•
Ernest Foot (Pemberton), a widower who tries to be politically correct but always puts his foot in it. In Series 3, his brother
Peter (Shearsmith) rehearses his funeral every weekend, long after his family has had enough; to get revenge, Ernest reveals his plans to marry
Sheila (Gatiss), Peter's wife, by rehearsing at the time of Peter's funeral rehearsal and pretending he is already dead. •
Dr Ira Carlton (Pemberton) is the unsympathetic GP in Royston Vasey. If a patient's illness cannot be remedied by pills or medicines from a chemist, he refuses to treat them unless they buy his time by playing party games at his house. He has a habit of crunching
Polo mints without sucking them. Dr Carlton is emphatic with his patients that "we'll do things PROPERLY". One of his patients is the tearful
Mrs Beasley (Gatiss), who also visits the Charity Shop in Series 2. If the patients appear to demonstrate traits often ascribed to hypochondriacs, he orders them to "go out would you!". •
Olive Kilshaw (Shearsmith), who works for the Attachments Dating Agency. She is a condescending and arrogant woman who regularly and openly ridicules the clients of the agency who trust her to find them partners. She has a boyfriend of her own that she did not meet at the agency and tries to "help"
Iain Cashmore (Pemberton), a man lacking self-confidence, to find a date in Series 2, despite taunting him about his appearance and inability to find a girlfriend. •
Pamela Doove (Shearsmith), a woman trying to be an actress. She cannot say a single easy line without putting on an unusual accent of which she is unaware and mispronouncing most of the words. She auditions for an orange juice commercial directed by
Jed Hunter (Pemberton) in Series 2, but, instead of "Excuse me, has anyone got a bottle of orange juice," says (or rather shouts), "Eskeewd beef! Have anybody got any bokkle oran doove?" She inexplicably wins the part; the commercial goes on to become a widespread success. Pam later performs as a Nazi in Keith Drop's local production of
The Diary of Anne Frank in Series 3. Jed also witnesses Geoff's appalling stand-up comedy in London in Series 3. Pamela is seen in the Christmas Special as part of "Solutions, Inc."; she asks for a bottle of orange juice in addition to the three items Stella needs to collect, and Val dismisses her. In the live shows, she attempts more auditions. In
The League of Gentlemen Live at Dury Lane she auditions for a Shakespearian production, where she characteristically mangles Portia's "Quality of Mercy" speech from
The Merchant of Venice. In
The League of Gentlemen Are Behind You she auditions for Legz Akimbo's production of "Commu-nativity", in which she reads for the part of an angel. Asked to speak in tongues as part of the audition, she instead speaks perfectly normally in a quiet voice. In the 2017 specials, she is shown to now do the
Shipping Forecast on BBC Radio 4. •
DJ Mike King (Shearsmith), the disc jockey at the local hospital. He plays a card game called "Go Johnny Go Go Go Go" (one of a series of card games he has made up) with two doctors,
Mr Best (Pemberton) and
Dr Simon (Gatiss), who are his childhood friends, in Series 2 and helps friend Lance get a new arm attached in Series 3. He is also seen as the DJ for the line-dancing competition in the Christmas Special attended by the Hulls. •
Owen Fallowfield (Gatiss), a mortician who loves his job, but is fired in Series 3 when certain activities are seen to have been inappropriate. •
Glen and Barry Baggs (Gatiss and Pemberton), debt collectors who are not good at their job, especially the obese Barry (Pemberton), who is childish and in permanent need of food. Their boss is
Mr Lisgoe (Shearsmith), who deals with them violently. They appear in one episode in Series 3. •
Pop (Pemberton) is a lecherous Greek, the world's seediest landlord and its worst father, to his cringing sons
Richie (Shearsmith) and
Al (Gatiss). In Series 1 he disowns Richie after nine
Maverick bars were stolen from his newspaper booth, and in Series 2 he ruins Al's chances of a relationship with a nurse called Patricia (
Sian Gibson). Aside from owning a string of newsagents' and some tenements, Pop also owns a strip club which features in Series 3. When would-be tenants refuse to sign his contracts, he denounces them as being homosexual until they sign. In the 2017 specials, he returns to visit Al who is now married to Patricia with whom he has two daughters. Whilst his wife wishes Pop to leave, Pop decides to visit Richie at his delicatessen, where he forces him to anally receive an entire jar of piri-piri olives and nine Picnic bars (since Mavericks are no longer made). In a fantasy sequence, Al's wife dares him to fit in the olive jar, which he magically does and is trapped by Richie, declaring "I've got you". However, in reality, Richie has murdered Pop just as Al and his wife arrive. They are last seen glancing at a mincing machine as a way to get rid of Pop's body, presumably in reference to Hilary Briss's "special stuff". •
