Butters Stotch

Butters Stotch
South Park character
First appearance "Cartman Gets an Anal Probe" (As background character)
"Two Guys Naked in a Hot Tub" (first major appearance)
Created by Trey Parker
Matt Stone
Voiced by Matt Stone
Information
Full name Leopold Stotch
Aliases Professor Chaos
Marjorine
Mantequilla Jordan Lawrence
Gender Male
Occupation Student
Family Linda Stotch (mother)
Stephen Stotch (father)
Grandma (grandmother)
Significant other(s) Charlotte (ex-girlfriend)
Relatives (details)
Religion Catholicism
Residence South Park, Colorado

Leopold "Butters" Stotch is a fictional character in the animated television series South Park. He is voiced by series co-creator Matt Stone and loosely based on co-producer & animation director Eric Stough.[1] He is a third- then fourth-grade student at the fictional South Park Elementary School. Butters is depicted as more cheerful, naive, optimistic, gullible, and passive compared to the show's other child characters and can become increasingly anxious, especially when faced with the likelihood of being punished, which is usually just being grounded, of which he is extremely terrified. As a result, he is often sheltered and unknowledgeable of some of the suggestive content his peers understand. His name is a play on the confection butterscotch.

Butters debuted as an unnamed background character when South Park first aired on August 13, 1997; his role gradually increased, becoming one of the series' most recurring characters beginning with Season 3 (1999). Creators Parker and Stone have stated that he is one of their favorite characters.

Role in South Park

Butters attends South Park Elementary as part of Mr. Garrison's (later Mrs. Garrison's) 4th grade class. His original name was puff puff. In "AWESOM-O", he says his birthday is September 11. He learns from his parents in "Going Native" that he was born on the island of Kaua'i. During the show's first 58 episodes (1997 through Season 4 episode "4th Grade" in 2000), Butters and the other main child characters were in the third grade. He lives in South Park as the only child of Stephen and Linda Stotch, from whom he perpetually faces the looming prospect of being grounded. In fact, Butters is the physical manifestation of the grounding itself. When the character of Kenny McCormick was temporarily written off the show near the end of the Season 5 (2001), Stan Marsh, Kyle Broflovski, and Eric Cartman allow Butters into their group as the "fourth friend",[2] a role he continued to fill until midway through Season 6. During this period, the boys would often take advantage of Butters' mild temperament by making him a stooge in their own personal schemes. The three eventually ousted him in favor of Tweek Tweak.

Butters as his evil alter ego "Professor Chaos"

As a result, Butters vengefully adopted the alter ego of Professor Chaos. Intending to be a supervillain, Professor Chaos wears a green cape, and a helmet and gauntlets constructed out of cardboard and aluminum foil (a parody of Marvel Comic's Dr. Doom). Butters as Professor Chaos received much focus during the back-to-back episodes "Professor Chaos" and "Simpsons Already Did It", where he took on his younger friend Dougie as his sidekick General Disarray and ultimately failed at their several ill-prepared attempts to create "worldwide chaos". Professor Chaos has occasionally made a few appearances since, appearing to be a known supervillain to South Park's police force. Despite being displaced from both his role as the "fourth friend" and from the eventual return of Kenny, Butters has continued to be a major character in recent seasons. Still the social outcast, he has nevertheless been seen spending considerable amount of time with the other children, and continues to be a frequent source of help to Cartman, while also being the main victim of Cartman's pranks and manipulation (for instance in the season 11 episode "Cartman Sucks" Cartman goes on numerous sleepovers with Butters so he can pull pranks on him while he sleeps).[3] Though the act is customarily performed by Stan or Kyle, Butters will occasionally reflect on the lessons he has attained during the course of an episode with a brief speech, and will sometimes muster up enough courage to act as the voice of reason when his parents or other adults in town engage in irrational behavior.[4][5][6][7]

