MarketList of Toy Story characters
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List of Toy Story characters

This is a list of characters from Disney and Pixar's Toy Story franchise, which includes the animated feature films Toy Story, Toy Story 2, Toy Story 3, Toy Story 4, Toy Story 5, and Lightyear, as well as the Toy Story Toons series and television specials Toy Story of Terror! and Toy Story That Time Forgot.

Main
Main characters Woody Sheriff Woody Pride (voiced by Tom Hanks in the films and Jim Hanks in other media) is a 1950s-style pull-string cowboy doll. He is Andy's favorite toy and serves as the leader of the toy group. Woody is highly attached to his hat and becomes alarmed when it goes missing in Toy Story 2. His rivalry with Buzz Lightyear forms the basis of the first film's plot, as he resents Buzz for becoming Andy's new favorite toy. In Toy Story 4, Woody travels with Bo Peep, helping lost toys find owners and assisting Forky. Woody appears in Toy Story, Toy Story 2, Toy Story 3, Toy Story 4, Toy Story 5, Toy Story Treats, Toy Story Toons, Toy Story of Terror!, Toy Story That Time Forgot, and Lamp Life. Buzz Lightyear Buzz Lightyear (voiced by Tim Allen in the films, Patrick Warburton in Buzz Lightyear of Star Command, Pat Fraley in Toy Story Treats and video games, Mike MacRae in video games, Chris Evans in Lightyear, and Javier Fernández-Peña in Spanish mode) is a modern "Space Ranger" action figure. In the Toy Story films, he serves as Woody's second-in-command. In the first film, Buzz initially believes he is a real Space Ranger and develops a rivalry with Woody. He later realizes that he is a toy, and so his alliance with Woody starts. In Toy Story 2, Buzz, together with Mr. Potato Head, Hamm, Rex, and Slinky, sets out to save Woody from Al. During the mission, he becomes stuck in the Buzz Lightyear aisle in Al's Toy Barn after being mistaken for another Buzz toy. In Toy Story 3, Buzz and Jessie begin to develop a relationship, and he is particularly affectionate when switched to "Spanish mode". Andy ultimately decides to take Woody to college, and when passing his toys to Bonnie, he describes Buzz as "the coolest toy ever". Buzz Lightyear is also the protagonist of the 65-episode television series Buzz Lightyear of Star Command (2000-2001), which portrays him as a real Space Ranger. The 2022 Pixar film Lightyear depicts his origin story and features other Buzz Lightyear toys. In Lightyear, Buzz is a Space Ranger in Star Command who becomes involved in a conflict with Emperor Zurg after experiencing time dilation while testing faster-than-light travel. Buzz Lightyear appears in Toy Story, Toy Story 2, Toy Story 3, Toy Story 4, Toy Story 5, Toy Story Treats, Buzz Lightyear of Star Command, Toy Story Toons, Toy Story of Terror!, Toy Story That Time Forgot, Pixar Popcorn, and Lightyear. Jessie Jessica Jane "Jessie" Pride (voiced by Joan Cusack) is a cowgirl rag doll who joins Woody's group in Toy Story 2. In that film, Jessie is initially happy to see Woody, but is surprised to learn he still has an owner, Andy. She is hesitant to join Andy's toys due to her past experience with her previous owner, Emily, who placed her in a charity box for donations after outgrowing her. When Woody mentions Andy's sister Molly, Jessie quickly decides to join the gang. In Toy Story 3, Jessie initially believes that Andy has thrown her and the other toys away. During the film, she grows close to Buzz Lightyear, particularly when he is in Spanish mode, and at the end, they dance to the Spanish version of "You've Got a Friend in Me." Jessie is the main protagonist in the 2013 television special Toy Story of Terror!, in which she saves the other toys from a toy thief and seller at a roadside rest stop. Jessie appears in Toy Story 2, Toy Story 3, Toy Story 4, Toy Story 5, Toy Story Toons, Toy Story of Terror!, Toy Story That Time Forgot, and Pixar Popcorn. Bo Peep Bo Peep (voiced by Annie Potts) is a porcelain figurine and Woody's romantic interest. Inspired by the nursery rhyme "Little Bo-Peep", she is a kindhearted shepherdess accompanied by three sheep named Billy, Goat, and Gruff. In the first film, she and her sheep are detachable components of Molly's bedside lamp. In Andy's imaginative plays, Bo Peep is portrayed as the damsel-in-distress and depicted as gentle and ladylike. Bo Peep is given away prior to the events of Toy Story 3; Rex mentions that she has gone on to a new owner. She returns in Toy Story 4 with a more prominent role, with the film focusing on her relationship with Woody. Bo Peep also adopts a new philosophy regarding what it means to be a toy. Bo Peep is set to appear in the fifth film. She will likely have a smaller role than she did in the fourth film. Bo Peep appears in Toy Story, Toy Story 2, Toy Story 4, Toy Story 5, and Lamp Life (commonly known as Slinky) is a Southern-accented toy dachshund with a metal Slinky for a body. His body parts are plastic with articulated limbs and feet, and his ears are made of worn vinyl, suggesting he predates many of Andy's other toys. The character is based on the Slinky Dog toy manufactured between the 1950s and the 1970s. For the film, Pixar artist Bud Luckey partially redesigned the character to make him more suitable for animation. In the opening scenes of Toy Story and Toy Story 3, Andy refers to Slinky as One-Eyed Bart's "attack dog with a built-in force field" during playtime. Slinky Dog is voiced by Jim Varney in Toy Story and Toy Story 2. Following Varney's death, the role was recast with Blake Clark beginning in Toy Story 3. Slinky also appears in the short film Hawaiian Vacation, in which he acts as a hotel porter during Ken and Barbie's Hawaiian adventures, Small Fry, and Partysaurus Rex. He makes a silent appearance in Buzz Lightyear of Star Command: The Adventure Begins. Theme park attractions based on the character include Slinky Dog Zigzag Spin, which opened at several Disney theme parks beginning in 2010, and Slinky Dog Dash, a steel roller coaster that opened at Disney's Hollywood Studios at Walt Disney World in 2018. Slinky Dog appears in Toy Story, Toy Story 2, Toy Story 3, Toy Story 4, Toy Story 5, Toy Story Toons, and Pixar Popcorn. Rex Rex (voiced by Wallace Shawn) is a large, green, plastic Tyrannosaurus rex toy characterized by his anxiety and self-doubt. He has an inferiority complex and frequently worries that he is not scary enough. In Toy Story, Rex fears that Andy will replace him with a more intimidating dinosaur, but he gains confidence after Buzz Lightyear offers him advice on how to roar more effectively. Despite being a dinosaur, Rex dislikes confrontation and is portrayed as sensitive and easily distressed. He is also one of the largest toys in Andy's collection. In the opening scenes of Toy Story and Toy Story 3, Andy refers to Rex during playtime as Woody's "dinosaur who eats force field dogs". At the end of Toy Story 3, when giving his toys to Bonnie, Andy describes Rex as the "meanest, most terrifying dinosaur who ever lived". In the video game adaptations, Rex is voiced by Earl Boen in Toy Story 2: Buzz Lightyear to the Rescue (1999) and Toy Story Racer (2001). He also makes a cameo appearance in an outtake from Monsters, Inc., in which he is seen waiting at a crosswalk with Mike and Sulley. Rex appears in Toy Story, Toy Story 2, Toy Story 3, Toy Story 4, Toy Story 5, Toy Story Treats, Buzz Lightyear of Star Command, Toy Story Toons, Toy Story of Terror!, Toy Story That Time Forgot, Forky Asks a Question, and Pixar Popcorn. Hamm Hamm (voiced by John Ratzenberger) is a wisecracking, stylized plastic piggy bank with a cork in his belly. He is close friends with Mr. Potato Head; in Toy Story, the two are seen playing cards and later the board game Battleship, which Hamm consistently wins. Of all Andy's toys, Hamm is portrayed as having the most knowledge of the outside world and is often familiar with various gadgets and technologies. In Toy Story 2 and Toy Story 3, Andy imagines Hamm as a villain named "Evil Dr. Porkchop", who typically wears Mr. Potato Head's bowler hat. In the third film, the character is depicted with a large pig-shaped aircraft, which he uses during playtime to rescue One-Eyed Bart and One-Eyed Betty (the Potato Heads). Hamm appears in each of the Toy Story films: Toy Story, Toy Story 2, Toy Story 3, Toy Story 4, Toy Story 5, Toy Story Treats, Buzz Lightyear of Star Command, Toy Story Toons, Forky Asks a Question, and Pixar Popcorn. He also appears as the mayor in Toy Box mode in Toy Story 3: The Video Game. In theatrical short films, Hamm is featured in Hawaiian Vacation, Small Fry, and Partysaurus Rex. Ratzenberger