Ortensia the Cat Ortensia is the girlfriend of Oswald the Lucky Rabbit. She appeared in the Oswald shorts starting with ''The Banker's Daughter'' (1927; Lost cartoon), replacing Oswald's former love interest, a much more feminine and sultry rabbit named Fanny in production materials. Ortensia's original name during the production of the Oswald shorts was Sadie, as referenced in the title of the animated short
Sagebrush Sadie (1928; Lost cartoon). The names for Oswald's love interests were never widely publicized, which is likely the reason she was given a new name in
Epic Mickey, following the alliteration pattern of Mickey and Minnie's mirrored relationship. Often in the original Oswald shorts, Oswald would compete with Pete for her affection. She also appeared in Oswald shorts produced by Charles Mintz and later Walter Lantz. In the Lantz shorts, she was called "Kitty". To add some confusion, copyright synopses of some Mintz and Lantz shorts erroneously refer to Ortensia/Kitty as Fanny.
Percy and Patricia Pigg Percy and Patricia Pigg (sometimes the surname being written as "Pig") are a married couple of anthropomorphic pigs. Percy made his debut in 1929 in the short
The Opry House, Patricia debuting that same year in ''
Mickey's Follies'', also Percy's second appearance, and the only short in which both characters appear together. After that, Percy appeared in the short films
The Barnyard Concert (1930),
The Chain Gang (1930) and
Traffic Troubles (1931), while Patricia appeared in
The Shindig (1930), ''
Mickey's Revue (1932) and The Whoopee Party'' (1932). After their appearances in short films, they started appearing in comics, but the two characters did not appear again in animation until 1983, in ''Mickey's Christmas Carol'', briefly appearing dancing at Fezzywig's party. Percy appears in the video game
Kingdom Hearts III (2018) in the minigame "Taxi Troubles" (based on
Traffic Troubles), where he is one of the characters that
Sora must pick up in his taxi.
Butch Butch is an anthropomorphic dog. Butch appeared as a gangster in "Mr. Slicker and the Egg Robbers". A sympathetic criminal, he eventually reformed, became Mickey's friend and remained in the strip as a supporting character until June 1931. He was revived in the 1990s as a member of Mickey's supporting cast in European Disney comics.
Gideon Goat Gideon Goat, or
Giddy Goat, is an anthropomorphic goat, a
supporting character in the Mickey Mouse comic strips of the 1930s. Gideon first appeared in the 1930 Mickey Mouse Book No. 1. He appeared in various American and European printed Disney comics until 1938. He was usually characterized as a farmer or the local sheriff. Gideon is married to a female anthropomorphic goat named Gertie (presumably Gertrude) who appeared in many early Mickey Mouse comics, primarily as a background character. Promotional materials for the 1935 animated short
The Band Concert include Giddy Goat as one of the characters. In the released film, he was replaced by an unnamed trombonist dog character.
Floyd Gottfredson made regular use of the character in his comic strips and later artists sometimes borrowed the character.
