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List of Gargoyles characters
List of Gargoyles characters
from Wikipedia

This page contains a list of characters in the animated television series Gargoyles (1994–97), the non-canon and the spinoff comic books.

Gargoyles

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Several clans of gargoyles exist worldwide, and each clan has distinct cultural and morphological characteristics. All gargoyle clans are alike in that each has a particular item, area, or concept that they strive to protect. They are fierce warriors and are incredibly powerful and resilient; their appearance and ferocity often means that humans vilify them as demons and monsters. Most of the world's gargoyle clans do not peacefully co-exist with humans.

Gargoyles are particularly notable for entering a sort of stone hibernation, called "stone sleep", during the day, during which they resemble Gothic statues. While the process is timed precisely to the times of sunset and sunrise, dormant gargoyles who are transported rapidly to different time zones experience a variation of jet lag which can significantly affect the time of their arousal, as well as causing some nausea until their circadian rhythms rapidly adapt.[1] During daylight, they can quickly heal from injury and illness, and are protected from most natural threats. However, this state makes them easy targets for destruction by their enemies and humans who hate them.[2] The geneticist Anton Sevarius surmised that, in this hibernation, they absorb solar radiation that allows them to store energy; otherwise, he concluded, the strenuous activity of gliding would require a nutritional intake equivalent to eating three cows a day.[3] Damage during stone sleep can be fatal to a gargoyle. If a gargoyle dies during its hibernation, such as by being shattered to pieces, its body will remain stone.[2]

Gargoyles, despite having large wings, can only fly by gliding on updrafts and on the wind. They have sharp claws that can dig into any kind of solid surface, and they can use these to climb vertical surfaces.[2] They are also excellent swimmers.

While not inherently immortal, gargoyles can be extremely long-lived, a result of stone sleep slowing their aging process until they wake again the following night. Even in old age, they are not as frail and incapacitated as other creatures. Because they spend half their day asleep as stone, they age at half the rate of a human, thus living twice as long.[4]

A subgroup of gargoyles are gargoyle beasts, who are typically quadrupedal and behave like domestic animals. Though they are smarter than mundane animals, they are not as intelligent as humans or gargoyles.

The Manhattan Clan

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The Manhattan Clan are the protagonists of the series. The original members of the group were made up of the remnants of the Wyvern Clan that were not shattered. They later gained new members as the series progressed.