reprised the role in the 2019 video game Kingdom Hearts III. Hamm briefly appears in Buzz Lightyear of Star Command: The Adventure Begins, voiced by Andrew Stanton. He also makes a cameo appearance in the post-credits scene of Cars as part of a self-referential homage to Ratzenberger, who voices Mack in the film. In a 2010 television advertisement for the United States Postal Service promoting Toy Story 3, Hamm appears dressed as a postal worker while promoting Priority Mail. Mr. Potato Head , 2013 Mr. Potato Head, and in Toy Story 2, the couple becomes the adoptive parents of three alien toys. Rickles had signed on to reprise the role in Toy Story 4, but passed away in 2017 before recording new material. At the request of his family, the filmmakers incorporated unused archival recordings from the previous films, Disney theme park attractions, and related video games. According to director Josh Cooley, the production team culled decades of recordings and worked with screenwriters Andrew Stanton and Stephany Folsom to construct new dialogue from existing material. The character ultimately appears in the film using repurposed audio. Mr. Potato Head appears in Toy Story, Toy Story 2, Toy Story 3, Toy Story 4, Toy Story 5, Toy Story Toons, Toy Story of Terror!, Toy Story That Time Forgot, and Pixar Popcorn. Mrs. Potato Head Mrs. Potato Head (voiced by Estelle Harris until her death and later by Anna Vocino) is Mr. Potato Head's wife. She is depicted as sweet-tempered and easygoing, in contrast to her husband's more impatient and hot-headed personality. Although mentioned in Toy Story, she does not appear on screen until Toy Story 2. In Toy Story 3, she has a larger role after one of her detachable eyes is left behind in Andy's room. Through the eye, she observes Andy searching for his missing toys, leading the others to realize that he did not intend to throw them away. She regards the three alien toys as her children, a view her husband comes to share after the aliens help save the toys from the incinerator. Mrs. Potato Head appears in the short film Hawaiian Vacation, in which she serves as a tour guide during Ken and Barbie's imagined trip, as well as in Small Fry, Partysaurus Rex. She also appears in Toy Story 4 and Toy Story 5. Toy Story 4 was Harris' final film role before her retirement and death in 2022. Aliens The Aliens, also known as Little Green Men (primarily voiced by Jeff Pidgeon, In Toy Story, Buzz and Woody encounter the Aliens inside a claw machine at Pizza Planet. The Aliens repeatedly state that "the Claw" determined who would be chosen, referring to the arcade machine's mechanism. In Toy Story 2, the three aliens join Andy's toy collection after being rescued by Mrs. Potato Head. They later accompany the toys on their mission to rescue Woody, expressing repeated gratitude to Mr. Potato Head for saving them. They also mistakenly identify the airport baggage area as a "mystic portal". In Toy Story 3, the three Aliens are portrayed in Andy's imaginative play as henchmen to One-Eyed Bart and One-Eyed Betty. Later, after the toys are donated to Sunnyside Daycare, the Aliens operate a claw crane to rescue the other toys from an incinerator. Following this event, Mr. Potato Head acknowledges them as his children. They are subsequently given to Bonnie along with the rest of Andy’s toys. The Aliens appear briefly in Toy Story 4. They also appear in the short films Hawaiian Vacation, Small Fry and Partysaurus Rex, and Pixar Popcorn, as well as in the video game Kingdom Hearts III. In the film Lightyear, they are referenced in the mid-credits scene as a decorative statue. A theme park attraction based on the characters, Alien Swirling Saucers, operates at several Disney parks. Forky Forky (voiced by Tony Hale) is a sentient spork toy made from a plastic spork with googly eyes, pipe cleaner arms, and popsicle stick legs. He is created by Bonnie in Toy Story 4, but initially rejects the idea that he is a toy, believing himself to be trash. Throughout the film, Woody repeatedly prevents him from throwing himself away and helps him understand his role in Bonnie's life. Forky is also the title character of the Disney+ short-form series Forky Asks a Question. ==Introduced in Toy Story ==
Introduced in Toy Story
Andy's toys Billy, Goat, and Gruff Billy, Goat, and Gruff (voiced by Emily Davis) are Bo Peep's three-headed sheep companions. They appear in Toy Story, Toy Story Treats, Toy Story 2, Toy Story 4, Lamp Life, and Pixar Popcorn. and the Bucket O Soldiers in Florida Sarge and the Bucket O Soldiers, also known as Sergeant (voiced by R. Lee Ermey), is the determined commander of a group of green plastic army men collectively referred to as Bucket O Soldiers. The soldiers are typically stored in a plastic bucket and specialize in reconnaissance missions. They play a prominent role in Toy Story and have smaller roles in Toy Story 2 and Toy Story 3. The characters also appear in the video game Kingdom Hearts III. A theme park attraction based on the characters, Toy Soldiers Parachute Drop, operates at Disney parks in France and Hong Kong. RC RC is Andy's remote-controlled buggy, with a green body and blue splash decals. He does not speak; instead, communicating through revving and engine sounds that some of the other toys, such as Mr. Potato Head, can understand. Outside of the films, RC appears as a playable character in the video game Toy Story Racer. The character also inspired the roller coaster RC Racer, which operates at several Disney theme parks and features riders "transported" in vehicles modelled after RC. Andy's other toysRocky (voiced by Jack Angel) is a heavyweight wrestler figure. He is silent and plays a minor role in the first two films. Rocky speaks in the Disney Adventures comics and in the Disney Interactive games, ''Disney's Animated Storybook: Toy Story and Toy Story Activity Center. He is a playable character in the Toy Story Racer video game. Rocky is absent from Toy Story 3'' and is no longer shown in Andy's room. His name and the logo on his championship belt are references to the Rock of Gibraltar. • '''''' is an Etch A Sketch toy capable of drawing various images quickly and accurately. In the first film, it sketches a hangman's noose and shows it to Woody after the toys revolt against him for knocking Buzz out of a window. In the second film, Etch helps by sketching portraits of Woody's kidnapper and later creating a map showing the location of Al's Toy Barn. In Toy Story 3, it appears only in footage of Andy as a young boy, and Woody mentions that Etch was one of the toys donated to someone else. • '''' (voiced by Joe Ranft) is a pair of wind-up binoculars used by the other toys to get a better view during various situations in the first two films. Lenny is a playable character in the Toy Story Racer video game and also appears in Toy Story 3'' through home video footage from Andy's childhood. • Magic 8 Ball makes brief appearances in the first three films. In the first film, Woody asks the ball whether Andy would pick him instead of Buzz Lightyear to take along to Pizza Planet, but the ball replies, "Don't Count On It", upsetting Woody. Woody shoves the ball aside, and it falls behind a desk. In Toy Story 3, a disinterested Molly tosses the ball into a donation box along with several other toys heading to Sunnyside daycare. • Mike is a Playskool tape recorder toy who helps Woody amplify his voice during a toy meeting using his attached microphone. At the end of Toy Story 2, Wheezy uses Mike as a karaoke machine. • A '''Farmer Says See 'n Say''' is one of Andy's toys in the first film. It communicates by spinning its pointer. The original pull-string variant appears in Toy Story 3, where it is used as a roulette wheel by Lotso's henchmen. • Mr. Shark (voiced by Jack Angel) is a yellow toy with a built-in keyboard that speaks words typed on it. He makes brief appearances in the first two films, and it is stated that he has held toy seminars on topics such as "plastic corrosion awareness" and "what to do if you or part of you is swallowed." In Toy Story 2, Buzz uses Mr. Spell to help identify the man who stole Woody from the yard sale. Mr. Spell also appears in Forky Asks a Question. • Robot (voiced by Jeff Pidgeon) is a red and blue toy robot. In Toy Story, he stands on his head so Buzz can run on his treads like a treadmill. In Toy Story 2, he assists Buzz in ensuring all of Andy's toys are accounted for after learning about the yard sale. He is not seen again until the end of the film, when he watches Wheezy sing "You've Got a Friend in Me". In Toy Story 3, Robot appears only in home video footage near the beginning