词条 | List of Cluedo characters |
释义 |
This is a list of characters in the game of Cluedo. {{TOC Limit|3}}{{anchor|Victim|In the board game|In film, television, books and computer games}}Dr. Black/Mr. BoddyDr. Black (UK)/Mr. Boddy (US), a stock character and generic victim, is the owner of Tudor Close (later known as Tudor Manor, Tudor Hall and Boddy Mansion). In Cluedo he is the unseen host who is murdered, which inspires the quest to discover who murdered him, with what weapon, and what room did the crime occur in his mansion. Dr. Black was listed in the original patent filing as one of the 10 characters created for the game, in which one character was drawn from the suspect cards to be the new victim before the start of a game. Although the victim and the player assignments were never intended to be the same, before the publication of the first edition Dr. Black became the permanent victim in the UK and Mr. Boddy in North America. Mr. Boddy's name is a pun on the fact that the character is a dead body. {{anchor|Miss Scarlet|Miss Scarlett|In the board game|In film, television, books and computer games|Colonel Mustard|Mrs. White|Reverend/Mr. Green|Mrs. Peacock|Professor Plum}}Original suspects
{{anchor|Miss Peach|Monsieur Brunette|Madame Rose|Sergeant Gray}}Additional suspectsParker Bros. released the Clue VCR Mystery Game in 1985, introducing the first new Cluedo characters in 36 years. The characters also appeared in a number of spin-off games and licensed products:
These characters also appear in Clue Master Detective (1988). This edition of the game not only allows for up to ten players, but has more weapons than in the original as well as additional locations (including three locations outside the main house).[2] {{anchor|Captain Brown|Mr. Slate-Grey|Dr. Orchid}}One-time suspectsIn 1986, Super Cluedo Challenge and Super Sleuth were released in the UK, introducing the second wave of new board-game characters:
{{anchor|Inspector Grey|Hogarth|The Black Dog|Editor Braunman|The Reporter}}Other charactersIn 2009, Electronic Arts released an iOS version of Cluedo in which the player is a reporter.
{{anchor|Lady Lavender|Mr. Meadow-Brook}}Millennial suspectsReleased in 2003, Clue FX is an electronic talking version with audio voices and clues. The victim in this version is Mr. Meadow-Brook. Other new characters are:
{{anchor|Cluedo Jr.|Cluedo Junior Detective}}Children's editionsSeveral variants of the game have been developed for children, most notably Clue and Cluedo Jr., which usually involve the disappearance of something (or someone) rather than a murder. These variants generally use the standard six surnames with different first names (or titles), often changing the gender of the original character. Typical of the first name changes, the UK edition of Cluedo Jr. introduced the first animal players or suspects: Samantha Scarlett, Mustard the Dog, Wendy White, George Green, Polly Peacock, and Peter Plum. Cluedo Junior Detective introduced Inspector Cluedo and his bloodhound Watson, who invites his eight nieces and nephews (younger versions of the standard six characters: Jake Plum, Natalie Peacock, Jessica Scarlett, Spike Mustard, Robbie Green and Megan White; Beth Peach, and investigator Tom Black). {{anchor|The Butler|The Inspector|Yvette|Mrs. Ho|The Motorist|The Singing Telegram Girl|Film and DVD}}FilmIn 1985, Cluedo began expanding its character roster and was the premise of a film:[3][4]
TelevisionIn 1999, Cluedo inspired several television series which (in addition to the standard six characters) created additional characters – primarily victims.The most notable recurring character in the UK series was Mr. White, and the Australian series introduced Det. Sgt. Stanley Bogong (who also appeared in French, German and Swedish versions). In episode one of the first UK series, Count Henri de Beauchamp (Oliver Tobias) is a sleazy French con man who tries to marry Mrs. Peacock for her money; she kills him with some poison in the dining room. In episode two Mr. Hall (Nicholas Ball), a developer who wants to drain the local pond to build a discothèque, is killed by Col. Mustard with a statuette in the dining room. In episode three Janet Hope (Joanna Van Gyseghem), wife and partner-in-crime of Jeremy Hope, is killed by Miss Scarlett with a bridge trophy in the study. In episode four Peregrine Talbot-Wheeler (Nickolas Grace), a smarmy antiques collector and host of a popular television show, visits to revalue Mrs. Peacock's valuables and she kills him with the antique sword in the study. In episode five David Chapman (Simon Williams), Prof. Plum's boss and a politician standing for election as MP against Col. Mustard, is killed by Professor Plum with a black tie in the billiard room. In episode six, Constable Jones (Chris Wright)—a local policeman hired to watch over the annual fete—is killed by Mrs. White with some poison in the drawing room. In the Christmas special, Ken (James Clyde) – the son of a judge who owned Arlington Garage – visits Arlington Grange, disguised as a chauffeur and is killed by Miss Scarlett with a knife in the library. In episode one of series two Simon Charles (Malcolm Stoddard), an investment broker who dupes everyone into investing in a faulty deal which collapses, is killed by Mrs. White with a sharpening steel in the kitchen. In episode two, insurance assessor George Biddle (Mark Eden) visits to re-insure the valuables in the garage and is killed by Reverend Green with a kettle flex{{clarify|date=December 2017|reason=How is a kettle flex a murder weapon?