  • Goliath (voiced by Keith David)  The leader of the Manhattan Clan.[5] Goliath is named for the biblical giant by the people of Castle Wyvern because of his large stature at 6 ft. 10 in. (208 cm) and a weight of 400 lbs. (181 kg).[2] By the end of the second season, Goliath has started a romantic relationship with Elisa Maza.
  • Hudson (voiced by Ed Asner)  An Elder and former leader of the Wyvern Clan.[5] He now serves as an advisor to Goliath and the rest of the Manhattan Clan. Hudson took his name from the river after Elisa explained almost everything has a name.[2] When not in battle, Hudson would spend the night watching television.
  • Brooklyn (voiced by Jeff Bennett)  The rufous-skinned, white-haired Brooklyn serves as the clan's second-in-command[6] with a somewhat sarcastic and impetuous attitude, but has a talent for tactics. Brooklyn is named for the New York borough.[2] He harbors bitter hatred against Demona after she tricked him. Forty seconds after being whisked away in time by The Phoenix Gate (but 40 years later, from Brooklyn's perspective), Brooklyn was returned to his correct time, older and with a family.[7]
  • Lexington (voiced by Thom Adcox-Hernandez)  The smallest of the clan and a technical wizard. Lexington is named from the avenue, which itself gained that name in 1836.[8][9][2] Lexington harbored bitter hatred against The Pack,[10] but attempted to reconcile with Fox after moving back to the castle.[11] Unlike the other Manhattan Clan gargoyles, Lexington's wings do not exist as fully "separate" limbs, but instead consist of membranes that are webbed to his arms with one extra set of "limbs" halfway down within the webbing, which allow him to glide like a flying squirrel. He holds a soft spot for baby Alex; in the third season, he is shown to act as a sort of babysitter and spoils him with new toys.
  • Broadway (voiced by Bill Fagerbakke)  An overweight and good-natured gargoyle. He is named for the street.[2] Broadway has developed a strong dislike of guns ever since he accidentally shot Elisa with her own gun, and has a great appreciation for old movies (particularly detective/noir films),[12] as well as a newfound and rapidly developing appreciation for reading and literary works. He later develops a relationship with Angela.
  • Bronx (vocal effects provided by Frank Welker)  A dog-like gargoyle beast who is named for the New York borough.[2] He often stays with Hudson within the clan's residence, keeping him company while watching television.
  • Angela (voiced by Brigitte Bako)  The daughter of Goliath[13] and Demona.[14] She was raised on Avalon like a human, thus making her more willing to trust others,[15] and joined the Manhattan clan in the middle of the second season. Angela is so named because of her angelic nature,[16] Angela literally meaning "She-Angel". She later develops a relationship with Broadway, after letting "the trio" (Broadway, Brooklyn and Lexington) know she does not tolerate nicknames being used for her.
  • Fu-Dog  A green leonine gargoyle beast, closely resembling a Chinese statuary lion in appearance from the Xanadu Clan in China who, at some unspecified time, joins Brooklyn on his journey through the time-stream. He is fiercely loyal to Brooklyn.[7]
  • Katana  She comes from the Ishimura Clan during feudal era Japan, and is Brooklyn's sky-blue hued mate with a similar but smaller beak when compared to her mate. Named for the most famous form of Japanese sword, she joined him on his Timedancer journey. During their adventures, she and Brooklyn had an egg which hatched into Nashville. She has a second egg, Egwardo, which she is very protective of, as shown by her carrying it (before it hatches in 1998) with her everywhere in a compact backpack.[7]
  • Nashville  The son of Brooklyn and Katana. He closely resembled Brooklyn, but had Katana's pale blue skin color and bluish-black hair. He is called Gnash for short.[7]
  • Egwardo  A yet-to-be-hatched gargoyle egg. Its parents were Brooklyn and Katana.[7] Egwardo hatched as a female in 1998, and was given the name "Tachi", possibly named for the predecessor of the sword her mother is named for.[17]
  • Othello (voiced by Michael Dorn)  A rookery brother to Goliath who is shown to be hot-headed. Resurrected as the cyborg Coldstone by David Xanatos. The Coldstone robot was designed to resemble him.[18] The name Othello was used to identify the character in the script.[19] He rejoined the clan in 1997.[7]
  • Desdemona (voiced by CCH Pounder)  A gargoyle who is Othello's mate.[20] She helped to keep Iago at bay and was eventually transferred into the robot shell of Coldfire.[21] The name Desdemona was used only for script and credit sequences.[19] She rejoined the clan in 1997.[7]

Coldstone

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Coldstone is the spirit of a deceased gargoyle from the Wyvern clan resurrected through science and sorcery into a cyborg body by David Xanatos.[18] He was formed from the remains of three different gargoyles (usually called Coldstone or "Othello", his mate Coldfire or "Desdemona", and his rival Coldsteel or "Iago"),[19][20] and each personality remains mostly intact. Eventually, each personality is transferred to a separate robotic body.[21] Since the Coldstone robotic body only had one voice box, Coldstone was always voiced by Michael Dorn, regardless of the personality in control. However, in "Legion" when Coldstone's tone changed whenever Desdemona was in control, Coldstone to be voiced by CCH Pounder during that time.

Iago/Coldsteel

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Iago or Coldsteel (voiced by Xander Berkeley) is Othello's enemy. He convinced Othello that Desdemona was secretly pursuing a relationship with Goliath.[20] He was eventually transferred into the robot shell of Coldsteel.[21] Upon Demona's reactivation of the Coldstone robot, Iago took control of the body, until Othello was convinced to help Goliath and clan.[22] In 1996, Coldsteel aided Xanatos and Coyote 5.0. in retrieving the Stone of Destiny in exchange for removing a tracking device from his body.[7] The name Iago was used only in the script and credits.[19]

Demona

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Demona

Demona (voiced by Marina Sirtis) is the main antagonist of the series,[23][24][25] driven by a hatred of humanity.[26] She is Goliath's ex-mate[2] and Angela's biological mother;[14] who is no longer frozen in stone by daylight like the others, thanks to Puck's pre-Gathering intervention.[27] She has been continuously alive for a millennium, because of a magical pact with Macbeth granted to them by the series' version of the Three Witches, giving both of them nearly-irrevocable immortality. Demona developed a hatred of all humans, making her an enemy of the clan. She was named by Macbeth, after her demonic fighting skills,[28] Demona literally meaning "She-Demon". Over the centuries that she has been alive, Demona was the enemy of the Canmore family, who all took on the moniker of The Hunter; because of this, Demona was indirectly responsible for the destruction of the Manhattan Clan's clock tower home.