Clara Cluck Clara Cluck debuted in 1934 in the Mickey Mouse cartoon ''
Orphan's Benefit''. Since then she has appeared as a semi-regular character in the Mickey Mouse cartoons. In the comic books she is depicted in the
Duck universe as
Daisy Duck's best friend. Clara has been a member of Mickey's original farmyard gang since the beginning of his career, although she is seen less often than
Clarabelle Cow and
Horace Horsecollar. She originally was voiced by
Florence Gill and later by
Russi Taylor and
Kaitlyn Robrock. Clara's singing is meant to be a caricature of the
Bel canto style of opera singing popular at the time of her appearance. Some of her arias are clearly modelled on those of
Tosca. Her last major appearance was as one of the musicians in
Symphony Hour. Curiously, although she is seen in the rehearsal scenes at the beginning, she is not seen in the performance scenes at the end. In Disney comics she has been shown to date
Gus Goose on very few occasions, and in the initial appearance of
Panchito Pistoles she was the object of his affections. As with other
Disney characters, she was given small cameos in ''
Mickey's Christmas Carol (1983), Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988), and Once Upon a Studio'' (2023). In television, she had some appearances in
Mickey Mouse Works (1999), where she is presented as
Daisy Duck's neighbor. She appeared occasionally in
House of Mouse (2001). In one episode of that series, "Double Date Don", she fell in love with Donald Duck and aggressively pursued him by puckering her lips in front of him, forcing him to dance with her, wearing dresses and posing provocatively to lure him in. At one point she even grabs Donald and forcibly, yet passionately, kisses him full on the lips. She almost tricked Donald into marrying her but Daisy stopped the wedding in time. She also had appeared to put Minnie Mouse in jail for driving her car through Daisy's house to deliver an apple pie of hers. She also appeared as a recurring character in the series
Mickey and the Roadster Racers (2017), where she is the mother of two chicks named Cleo and Clifford. In video games, Clara Cluck made a
cameo appearance in the
Timeless River world of
Kingdom Hearts II with many other Disney characters like Clarabelle Cow and Horace Horsecollar as one of the world's citizens, being one of the rare media in which the character is seen speaking (her dialogue being seen in
speech balloons). She appears in
Disney Magic Kingdoms as a playable character available to unlock for a limited time. She also makes an appearance in the ''Mickey's Boo to You Parade'' and for rare meet and greets at
Walt Disney World's
Magic Kingdom.
Doctor Einmug Doctor Einmug is a scientist who was created by
Ted Osborne (plot) and
Floyd Gottfredson (plot and art) in the story
Island in the Sky, published in the
Mickey Mouse comic strip from November 1936 to April 1937. He is a large man who wears a big white beard and laboratory coat. Doctor Einmug specializes in
atomic physics and speaks in a German-like accent which was probably a nod towards
Albert Einstein, "
mug" also being a pun on "
stein". His introductory story,
Island in the Sky, raises many issues about the benefits and dangers of atomic physics just a few years before the first
atom bombs were developed. After that, Einmug did not re-appear in American comics for almost 50 years, but he was used in Italian ones, starting some 12 years later in 1959 when he appeared in
Romano Scarpa's
Topolino e la dimensione Delta ("Mickey Mouse and the Delta Dimension"). In this story, he discovered the means to travel to the Delta Dimension, which was effectively an infinite void of nothing, just space. Setting his laboratory up in the Delta Dimension, Einmug pursued his work and discovered that
atoms were living beings. He thus increased the size of one of them to that of a small boy and named him
Atomo Bleep-Bleep (Italian:
Atomino Bip-Bip). Einmug himself has also appeared in numerous European Mickey Mouse comics. He is often shown as less secretive and paranoid than in his original appearance, though his discoveries are still coveted by the likes of
Pete and the
Phantom Blot. Einmug reappeared in American comics in 1991 in the story
A Snatch in Time! in which he had developed a time machine. It was written by
Lamar Waldron and drawn by Rick Hoover and Gary Martin. More recently, Einmug has also appeared in American editions of
The Delta Dimension and other European-made stories.
Detective Casey Detective Casey (sometimes Inspector Casey) is
Chief O'Hara's head detective, first appearing in the Mickey Mouse daily comic in the 1938 sequence ''The Plumber's Helper''. The story was plotted and penciled by
Floyd Gottfredson and written by
Merrill De Maris. Casey disappeared from American comics in the 1950s, but was used frequently in Europe, especially in Italy, afterwards; from 2003, he returned as a frequent player in the American comics. Despite his occupation, Casey is an impatient man of only average intelligence. Thus, while sometimes a successful detective, he is prone to bungling cases as well. Therefore, Chief O'Hara often recruits Mickey Mouse to help solve some of Casey's cases, much to Casey's general irritation.
Chip 'n' Dale '''Chip 'n' Dale''' are two anthropomorphic
chipmunks who are often trouble-makers for Pluto and Donald. However, the chipmunks are often provoked, especially by Donald. In modern series, they are depicted as friends of Mickey.
