode, he finally takes a bath, and realizes that it's [[BathsAreFun fun after all]]]].
540* InformedSpecies: The original E.H. Shephard illustrations make him look a lot more like a squirrel than a kangaroo. Averted by the Disney version.
541* KidAppealCharacter: the reason for his ascended role in the Disney canon.
542* {{Keet}}: In the original novels, he's the only character who can match Tigger for hyperactive overenthusiasm. In fact, he occasionally surpasses Tigger, largely because Tigger has ''just'' enough sense to realize when he's in a bad situation, while Roo is a FearlessFool through and through. The Disney version certainly has shades of this too, albeit more toned down and DependingOnTheWriter.
543* ALizardNamedLiz: A kangaroo named "Roo".
544* MommasBoy: Most incarnations show him and Kanga being really close.
545* MoralityPet: To Tigger. Starting from ''The Tigger Movie'', we see more cases of Tigger actually feeling inclined to act halfway responsible if Roo is around, aware he looks up to him. Especially apparent in ''Springtime With Roo'' and ''The Book of Pooh''.
546* MotorMouth: Again, in the original novels. The Disney adaptions use this for occasional gags.
547* NiceGuy: Roo is generally a kindhearted and cheerful young kangaroo.
548* OutOfFocus: In the ''New Adventures'' cartoon, he and Kanga only appear in the occasional episode, and were mostly absent from any featurettes and merchandise until ''Seasons of Giving''. He got a very healthy amount of screentime from that point onwards however.
549* SidekickGraduationsStick: Subtle but implied. After Tigger PassingTheTorch in the end of ''The Tigger Movie'' , most works after make a point to give Roo more individual screentime, culminating in him getting his own sidekick in the form of Lumpy in ''Pooh's Heffalump Movie''.
550* SixthRanger: Promoted to such in the Disneytoon Studios cartoons, where he nearly always joins in on the main gang's antics.
551* SpotlightStealingSquad: By the end of the Disneytoon Studios run of Pooh cartoons, Roo began to eclipse even Tigger and Pooh himself as the central character, so much so that its new addition, Lumpy, was crafted to [[SatelliteCharacter work as Roo's foil more than anyone else]].
552* TagalongKid: Being the youngest of the group, he naturally fills this role to them.
553* ToxicFriendInfluence: Tigger plays a light example. While he [[BigBrotherInstinct genuinely tries to look out for Roo]] (and has saved his life at least once) the other residents show awareness that he is [[{{Cloudcuckoolander}} not the]] [[{{Keet}} most ideal]] [[SmallNameBigEgo role model]] for him at times.
554-->'''Tigger:''' Taught him everything he knows.
555-->'''Rabbit:''' That explains a lot.
556* UndyingLoyalty: Even when the other animals lose patience with Tigger's antics, Roo will always look up him.
557* VagueAge: He's definitely not a baby, but he does take a nap. Then again, he's allowed to play unattended with Tigger, but we don't know how old Tigger is either.
558[[/folder]]
559
560[[folder:Owl]]
561!!Owl
562[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/owl_8.jpg]]
563[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/unnamed_987.jpg]]
564[[caption-width-right:250:''"Yes, I am known for my inspiring rhetoric."'']]
565-->'''Voiced by:''' Hal Smith (1966-1991); Andre Stojka (1997-2006); Craig Ferguson (2011-present), Creator/TobyJones (''Christopher Robin''), Creator/HenryDjanik (European French, 1977-2000), Toshiya Ueda (Japanese, speaking), Ryochi Fukuzawa (Japanese, singing)
566
567A scatterbrained old owl. Usually shares knowledge and wisdom with the other residents of the Hundred Acre Wood, oblivious to the fact he has as little idea of such aspects as they do. Also likes to share rather frequent (and long) amusing stories about his somewhat eccentric family.