of the film. • Snake is a green and purple toy snake that communicates through hissing. It appears briefly in the first two films and is shown only in home video footage at the beginning of Toy Story 3. • Troikas are a set of five non-talking, egg-shaped toys featured in Toy Story and Toy Story 2. They vary in size, with one able to fit inside another, similarly to Matryoshka dolls. • Toddle Tots and a Little Tikes fire truck are among Andy's toys in the first two films. • Troll doll is a small doll with pink hair and a blue bathing suit, appearing in the first two films. In the first film, ahe became fascinated with Buzz and is seen lifting weights with him. In Toy Story 2, it is seen alongside Bo Peep, helping search for Woody's hat before Andy takes him along to cowboy camp. It briefly appears in Toy Story 3 through old home videos of Andy as a child. A group of Troll dolls also appear in the third film's opening sequence, in which they are portrayed as orphans on a runaway train during Andy's playtime. • Barrel of Monkeys is a barrel used to contain red monkeys whose arms interlock. In a brief appearance, the monkeys are lowered by Andy's other toys out of the bedroom window in an attempt to retrieve Buzz, but the plan fails because there are not enough monkeys. They make brief appearances in the next two films during Andy's playtime. A Barrel of Monkeys is also briefly featured as one of Bonnie's toys in the short film Hawaiian Vacation. • Roly-Poly Clown is a toy clown that jingles when it is wobbled. It appears only in the first two films. • A hockey puck with yellow gloves and red boots appears in the first film after Mr. Potato Head tells Hamm that he is Picasso. Davis family Andy Davis Andrew "Andy" Davis (voiced by John Morris in all four films, Charlie Bright in Toy Story 3, and Jack McGraw in Toy Story 4) is one of the overarching protagonists alongside Bonnie of the Toy Story franchise and the original owner of Woody, Buzz Lightyear, and the other toys in the first three films. He lives with his mother and sister, Molly, until the third film, when he goes to college after turning 17. His father is never seen or mentioned in the films. In Toy Story 2, Andy's mother calls Woody "an old family toy", and the Prospector calls him a hand-me-down toy. John Lasseter said, "We always thought that Woody was kind of a hand-me-down to Andy from his father". According to Toy Story producer Ralph Guggenheim in a December 1995 Animation Magazine article, John Lasseter and the story team reviewed the names of Pixar employees' children, looking for the right name for Woody's owner. Davis was ultimately named after and based on Andy Luckey, the son of animator Bud Luckey, Pixar's fifth employee, and the creator of Woody. The physical appearance of Andy differs slightly between each of the films due to advances in animation technology. Mrs. Davis Mrs. Davis (voiced by Laurie Metcalf) is Andy and Molly's single mother. She is portrayed as a loving parent to Andy and Molly, but also acts as an indirect threat to the toys. Her actions involving the toys help set the plot in motion in the first three films, though they are not malicious. In the first film, she buys a Buzz Lightyear toy for Andy on his birthday, prompting the rivalry between Buzz and Woody that eventually leads to the two toys being lost and forced to find their way home. In the second film, she places Wheezy in a yard sale, prompting Woody's rescue attempt, during which he is stolen by Al McWhiggin. In the third film, she asks Andy to clean out his room before leaving for college and mistakenly throws away the toys Andy planned to put in the attic. Despite this, in the second film, she is very protective of Woody, describing him as an "old family toy" when a collector, Al McWhiggin, offers to buy him at the yard sale. At the end of the third film, she becomes emotional and cries as Andy prepares to leave for college, but Andy reassures her that they will remain connected even when apart. This moment plays a role in Woody's decision to have Andy donate the toys to Bonnie, giving them a new life. Molly Davis Molly Davis (voiced by Hannah Unkrich in Toy Story 2 and in archived footage in Toy Story 3, and by Bea Miller in Toy Story 3) is Andy's younger sister. She is depicted as a baby in the first film, a toddler in the second film, and a preteen in the third. At the beginning of the first film, Andy uses her crib as a town jail during playtime, showing that they share a room. When the family moves later in the film, Andy and Molly are given separate rooms, though Molly plans to move into Andy's room once he leaves for college. In the first film, she drools on Mr. Potato Head and throws him from the crib, causing his parts to scatter and earning her the nickname "Princess Drool" from him. At the end of the film, she receives a Mrs. Potato Head toy for Christmas. In Toy Story 3, she owned a Barbie doll, which she donated to the daycare center after losing interest in dolls and toys. In Toy Story 2, Molly is voiced by co-director Lee Unkrich's daughter, Hannah Unkrich. Unkrich later reused recordings of his daughter to portray Molly in the old home-video scenes at the beginning of Toy Story 3. Phillips family Sid Phillips Sidney "Sid" Phillips (voiced by Erik von Detten) is Andy's next-door neighbor in the first film, although it is unclear whether he and Andy know each other. Known for torturing and destroying toys, Sid serves as the film's main antagonist. Many of his toys are destroyed or have pieces missing, and are rebuilt using parts from other toys. He is also shown tormenting his sister, Hannah, and destroying her toys by blowing them up, burning them, or decapitating them. Sid enjoys skateboarding and wears a t-shirt depicting a human skull that was later used as the logo for Zero Skateboards. Andy's toys mention that Sid was repeatedly kicked out of summer camp, and in the audio commentary on the 10th-anniversary DVD, the directors describe him as a bully, but also the "most creative character in the movie". His parents make only minor appearances: his mother's voice is briefly heard several times in the film, while his father is briefly seen asleep in a chair in front of a television. Sid is the only human character in the films to witness toys actually coming to life. Near the end of the first film, Woody and Sid's mutant toys attempt to rescue Buzz by scaring Sid, causing him to become terrified of toys. The final moment occurs when Woody comes to life while Sid is holding him and tells him to "play nice". Sid panics and runs back into the house, screaming, then flees to his room when his sister scares him with her doll. Sid does not appear in the second film, although Buzz briefly mentions him during the toys' mission to rescue Woody from the toy collector, Al McWhiggin. Sid also appears in the four-issue Monsters, Inc. comic mini-series produced by Boom! Comics. In the third film, Sid makes brief cameo appearances in two scenes, with von Detten reprising his role. He is shown working as a garbage collector and has grown a small beard, though he remains recognizable by his distinctive T-shirt. His only dialogue consists of humming guitar riffs, and he is depicted listening to heavy metal music through large headphones. is Sid's sweet-natured younger sister, who appears a few times in the film. Having adjusted to her toys being mutilated by Sid, most of Hannah's dolls either have different heads or altered body parts, and at the end of the film, she finds enjoyment in scaring her brother after he has been horrified by Woody and the other toys revealing their anthropomorphism. She spends most of her screen time playing with her altered dolls. Scud Scud is Sid's aggressive Bull Terrier and the secondary antagonist of the first film. He first appears when Sid blows up a Combat Carl in his backyard, and is shown to have a malicious attitude towards toys, violently chewing them to destroy them. His viciousness is demonstrated when Sid places a squeeze toy Alien on his nose and Scud mauls it. Scud serves as an obstacle for Woody and Buzz as they come to life and try to escape Sid's house. Later, he spots Woody and Buzz trying to reach the moving van and pursues them, but they elude him when he chases them into the middle of a traffic intersection and becomes trapped by the cars crashing to avoid him. Mrs. Phillips Mrs. Philips (voiced by Mickie McGowan) is Sid and Hannah's unseen mother with few lines. Sid and Hannah's toysBabyfaceLegs is a toy fishing rod with Barbie doll legs. When Woody formulates his plan to save Buzz from Sid, he assigns Legs to partner up with Ducky. Legs opens