Chief O'Hara '''Chief Seamus O'Hara''' is the chief of police in the Mickey Mouse universe. He plays a supportive role in Mickey Mouse's comic-book mysteries, often relying on Mickey's help to solve crimes committed by criminals such as
Pete,
The Phantom Blot and others. Known fellow officers include his head detective,
Detective Casey. The character was conceived by
Floyd Gottfredson and
Merrill De Maris for
Disney's comic strips as a stereotypical Irish cop. He first appeared in the newspaper strips in May 1939, in the serial
Mickey Mouse Outwits the Phantom Blot. He eventually became a recurring character in European comics stories. O'Hara also appeared on
Mickey Mouse Works and
House of Mouse, voiced by
Corey Burton. In the Brazilian version of the comics, he is known as "Coronel Cintra", in the Danish versions as "Politimester Striks", in the Finnish translation, he is known as "Poliisimestari Simo Sisu" (possibly named after the Finnish concept of
sisu), in the French versions as "Commissaire Finot", in the German versions as "Kommissar Albert Hunter" (Kommissar means
commissioner in German), in the Italian version as "Commissario Adamo Basettoni" (with "Basettoni" referring to his prominent
sideburns, "
basette"), and in the Swedish versions as "Kommissarie Konrad Karlsson". In Italian stories, O'Hara has a wife called
Petulia. Before her introduction, O'Hara frequently mentions his wife, with the first instance of this being "The Gleam" (1942).
The How-to Narrator The
How-to Narrator is a
narrator that serves as a guide in short films starring
Goofy where he shows how to do different types of activities. The How-to Narrator also has participation in the television series
Goof Troop (1992),
Mickey Mouse Works (1999-2000),
House of Mouse (2001-2003), and
How to Stay at Home (2021).
Pete Junior Pete Junior, better known simply as P.J., is Pete's son. He appears for first time in the short
Bellboy Donald, as a naughty little kid. Later, he appears in the TV series
Goof Troop, this time as a kind pre-teen, and being Max Goof's best friend. After that he appeared in the film
A Goofy Movie, also in the role of Max's best friend, and its sequel
An Extremely Goofy Movie, where he, Max, and their friend Bobby go to college. He also makes a cameo in the
DuckTales reboot episode, "Quack Pack", where he is seen in a photo from Goofy's wallet.
José Carioca José "Zé" Carioca is a green, Brazilian parrot who first appears in the Disney film
Saludos Amigos (1942) alongside Donald Duck. He returned in the 1944 film
The Three Caballeros along with Donald and a Mexican rooster named Panchito Pistoles. José is from
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (thus the name "Carioca", which is a term used for a person born in Rio de Janeiro). Zé Carioca comic books are still regularly published in Brazil to this day.
Panchito Pistoles Panchito Pistoles is a red, Mexican rooster who was created as the third titular caballero (along with Donald Duck and
José Carioca) for the 1944 film
The Three Caballeros. Later he appeared in several
Disney comics, including a year-long run in the
Silly Symphony Sunday comic strip (1944–1945), as well as
Don Rosa's comic book stories
The Three Caballeros Ride Again (2000) and
The Magnificent Seven (Minus 4) Caballeros (2005).
Aracuan Bird The
Aracuan Bird, also called the Clown of the Jungle, first appeared in the feature film
The Three Caballeros (1944). The film's narrator introduces the Aracuan as "one of the most eccentric birds you have ever seen".