568----
569* AdaptationalIntelligence: The Disney interpretation, while still a TalkativeLoon, has moments of being much more lucid and genuinely insightful, DependingOnTheWriter. Especially apparent in ''The Book of Pooh'' and the edutainment films where his studious personality is quite real, so much that [[ReadingIsCoolAesop he encourages literacy]] he was hopeless at in the books.
570* AdaptationalNiceGuy: In the Disney version, he is an altogether more jovial and cheerful fellow instead of being a GrumpyOldMan. Although in the 2011 movie adaptation, he became frustrated with the simple-minded residents, and [[UnwittingInstigatorOfDoom starts the main conflict in the film unknowingly]].
571* AdaptationSpeciesChange: Based on his appearance in the illustrations and the fact that he was based on a real animal in Ashdown Forest, he's probably a tawny owl in the books. In the Disney cartoons, he looks more like a great horned owl, which would have been more familiar to American audiences. In the 2018 live-action film, he is specifically based on a Eurasian eagle-owl.
572* BigBrotherMentor: Tutors Kessie how to fly in ''New Adventures'' and ''Book of Pooh''. Also plays this role to the other animals in the edutainment films.
573* BookSmart: Owl has an education and is relatively knowledgeable, but as far as actual intelligence goes, he's actually pretty dumb.
574* BreakTheCutie: In the ''New Adventures'' episode, "Owl In The Family", Rabbit accuses Owl's anecdotes (and his relatives even) of being fake. Owl refutes this at first, but then, in an unusually self-aware moment, realises he's become so estranged from his family that he can't even remember if his stories ''are'' true or not, leaving him feeling despondent and lonely. Thankfully a happy family reunion proves him right this time.
575* BritishStuffiness: He's rather stuffy about things, particularly when tradition's involved, and he's the only regular character who consistently speaks with even a slight British accent (only Christopher Robin comes close, sporting his own British accent in the movies and all the featurettes except ''Honey Tree'').
576* CoolOldGuy: The other animals view him as this. While much more brainless in reality, he does have some shades of this.
577* DependingOnTheWriter:
578** Owl's level of literacy fluctuates. In ''Many Adventures'' and ''A Day For Eeyore'' his spelling is utterly mangled. In ''The Tigger Movie'' and ''Winnie the Pooh: [=ABCs=]'' he seems perfectly fluent in spelling. The 2011 film takes the middle road, he can "de-code" most of Christopher Robin's crude letter except for one crucial detail.
579** Similar to Rabbit, Owl is designed to represent a realistic animal, though some of the framing devices still show Owl in toy form.
580* DitzyGenius: Depending somewhat on the incarnation; whether he ''is'' smart or not, he's certainly a ditzy fellow.
581* FleetingPassionateHobbies: In ''Return to the Hundred Acre Wood'' he develops an obsession with writing a novel. Despite the other animals' failed attempts to get him to drop it, he eventually loses interest in favour of stamp collecting and denies any interest in writing.
582* GrumpyOldMan: Sometimes shows traces of this in the books; in one chapter it's revealed that his standard reply when someone knocks on his door is "Go away, I'm thinking -- oh, it's you?", and he can get pretty high-and-mighty and impatient with the others when he thinks they're talking about things that are beneath his dignity.
583* InTheBlood: His family is often implied to be as scatterbrained as he is. Confirmed in ''New Adventures'' when we finally meet some family members and they all join Owl in some lengthy anecdotes.
584* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: In the books, he's a GrumpyOldMan and pretty stuffy, but when one of his friends needs his help, he's there for them. He's more softened and jovial in most of the Disney cartoons, although in the 2011 movie, he's a bit more self-absorbed and egotistical (not to mention having a slightly shorter fuse), but at his core, he's still a well-meaning fellow.
585* KnowNothingKnowItAll: Switches back and forth between this and TheSmartGuy depending on the story's needs. More likely to be the smart guy in ''Series/TheBookOfPooh'' and the Disneytoon Studios endutainment films.
