A
sidekick is a character in a drama who is of lesser importance than the main
protagonist, but who nonetheless accompanies or tags along with that lead character.
Sidekicks
have been a staple of cult television storytelling since the very beginning of
the format, in part because they are useful sounding boards for exposition or
back-story. A hero can frequently take the time to “explain” things to his or
her sidekick, thus conveying crucial information to the audience at the same
time.
One
popular series, Doctor Who (1963 – 1989; 2005) -- perhaps inspired by Sherlock
Holmes and the most famous sidekick of all, Dr. Watson -- has featured a rotating
cast of sidekicks throughout the years, but termed them “Companions” instead.
In
the early, black-and-white days of the series, these companions were often
present mostly to scream in terror, and to require rescuing from the Doctor. That idea has changed dramatically over the
years, and at least two companions have headlined their own spin-off series
(Jack Harkness [John Barrowman] and Torchwood [2006 – 2011]) and Sarah
Jane Smith [Elizabeth Sladen] in The Sarah Jane Adventures [2007 –
2011])
Another
series that has often featured sidekicks is the bad-movie skewering Mystery
Science Theater 3000. This
series features an astronaut Joel Robinson (Joel Hodgson) and later Mike Nelson
trapped in orbit with several comedic robot sidekicks: Cambot, Gypsy, Tom Servo
and Crow, specifically.
Meanwhile,
down on Earth (and later in space too…), the villains also have sidekicks or “second
bananas.” TV’s Frank (Frank Coniff) is Dr. Clayton Forrester’s (Trace Beaulieu)
sidekick, and Pearl Forrester (Mary Jo Pehl) is side-kicked by Professor Bobo (Kevin
Murphy) and the Observer, Brain Guy (Bill Corbett).
Mad
scientist, it seem often work with sidekicks.
Pinky is Brain’s sidekick on Pinky and the Brain, and Jay
Robinson had Billy Barty’s help on Dr. Shrinker (1976 -1977).
Robot
sidekicks like the ‘Bots are also often sidekicks on popular series. Buck Rogers’ (Gil Gerard) sidekick was the
robot Twiki (Mel Blanc/Frank Silla) in Buck Rogers in the 25th Century
(1979 – 1981). And Muffitt the Daggit
was a sidekick in the original Battlestar Galactica (1978 – 1979).
Buffy
the Vampire Slayer
(1997 – 2003) devised a new terminology for the Chosen One’s high-school
friends and sidekicks. Together, they
were all part of the “Scooby Gang,” a reference to Hanna-Barbera’s Scooby Doo,
and the team of mystery investigators on the series.
Other,
more conventional superhero programs have also featured sidekicks. When cannot think of Batman without Robin,
The Green Hornet without Kato, Superman without Jimmy Olsen, and the Lone
Ranger without Tonto.
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