Eega Beeva Eega Beeva, also known by his proper name
Pittisborum Psercy Pystachi Pseter Psersimmon Plummer-Push, is a human from the future, although some translations refer to him as an
alien. He was created by
Floyd Gottfredson (art) and
Bill Walsh (plot) and first appeared on September 26, 1947, in the
Mickey Mouse comic strip storyline
The Man of Tomorrow. The complete original run of Eega Beeva stories has been anthologised in
The Floyd Gottfredson Library volumes 9
Rise of the Rhyming Man and 10
Planet of Faceless Foes, published by
Fantagraphics Books in 2016. The story arcs are given the titles "The Man of Tomorrow", "Mickey Makes a Killing", "Pflip the Thnuckle-booh", "The Santa Claus Bandit", "The Kumquat Question", "The Atombrella and the Rhyming Man", "An Education for Eega", "Pflip's Strange Power", "Planet of the Aints" (alternate title "Be-junior and the Aints"), "Itching Gulch", "The Syndicate of Crime", and "The Moook Treasure". Eega's final appearance is a three day bridge between story arcs; for convenience, the anthology prints this event as the start of the story arc "Mousepotamia", in which Mickey is abducted to a foreign land, bereft of all his traditional companions. In Eega's debut story, Mickey Mouse and Goofy seek shelter from a thunderstorm and get lost in a cave. There, Mickey suddenly encounters an unusual humanoid who only says "Eega" at first. When Mickey and Goofy find the cave's exit, Mickey invites the being to stay at his house, and the being identifies himself as "Pittisborum Psercy Pystachi Pseter Psersimmon Plummer-Push". Finding this name too cumbersome, Mickey gives him the name "Eega Beeva" (a corruption of the
idiom "
eager beaver"). At first,
Goofy refuses to believe in the existence of Eega Beeva and ignores his presence. In a series of events, two scientists conclude that Eega Beeva is a human from 500 years in the future. At the end of the storyline, Eega saves Goofy from a skiing accident, causing them to become friends. In the next comic strip storyline starring Eega Beeva,
Mickey Makes a Killing, his pet Pflip the Thnuckle Booh is introduced. Eega continues being Mickey's
sidekick in the American comic strips until July 1950. Eega Beeva is depicted as a humanoid with a wide head, mitten-like hands and a scrawny body. In
The Man of Tomorrow, the name is given to him by Mickey, since Eega Beeva originally only said "Eega." Walsh's stories are often wildly inconsistent in themselves as to what Eega Beeva's attributes and back story are, as pointed out in the editorial columns in
The Floyd Gottfredson Library. During his first story "The Man of Tomorrow", Goofy declares that Eega is only a hallucinatory apparition because he casts no shadow, when in fact an earlier panel in the story showed Eega's shadow. In Eega's farewell appearance, he refers to his family as "the Beeva family". As he departs into the cave where Mickey first met him, he implies that his family live in there are eagerly awaiting his homecoming. This contradicts his first story, where "Beeva" is a name Mickey made up for him, and Eega's family were not yet to be born for another 400 or more years. While Eega Beeva was still being featured in the American comic strips, he made his first appearance in a 1949 Italian comic story titled ''L'inferno di Topolino'' (lit. "Mickey Mouse's inferno,"
Topolino issue 7), in which Mickey plays
Dante Alighieri in a theatre production of the
Divine Comedy. The character was newly discovered and defined by Italian comics artist and writer
Romano Scarpa with the comic
Topolino e la nave del microcosmo (lit. "Mickey Mouse and the ship of microcosm"), published in
Topolino 167 in July 1957; American translation published in BOOM's
Mickey Mouse Classics 1 - Mouse Tails (2010). (Eega had previously appeared in stories which Scarpa drew but did not write, including
Guido Martina's
Topolino e il doppio segreto di Macchia Nera in
Topolino 116-119, 1955 - Americanised in Gladstone's
Mickey and Donald 6-8 [1988] and Fantagraphics' hardcover album ''Mickey Mouse: The Phantom Blot's Double Mystery
[2018].) Rather than his whimsical attributes, the "microcosm" story focuses on the futuristic and fantastic aspects of Eega Beeva and his environment, as do later stories. The character has since been used numerous times by European authors, mostly in Italy where more than half of all comics featuring him were produced. He has also been used in longer comics stories, especially the ones produced in Italy, France and Brazil. In France, he has been the protagonist of his own series, published from 1985 to 2009 in Le Journal de Mickey''. Ellsworth usually wears a red-orange shirt and a green cap or beret. Reflecting a trait of mynah birds who can imitate human speech, he is extremely vain and self-centered, which was originally the spotlight and center of jokes in his stories. On the other hand, Ellsworth is also a bonafide genius with awesome tech and scientific knowledge—the "Y" on his shirt in earlier stories stands for "Yarvard" (a parody of
Harvard), his alma mater. Despite being more or less entirely humanized in more recent stories, Ellsworth retains his ability to fly, a unique trait among the central Disney funny animal cast. In manner, Ellsworth is often sarcastic and condescending, typically addressing others with statements like "Let's not [do X], shall we?" He is also quick to call others by insulting nicknames. But when push comes to shove, he is genuinely fond of and defensive of his pals Goofy and Mickey.