586* LiteralMinded: Certainly so in ''Piglet's Big Movie'', having taken the questions "Have you seen Piglet?" and "Have you seen him this morning?" literally.
587* MotorMouth: Once he starts talking, good luck shutting him up.
588** This can sometimes overlap with CharacterFilibuster, as he likes talking about his family.
589** How bad can this get? In ''Blustery Day''...
590-->'''Narrator:''' Owl talked from page 41 to page 62!
591* MrExposition: Zig-zagged in the cartoons DependingOnTheWriter. He seems to consider himself this in all versions, but what he has to say [[KnowNothingKnowItAll isn't always very informative]]. He plays it straighter in ''The Book of Pooh'' and the edutainment cartoons.
592* OldWindbag: He just loves the sound of his own voice and will seize any opportunity to talk about whatever strikes his fancy.
593* OminousOwl: Subverted somewhat. Though his [[KnowNothingKnowItAll clueless]] and sometimes [[{{Cloudcuckoolander}} deranged]] demeanour causes problems at times, Owl is a thoroughly high spirited and kindly individual (if sometimes grouchy). The other residents even frequently referring to him as "their good friend".
594* OutOfFocus: Disappeared for a while in the Disney version from about the mid-2000s up until the 2011 film, where he had a large role.
595* TheOwlKnowingOne: Parodied. Everyone (including Owl himself) views Owl as the wisest and most intelligent of the animals, but in reality he's pretty clueless.
596* ShesAManInJapan:
597** In the Soviet ''Vinni Pukh'' adaptions, Owl is female.
598** The original Norwegian translations of the books also turned Owl female. The books were re-translated (and drastically shortened, several plot points and jokes left out) later on, still with a female Owl. It wasn't until the third translation, which was far more faithful to the original text that Owl became male. (He was always male in the Norwegian dub of the Disney cartoons, which just made the entire thing even more confusing.)
599** Owl is also female in the Polish translation of the books.
600* TeamDad: He trades this role with Rabbit on many occasions. Especially apparent in ''The Book of Pooh'' due to his AdaptationalIntelligence, meaning he regularly sorts out arguments and confusions between the others.
601* TokenMinority: The only non-mammal of the main cast. Also, along with Rabbit and Gopher, he's a flesh-and-blood animal living among stuffed toys.
602* UnwittingInstigatorOfDoom: He is this in ''The Search for Christopher Robin'', misinterpreting Christopher Robin's message to Pooh as one suggesting he had run away, and thus sends the entire gang on what proves to be a harrowing journey to find him. Even lampshaded at the end by Rabbit, who is rather miffed to find out that Christopher Robin was at school all day, and not lost as Owl had said.
603[[/folder]]
604
605[[folder:Gopher]]
606!!Samuel J. Gopher
607[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/gopherwinniethepooh.png]]
608[[caption-width-right:250:''"Dagnabbit!"'']]
609-->'''Voiced by:''' Howard Morris (1966-1977); Creator/MichaelJGough (1988-present); Creator/FrankWelker (''WesternAnimation/GoofTroop''), Mahito Tsujimura (Original Japanese voice 1977-2006), Kunihiro Kawamoto (Japanese, 2018)
610
611He usually litters the Hundred Acre Wood with his endless burrows, often for someone (usually himself) to fall into. Exclusive to the Disney adaptions.
612----
613* AscendedExtra: He was a fairly minor character in the original ''Many Adventures'' film, though became a regular in the ''New Adventures'' series and even got several limelight episodes. [[OutOfFocus Subverted]] in the Disneytoon movies however, where Roo took his place as the SixthRanger.
614* CanonForeigner: A Disney-created character who was not in the original books and was added by Disney in order to have a "folksy, all-American, grass-roots" character that can appeal to American audiences. This is {{lampshaded|trope}} in ''Many Adventures'' by Gopher himself and Pooh.
615-->'''Winnie the Pooh:''' After all, he's not in the book, you know.