the vent grating so that she and Ducky can go to the front porch. Here, Legs lowers Ducky through the hole Ducky created so he can swing toward the doorbell. After Ducky catches the frog, Legs pulls both toys up to safety. Later, when the mutant toys advance on Sid, Legs lowers Babyface onto Sid's head, scaring him. Legs also appears in Toy Story Treats. • A jack-in-the-box toy with a green Frankenstein-esque hand that pops out. During Woody's plan to save Buzz from Sid, the toy extends its hand to Sid's doorknob, ready to open the door when the signal comes. The hand later grabs Sid's leg when the mutant toys surround him. The toy also appears in Toy Story Treats. • RollerBob is a jet pilot action figure, whose torso has been attached to a skateboard. After the frog is let out of Sid's room to distract Scud, RollerBob ferries Woody and the other mutant toys outside of the house to Sid's yard. • Rockmobile is the head of a toy insect attached on top of a small, headless human torso toy who is holding a steering wheel. This torso is attached in the head socket of a larger, muscular human torso toy that is missing its legs. • Pump Boy is a yellow convertible toy car with doll arms instead of wheels. It is capable of walking very fast and climbing walls. As part of the toys' rescue plan, Woody chooses Pump Boy to wind up the frog to distract Scud. • A tin wind-up frog with two different wheels, instead of back legs and without its left front foot. As part of Woody's plot to rescue Buzz from Sid, Woody orders, "Wind the frog!", at which point the frog is wound up by Pump Boy. When Ducky rings the doorbell, the frog is let out of Sid's room, allowing Scud to chase it down the stairs and out to the front porch, where it is caught by Ducky; Legs reels both toys up to safety. • Ducky is a triple toy combination: a duck-headed Pez dispenser with a doll torso and a plunger base. He and Legs go to the front porch via the vent, and Ducky, suspended from the porch ceiling by Legs, swings toward the doorbell until he finally activates it, giving Woody the signal to release the frog. Ducky catches the frog as Legs reels both toys up to safety. • Jingle Joe is a Combat Carl head atop a jingling roller toy, with a severed Mickey Mouse arm nailed to the side for support. Jingle Joe first rolls out from under Sid's bed to fix Janie and the Pterodactyl. He notices Woody staring at them with a flashlight, so he turns it off, sending Woody running back to Buzz. • '''' is a G.I. Joe-like soldier action figure who is blown up by Sid with an explosive device. Combat Carl is Caucasian; a different character with the same name, who is African-American, appears in Toy Story of Terror! and Toy Story 4''. • "Marie Antoinette" and "her little sister" are nicknames given to Hannah's two headless dolls by Buzz after he is found by Hannah who makes him and her dolls drink some tea at a tea party. The dolls, being decapitated, cannot talk, but they do wave when Buzz mentions them to Woody. The two dolls are also always seen sitting next to a headless teddy bear. ==Introduced in Toy Story 2==
Introduced in Toy Story 2
The Roundup Gang Stinky Pete Stinky Pete, commonly known as the Prospector (voiced by Kelsey Grammer), is a prospector doll and one of the two main antagonists in Toy Story 2. He is a mint in the box toy modelled after a character from the fictional television show ''Woody's Roundup'', which also features Woody, Jessie, and Bullseye. In contrast to the bumbling, optimistic character portrayed on the show, the Prospector is intelligent, ruthless, short-tempered, and well-spoken. He openly despises space-themed toys like Buzz Lightyear, whom he angrily blames for the cancellation of ''Woody's Roundup'' following the launch of the Soviet satellite Sputnik, which made children all over America lose their interest in western toys. The Prospector believes the Roundup Gang should be put on display in a toy museum, and secretly disrupts Woody's escape attempt and frames Jessie for the sabotage. Later, he openly intervenes when Woody asks the Roundup Gang to come home with him, warning them about toys spending a lifetime on a dime store shelf watching other toys be sold, like he did, and won't let it happen again, hence his willingness to go to Japan. After a final confrontation at the airport, Andy's toys stuff the Prospector into a backpack belonging to Amy, an artistic girl who takes him in as her new toy. In one of the films' outtakes, he is seen talking to two Barbie dolls in the box, saying that he could probably get them a role in the third film. This outtake was later deleted in the 2019 home media reissue, which media outlets inferred as a result of the MeToo movement. The Prospector appears in Toy Story Mania!, the Disney Parks attraction ride, as well as the Toy Box mode of Toy Story 3: The Video Game, now voiced by Stephen Stanton. Al's Toy Barn Ultra Buzz Lightyear Ultra Buzz Lightyear, also known as Utility Belt Buzz, (voiced by Tim Allen) comes across the Buzz Lightyear aisle, including a display case labeled "New Utility Belt", which contains a newer Buzz Lightyear with a utility belt. He believes the original Buzz has escaped his box, and captures him inside one. He is then mistaken by Andy's toys to be the original Buzz and goes with them to rescue Woody, until he decides to join his father, Zurg. Emperor Zurg Emperor Zurg (voiced by Andrew Stanton in most media, Wayne Knight in Buzz Lightyear of Star Command: The Adventure Begins, Jess Harnell in a mini counterpart in Small Fry, James Patrick Stuart in the video game version of the third film, Kinect Disneyland Adventures, Disney Infinity, and Disney Magic Kingdoms, and James Brolin in Lightyear) is a robotic villain action figure and Buzz's archenemy. He is a thinly veiled parody of Darth Vader from the Star Wars franchise (with certain other visual elements adapted from the Death's Head character from Marvel UK). He usually carries an "ion blaster" that fires plastic balls. Zurg is mentioned in the first film under the title of the "Evil Emperor Zurg", but does not appear. He debuts in Toy Story 2 as the secondary antagonist, where he battles with Ultra Buzz Lightyear. Zurg claims he is the father of Buzz, in an almost word-for-word homage to the famous scene in The Empire Strikes Back. Much like Palpatine in Return of the Jedi, he is unintentionally knocked down an elevator shaft by one of Andy's toys, Rex. In Toy Story 3, another Zurg appears briefly during a sequence in the end credits, where he is donated to Sunnyside Daycare Center and greeted by the resident toys. Zurg also appears in Buzz Lightyear of Star Command and its direct-to-video film Buzz Lightyear of Star Command: The Adventure Begins as the main antagonist of both. Zurg is also a playable character in the PlayStation 3 version of Toy Story 3: The Video Game, in Toy Box Mode. In the game, he has a convertible (the ZurgsMobile) that matches his personality. Zurg's mini counterpart is featured in the short film Small Fry. A Zurg toy appears in the 2015 live-action Disney film Tomorrowland, in the Blast from the Past toy store. In the 2022 spin-off film Lightyear, Zurg is revealed to be Buzz Lightyear, who has traveled centuries into the future due to the effects of time dilation after having experienced faster-than-light travel. Zurg reveals that he is 50 years older than his younger counterpart, and that the name "Zurg" is the sound his robot minions make in reference to him (B'Zurg), which lead him to assume the identity. He controls a mecha suit and travels back in time to confront his younger self in order to fix a mistake he perceives that he made. Zurg has become consumed with regret, resentment, and is obsessed with his own "mission". He has missed out entirely on life, and is blind to others' experiences. In Buzz's final battle against him, he is seemingly killed, but is later revealed to be alive in a post-credits scene. Tour Guide Barbie Tour Guide Barbie (voiced by Jodi Benson) is the owner of Al's Toy Barn and one of the two main antagonists of the second film. Al is first seen in Toy Story 2 during an advertisement for his toy store in which he is dressed up as the Chicken Man. Al is a collector of all things related to the old ''Woody's Roundup'' television show. He is greedy, unscrupulous, and lazy as he complains of having to drive all the way to work on a Saturday, despite his apartment being only across the street from the store. When visiting the Davis family's yard sale, Al discovers Woody there, but when he tries to buy Woody, Andy's mom refuses and locks Woody in a cash box for safety. In desperation, Al causes a