Clarice Clarice is a chipmunk who appeared in the short film
Two Chips and a Miss (1952), being the romantic interest of Chip and Dale, for whom they both compete for her attention, although she seems to love them both equally (at the end of the short film ending by giving both of them a kiss). She works as a singer in a night club. Despite her only appearance in a short film, she became a very popular character, appearing in
Disney Parks as a meet-and-greet character or in live shows, and appearing in the video games
Disney Tsum Tsum (2014) and
Disney Magical World 2 (2015). Clarice did not have an animated appearance again since
Two Chips and a Miss until she appeared as a recurring character in the television series ''
Chip 'n' Dale: Park Life'' (2021-present), having a radical design change, being a tough chipmunk, wearing no clothes, and having for a hairstyle a crest with flowers shaved on the sides of the head. In the series she lives in the engine of a car that is on a tree. Her relationship with Chip and Dale is also simply friendship, although they admire her for her abilities, she being very constructive and being constantly fixing and repairing things.
Atomo Bleep-Bleep Atomo Bleep-Bleep (, ) is a "humanized atom" created by
Doctor Einmug, who used a gigantic
meson accelerator to enlarge atoms to the size of a human child. The character was created by
Romano Scarpa in the 1959 story
Topolino e la dimensione Delta ("Mickey Mouse in the Delta Dimension"), published in
Topolino No. 206. Bleep-Bleep is a good-natured, highly intelligent, hard-working blue creature with electrons constantly spinning around his large bald head. He was created at the same time as his "brother", a red atom named Bloop-Bloop, who was bad-tempered and lazy. Bleep-Bleep can spit mesons to alter or manipulate the attributes of physical objects and uses this ability to accomplish various feats such as turning metal into chocolate or estimating with absolute precision when an object was created. In their first adventure together, Atomo and Mickey manage to foil Pete, who has enlisted Bloop-Bloop as his accomplice. Scarpa wrote and drew a further eight stories with Atomo that appeared in
Topolino from 1959 to 1965. The character has been revived occasionally by other Italian authors. In his appearance as well as his role in the stories, Atomo is very similar to Gottfredson's
Eega Beeva, a short, friendly science-fiction character with unpredictable powers that drive the plot. In English-language translations, Atomo Bleep-Bleep speaks with a German accent identical to Einmug's, insofar as Einmug was presented as Atomo's language teacher.
Glory-Bee Glory-Bee was Goofy's girlfriend who first appeared in a
Mickey Mouse daily strip on June 19, 1969. She was first created by Bill Walsh, and appeared in some "Mickey Mouse" dailies by Floyd Gottfredson, and others written by Del Connell (drawn by Manuel Gonzales). Her predecessor appeared perhaps as early as 1946, in the form of Minnie Mouse's Aunt Marissa (from a multi-part story by Floyd Gottfredson printed in the
Mickey Mouse dailies June 17–29, 1946, and reprinted twice in WDC&S No. 95 and No. 575, and later seen in a cameo one-page gag love story by Bill Walsh and Manuel Gonzales which also featured Mickey Mouse and Montmorency Rodent (Mortimer Mouse) (April 21, 1946) that has been dubbed "Spring, Love, Monty"). Glory-Bee is a slender, pretty, blonde, and young dognose lady who, while quite good-natured and likable, tends to be somewhat of an "airhead" (a stereotype of the "dumb blonde"), which may explain why she was dropped from Goofy's storyline altogether (though a better possibility is that Goofy will always be the consummate bachelor). While it might be difficult to imagine she had a very strong crush on Goofy, he hardly seemed to notice. Occasionally, however, he did try to impress her, even to the point of trying to reveal his Super Goof identity to her, to no avail. At one point Glory-Bee and Clarabelle Cow were even vying for Goofy's attention, but both failed to achieve their objective (WDS #8). Glory-Bee has disappeared from comics in the USA and has seldom appeared in foreign comics.