Christopher Frost (Shearsmith),
store detective. Frost is a store detective who takes his work just a little too seriously, making a special effort to look inside prams, in case "baby turns out to be a 16-piece Queen Anne Breakfast set". He also targets people using wheelchairs, completely prepared to ask them to slide over in their seats in case they are sitting on a book or a plate, saying "Chalk 'em up!" It turns out he is a shoplifter himself in Series 2. •
Terry Lollard (Shearsmith) and
Anne Hand (Pemberton), two religious door-to-door people who also sell loft conversions. Anne remains mostly silent and appears to have the mental age of a young child. They appear in one episode in series 3. •
Ken Sweeney,
blind photographer. He has a shop on the high street, and is hired by Geoff as the photographer at Mike and Cheryl's wedding in series 1. He is seen briefly in Series 2 in the circus audience with a massive nosebleed. •
Lance Longthorne (Gatiss), a
cockney joke shop owner with a sadistic sense of humour. He only has one arm and claims that the other was ripped from its socket by the Frankenstein monster at a young age. In Series 3 he gets a bigger role with his own story about being controlled by his new arm. His arm compels him to save Pauline from Geoff and he subsequently dies a hero. •
Little Don (played by
Don Estelle), who runs a zoo on a town roundabout. He has a pig, a goat and a chimp. All three are stolen and killed by Edward, who creates a monster out of the body parts in an attempt to halt construction of the new road in Series 1. •
Kenny Harris (Gatiss), owner of the Dog Cinema. He is assisted by
Shelley Shirley (Shearsmith) and
Oshi Kurosawa (Pemberton). His rival is
Dougal Siepp (Christopher Eccleston), who is more into cat films. They appear in one episode in Series 3. •
Dean Tavalouris (Shearsmith), a hopeless street magician who uses his camera to film tricks in the street (a couple of pensioners lose interest, while two youths reveal his secret and stub a cigarette out in his hand). He uses his camera to cover the aftermath of the big accident at the end of Series 3. Named after the renowned 1970s film
production designer. •
Alvin (Gatiss) and
Sunny Steele (Chrissie Furness), who run Windemere Guest House. Sunny regularly arranges and hosts bondage parties, at which Alvin, a plain man who is fond of gardening, is often left feeling awkward. In Series 3, Sunny and the attendees at one of her bondage parties are killed in a sex guru's machine after he has a heart attack and dies before he can switch the air back on, asphyxiating everyone else. Meanwhile, Alvin has an affair with Judith Buckle (Shearsmith), who works at a garden centre. After Alvin and Judith leave the Windermere Guest House, a BBC television crew arrive to film a show that involves quickly constructing something in someone's garden (Alvin's garden being the next one they work on) and leaving. The construction workers come close to discovering the bodies but are interrupted by Geoff when he crashes into Alvin's wall in the big accident at the end of each episode. • '''Professor Erno Breastpinch'd''' (Gatiss), a man carrying out a survey on the streets of Royston Vasey in Series 3, but his only question is if a woman wants her breasts pinched. •
Mayor Larry Vaughan (
Roy Chubby Brown, Series 2). Larry Vaughan is a reference to the film
Jaws, where
Amity Island's Mayor also has this name. Ironically, he is also extremely foul-mouthed, and his bad language usually gets him in trouble with the media. In the end he dies from a massive nosebleed just after assuring the public that the nosebleeds have stopped. His last words are "Urrrgggh...bastards". An interesting note would be that Roy Chubby Brown's real name is in fact Royston Vasey, so he is the namesake of the village in which almost all of the
League of Gentlemen takes place. •
Murray Mint (Gatiss), Vaughan's right-hand man. He is fired when he hires Legz Akimbo to try and calm the homeless during the epidemic in Series 2. He is rehired by the new mayor, Bernice, in the 2017 specials. His name is an obvious pun on the Murray mint confectionery. •
Mick McNamara, the Stump Hole Caverns guide (Gatiss), who believes that he is responsible for the death of a small boy called Jay who once took part in his tour on a school trip. He appears in Series 1. •
Farmer Jed Tinsel (Pemberton), the frighteningly paranoid and jealous farmer. Several of his animals have been killed by Mr. Chinnery. He imprisons