616* ChuckCunninghamSyndrome: He disappeared for a long interval after ''Blustery Day'', not appearing again until ''New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh'' two decades after. Despite becoming a regular in afterwards, Gopher slipped OutOfFocus ''again'' in the Disneytoons produced works.[[note]]his most recent appearance in the Pooh franchise was in the 2004 educational video ''Winnie the Pooh: 123s'', besides some StockFootage appearances in ''Pooh's Heffalump Halloween Movie'' and ''The Mini Adventures of Winnie the Pooh''[[/note]] He was absent from the 2011 film, which saw the return of Owl, who disappeared from the ''Poohniverse'' around the same time. He doesn't appear in ''Christopher Robin'' either, which makes sense, as gophers aren't native to England.
617** He reappeared in ''VideoGame/WinnieThePoohsHomeRunDerby'' as an umpire. Be thankful he's not one of [[NintendoHard the pitchers]]. He also makes continuous appearances in the ''Franchise/KingdomHearts'' series and appears sporadically on current merchandise.
618* CirclingSaw: He often cuts a round hole in the floor with a saw when he enters other residents' homes.
619* DubSpeciesChange: Due to the fact that gophers are not so known outside America, in many foreign translations, mainly European ones, his species is referred to as a mole, beaver, marmot, hamster or vole.
620* {{Expy}}:
621** His appearance and personality is based very largely on the beaver character in ''WesternAnimation/LadyAndTheTramp'' In fact, this character made a cameo appearance in ''My Friends Tigger and Pooh'', and Tigger lampshades the similarity by saying "I miss Gopher".
622** Ironically, Gopher himself replaced the beaver in the comic strip adaptation of ''Lady and the Tramp''.
623* FunnyAnimal: Zigzagged. The ''New Adventures'' TV series gave him a miner's helmet, making him alternate between this trope and a less anthropomorphic animal.
624* InconsistentColoring: He is sometimes brown in some books, educational games, and the educational episode ''Winnie the Pooh: 123s''.
625%%* MoleMiner
626* MotorMouth: When engrossed in his work anyway.
627* PintsizedPowerhouse: In "Winnie the Pooh and Christmas Too" had him get squished by a tree he was chopping, only for him to lift and carry it off while it was still upright seconds later.
628* {{Prospector}}: His overall mannerisms and duties very much resemble a stereotypical rendition of the trope, however, being a gopher, [[ThePiratesWhoDontDoAnything his motives for burrowing around are never really explained]].
629* SignatureSoundEffect: ''The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh'' tends to use race-car noises for when his tunneling is seen above-ground.
630* SixthRanger: Due to being added in post-novel canon, he tends to fill this role in the group's dynamics, especially in ''New Adventures''.
631* SpeechImpediment: He whistles out his sibilant consonants.
632** In the episode "Sham Pooh," Piglet interprets it as SnakeTalk.
633** In "Honey Tree", Pooh does a BriefAccentImitation of Gopher's way of speaking, which leads to this classic piece of HypocriticalHumor.
634-->'''Pooh''': Could you sssspare a sssssmall sssssmackerel?
635-->'''Gopher''': Sssssay, you oughta do ssssssomethin' about that sssssspeech impediment, ssssssonny.
636* SpeciesSurname: His full name is Samuel J. Gopher.
637* SpotlightStealingSquad: In ''New Adventures'', Gopher even eclipses Eeyore in screen-time and many episodes, particularly towards the end of the series, revolve around him and his crazy schemes for tunneling.
638* StuffBlowingUp: Has a strong fondness for dynamite and uses it for his tunneling work.
639* WhenAllYouHaveIsAHammer: In ''New Adventures'', he's got lots of other equipment at his disposal, but explosives are often his go-to solution to a problem, even if an explosion caused the problem in the first place ("What gets blown up must get blown down").
640* {{Wormsign}}: He often does this.
641[[/folder]]

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