The Mary Sue's Jessica Mason described Demona as the "perfect complex villain," writing "Oftentimes, villains are one-note and not nuanced, or they’re too evil and all we want is to see them defeated. But a great villain is one we can maybe sorta understand, who doesn’t see themself as a villain." "Demona was sympathetic. I'm not saying that I agree with her methods or where she landed in her world view, but viewers could understand why she did what she did and felt what she felt. Demona was always defiant and ambitious, but centuries of human betrayal and seeing the worst in men radicalized her. She represented the ultimate form of cynicism about humanity, and sometimes it felt justified... Demona is a great example of a villain that is so much fun to watch and even kinda fun to root for. She was an icon of so many childhoods because she was complicated, powerful, badass, and fun."[29]

Avalon Clan

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The Avalon Clan are the gargoyle eggs of Castle Wyvern that were protected by Princess Katharine, Tom, and the Magus. The eggs were taken to Avalon where they hatched and grew to adulthood where they formed this offshoot of the Wyvern Clan.[15] Katharine and Tom raised them as their own children, and thus gave each a name to be told apart from each other, so the Avalon Clan holds great respect for them.

Known members of the clan include:

The unnamed members of the Avalon clan consist of 14 unnamed females, 16 unnamed males, and 2 gargoyle beasts.

London Clan

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The London Clan are a prosperous English clan resembling the creatures of heraldry. The London Clan roosted at a country estate called Knight's Spur.[7] They also ran a magic shop in London to supplement their income and until the mid-1990s (the timeframe of the Gargoyles series), the London Clan had abandoned their mission of protection.

Their names were derived from the heraldic creatures they were based on:

  • Una (voiced by Sarah Douglas) – A unicorn-type gargoyle and the clan's leader.
  • Leo (voiced by Gregg Berger) – A lion-type gargoyle.
  • Griff (voiced by Neil Dickson) – A griffin-type gargoyle who later got displaced in 1995 when he went through the Phoenix Gate.[31]
  • Staghart – A white stag-type gargoyle who was rumored to have a close friendship with Lexington.
  • Constance – A wild boar-type gargoyle, whom is second-in-command to Una.
  • Pog – A hippogriff-type gargoyle who is the clan's eldest member.
  • Lunette – A winged unicorn-type gargoyle. She is Leo and Una's daughter who was born the same year as Brooklyn's son Nashville.

The rest of the London Clan consisted of 189 unnamed members.[7]

Clan Ishimura

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Clan Ishimura (Japanese for "stone village") was a gargoyle clan in Japan and the only clan thus far that lived in harmony with humans, teaching them Bushido, (lit. the "Way of the Warrior"), since feudal times. It includes:

  • Kai (voiced by Clyde Kusatsu) – Clan Ishimura's leader.
  • Sora (voiced by Haunani Minn) – A member of Clan Ishimura and Kai's second-in-command.
  • Yama (voiced by Bruce Locke) – A member of Clan Ishimura and Sora's former mate who was banished from the clan for criminal activity. This resulted in his joining Robyn Canmore's Redemption Squad unit in the future to atone for his own misdeeds.

Clan Ishimura also had many other unnamed members.[32] In the Gargoyles comic series issue "The Lost", it is revealed that the gargoyles of Japan are properly called Tengu as a possible inspiration for Japan's folkloric creatures with similar physical characteristics.