Character

Creation and design

On August 13, 1997, Butters first appeared as a background character when South Park debuted on Comedy Central with the episode "Cartman Gets an Anal Probe".[8] For the episode, the character was composed of construction paper cutouts and animated through the use of stop motion.[9] Since then, like all other characters on the show, Butters has been animated with computer software, though he is portrayed to give the impression that the show still utilizes its original technique.[9] In the tradition of the show's animation style, Butters is composed of simple geometrical shapes and colors.[9][10] He is not offered the same free range of motion associated with hand-drawn characters; his character is mostly shown from only one angle, and his movements are animated in an intentionally jerky fashion.[3][9][10] Butters has a large tuft of blond hair on top of his head, and is usually depicted wearing an aquamarine jacket with dark green pants. When voicing Butters, Stone speaks within his normal vocal range while adding a childlike inflection, a slight stutter and a Southern accent. The recorded audio is then edited with Pro Tools, and the pitch is altered to make the voice sound more like that of a fourth grader.[11][12]

Development

The character is loosely based on South Park co-producer Eric Stough,[13] whom Stone and Trey Parker regard as a "goody-goody" because of his reluctance to offend.[14] The nickname "Butters" evolved from Parker and Stone calling Stough "little buddy" for about three years.[15][16] Prior to making his first major speaking appearance in the episode "Two Guys Naked in a Hot Tub", crew members referred to the character as "Puff Puff" and "Swanson".[17] Butters gradually became one of Parker and Stone's favorite characters, and for the show's season five finale they created the episode "Butters' Very Own Episode", which revolves entirely around Butters and his parents. The intention was to give the character a proper introduction to the South Park audience and prepare them for the larger role he would come to play in further seasons.[15] Butters eventually took part in more and more scenes in which he is paired with Cartman, and Parker declares that the scenes involving the two together are his favorite of the series.[18] Butters had no dialogue in the 1999 film South Park: Bigger, Longer, and Uncut, though he does utter some grunts and other sounds during some scenes. In a 2009 audio commentary for the Blu-ray edition of the film, Parker and Stone expressed shock at how little the character was used, and agreed that any South Park movie made today would demand he play a role in the plot.

Personality and traits

Though using profanity on occasion, Butters does not indulge in foul-mouthed language as often as the other children on the show, instead preferring to use minced oaths; "oh hamburgers" is one he uses frequently, as well as "gee whiz" mostly in earlier seasons. Butters speaks with a mild stutter and tends to fidget with his hands.[19] The other characters perceive him as "nerdy",[20] and he obliviously maintains a wholesome attitude and mild disposition despite the tragedy and abuse that he frequently encounters.[19][21] His happy-go-lucky persona has been described as resembling that of a typical 1950s sitcom child character,[3] and is usually presented in stark contrast to the harsh treatment he receives at the hands of his friends and strict parents, including his mother's deranged attempt to murder him after discovering his father's bisexuality,[19] as well as when his grandmother happens to be in town and constantly bullies him during her stay. Stone describes him as embodying "permanent innocence".[3] Butters, however, sees himself as a problem child because his parents tell him so and often expresses remorse at being "out-of-control". Exceptions to this include the episode called "The Ungroundable", Butters makes his parents worry about their ability to ground him when he refuses to be punished. This rebellious behavior begins after he joined the vampire kids at his school, but ends when he helps the Goth kids burn down a Hot Topic store.[22] He is also known for being gullible, quickly believing anything told to him by others and tending to do whatever he is told to do with little protest, no matter how ridiculous these things seem to be. As such, he is always made an unknowing accomplice in Cartman's various devious schemes. There are cases, however, where Butters has shown a darker side, such as in episodes like "The Tale of Scrotie McBoogerballs" and "Butterballs"; in the latter of which he viciously assaulted Dr. Oz and verbally castigated his abusive grandmother.

In other media

Butters played a major role in the three-episode "Imaginationland" story arc, which was reissued straight-to-DVD as a full-length feature in 2008.[23][24] Butters is the main playable character in South Park Imaginationland, a mobile game for the iPhone loosely based on the show's Imaginationland trilogy of episodes.[25] In the video game South Park Let's Go Tower Defense Play!, Butters can be selected as a playable character used to establish a tower defense against the game's antagonists.[26]

He also appears in a major role as a companion fighter in the video game South Park: The Stick of Truth, where he plays as a paladin, where his abilities include healing, holy damage, and summoning Professor Chaos who can inflict a variety of status-affecting attacks on enemies or shielding the players.

