Jon Arbuckle
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Jon Arbuckle | |
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Garfield character | |
First appearance | January 8, 1976 in Jon |
Created by | Jim Davis |
Portrayed by | Breckin Meyer (live-action/CGI 2004–06) |
Voiced by | Sandy Kenyon (1982) Thom Huge (1983–1994) Wally Wingert (2007–present) |
In-universe information | |
Species | Human |
Gender | Male |
Occupation | Cartoonist |
Family | Garfield (pet cat), Odie (pet dog) |
Significant other | Liz Wilson (girlfriend) |
Relatives | Doc Boy (brother), Tony Arbuckle, Long John Arbuckle, Judy (cousin), Tammy (niece), Stevie (nephew), Ned (uncle), Roy (uncle), Bill (uncle), Ed (uncle), Orpha (aunt), Edna (aunt), Trudy (aunt), Zelda (aunt), an unnamed great-great-grandmother |
Birthday | July 28[1][2][3] |
Jonathan Q. Arbuckle [4] is a fictional character from the Garfield comic strip by Jim Davis. He has also appeared in the animated television series Garfield and Friends, the computer-animated The Garfield Show, and two live-action/computer-animated feature films.
A geeky and clumsy man yet caring owner, Jon is the owner of Garfield and Odie.
Physical appearance[]
Jonathan is a Caucasian man with brown frizzy hair.
Fictional biography[]
Jonathan told Garfield that he was 29 years old in a December 23, 1980 strip.[5] However, in the episode "T3000" of The Garfield Show, he is described as 22.[citation needed]
Jonathan might be of Italian origins since he has an Italian ancestor whose name was Tony Arbuccli.[citation needed]
He and his pets might live in Muncie, Indiana according to several episodes of the cartoon.[citation needed]
He can play accordion, bagpipes, guitar, banjo, and bongos and sing, though his singing and musical skills are not the greatest.[citation needed]
Hobbies[]
In the first strip, Arbuckle is presented as a cartoonist.[6] Garfield and Friends also shows him several times as a cartoonist. His occupation is likely still that of a cartoonist on The Garfield Show, as in the episode "Family Picture" he draws a sketch of a photograph that he wants to take as Liz's birthday present.[citation needed] Also, in the strip from May 2, 2010, Liz tells her parents Jon is a cartoonist.[7] Jon was also seen doing his work briefly in the August 2, 2015 strip.[8]
Family[]
Jonathan was raised on a farm and occasionally visits his mother, father, paternal grandmother, and brother Doc Boy, who live on the farm.[citation needed]
Jon lives with Garfield and Odie, his pets.
Jon acquired Garfield at a pet shop.[citation needed]
Jon acquired Odie when Lyman, an old friend of his (and Odie's original owner), moved in with him and Garfield. After a few years, Lyman disappeared from the strip, never to be heard from again. The book Twenty Years and Still Kicking, which marked Garfield's twentieth year, included parodies of how Lyman left, such as "Had lunch with Jimmy Hoffa and then...".[citation needed] Lyman does appear in an episode of The Garfield Show, during which Jon sets out to look for him. Odie goes back to Lyman, but returns to Garfield at the end.[citation needed]
Personality[]
Before he met Liz, Jon consistently failed to date any woman. This has been partly due to ridiculous pick-up lines, lack of social skills, his entire wardrobe of incredibly weird, flashy outfits, and his general awkwardness. Every Friday night, he would invite Garfield to undertake in his Friday night festivities instead of inviting whichever woman he was trying to hook-up with. Otherwise, he would solely stare at his phone, desperately waiting in vain for a woman to call him.[citation needed]
Jon has a long-time crush on Garfield's veterinarian, Dr. Liz Wilson.[citation needed] Although she has a deadpan, sardonic persona, she finds Jon's outlandish and goofball behavior endearing on occasion. Jon often attempts to ask her out on a date, but rarely succeeds, usually due to his lack of fashion sense, and with Garfield making fun of his failure; however, in an extended story arc from June 20 to July 29, 2006, Liz finally admitted she was in love with him and became his girlfriend from that point onwards.[citation needed] As early as 1982, Davis had suggested he would eventually bring Jon and Liz together as a couple.[9]
Despite his somewhat timid and honest nature, Jon is sometimes shown to be quite assertive on Garfield And Friends. He also shows a tendency to be a miser, as Garfield mentions how Jon passes out seeing the rates on a parking meter and Jon tries to perform an appendectomy on himself to save money.[citation needed]
Trivia[]
- Jon was voted number one on the Best Week Ever blog's list of "The Most Depressed Comic Book Characters".[10]
- Many of Arbuckle's character traits are shared with his author Jim Davis, who was likewise a cartoonist, raised on a farm and born on July 28.[11]
- Jonathan is a theist who believes in God, as he is seen praying before going to bed in the April 29, 1987 strip.[12]
Other media[]
- Jon's first animated appearance was in the 1980 CBS special, The Fantastic Funnies, when he was voiced by Thom Huge. Jon was voiced by Sandy Kenyon in the first animated television special (Here Comes Garfield), before Huge returned to the character in all later specials and in Garfield and Friends. Breckin Meyer portrayed Jon in the live-action/computer animated films Garfield: The Movie and Garfield: A Tail of Two Kitties. In Garfield Gets Real, Garfield's Fun Fest and Garfield's Pet Force, he was voiced by Wally Wingert. Wally also provides Jon's voice for The Garfield Show.
- In an episode of Futurama, the forehead of a giant "Jon" balloon from the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade becomes a hot air balloon to raise Fry, Leela, and Bender to the surface world.
- Similarly, Garfield Minus Garfield removes all the other characters completely and simply features Jon talking to himself. Fans connected with Jon's "loneliness and desperation" and found his "crazy antics" humorous; Jim Davis himself called Dan Walsh's (the author of Garfield Minus Garfield) strips an "inspired thing to do" and said that "some of the strips work better than the originals".[13][14]
- An Arbuckle Thanksgiving and An Arbuckle Christmas have taken the two holiday video specials and digitally removed Garfield and Odie, leaving Jon as the lead.
References[]
- ^ "Garfield & Friends". Retrieved 3 March 2017.
- ^ "Garfield & Friends". Retrieved 3 March 2017.
- ^ "Garfield & Friends". Retrieved 3 March 2017.
- ^ "Garfield". December 6, 2001. Retrieved May 7, 2020.
- ^ "Garfield & Friends". Retrieved 3 March 2017.
- ^ "Garfield & Friends". garfield.com. Retrieved 2019-09-30.
- ^ "Garfield & Friends". Retrieved 3 March 2017.
- ^ "Garfield & Friends". Retrieved 3 March 2017.
- ^ Shapiro, Walter (December 12, 1982). "LIVES: The Cat That Rots the Intellect". The Washington Post. Retrieved June 23, 2019.
- ^ Best week ever blog
- ^ "Jim Davis - Biography". Retrieved December 7, 2019.
- ^ "Garfield & Friends". Retrieved 3 March 2017.
- ^ Doty, Cate (June 2, 2008). "Is the Main Character Missing? Maybe Not". The New York Times. Retrieved July 25, 2008.
- ^ "When the Cat's Away, Neurosis Is on Display". The Washington Post. April 6, 2008. Retrieved July 25, 2008.
- Garfield characters
- Fictional cartoonists
- Fictional characters from Indiana
- Comics characters introduced in 1978
- Male characters in comics
- Male characters in animation