Andrew Ward (Gatiss), who worked at the local cash and carry in Series 1, because he had an affair with Tinsel's wife. Ward tries to get help from the Denton twins, but they simply ignore him. •
Cathy Carter-Smith (Shearsmith), Pauline's rival Restart officer whose behaviour is even more arrogant and patronising towards her clients. Cathy seems to be as obsessed with computers as Pauline is with pens. It is hinted in the first live show that she also shares Pauline's lesbian tendencies. Pauline has an intense dislike of Cathy, referring to her as a "tubby little tit-witch." In addition to the live shows, she appears in Series 2. •
Mr Ingleby (Shearsmith), a shopkeeper who insists on doing all the work in his shop himself, despite him being small (his height varies over the episodes). He only appears in the radio series; an escapologist called "Ingleby" is seen in Series 2 as part of Papa Lazarou's Pandemonium Carnival. •
Tish Guppy (Pemberton, Series 3), a massively self-centred
fag hag. She appears friendly and welcoming but reveals herself to only care about maintaining her own social standing and self-importance. She is seen hanging around
Camden with
Phil in Series 3. •
Mr Wint and
Mr Kidd, two construction workers who are seen planning for the new road in the beginning of "The Road to Royston Vasey". The pair inquire to Edward and Tubbs, with the intent of purchasing their land on behalf of PQ Construction. Unfortunately, Mr Kidd mentions that the road will bring strangers into their shop and invokes the wrath of the couple. The pair are subjected to ritualistic torture and sexual assault before Edward lets them go. However, he immediately chases after them with a crossbow, and their ultimate fate is left unclear. The two share their names with a pair of assassins in the
Ian Fleming novel
Diamonds Are Forever and the James Bond film
of the same name. •
Grandma Bradley, a missing elderly woman. A missing persons poster was put up for her in "The Road to Royston Vasey". It is later shown that she has become trapped on the roof of the church and eventually dies there. She appears in Series 1. •
Tony Cluedo (
Ted Robbins), Lead vocalist of Crème Brulee. The band reunited on tour without
Les McQueen and subsequently refuses to have him back. The other members,
Patch Lafeyette (Shearsmith) and
Bob Chagnall (Pemberton) still currently write the songs. In Series 2, Les offers him his savings to fund the band but he takes them and disappears. Tony Cluedo also has
asthma and regularly uses an inhaler. •
Nancy (Pemberton) and
Noel Glass (Shearsmith), husband and wife and parents to
Casey (
Brooke Vincent), whom they enter regularly into
beauty pageants despite her reluctance. While Casey is polite and quiet, her overbearing parents are stuck-up and rude, rejoicing as a child competing against their daughter falls and bursts into tears before taking the credit for their daughter's ensuing win. Casey is seen by her parents solely as a means of self-glorification and thus is neglected, at one point being nearly left behind in a car park after her inebriated parents drive off, returning for her as an afterthought. They appear in one episode in Series 3. • '''Anthony 'Neds' Needham
(Gatiss), an "adult baby" who is friends with the 13-year-old Tris'
(Gary Damer). Both are obsessive fans of the series Knight Rider'', for which reason Neds converts a rusty
Renault 5 into a talking car,
Maxie Power, with a pre-recorded voice ("Let's solve some crime!" and "Hello, Neds" are two examples of its sayings) and the ability to drop
paperclips at the press of a button (the shop had run out of
drawing pins). Neds persuades Tris to accompany him in "Maxie Power" to fight crime. This goes awry, however, when they attempt to prevent a gang from robbing cigarettes from the cash and carry in Series 3. The pair are last seen trapped inside a burning warehouse. •
Dr Fish (Shearsmith), a Doctor at St Mary of Bethlehem Hospital who struggles to give bad news to patients ("How old would you have been next birthday?"). In Series 2, he attempts to apprise
Mr Bamford (Gatiss), who would have been 45 next birthday, though will die in an "amount of time beginning with 2", of his terminal illness through obtuse film references. When this fails, he calls in
Dr Lucas Wesley (Pemberton), only for him to attempt the same. Dr Wesley later reappears in Series 3, performing Lance Longthorn's illicit arm
transplant, having been coerced by hospital DJ Mike King. •
Derek (Pemberton), a drunken vagrant who is actually revealed to be a practising dentist. •
Toddy (Gatiss), a bingo-caller who recounts a tragic tale of lost love at a local bingo hall. ==References==