Mayan Clan

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The Mayan Clan members are protectors of the Guatemalan rainforest and associated with the Kaqchikel people's culture and have patagia-form, leathery wings. The four surviving gargoyles of the clan wore special talismans linked to a special artifact called the Mayan Sun Amulet, that let them avoid their stone sleep. Their names are Spanish words for precious gemstones:

  • Zafiro (voiced by Héctor Elizondo) – The red-skinned leader of the Mayan Clan with a snake tail instead of legs and a unique feather-winged appearance reminiscent of the Mayan deity Kukulkan but with human-form arms, or possibly one of the cuoatl, specifically Quetzalcoatl. He wears the sapphire amulet.
  • Jade (voiced by Jesse Corti) – A green-skinned Gargoyle with a facial appearance reminiscent of Goliath. His name is pronounced /ˈhɑːd/ HAH-day in Spanish and he wears the jade amulet.
  • Turquesa (voiced by Marabina Jaimes) – A blue-skinned gargoyle. She wears the turquoise amulet.
  • Obsidiana (voiced by Elisa Gabrielli) – A blue-skinned gargoyle and Zafiro's mate who has developed skills as an herbalist (similar to Maya ethnobotany) with medicinal plants of the rain forest, in healing physical injuries. She wears the obsidian amulet.

Due to malicious business actions initiated in 1993 by the Cyberbiotics Corporation's Preston Vogel in and near the clan's rain forest protectorate (see below), a sizable number of the Guatemala Clan's earlier gargoyle membership was destroyed in stone slumber only a few years before the "Avalon World Tour" visit to them by Goliath, Angela, Elisa, and Bronx as the Guatemala Clan's rookery of gargoyle eggs has not been discovered in the tragic event.[33]

Labyrinth Clan

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The Labyrinth Clan lived underground, protecting the homeless individuals who also lived there.

The Mutates

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The Mutates were created when Anton Sevarius combined animal genes with humans in an attempt to create gargoyle-like creatures for Xanatos.[3] They rebelled against Xanatos,[34] and now protect the homeless in the underground facility known as the Labyrinth.[35] They also take care of the clones. All the Mutates resembled humanoid cats with bat-like wings on their backs (giving them enough strength to glide due to the bat DNA in them) and had the ability to store and discharge electricity due to having the DNA and the associated storage organ of an electric eel to naturally accumulate an electric charge.[3]

  • Talon (voiced by Rocky Carroll) – Talon became the leader of the Mutate Clan. Originally, he was against leadership as he preferred everyone being equal, but took control when Fang attempted mutiny. He resembles a black panther/bat/electric eel hybrid. Talon was originally Elisa Maza's younger brother Derek. He took a job as a pilot for David Xanatos, with a series of events leading to his mutation. The mutate Maggie Reed is shown to love him and the feeling is mutual.[3]
  • Fang (voiced by Jim Belushi) – Fang was originally a member of the Mutate Clan, but eventually betrayed them. He resembles a cougar/bat/electric eel hybrid with bat wings. Fang was a human named Fred Sykes before Sevarius mutated him. He found several laser rifles and used them and a pair of human followers to attempt to take over the Labyrinth where the mutates lived.[35] He later joined forces with Thailog and Demona.[36] Fang is a loud mouthed bully who likes dominating those weaker than himself,[3] which causes Yama to become antagonistic towards him as both Yama and Fang are eventual members of Robyn Canmore's Redemption Squad.
  • Claw – Claw is a strong-but-silent Mutate.[3] The transformation process rendered him mute, brought on by either physical damage or psychological trauma (it is never specified). He resembles a tiger/bat/electric eel hybrid.[34] Claw is shown to be a coward, doing what he is told out of fear. However, he has brief moments of bravery.
  • Maggie Reed (voiced by Kath Soucie) – Maggie Reed, a young homeless woman tricked by Sevarius into being a "temporary assistant" at Gen-U-Tech, was the most desperate to find a cure for her condition.[3] Brooklyn had a crush on her for a time, but she fell in love with Talon. Maggie was listed in the show's credits as Maggie the Cat, an allusion to the female lead in the play Cat on a Hot Tin Roof by Tennessee Williams. Maggie resembles a lion/bat/electric eel hybrid.[34] In the comic continuation, it is revealed that she is pregnant with Talon's child.
  • Xanatos' Mutate Army – A group of mutants from "Future Tense" who are clones of Talon.
Non-combat Mutates
[edit]

To continue with his experiments in mutating, Sevarius and Fang abducted four residents of the Labyrinth who are just humans spiced with the DNA of an animal.

