Glenn Quagmire

Glenn Quagmire
Family Guy character
First appearance "Death Has a Shadow"
Created by Seth MacFarlane
Voiced by Seth MacFarlane
Information
Full name Glenn Quagmire
Gender Male
Occupation US Navy ensign (discharged)
Commercial Airline Pilot
Family
Spouse(s)
  • Joan Quagmire (deceased wife)
  • Charmise Quagmire (ex-wife)
Significant other(s)
Children Anna Lee Quagmire (biological daughter)
Relatives Abby (niece)
Nationality American

Glenn Quagmire, often referred to as just Quagmire, is a character from the animated television series Family Guy. He is a neighbor and friend of the Griffin family and is best known for his hypersexuality and his catchphrase, "Giggity".[1] The show's creator and voice actor Seth MacFarlane describes him as "an appalling human being who is still caught in the rat-pack era" based on anachronistic 1950s party-animal clichés.[2]

Origins and appearance

The name Quagmire was chosen by a college acquaintance of MacFarlane's;[2] the word quagmire refers to both a soft soil that yields easily, such as quicksand, and a situation that is difficult to get out of. The title of the episode "Quagmire's Quagmire" plays on the second meaning. MacFarlane came up with Quagmire's voice after listening to fast-talking radio jockeys from the 1950s era, describing the character as a "50s radio guy on coke."[2][3] The "giggity" phrase was inspired by Steve Marmel's Jerry Lewis impression.[4] Quagmire's home follows the same retro theme, decked out in a style reminiscent of the swinging party set of the 1950s and 1960s; nearly every part of the house has a discreetly hidden bed.

Role in the show

Quagmire is a bachelor who works as a commercial airline pilot. He lives on Spooner Street where he is a neighbor and friend of Peter Griffin, Cleveland Brown and Joe Swanson. He has had two spouses: Joan, a maid for the Griffins who died;[5] and Charmise, a prostitute whom he divorced.[6] The former episode, "I Take Thee Quagmire", was acknowledged by MacFarlane as the first to have a plot revolving around Quagmire.[7]

During his time in Korea in service, he had a brief career as a Korean soap opera star and was lovers with his co-star, Sujin.[8] They would reconnect ties during his brief travel there with Peter, Joe and Cleveland.[8] Quagmire briefly dated Cheryl Tiegs in the early 1980s,[9][10] but she dumped him because of his constant jealousy[10] and his sex addiction.[9] Cheryl, who Quagmire considers his long-lost one true love,[9] would again appear twice in Quagmire's life, both times due to Brian Griffin's meddling: the first one, in "Jerome Is the New Black", when Brian invited him to dinner under the pretense he was going to dinner with her;[9] the second one, in "Tiegs for Two", when Brian dated her just to mess with him (he would bring Jillian, Brian's ex-girlfriend, with him, with both starting a fight and both Jillian and Cheryl dumping them).[10]

Quagmire despises Brian Griffin,[9] and they have a feud that spans several episodes but have since moved on.

In the episode "Quagmire's Baby", he discovers that he has a daughter, Anna Lee, but puts her up for adoption; several episodes imply that Quagmire has fathered several other children. His father, Dan, is introduced in the episode "Quagmire's Dad"; he is a naval veteran of the Vietnam War who has a sex change and becomes a woman named Ida. Quagmire's sister, Brenda, is first seen in the episode "Jerome is the New Black" and is the subject of "Screams of Silence: The Story of Brenda Q". In both episodes she is the victim of domestic violence from her partner Jeff, whom Quagmire murders in order to protect her.

He is characterized as indulging in numerous sexual fetishes such as BDSM, frotteurism, biastophilia, somnophilia, and erotic asphyxiation to voyeurism, exhibitionism, incest, pecattiphilia, zoophilia, and necrophilia. Following the episode "Family Goy", he develops a pornography addiction after discovering the existence of internet pornography. When in sexual situations, he often shouts variations of his catchphrase "giggity", which has been used on Family Guy merchandise such as keyrings.[11]

Scenes involving Quagmire's sexual behavior have sometimes been censored by Fox, such as a cutaway in the episode "Airport '07" which implied that he engaged in necrophilia with a dead virgin at her funeral.[12] The Parents Television Council, a long-term critic of Family Guy, says that Quagmire provides "some of the tawdriest moments" in the show.[13]

References

  1. Miller, Shaun (2007). "Quagmire: Virtue and Perversity". In Wisnewski, J. Jeremy. Family Guy and Philosophy: A Cure for the Petarded. The Blackwell Philosophy and Pop Culture Series. Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing. pp. 27–35. ISBN 140516316X.
  2. 1 2 3 Seth MacFarlane Interview. YouTube. Retrieved 2009-03-18.
  3. "Episode 9". The Graham Norton Show. Season 15. 2014-05-30. BBC.
  4. "Seth MacFarlane on Family Guy #100".
  5. "I Take Thee Quagmire" (Season 4, Episode 21). Episode aired on March 12, 2006.
  6. "The Giggity Wife" (Season 11, Episode 11). Episode aired on January 27, 2013.
  7. MacFarlane, Seth (2005). Family Guy season 4 DVD commentary for the episode "I Take Thee Quagmire" (DVD). 20th Century Fox.
  8. 1 2 "Candy, Quahog Marshmallow" (season 14, episode 10). Episode aired on January 3, 2016
  9. 1 2 3 4 5 "Jerome Is the New Black" (season 8, episode 7). Episode aired on November 22, 2009
  10. 1 2 3 "Tiegs for Two" (season 9, episode 14). Episode aired on April 10, 2011
  11. "Family Guy - Boxed Thick Metal Keyring Quagmire Giggity". Forbidden Planet. Archived from the original on July 31, 2014. Retrieved 10 September 2014.
  12. MacFarlane, Seth (2007). Family Guy season 5 DVD commentary for the episode "Airport '07" (DVD). 20th Century Fox.
  13. Worst of the week - Family Guy on Fox

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/3/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.