The Sleuth The Sleuth,
Sureluck Sleuth in full, is an anthropomorphic
canine. He is an English
private eye operating in 19th century London and employing Mickey Mouse as an assistant. The character was created by
Carl Fallberg (plot) and Al Hubbard (art) for the
Disney Studio Program and intended solely for foreign publication. The first story in the series is "
Mickey and the Sleuth: The Case of the Wax Dummy". Unusually for material created for the program, this story appeared domestically in the
Procter & Gamble Disney Magazine giveaway and then was published by
Gold Key in "
Walt Disney Showcase" n°38 (1977).
Mickey and the Sleuth stories were produced up until the late 1980s. Given their historical setting, these stories stand apart from other Mickey Mouse continuities. It is never explained if the "Mickey Mouse" working with the Sleuth is an ancestor of the present-day Mickey or if those stories are included in a totally different continuity. Adding to the muddle are the frequent humorous anachronisms which complicate the purportedly Victorian setting, and arguably place the stories in the genre of
steampunk. Apart from Mickey, no other prominent Disney characters are featured in the stories. The Sleuth's recurring antagonists are
Professor Nefarious and his three bumbling henchmen. The Sleuth is a good-natured gentleman; wearing a
deerstalker hat, smoking a
pipe and using a
magnifying glass, he is an obvious parody of
Sherlock Holmes, Mickey basically playing the part of
Dr. Watson. Like his literary counterpart, he also plays the violin (albeit horribly). Unlike Sherlock Holmes, he is totally hopeless as a detective, sometimes unable to figure out crimes committed right in front of his eyes. Nevertheless, he always manages to solve his cases – hence ensuring a reputation as a great investigator – either by sheer luck, or thanks to his foes' fecklessness or simply because Mickey Mouse does all the actual detective work for him. Apart from Mickey, no one seems to be aware of the Sleuth's utter incompetence. The characters of The Sleuth and Professor Nefarious, complete with the University of Criminal Sciences and the henchman Fliplip, were portrayed in an extended sketch in an episode of
The New Mickey Mouse Club in 1978. Two Mouseketeer cast members – Lisa Whelchel as the Sleuth's niece Lisa, and Scott Craig as Fliplip – performed alongside the two lead rivals, using puppetry and ventriloquism skills. The setting of the story was England, near the White Cliffs of Dover.
Ellroy Ellroy (original Italian name
Bruto Gancetto) is an anthropomorphic mynah bird and Ellsworth's adoptive son. He was created by Romano Scarpa in the story
Topolino e il rampollo di Gancio (
Topolino n°1048, 1975). After adopting Ellroy, Ellsworth entrusted him to Mickey Mouse. Ellroy went on to be Mickey Mouse's
sidekick in numerous Italian comics stories by Scarpa and other authors. Like Ellsworth, Ellroy can fly by using his arms like wings. Ellsworth and Ellroy look very much alike – Ellroy being somewhat smaller – and have appeared together in relatively few stories: this has caused confusion between the two characters among readers and translators. Ellroy first appeared in American comic books in 2016.
Zapotec and Marlin Professor Zachary Zapotec and
Dr. Spike Marlin are two Italian dogface characters created by Massimo De Vita. They are scientists from the Mouseton science museum. They are the inventors of a time machine which sends Mickey and Goofy on adventures in the past. Zapotec first appeared in "Topolino e l'enigma di Mu" in 1979 and Marlin first appeared in "Topolino e il segreto della Gioconda" in 1985. They also frequently argue but always forgive each other by the end. So far, they have only appeared in a handful of stories in the US.
Zenobia Zenobia is a character created by
Romano Scarpa, first appearing in the 1983 story "The African Queen", being the ruler of an African state, and leaving the throne to follow Goofy to the United States after having fallen in love with him. Scarpa's intention was to create a new girlfriend for Goofy, capable of bringing out the best in him. In her stories with Goofy, he seems "more serious" and less inclined to follow Mickey on his adventures. Perhaps this was the reason that would push Scarpa to abandon Zenobia's participation in the stories: in the story "Ciao Minnotchka" (1993), after a trip to France with Mickey's gang, Zenobia announces that she will stay in Paris to help the ex-king of Selvanja, Ilja Topòvich, to run a hotel, as there is an attraction between the former rulers, and Goofy can't help but agree. But Zenobia has never forgotten Goofy, as shown in "Miseria e nobiltà" (1993) by Lello Arena, Francesco Artibani and Giorgio Cavazzano; after having performed at the theater, Goofy finds in her dressing room a bouquet of flowers with the dedication: "You are always the best. Zenobia." Subsequently, Zenobia reappeared in various stories since 2013.