distraction and breaks into the cash box to steal Woody. With the toy versions of all the Roundup characters collected, Al plans to sell them to a museum in Japan, but by the end of the film, with all of the characters' toys missing, he's shown in another Toy Barn commercial where he's openly despondent and sobbing, as the deal to sell the toys was lost. His car's license plate reads LZTYBRN, which stands for "Al's Toy Barn.” This is how Buzz figures out that the chicken man was the kidnapper of Woody. It is also the actual license plate of Ash Brannon, co-director of Toy Story 2, according to the Toy Story 2: Special Edition commentary. Al is also alluded to in Toy Story of Terror! as a name on a shipping address on the box Woody was going to be sold in after being stolen, revealing that Al had tried to buy him again. Other Wheezy Wheezy (speaking voice by Joe Ranft and by Phil LaMarr in Toy Story Mania and Toy Story 3: The Video Game and singing voice by Robert Goulet in Toy Story 2) is Andy's penguin squeeze toy that appears in Toy Story 2. He is introduced when Woody finds him on a shelf, after Andy accidentally ripped Woody's arm and his mom took him, where Wheezy had been placed after his squeaker broke, upsetting Andy. When Andy's mom plans to sell Wheezy at a yard sale, Woody tries to save him, but gets left behind in the process, leading to Woody being stolen by Al. At the end of the film, Wheezy tells Woody that the shark had an extra squeaker, allowing Wheezy to squeak normally again. Wheezy does not directly appear in Toy Story 3, except in footage showing Andy as a young boy. Woody says that Wheezy was one of Andy's toys who went to new owners. Wheezy appears in the Toy Box mode in Toy Story 3: The Video Game. The Cleaner The Cleaner (voiced by Jonathan Harris) is an elderly specialist in toy restoration and repair with a fully loaded toy repair kit. He comes to Al's apartment to fix Woody in preparation for selling him to the toy museum. He insists that Al let him take his time with the work and views it as more than a simple job, asserting, "You can't rush art." Once he finishes the job, he tells Al that Woody is “for display only,” while Al is simply overjoyed by the quality of the repair. Emily Emily is Jessie's former owner and is mentioned by her in the film. She appears in a flashback during the song "When She Loved Me" by Sarah McLachlan. As a young girl, she enjoyed playing with Jessie. However, as she got older, she became more interested in makeup and talking with her friends on the phone, causing her to forget about Jessie, who had fallen under her bed, for years. As a teenager, she rediscovers Jessie but promptly donates her to charity, causing Jessie to develop claustrophobia and a fear of being abandoned. In Toy Story 3, as Andy prepares to leave for college and the toys begin to worry about their future, Jessie describes the situation as "Emily all over again." Buster Buster is Andy's pet dachshund, mentioned at the end of Toy Story as his Christmas present. In Toy Story 2, Buster is very energetic and friendly. He obeys commands given to him by Woody (although he does not obey orders from Andy), who uses Buster to rescue Wheezy from a yard sale. In Toy Story 3, Buster is now old, visibly aged, and overweight. Because of that, he is unable to help Woody rescue Andy's other toys, instead falling asleep. He stays with Mrs. Davis while Andy goes to college. Crazy Critters The Crazy Critters are the name given to several small animal cutouts that are friends of the Roundup Gang. They are often seen in the show ''Woody's Roundup accompanying the characters, as well as in several pieces of merchandise themed after the show. The Crazy Critters can also be found on Toy Story Midway Mania!'' as prizes won by the riders depending on their score. The critters also serve as the vehicles for Jessie's Critter Carousel, and some horse-shaped critters help pull a cart that people board in on the ride ''Woody's Round-Up''. Zurg Bots The Zurg Bots (both voiced by Angus MacLane) are Zurg's robot minions that appear in a Buzz Lightyear video game that Rex plays at the beginning of Toy Story 2, where they serve as the antagonists. The Zurg Bots each have a "Z" symbol on their chests standing for "Zurg", a laser built into their right arms, and miniature versions of the Zurg Bots built into their shoulder armor. Rex, playing as Buzz, shoots a crystal near him with his laser, causing several lasers to shoot towards each Zurg Bot surrounding him and triggering an explosion. The Zurg Bots reappear in the film Lightyear, where they are named Zyclops, and act similarly to how they did in Toy Story 2, acting as minions of Zurg. In Lightyear, they can speak, but the only word they can say is "Zurg". ==Introduced in Toy Story 3==
Introduced in Toy Story 3
Molly's toy Barbie Barbara "Barbie" Roberts (voiced by Jodi Benson) is a plush, pink, strawberry-scented Southern-accented teddy bear and the main antagonist of the third film. He has a limp from falling off a truck in early years, and uses a wooden toy mallet as an assistive cane (although he is still able to walk without it). Lotso is the supreme ruler of the toys at the Sunnyside Daycare and initially acts like a kindhearted and wise caretaker, but is eventually revealed to be a ruthless and unkind prison warden. Lotso, Big Baby and Chuckles once belonged to a little girl named Daisy, whom Lotso adored. When Daisy fell asleep and accidentally left them at a rest stop, Lotso led the toys on a long journey home, only to discover that Daisy's parents had replaced him with a duplicate. Embittered beyond the point of insanity, Lotso convinced Big Baby that Daisy had replaced all of them, ended his friendship with Chuckles and forced them both to come with him to Sunnyside. There, he established a totalitarian rule, depriving toys of the Butterfly Room unless they earn it, forbidding them from leaving or escaping back to their owners and ensuring that the only way out is through the trash, which he believes is where all toys are destined. He often assigned new toys to the Caterpillar Room, where destructive toddlers who were too young to properly play with toys. Some threw them and broke them, while he and his henchmen reserved themselves in the Butterfly Room where they were played with properly. When Woody reveals Lotso's true character, all of Lotso's henchmen turn on him and Big Baby throws Lotso in the dumpster. Seeking revenge, he pulls Woody into the dumpster, resulting in Andy's toys jumping in to save him just as the garbage truck arrives. All of them end up at the dump on a conveyor belt leading to a shredder, and then an incinerator. Lotso, getting free with Woody and Buzz's help, reaches an emergency stop button, but sadistically decides at the last minute to leave the other toys to be burned as a last ditch attempt to keep them from returning to Andy. However, his final plot failed at the last second as Andy's toys are saved by the Aliens using a giant claw. Hamm and Slinky wish to get revenge on Lotso for his betrayal, but Woody convinces them he isn't worth it, feeling that the dump is where he belongs. Lotso, meanwhile, attempts to escape from the dump, but a garbage man (who had owned a Lots-o'-Huggin' Bear during his childhood) finds Lotso and straps him to the grill of his truck as a decoration. Lotso most likely sees Woody and his friends alive on the side of the road, which makes him realize he has failed in preventing them from returning to their owner; however, due to his position, there was nothing he could do about it. Lotso was intended to be in the first film, but the technology to represent realistic fur was not available until Monsters, Inc. An early version of Lotso makes a brief appearance in the first film, Ken Kenneth "Ken" Carlson (voiced by Michael Keaton) is a smooth-talking doll, who falls in love with Barbie at first sight. He lives in Ken's Dreamhouse, a big yellow dollhouse with three stories, a large wardrobe room, and an elevator. His appearance is based on a real Mattel Ken doll from 1988, called Animal Lovin' Ken. Ken serves as one of the two secondary antagonists for most of the third film, but later reforms. He was originally one of Lotso's henchmen, which caused a temporary strain in his relationship with Barbie. He later turns on Lotso after understanding of his true nature and encourages Lotso's crew to do the same. After Lotso's defeat, he and Barbie renew their relationship and become the new leaders of Sunnyside's toy population, keeping in touch with Bonnie's toys through letters sent home in Bonnie's backpack. He and Barbie later come to visit Bonnie's