Violet is smart, popular, tomboyish, and somewhat of a
snob. She makes her opinions known to everyone, whom she views as beneath her. Compared to the apparent
middle-class upbringing of the other characters, Violet has an
upper-class mentality and she likes to brag about how her father possesses something her friends' fathers don't; it is also implied, however, that Violet's father is often absent from her life, which her peers use against her when she gets too obnoxious. For example, in a
Father's Day strip, her boasts are quelled by Charlie Brown when he takes her to his dad's barbershop. After telling her about how his dad would always smile at him no matter how bad a workday he was having, a moved and humbled Violet walked away, but not before quietly wishing Charlie Brown a Happy Father's Day. In another example, a character named "5" fired back at her with "
My dad goes to
PTA meetings!" Charlie Brown once deflated her with the comeback: "
My dad has a
son." In the early strips, Violet often acted like a preschool-age Suzy Homemaker: frequently making mud pies, playing "house," and being linked to romantic scenarios involving Shermy or Charlie Brown. In a strip from 1954, she is shown to
collect stamps as a hobby. On some occasions, Violet was shown walking and keeping company with
Lucy. Her surname (Gray) was mentioned only once, on April 4, 1953. Violet's personality was much more forceful and recognizable compared to the more generic early
Peanuts characters like
Patty and
Shermy, which allowed her to survive slightly longer than those founding characters when a new wave of characters,
Linus,
Lucy, and
Schroeder, were introduced (as an example, Violet has key roles in the TV specials
A Charlie Brown Christmas and ''
It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown''). By the 1960s, however, Violet, too, was largely phased out with the introduction of the next wave of characters (
Peppermint Patty,
Marcie,
Franklin and such). Schulz admitted in a 1988 interview that Violet's pure vindictiveness had made it difficult to give her
punch lines. Speaking of her, Patty and Shermy: "Some characters just don't seem to have enough personality to carry out ideas. They're just almost born straight men." Schulz also contrasted Violet to Lucy in that where Violet was purely mean, Lucy had redeeming characteristics of being bluntly honest and to-the-point, and thus Lucy "worked" as a more rounded character where Violet did not. Violet's use in the strip was eventually reduced to appearances in the background. ==Voiced by==