A DVD box set of 13 Butters-centric episodes, A Little Box of Butters, was released in September 2010.[27]

Notes

  1. spsmedia (2011-02-27), Matt Stone and Trey Parker on Butters, retrieved 2016-09-30
  2. Don Kaplan (2002-04-08). "South Park Won't Kill Kenny Anymore". New York Post. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
  3. 1 2 3 4 Jaime J. Weinman (2008-03-12). "South Park grows up". Macleans.ca. Retrieved 2008-04-30.
  4. Griffiths, Eric (2007-06-21). "Young offenders". New Statesman. Retrieved 2009-05-03.
  5. William Cohen (2005-11-04). "Respect Its Authoritah!". The Cornell American. Archived from the original on January 29, 2010. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
  6. Randy Fallows (January 2002). "The Theology of South Park". The Institute for the Study of American Popular Culture. Retrieved 2009-05-03.
  7. Virginia Heffernan (2004-04-28). "What? Morals in 'South Park'?". The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-07-08.
  8. "South Park turns 10". theage.com.au. 2006-09-27. Retrieved 2009-07-23.
  9. 1 2 3 4 Matt Cheplic (1998-05-01). "'As Crappy As Possible': The Method Behind the Madness of South Park". Penton Media. Archived from the original on 2009-03-29. Retrieved 2009-04-28.
  10. 1 2 Abbie Bernstein (1998-10-27). "South Park - Volume 2". AVRev.com. Retrieved 2008-04-30.
  11. "South Park FAQ". South Park Studios. 2009-02-10. Retrieved 2009-04-30.
  12. "40 Questions". South Park Studios. 2001-10-04. Retrieved 2009-01-30.
  13. "CU-Boulder Alum, 'South Park' Animation Director To Work With CU Film Students". University of Colorado at Boulder. April 21, 2008.
  14. Trey Parker, Matt Stone (2003). VH1 Goes Inside: South Park (TV). Viacom International. Interview with Trey Parker and Matt Stone
  15. 1 2 Trey Parker, Matt Stone (2003). "South Park" — The Complete Fifth Season (DVD). Comedy Central. Mini-commentary for episode "Butters' Very Own Episode"
  16. "An interview with Matt Stone". Archived from the original on 2008-12-19.South Park Studios. Accessed on Feb. 16, 2009
  17. "FAQ – South Park Studios". www.southparkstudios.com. Retrieved 2009-08-07.
  18. Dudley Price (2003-12-18). "Butters one of 'South Park' creator Trey Parker's favorite characters.". The America's Intelligence Wire. Retrieved 2009-08-14.
  19. 1 2 3 Ryan Nyburg (2005-03-03). "Who killed Kenny? South Park defines a generation with its jokes". Oregon Daily Emerald. Retrieved 2008-08-14.
  20. Todd Vanderwerff (2007-08-13). "South Park: The Best of the Bleeping Best". The Press-Enterprise. Retrieved 2009-08-14.
  21. Arp and Yu, p. 27
  22. for instance in How to eat with your butt
  23. "South Park: Imaginationland Will Bring the Laughs on DVD on March 11th". www.movieweb.com. 2008-01-17. Retrieved 2009-08-14.
  24. Chitwood, Scott (2008-03-11). "DVD Roundup: 3.11.08 Blu-ray and DVD Review - ComingSoon.net". www.comingsoon.net. Retrieved 2009-08-14.
  25. Buchanan, Levi (2008-07-12). "IGN: South Park Imaginationland Review". wireless.ign.com. Retrieved 2009-08-14.
  26. Brudvig, Erik (2009-10-06). "South Park Let's Go Tower Defense Play Review". IGN Entertainment. Retrieved 2009-10-10.
  27. "Press Release: A Little Box of Butters". PR Newswire. July 12, 2010. Retrieved July 31, 2011.

References

External links

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