House in Hawaiian Vacation. Big Baby Big Baby (voiced by Woody Smith) is a baby doll with a lazy eye who carries around a bottle and is adorned with childlike scribbling that resembles tattoos. He is one of the two secondary antagonists for most of the third film, but later reforms. As a sentient toy, he has the biological traits of a human infant. He normally does not speak, instead communicating through baby sounds, with the exception of one spoken line ("Mama") as the toys escape Sunnyside. He acts as Lotso's assistant and enforcer, who helps guide the new toys around, and punishes them when they misbehave. He, Lotso and Chuckles were all once owned by Daisy before they were left behind. When Lotso found Daisy had replaced him, he convinced Big Baby and Chuckles that they were met with the same fate as they traveled to Sunnyside, where Lotso took over. Once Woody revealed Lotso's true nature, Big Baby realized that Lotso had been using him and throws Lotso in the dumpster. He then helps Ken and Barbie reform Sunnyside and is last seen wearing a new outfit matching one of Ken's. The baby who provided the voice for Big Baby is named "Woody", according to director Lee Unkrich, and the film's credits list him as Woody Smith. Other Sunnyside toys • '''''' (voiced by John Cygan) is a green insect action figure with a bug's head, chomping mandibles, wings, and two muscular arms. He is a supporting antagonist, but later reforms. He serves as one of the toy thugs working for Lotso, and helps to reprogram Buzz and apprehend Andy's other toys. He also operates a searchlight in the playground to look out for escaped toys. He later turns against Lotso after learning of his true nature. During the credits, he is seen living in a happier Sunnyside and is shown taking a turn to endure playtime with the young children in the Caterpillar Room, switching with Chunk so he can rest. • '''''' (voiced by Whoopi Goldberg) is a purple toy rubber octopus. She is the only female member of Lotso's gang, and at first welcomes Andy's toys, but later helps capture them with her elastic arms. After they escape, she traps them near the edge of a garbage chute and is ready to push them into the dumpster, should they not admit defeat. She is seen visibly cringing at Lotso's true character being revealed. After understanding the true nature of Lotso, she turns on him. Eventually, Lotso orders Stretch to push the toys into the dumpster, which she is reluctant to do so. Lotso is then thrown into the dumpster by Big Baby for his lies and treachery, and Stretch immediately leaves the area. In the credits, she welcomes new toys happily and is later seen sneaking a message to Woody and his friends in Bonnie's backpack. • '''''' (voiced by Jack Angel) is an orange rock monster toy with a face that can change expressions and is one of Lotso's henchmen who eventually helps imprison Andy's toys. He later turns on Lotso after learning of his true nature. In the credits, he is seen enduring the abuse of the younger children, and later taking a rest while Twitch takes his place. • '''''' (voiced by Jan Rabson) is a blue and silver robot toy at Sunnyside Daycare and one of Lotso's henchmen. He only has one line, when he points out Chunk's low intelligence. He later turns against Lotso after learning of his true nature. • '''''' (voiced by Teddy Newton) is a character based on the real-life toy of the same name. He can only speak when his receiver is lifted from its cradle. He has been at Sunnyside for many years, and lives in a corner in the Caterpillar Room. He becomes an ally to Woody. When Woody returns to Sunnyside, Chatter Telephone says that coming back was a mistake because Lotso had since improved his security. He takes Woody to the window and explains that the trash chute is now the only way toys leave Sunnyside. Although his advice is to lay low, he reluctantly gives Woody instructions on how to escape from Sunnyside, placing particular emphasis on the importance of subduing the Monkey, who monitors the security cameras (which Woody and Slinky accomplish). For this, he is later beaten and broken by Lotso's gang for helping the toys escape until he finally talks. He apologizes to Woody. In the credits, he has been repaired and is shown happily attending a toy party in the Butterfly Room. • '''' (voiced by Richard Kind) is a green toy worm with a built-in flashlight who wears glasses. He keeps a library of instruction manuals in a closet at Sunnyside, and gives Lotso the instruction manual for Buzz Lightyear. He later gives the same manual to Barbie (whom he mistakes for Ken since she is disguised in his spacesuit outfit). In the credits, he is seen happily using his flashlight to light a disco ball during a party at Sunnyside. He only has two lines in the film. Bookworm is voiced by Richard Kind, who had previously done voice work for Pixar as Molt in A Bug's Life and Van in the Cars franchise and would later voice Bing Bong in Inside Out''. • The Monkey (voiced by Lee Unkrich), based on the Musical Jolly Chimp toy from the 1960s, monitors the Sunnyside Daycare security cameras at night. Every time a toy tries to escape, the Monkey pushes a button that turns on the P.A. and screeches into it while banging his cymbals repeatedly, alerting Lotso and his gang like a security alarm. Chatter Telephone tells Woody that he must get rid of the Monkey before he and his friends can escape Sunnyside, as the Monkey can view cameras monitoring all areas of the daycare premises, including the playground. After an initial unsuccessful attempt to put a plastic black bag over the Monkey, Woody and Slinky manage to wrap him up in adhesive tape, and subsequently lock him in a filing cabinet. It is assumed the Monkey somehow freed himself and alerted Lotso, as well as figuring out that the Chatter Telephone helped them in their escape, leading to the confrontation at the dumpster. In the credits, the Monkey is still monitoring the security cameras, but is seen happily playing his cymbals while wearing star-shaped sunglasses. • Some basic Lego minifigures. They have yellow skin and wear plain clothing in different colors. • A jack-in-the-box toy (voiced by Lee Unkrich) has two lines in the film when he greets Andy's toys, and later Zurg and a few other toys during the credits, exclaiming, "New toys!" Anderson family Bonnie Anderson Bonnie Anderson (voiced by in Emily Hahn in Toy Story 3, short films, and television specials, Madeleine McGraw in Toy Story 4, and Scarlett Spears in Toy Story 5) is one of the children who attends Sunnyside Daycare, where her mother is the receptionist. In Toy Story 3, Andy donates his toys to her before he leaves for college. In the short film Hawaiian Vacation, Bonnie goes on a vacation to Hawaii and leaves Barbie and Ken in her room. In Toy Story of Terror!, she and her mother are stranded at a motel, and she later discovers the manager has been stealing her toys to sell on the internet. In Toy Story That Time Forgot, it is revealed that Bonnie has scheduled play dates with a friend named Mason in a neighboring house. In Small Fry, Bonnie forgets Buzz in a fast-food restaurant's ball pit and does not notice that the mini-buzz has taken his place. Partysaurus Rex reveals that Bonnie has an extensive collection of bath toys, and that the regular toys fear being included in her bath time. In Toy Story 4, Bonnie creates a toy called Forky out of trash, on her first day of kindergarten. Mrs. Anderson Mrs. Anderson (voiced by Lori Alan) is Bonnie's mother, is a brokenhearted toy clown who was once owned by Daisy, alongside Lotso and Big Baby. In addition to Lasseter's relationship to Miyazaki, another factor that contributed to Totoro's appearance was Disney's role in dubbing Studio Ghibli films for their English-language releases. He does not appear in Toy Story 4. Daisy Daisy is a little girl who appears in flashbacks. She owned Lotso, Big Baby and Chuckles, but accidentally left them behind at a rest area along the road. In order to pacify her, Daisy's parents bought her another Lots-O'-Huggin' Bear rather than going to find Lotso and the rest of her toys, which made Lotso think he had been forgotten about, and changed him into a sinister, ruthless toy. Lotso lied to Big Baby, claiming Daisy replaced all of them, and made him come to Sunnyside and take it over. Chuckles keeps Big Baby's lost pendant; however, it is revealed Big Baby still loves Daisy, much to Lotso's dismay, when he sees the pendant again (which he promptly destroys with his mallet). ==Introduced in Toy Story 4==
Introduced in Toy Story 4