  • Thug – Thug was in charge of guarding Fang's cell before he was freed by Sevarius. Mutated into a humanoid crocodile. He took Benny and Erin back to the Labyrinth.
  • Tasha – Tasha was a woman who was mutated into a humanoid armadillo. She committed suicide by hanging after discovering that Sevarius had no intent to cure them.
  • Benny – Benny is a boy who was mutated into a humanoid woodlouse.
  • Erin – Erin is a girl and Benny's older sister who was mutated into a humanoid turtle.[37]

Both Benny and Erin are modeled after the children of series creator Greg Weisman. They got to choose which mutated forms that their comic book versions were given.[38]

Thailog

[edit]

Thailog (voiced by Keith David) was a clone of Goliath created by Anton Sevarius and educated by David Xanatos (via a "subliminal education program"), giving him many of Xanatos's personality traits. He would prove to be both a genius and a persistent enemy. Thailog debuts in the season 2 episode Double Jeopardy, which aired in November 1995, and his name is almost backwards for "Goliath". When Owen Burnett cleaned Goliath's wound from a drone attack, the blood on the cloth he used was secretly given to Sevarius. A "monster", in Xanatos' words. Goliath's body and Xanatos' mind. Deciding that he would never be free under Xanatos' thumb, Thailog planned his own kidnapping by Sevarius, blackmails Xanatos for 20 million dollars for his safe return, and after meeting his genetic source, Goliath, for the first time, seemingly perishes in an explosion. Xanatos later guesses that Thailog had planned to fake his death all along, leaving him both free of Xanatos, and free to spend the 20 million without interference. Xanatos realizes that he has created a monster, one as strong as Goliath and as smart as (if not smarter than) himself.

Under the name "Alexander Thailog", Thailog would later form a partnership/relationship with Demona, (business-wise they formed a company, called "Nightstone Unlimited"), but was planning to let her and Macbeth die to inherit both their fortunes. Demona in her human form planned to marry Macbeth and then claim that he was dead to inherit his fortune. Thailog planned to kill Macbeth and Demona and as her sole business partner, her Banker, he would inherit their combined fortunes.[14] Both of them later commissioned Sevarius to create a clan of clones from the Manhattan Clan's DNA, which he eventually betrayed.[14]

Thailog eventually "dies" (or, more accurately, lapses into a permanent stone sleep) in the third season of the animated series, but is depicted as alive in the canonical SLG Comic Book. Gargoyles: The Goliath Chronicles was considered non-canon by Weisman, although "Genesis Undone" does give some insight into relationship-dynamic between Goliath and Thailog.

The Clones

[edit]

The Clones were made by Anton Sevarius at the request of Demona and Thailog. Their intellects were originally deliberately stunted to make them obedient to Thailog. With Thailog's supposed death, they regained their freedom. Talon offered to take the clones with him to the Labyrinth to educate them.[39]

Issues 3 to 5 of the comic depict Thailog later going to Castle Wyvern to persuade the clones to rejoin him as they still had not developed free will at that time. After a battle with Goliath and his clan, most of the clones decide to return to the Labyrinth at the insistence of Delilah. Only Brentwood decides to remain with Thailog.[11]

  • Malibu (voiced by Jeff Bennett) – The clone of Brooklyn. There are hints to a possible relationship between Malibu and Delilah (much to the disappointment of Brooklyn, before his initial meeting with his own future mate Katana).[11]
  • Brentwood (voiced by Thom Adcox-Hernandez) – The clone of Lexington. Unlike the other clones, he decides to remain with Thailog, viewing him to be smart. He was the only clone to stay out of the fight between the clans.[11]
  • Hollywood (voiced by Bill Fagerbakke) – The clone of Broadway.
  • Burbank (voiced by Ed Asner) – The clone of Hudson. Much like Hudson, Burbank carries a weapon, in his case, a mace. In addition, he lacks the injured left eye Hudson still possesses.
  • Delilah (voiced by Salli Richardson) – Delilah is a binary clone made from 90% of Demona and 10% of Elisa's DNA. She was programmed to be a servile concubine for Thailog, replacing Demona. Goliath went to the Labyrinth requesting Delilah's company for a Halloween dance (as Elisa had broken up with him). After Thailog crashes the party, Delilah is given the choice to remain with Thailog or go back to The Labyrinth. After deciding to leave Thailog, she asked the other clones to make the same choice, and was joined by all of them except for Brentwood. Delilah was angry that Goliath tried to use her as a replacement for Elisa when they temporarily broke up. Goliath had explained to Elisa that he could never feel anything for Delilah, because Gargoyles mate for life.[11] In the unmade spinoff Gargoyles 2198, Delilah's eponymous descendant would have been a main character, close friends with Samson (the grandson of Broadway and Angela, resembling Goliath).[40]
  • Little Anton (voiced by Dorian Harewood) – A giant gargoyle made by Sevarius using the DNA from all the gargoyles at the time when the clones were slowly turning to stone. The events of this episode was considered non-canon by Weisman.