Doc Static Doc Static is an overweight, clean-shaven inventor with a lab coat, wavy hair and glasses who appears in Egmont comic stories. He serves the same role in Mickey stories that
Gyro Gearloose or
Ludwig Von Drake have for Donald and Scrooge. Doc Static first appeared in
Plastic Mickey! in 1995.
Brick Boulder Brick Boulder (original Italian name "Rock Sassi", which is a
pleonasm as "sassi" means "rocks") is a plainclothes police officer who usually works together with Detective Casey. He first appeared in the story
La lunga notte del commissario Manetta (English title: Casey's Longest Night) in 1997, written by Tito Faraci and drawn by
Giorgio Cavazzano . Like Casey, Brick Boulder is a bumbling and incompetent policeman. Curiously though, his intelligence seems to vary, even between stories by the same writer. He is physically more robust than the overweight Casey and likes to dress flashily, often wearing
cowboy boots, a
stetson and a
bolo tie. He has been said to be a parody of
Ronald Reagan and
Arnold Schwarzenegger, the latter aspect being particularly obvious in his first appearance, but later toned down. Brick Boulder is from
Texas, United States. In one story, it was revealed that his entire family consists of criminals. Despite this, Brick Boulder is law-abiding and has wanted to be a policeman since his early childhood, much to the disappointment of his family. Another quirk is that he is afraid of alligators, as shown in the story "Topolino e lo strano caso di Jack Due di Cuori".
Duffy the Disney Bear Duffy is a
teddy bear available at
Disney Parks. He was given a backstory in which Minnie Mouse sewed him for Mickey as he was leaving for a voyage at sea.
Eurasia Toft Eurasia Toft ("Eurasia Tost" in Italian) is an adventurer and archaeologist, and a friend of Mickey and Goofy. Her first appearance happened in the 2003 story "The Lost Explorers' Trail", written by Casty (who also created the character) and drawn by Giorgio Cavazzano. She is a strong-willed character and can react very impulsively. Fans have likened her to Arizona Goof, though she has fewer personality quirks. Her name and character parody both Indiana Jones as well as
Lara Croft (her Greek name is "Clara Loft"). Ever since the end of "Shadow of the Colossus", she has been obsessed with
Atlantis; in her quest for the lost continent, she has repeatedly confronted a
secret society called "Horde of the Violet Hare" (also created by Casty), who want to use Atlantean technology for their own goals.
Cuckoo-Loca Cuckoo-Loca is a small yellow
cuckoo from a
cuckoo clock with a pink bow on her head and a tail in the shape of a clock key that, when spun, allows her to fly. She was introduced in the television series ''
Minnie's Bow-Toons'' (2011) working in Minnie's boutique with her and Daisy. After that, she became a frequent character in the series and productions derived from it, appearing in the series
Mickey Mouse Mixed-Up Adventures (2017) as one of the main characters in the stories centered on Minnie and Daisy, helping them with their orders. She subsequently appeared as a recurring character in the series
Mickey Mouse Funhouse (2021) and
Mickey Mouse Clubhouse+ (2025). In 2021 she appeared in the Halloween TV special ''
Mickey's Tale of Two Witches, and in the same year in the Christmas special Mickey and Minnie Wish Upon a Christmas''. In the stop motion TV special
Mickey Saves Christmas (2022), Cuckoo-Loca makes a cameo appearance, with a figurine of her emerging from the cuckoo clock in Santa's workshop. "Loca" being the Spanish word for "Crazy", her name is probably a reference to when people compare someone who is considered crazy to a cuckoo. == Non-anthropomorphic supporting characters ==