Mr. Anderson Mr. Anderson (voiced by Jay Hernandez) is Bonnie's father. is a sentient plastic knife with googly eyes and pipe cleaner arms. Like Forky, she was created by Bonnie and initially considers herself as trash. She appears in a mid-credits scene, in which she is introduced by Jessie after Bonnie's first day in first grade. Forky instantly falls in love with her. Melephant Brooks, Chairol Burnett, Bitey White and Carl Reineroceros Melephant Brooks (voiced by Mel Brooks), Chairol Burnett (voiced by Carol Burnett), Bunny Bunny (voiced by Jordan Peele) is a blue and green stuffed bunny with purple glitter eyes, and a carnival prize who wants to be won. Ducky Ducky (voiced by Keegan-Michael Key) is a stuffed duck with pink glitter eyes and a carnival prize. He is friends with Bunny, and also wants to be won. Duke Caboom is a parody of the Evel Knievel Rally Stunt Cycle by the Ideal Toy Company. Second Chance Antiques Gabby Gabby Gabby Gabby (voiced by Christina Hendricks) is a 1950s pullstring doll with a broken voice box, the result of a manufacturing defect, who lives in Second Chance Antiques. She serves as the former main antagonist of the fourth film, having become bitter at being in the store for decades and not being wanted due to her broken voice box. During her time in the store, she has become like a godfather, with a set of ventriloquist dummies as her henchmen. Woody eventually gives her his voice box in return for Forky's freedom and persuades her to place herself in a position for a lost young girl to find her and take her home. According to director Josh Cooley, Gabby was inspired by the Talky Tina doll from The Twilight Zone episode "Living Doll", who in turn was inspired by the Chatty Cathy line of talking dolls. Cooley also cites Vito Corleone from The Godfather film series as an influence for Gabby's control over the dummies who served as her enforcers. The Dummies The Dummies (both voiced by Steve Purcell) are non-speaking ventriloquist dummies who work as Gabby Gabby's henchmen, patrolling Second Chance Antiques. The dummies are partially based on Slappy the Dummy. Tinny Tinny is a small, music-making tin toy that is the owner of a club for antique toys hidden inside a pinball machine. Tinny is actually the main character of the 1988 Pixar short, Tin Toy. Tinny was also planned to be the main protagonist of Toy Story until he was replaced by what would become the basis for Buzz Lightyear. Margaret Margaret (voiced by June Squibb) is the owner of Second Chance Antiques. Dragon Dragon is a gray cat who lives in Second Chance Antiques and loves to destroy all toys. Harmony Harmony (voiced by Lila Sage Bromley) is the granddaughter of the antique store's owner. Gabby Gabby hopes to obtain a new voice box to get Harmony's attention, but even after Woody gives Gabby his voice box, Harmony still shows no interest. Rejean Rejean is a boy who appears in flashbacks. Duke Caboom is given to Rejean for Christmas, but because TV toy commercials greatly exaggerated Duke's abilities, Rejean is seemingly disappointed when Duke is unable to jump through hoops, and thus throws Duke away on Boxing Day, believing he is defective. When Duke Caboom and Woody are on a mission to rescue Forky and Bo Peep's sheep, Duke hallucinates an angry Rejean's head watching him, and loses control. ==Introduced in Toy Story 5==
Introduced in Toy Story 5
Lilypad Lilypad (voiced by Greta Lee) is a frog-shaped smart tablet toy. An attractive toy of Bonnie's, it becomes a major enemy to the other toys. Smarty Pants Smarty Pants (voiced by Conan O’Brien) is a toilet-training tech toy placed in Bonnie’s room. Atlas Atlas (voiced by Craig Robinson) is a GPS-themed hippo toy equipped with navigation-style features. Snappy Snappy (voiced by Shelby Rabara) is a camera-themed toy able to capture photos and record moments during play. It is placed in Bonnie’s room. Dr. Nutcase Dr. Nutcase (voiced by Matty Matheson) is a peanut-shaped daredevil toy who fears technology. ==Introduced in Lightyear==
Introduced in Lightyear
Izzy Hawthorne Izzy Hawthorne (voiced by Keke Palmer and Keira Hairston) is the granddaughter of Alisha, whom Buzz meets in the future as a result of multiple hyper-speed tests. She is the leader of Junior Zap Patrol, a volunteer team of cadets training to become protectors of the nascent society that has taken shape on the planet. Sox Sox (voiced by Peter Sohn) is a robotic cat and Buzz's personal companion. A gift from Alisha after his first hyper-speed test, Sox is programmed to provide personal and emotional support for Buzz and is equipped with a number of accessories. Despite being programmed with artificial intelligence, he occasionally shows signs of a real cat, including expressing satisfaction from being pet and getting distracted by laser pointers. Mo Morrison Maurice "Mo" Morrison (voiced by Taika Waititi) is a naive, neurotic space cadet who Buzz befriends. Darby Steel Darby Steel (voiced by Dale Soules) is an elderly space cadet and paroled criminal whom Buzz befriends. Initially serving a prison sentence, she joins the cause of Junior Zap Patrol in exchange for having her time reduced. She is an explosives expert. Alisha Hawthorne Alisha Hawthorne (voiced by Uzo Aduba) was Buzz Lightyear's best friend and commanding officer. She is one of Izzy's grandmothers. Initially exploring the planet of T'Kani Prime with Buzz and newly recruited Featheringstam, the three of them are forced to abort after learning of the planet's hostile life forms. Due to time dilation as a result of Buzz's multiple hyper-speed tests, Alisha dies due to old age and leaves a recording for Buzz, stating she's sorry she won't get to see him finish the mission. Commander Burnside Commander Calvin "Cal" Burnside (voiced by Isiah Whitlock Jr.) is Alisha Hawthorne's successor. ==Other projects==
Other projects
Hawaiian VacationCaptain Zip (voiced by Angus MacLane) is a keychain airplane captain that is attached to the zipper of Bonnie's backpack. He is mistaken for an actual captain by Ken, who wants to go to Hawaii, to which Captain Zip responds that he just zips and unzips. • A Lego man and a Lego woman come with Barbie and Ken in Bonnie's backpack to help them unpack their luggage. Since they don't arrive in Hawaii, the Lego people stay in Bonnie's room. Small FryNeptuna (voiced by Jane Lynch) is a mermaid toy from the "Mermaid Battle Squadron" tie-in line from the summer of 1998. She leads the discarded Fun Meal toys support-group meetings. • T-Bone (voiced by Angus MacLane) is a steak toy from the "Steak Force" line, which battles the "Vegetarians". • DJ Blu-Jay (voiced by Bret Parker) is a small blue jay toy wearing a set of headphones and standing at a turntable on top of a tree trunk. • Lizard Wizard (voiced by Josh Cooley) is a small lime green lizard toy with a beard, a violet wizard hat, and a wizard robe. He is paired up with Buzz Lightyear until Buzz drops him and, with the assistance of Gary Grappling Hook, escapes, leaving him upset. • Bozu the Ninja Clown is a toy combination of a clown and a ninja. • Vlad (voiced by Jess Harnell) is a vampire wearing a train engineer's hat who rides in a purple steam engine. He was discarded because "nobody wanted to board the Vampire Express." • Gary Grappling Hook (voiced by Angus MacLane) is a green toy gun with hands and legs and a blue grappling hook in place of a face. Buzz uses him to escape the toy psychotherapy meeting when he was paired up with Lizard Wizard. • Tae-Kwon Doe (voiced by Lori Alan) is an anthropomorphic karate deer toy. At one point, Neptuna sees her hoof raised and thinks she is raising her hand. When Neptuna calls on her, Tae-Kwon Doe explains that it is simply her play feature, at which point her hoof goes down, hitting the plastic board that is a part of her base and "breaking" it. Her name is a play on "Taekwondo". • Super Pirate (voiced by Angus MacLane) is a pirate-themed superhero with an eyepatch on his left eye and a peg leg replacing the lower part of his left leg. • Beef Stewardess is an anthropomorphic cow dressed as a stewardess. • Nervous Sys-Tim (voiced by Kitt Hirasaki) is a clear plastic human figure displaying many body parts such as the brain, the eyes, and the nervous system. He was discarded because nobody wanted to see an accurate depiction of the human nervous system while eating. • Ghost Burger (voiced by Jason Topolski) is a hamburger wearing a ghost sheet. • Koala Kopter (voiced by Carlos Alazraqui) is a plastic, Australian-accented koala on a helicopter with a propeller on top of his hat who is part of the "Down Undermals" set. He was switched out for a Kangaroo Kanoe toy. • Roxy Boxy (voiced by Emily Forbes) is a boxing-themed turtle. She