The clones differ from the originals by their colors and some features like horns or teeth. To gain a physical advantage, Malibu, Brentwood, Hollywood and Burbank were aged to be in their biological 20s: older than the young trio, yet younger than Hudson.

The clones' names are places in Los Angeles, contrasting with and spoofing (as chosen by Demona) their counterpart protagonists' New York City place names.

Humans

[edit]

In addition to the gargoyles, human characters figure prominently in the series, both as allies and enemies of the gargoyles.

Residents of Castle Wyvern 954–994

[edit]

Princess Katharine

[edit]

Princess Katharine (voiced by Kath Soucie) is the leader of Castle Wyvern (and, by default, the Scottish clan of gargoyles) during the 990s. Katharine was at first prejudiced against the clan, but after they saved her life, she vowed to protect the clans' unhatched eggs[2] and raise them on Avalon.[15]

Katharine's parents

[edit]
  • Prince Malcolm (voiced by Roger Rees) was Katharine's father, the previous lord of Wyvern Castle, Hudson's good friend, and brother to King Kenneth. He formed a co-existence alliance with the gargoyles who had been there for centuries, and built Castle Wyvern. Goliath, Demona, and Hudson saved his life from an attack by the Archmage. He also inadvertently inspired hatred of gargoyles at Wyvern, particularly in Princess Katharine—he told her that the gargoyles would get her if she did not stay in bed.[5] He was apparently deceased by the time of the Viking attack in 994.
  • Princess Elena (voiced by Kath Soucie) is Katharine's mother. She married Prince Malcolm in 975, and intended to give him the Phoenix Gate as a dowry until it was stolen by Demona.[41]

The Magus

[edit]

The Magus (voiced by Jeff Bennett) was a court magician of Castle Wyvern and Katharine's top advisor. It was the Magus who cast the spell that imprisoned Goliath's clan in stone, believing that the Viking Hakon had murdered the Princess and blaming the gargoyles for her death. He later discovered that Princess Katharine had been rescued by Goliath. The spell would place the Gargoyles in stone until their associated castle touches the sky. Unable to restore the gargoyles as Hakon had burned the page with his counterspell, he agreed to place Goliath under the same spell so that he might one day be reunited with his clan.[2] The Magus guided Princess Katharine and the eggs to Avalon, and harbored unrequited feelings for the princess for many years. He died after using a great deal of energy to defeat the Weird Sisters.[15] The spell in question was later broken by David Xanatos.

Tom the Guardian

[edit]

In 10th-century Scotland, Tom (voiced by J. D. Daniels as a child, Gerrit Graham as an adult) was a peasant boy at Wyvern Castle, who was eager to make friends with the gargoyles, especially the future-named Lexington & Brooklyn, despite his mother's objections. He also accompanied Princess Katherine and the gargoyle eggs to Avalon, where he took on the role of Guardian, protecting the eggs & training the young gargoyles when they hatched. While living on Avalon, the adult Tom became Katharine's confidante and eventually her husband.

Mary

[edit]

Mary (voiced by Kath Soucie), Tom the Guardian's mother, was fiercely anti-gargoyle like Katharine,[2] but had a change of heart as she, too, vowed to protect the eggs. Along with Finnella, she did not go to Avalon, instead choosing to stay on Earth and guard the Grimorum Arcanorum, stating that, "a woman alone might run into trouble: two women can cause plenty of it".[15] When a Timedancing Brooklyn arrived in Scotland in 997, Mary recognized him as one of the gargoyles from Goliath's clan. Together, the three of them joined Constantine's enemies, led by King Kenneth III. She and Finella would continue guarding the Grimorum while leaving 997 with Brooklyn.[7] In October 1996, Mary (or a woman resembling her) attended a Halloween party atop The Eyrie Building.[11]

The Archmage

[edit]

The Archmage (voiced by David Warner) was an evil sorcerer and an enemy of the gargoyle clan at Castle Wyvern. He was defeated by Goliath,[5] but his future self saved him from his fall in a perpetual time paradox—as his future self existed in the 1990s, and rescued his past self, without any explanation for how the loop began. The Archmage continues to live through this loop, despite his later defeat, after rescuing himself in the past.