}} in the kitchen. In episode three, famous actress Marieanne Kray (Sharon Maughan) visits to film a movie on location at the garage and is killed by Colonel Mustard with a rope in the kitchen. In episode four Ben (Nick Berry), a private detective disguised as a window cleaner who is hired by Mrs. Peacock to watch the valuables in the Grange, but she kills him with a lead pipe in the billiard room. In episode five Dave (Christopher Guard), a hippie, camps with his commune next to Rev. Green's church and is killed by Miss Scarlett with a knife in the study. In episode six, Jack Peacock (Lewis Collins) – Mrs. Peacock's second husband – returns from the grave. Wanting to reclaim his property, he is killed by Professor Plum with a funeral urn in the drawing room. In episode one of series three, activist Gordon Ferrar (Neil Morrissey) shows up beaten on the garage doorstep after a catastrophic day fox hunting and is killed by Reverend Green with a pair of scissors in the kitchen. In episode two Professor Plum hires the psychic Miss Terry (Ruth Madoc) to ease Mrs. White's paranoia about ghosts, but Terry is killed by Colonel Mustard with a dagger in the billiard room. In episode three, Mrs. Peacock sells Arlington Grange to multimillionaire Max Gold (Mike Sarne) so he plans to turn it into a theme park but later she kills him with a croquet mallet in the study. In episode four Sister Concepta (Jean Boht), Mrs. Peacock's long-lost sister-in-law, arrives claiming to be the rightful heir of Arlington Garage and hopes to make it a convent; she is killed by Mrs. White with an African spear in the drawing room. In episode five, journalist David Stringer (Dudley Sutton) arrives to write an article about country life and is a little too interested in the house's occupants; he is killed by Professor Plum with some insecticide in the library. In episode six Clive Moxton (Simon Shepherd), Miss Scarlett's new fiancé, is not whom he appears to be so she kills him with a swordstick in the billiard room. In episode one of series four, crass handyman Jake Swithin (Ray Lonnen) strikes it rich after discovering an incredible claim for lost treasure and is killed by Professor Plum with a dagger in the billiard room. In episode two, MP Sir Nigel Hussey (Ian McNeice) plans to build a sex-theme park on the grounds surrounding Arlington Garage and is strangled by Colonel Mustard with a G-string in the kitchen. In episode three, celebrity journalist Candice Costello (Caroline Langrishe) visits Arlington Grange. Her nosy research literally lands her on ice, when she is killed by Reverend Green with an ice pick in the kitchen. In episode four the predictions of Marjory Hunt (Jean Alexander), Mrs. White's psychic friend, alarm the guests when she predicts their secrets but even predicts that she will be killed by Miss Scarlett with a desktop lighter in the drawing room. In episode five Terrence Radcliffe (Matthew Marsh), Mrs. Peacock's new financial advisor, is a little too eager for business and is killed by Mrs. White with a decanter stopper in the study. In episode six, Roger Morgan (Daniel Peacock) comes to the Grange in search of racy details for his biography of Princess Katherine and is killed by Mrs. Peacock with a microphone in the study. BooksClue Jr., a "Let's Read and Play" book written by Sara Miller and illustrated by Jim Talbot introduced five new suspects in 2004: a butler, a cook, a gardener, a maid, and a repairman. {{anchor|Mobil £5 Million Cluedo Mystery|Clue Chronicles: Fatal Illusion}}Other mediaIn the first half of 1985, Mobil Oil joined Cluedo to introduce three new characters as part of its Mobil £5 Million Cluedo Mystery contest game: Sir Peach, Lady Oakwood and Dr. Prussian. The characters were added along with three additional murder weapons to balance the game's playing elements. Of the three, only the name "Peach" would be re-used for other characters. Clue Chronicles: Fatal Illusion, Hasbro's short-lived interactive video-game series, added five characters to the usual six: Ian Masque, Marina Popov, Martin Urfe, Sabata and Dr. Julia Kell. In 1938, eccentric millionaire Ian invites the original Cluedo suspects and the new characters to his isolated Swiss mountain estate for a mysterious dinner party. Marina Popov is an attractive, blonde Russian psychic. Martin Urfe, a mediocre magician hired by Ian to entertain his guests, may be a fraud. Sabata is a deranged Spanish artist, and aging German psychoanalyst Julia Kell may have Nazi connections. References1. ^The Waddingtons Story: From the Early Days to Monopoly, the Maxwell Bids and into the Next Millennium, p.81, by Victor Watson, Jeremy Mills Publishing, November 11, 2008. 2. ^https://www.geekyhobbies.com/clue-master-detective-board-game-review/ 3. ^{{cite video | people = Jonathan Lynn (Director) |date = 1985 | title = Clue | medium = Film | location = USA | publisher = Paramount}} 4. ^{{cite web | last = Landis | first = John |author2=Jonathan Lynn | title = Clue (script) | work = AwesomeFilm.com | year = 1985 | url = http://www.awesomefilm.com/script/clue.html | accessdate = 2006-07-25 }} External links
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