was recalled because her boxing glove hands could shoot out and injure children, making her defective. This occurs during the meeting, when they hit Lizard Wizard twice. • Recycle Ben (voiced by Peter Sohn) is a blue recycling bin with arms who says he was "recycled." • Funky Monk (voiced by Angus MacLane) is a monk with sunglasses and a gold chain with his initials around his neck. • Condorman (voiced by Bob Bergen) is a condor-themed superhero who appears in his vehicle. He is an allusion to the film Condorman. • Franklin (voiced by Jim Ward) is a bald eagle sitting on a rolled-up version of the Constitution, which supports a feather pen on the back of it, and the wheels are made up of quarters. He does not understand why children dislike him because he is "history, but on wheels." • Pizza Bot (voiced by Jason Topolski) is a blue pizza box-headed robot whose right hand holds a pizza, while his left hand is a pizza cutter. It reads "PIZZABOT5000" on his chest. Children do not like him, which makes him sad. • Mini Buzz Lightyear (voiced by Teddy Newton) is a small version of Buzz Lightyear who replaces the real Buzz when he ends up in the Poultry Palace ball pit. He fools Rex into thinking he is the real Buzz, but the other toys know he is an impostor. At the end of the short, Mini Buzz has become part of the discarded Fun Meal toy support group. • Mini Zurg (voiced by Jess Harnell) is a small version of Zurg. He warns Mini Buzz against escaping from the display and going into the ball pit. Mini Zurg is later seen talking to the electronic belt buckle, much to his delight. • A light-up Zurg belt buckle is initially given to Bonnie as her Fun Meal toy, much to her disappointment due to Poultry Palace running out of Mini Buzz toys. Later, Mini Zurg is seen with the one in the display as his companion. It communicates using Simon-like beeps, yet Mini Zurg can understand it. Partysaurus RexCaptain Suds (voiced by Corey Burton) is a boat toy with a sailor face and a headlamp who serves as the leader of the bath toys. He speaks like a pirate. • Chuck E. Duck (voiced by Tony Cox and Don Fullilove) is a rubber duckie who serves as Captain Suds' assistant. • Drips (voiced by Mark Walsh) is a blue whale faucet cover. • Babs (voiced by Lori Richardson) is an octopus bath toy in a soap bar. • Cuddles (voiced by Sherry Lynn) is an alligator bath toy who can squirt water. • Helga Von Bubble Bath is a Viking bubble bath bottle. Rex throws her into the bathtub to add more bubbles. • Dolphina is a pink dolphin toy that lights up. Rex knocks her in and several of her friends to create a light show. • A toy robot with suction cups that allow it to stick to the wall, which plays music for the bath toys. Toy Story of Terror!Ron (voiced by Stephen Tobolowsky) is the greedy manager of the Sleep Well Motel. He has a habit of stealing toys from customers in his motel and selling them on the Internet, with the help of his pet iguana, Mr. Jones (non-speaking character, portrayed by Dee Bradley Baker), who snatches the toys in the middle of the night. When Bonnie and her mother went to sleep after their car got a flat tire, Mr. Jones stole a number of Bonnie's toys, including Woody, Buzz, and Jessie. Ron takes pictures of the toys and puts them on his bidding sale, awaiting buyers. Jessie manages to trick Mr. Jones into tearing off a curtain, revealing the toys' location and Ron's scheme to Bonnie and her mother, who then call the police. Two police officers later arrive to question Ron, who attempts to escape by stealing their car, but is forced to flee on foot after immediately crashing it into the motel sign. The police officers initiate a manhunt for him. • '''' (voiced by Carl Weathers and Ernie Hudson) is a G.I. Joe-esque action figure. He is African-American in appearance, unlike the Caucasian character of the same name who briefly appeared in the first film. He is encountered by Jessie after all of her friends have been captured, having eluded Mr. Jones though losing a hand in the process. Carl is extremely paranoid and refers to himself in the third person, but later helps Jessie overcome her fears to save everyone. He was owned by a boy named Billy, to whom he is determined to return. Three Combat Carl variants later appear in Toy Story 4'', which would be Weathers' final film role prior to his death in 2024. In April 2025, it was revealed that Ernie Hudson would voice Combat Carl in Toy Story 5. • Combat Carl Jr. (voiced by Carl Weathers) is a miniature version of Combat Carl who has a close relationship with his larger self. • LEGO Bunny is a yellow bunny with a scarf that is made up of LEGO bricks, allowing him to transform into different LEGO structures. • Old Timer (voiced by Christian Roman) is an elderly toy alarm clock with a moustache and a beard. He helps track the time for the toys' escape plan. Old Timer would later reappear in Toy Story 4 (voiced by Alan Oppenheimer). • Pocketeer (voiced by Ken Marino) is part of an action figure line known as the Fastener Four; the Pocketeer has an outfit covered in pockets in which he keeps various helpful items. His fellows Zipper Man, Snaps, and Speed Lacer were sold by Ron prior to the capture of Bonnie's toys. • Pez Cat (voiced by Kate McKinnon) is a Pez dispenser whose head is that of a cat wearing glasses, and who serves as the lookout for the trapped toys. • Transitron (voiced by Peter Sohn) is a Transformers-esque transforming robot who splits into five vehicle components. Jessie freed Transitron from a box that he was to be shipped in and then had him seal her inside so she could rescue Woody. Transitron later joined up with the other stolen toys and departed the Sleep Well. Toy Story That Time ForgotMason (voiced by R.C. Cope) is Bonnie's friend, and a post-Christmas playdate between the pair serves as the setting for the special. Mason receives a Battlesaurs toy collection for Christmas, but is distracted from them by a new video game system. However, due to Trixie and Reptillus's efforts, he abandons the video game and plays with his new toys. He is later shown to write his name on his toys in a similar fashion to Andy and Bonnie. • Battlesaurs are a group of mostly humanoid dinosaur toys who initially believe themselves to be real beings rather than playthings. This illusion is encouraged by Mason's greater interest in a new video game system that he received for Christmas, and they become hostile to Mason's other toys and to Bonnie's when they are brought over for a playdate. However, Trixie is eventually able to convince them that being played with brings its own joy, and they happily embrace their life as toys. • Reptillus Maximus (voiced by Kevin McKidd) is the Champion of the Battlesaurs, who is fascinated by Trixie after meeting her. Initially, Reptillus is resistant to the idea of being a plaything, feeling that to submit to the will of his child would be surrender and dishonorable. However, Trixie later helps him to see that being there for Mason is honorable, and he helps her divert Mason's attention to his new toys. Near the end of Toy Story That Time Forgot, it is implied that he has a crush on Trixie. Reptillus has a cameo in Toy Story 4 as his picture is seen on a lunchbox in Bonnie's kindergarten class. • The Cleric (voiced by Steve Purcell) is the "spiritual" leader of the Battlesaurs. The Cleric is the first Battlesaur shown to be aware of their status as toys, but conceals it from the others so that he can rule over them and Mason's other toys. However, his plans are thwarted when Reptillus sides with Trixie; he is later shown apparently enjoying his new role as Mason's toy. • Ray-Gon (voiced by Jonathan Kydd) is the armorer of the Battlesaurs. His main contribution is providing Trixie and Rex with battle armor, with the latter featuring remote-control arms that the Cleric uses to manipulate Rex. • The Goliathon is a large creature used by the other Battlesaurs to imprison their enemies in its belly. • Angel Kitty (voiced by Emma Hudak) is a cat ornament on Bonnie's Christmas tree. Bonnie briefly uses Angel Kitty during playtime, portraying her as a dinosaur. A running gag in the special is Angel Kitty giving a moral lesson about Christmas, much to the other toys' dismay and joy. Angel Kitty has a small horn and a halo. In her final scene, she gives a moral lesson to Bonnie's toys and then vanishes. Forky Asks a QuestionRib Tickles (voiced by Aloma Wright) is a toy dog Pet Patrol officer who Forky meets. A male version of the character was originally set to appear in Toy Story 4, although it was ultimately deleted. ==References==
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