The Archmage was encouraged to conquer the world, but first had to retrieve the trio of occult objects he most desired: the ancient book of magic spells named the Grimorum Arcanorum, the Phoenix Gate, and the Eye of Odin; as well as to conquer Avalon as a base of operations. His future self secured an alliance with the Weird Sisters to watch out for the mystical artifacts, as well as guide the destinies of Demona and Macbeth, advising them to bend Oberon's law of non-interference.

The "Future Archmage" brought his past self nearly a thousand years into the future, where his past self swallowed the Grimorum to bring it onto the island, thus making him very powerful. However, he was defeated by Goliath, who stripped him of the Eye of Odin, causing the Grimorum to turn the Archmage into a pile of dust.[15] During some unspecified time, the enhanced Archmage undertook additional time travel, thus meeting a Timedancing Brooklyn.[42]

The Captain of the Guard

[edit]

The Captain of the Guard (voiced by Ed Gilbert) was the head of Castle Wyvern's garrison in 994. Resentful of the lack of appreciation that he and the gargoyles received for defending the castle, he struck a deal with Demona and the Vikings to have the castle sacked, forcing out the humans and leaving only him and the gargoyles. The plan included sabotage, such as severing bowstrings, but backfired when the Viking leader Hakon shattered most of the gargoyles during the day after the siege, prompting Goliath and the survivors (Hudson, Brooklyn, Broadway, Lexington and Bronx) to go after the Vikings for revenge. The Captain was killed along with Hakon in 994 when they fell off a cliff,[2] but their spirits remained trapped in the area as punishment for their actions. When Goliath returned to the Wyvern site a thousand years later, the Captain and Hakon, in spirit form, attempted to steal Goliath's lifeforce and thus free themselves from the area. He stopped midway after realizing his guilt for his treachery and turned on Hakon. Having atoned for his sins, his spirit was set free to rest in peace.[43]

Residents of New York

[edit]

Elisa Maza

[edit]

Elisa Maza (voiced by Salli Richardson) is an NYPD detective, a woman of Hopi and Nigerian heritage, friend of the Gargoyles,[2] and later love interest for Goliath.

Maza Family

[edit]

Eliza's family also figures prominently in the series:

  • Peter Maza (voiced by Michael Horse) is Elisa's father.[44] Peter, a Native American of Hopi descent, is a retired NYPD officer. He never argues with Elisa once she sets her mind on something.[45]
  • Diane Maza (voiced by Nichelle Nichols) is Elisa's mother.[44] Diane, an African American of Nigerian descent, is an anthropologist and teaches at Columbia University. She goes to a Nigerian village to get in touch with her roots as a griot.[46]
  • Derek Maza (voiced by Rocky Carroll) is Elisa's brother.[44] A former NYPD officer who goes to work for Xanatos as a pilot, he is later transformed into the mutate Talon by Xanatos and Sevarius. See above for more information.
  • Beth Maza (voiced by Monica Allison in "The Cage," Roxanne Beckford in "Cloud Fathers") is Elisa's sister.[44] A student at the fictional University of Flagstaff, she studies anthropology, focusing on Native American cultures.[45]

Macbeth

[edit]

Macbeth (voiced by John Rhys-Davies), former King of Scotland, was loosely based on the Shakespearean character as well as the real historical figure, depicted with a white chin curtain beard in the 1990s main storyline of the series. He is eternally bound to Demona and is forced to live in conflict with her forever; neither one can die until one simultaneously kills the other.[28] Initially an enemy of the gargoyles, he later becomes their ally. He tried to claim the sword Excalibur for himself but did not succeed in doing this. After being impressed with Macbeth's skills and honorable behavior King Arthur offered him a place in the New Round Table. Macbeth, while honored, refused this offer because he felt he could not submit to Arthur's rule as he had "been a king too long." But, Macbeth offered his services should there ever be a crisis. He sometimes uses the alias Lennox Macduff (after two characters in the Shakespeare play).

Macbeth's family
[edit]
  • Duncan (voiced by Neil Dickson) is the ancient king of Scotland, Macbeth's foe, and the second to wear the Hunter mask. He secretly ordered the death of Macbeth's father, and destroyed the few remaining gargoyles in Scotland. It was because of Duncan that the Weird Sisters forged the spell between Macbeth and Demona. While in a sword fight with Macbeth, Macbeth uses an orb given to him by the Weird Sisters to burn Duncan alive.[28]
  • Gillecomgain (voiced by Cam Clarke as a young man, Jim Cummings as an adult) started the Hunter line as part of his revenge on Demona, who had scarred his face as a child. As an assassin under Duncan, he started a spree of terror and violence that included assassinating Macbeth's father Findláech of Moray and nearly wiping out all of the gargoyles in Scotland. After betraying Duncan, Duncan reveals him as the murderer of Findláech to Macbeth, who promptly attacks him alongside Demona. During the fight, Demona throws him off a balcony to his death.[28]
  • Gruoch (voiced by Emma Samms) is Macbeth's beloved in ancient Scotland, Gruoch is pressured into marriage to Gillecomgain by her father Boite. When Gillecomgain is revealed as the Hunter and slain, she happily marries her love and becomes Lady Macbeth, Queen of Scotland. They are later severed when Macbeth "dies" and begins his centuries-long struggle with Demona.[28]
  • Lulach (voiced by Jeff Bennett) is the son of Gruoch and (historically) stepson of Macbeth (though this is not made explicit on the series). Ascends to the throne of Scotland after his father's "death." His ultimate fate is not shown, but it is implied that he is slain by Duncan's son, Canmore, in a later battle.[28]
  • Boite (voiced by Ed Gilbert) is the father of Gruoch and friend to Macbeth's father Findláech, Boite serves as an advisor to his son-in-law, Macbeth, throughout his life. Boite counseled Macbeth to destroy the remaining gargoyles (a plan which Macbeth rejected), ultimately leading to Demona and Macbeth's falling-out.[28]
  • Canmore (voiced by Neil Dickson) – Son of Duncan, Canmore is only a boy when his father is slain in battle by Macbeth. Canmore is banished to England, but returns to Scotland as a grown man for revenge. Like his father before him, Canmore takes up the mask of the Hunter and declares war upon the gargoyles. He "slays" Macbeth in single combat, unaware of Macbeth's immortality. It is implied that he later has Macbeth's son, Lulach, killed. Canmore's descendants each become the Hunter in turn, hunting Demona through the centuries.[28]

The Pack

[edit]

The Pack are mercenaries organized by Xanatos first to be TV stars, then to hunt gargoyles. Lexington harbors a bitter hatred against them.[10]

They were subsequently "upgraded" into more deadly forms through the use of genetic and cybernetic enhancements.[6] Each of its members are named after different canines and one feliformia.

  • Coyote (voiced by Jonathan Frakes) is a robot constructed by the Scarab Corporation in Xanatos' image. Coyote was sent to infiltrate and lead the Pack due to Fox being up for parole. When the Pack got themselves upgraded, Coyote was upgraded to Coyote 2.0.
  • Wolf (voiced by Clancy Brown) is a descendant of Hakon and member of the Pack. Upon the Pack getting "upgraded", Wolf was genetically mutated into a werewolf-like creature upon being spliced with wolf DNA offscreen.
  • Jackal (voiced by Matt Frewer) is the cold and calculating member of the Pack. He was later "upgraded" and gained cybernetic enhancements that included fingers that shot out like darts, extending legs, retractable arms, a cybernetic eye and ear, laser weaponry, cutting blade weaponry, and other types of technology.
  • Hyena (voiced by Cree Summer) is the most bloodthirsty member of the Pack and the younger sister of Jackal. She was later "upgraded" and gained cybernetic enhancements that included elongating razor fingers, extendable limbs, multi-directional joints, a cybernetic ear, laser weaponry, cutting blade weaponry, flight, and other types of technology.
  • Dingo (voiced by Jim Cummings) is a fit member of the Pack who wields a variety of weaponry. He later utilizes a robotic battle suit due to refusing to undergo the cybernetic or genetic enhancements that the other Pack members did.[6] Over time, Dingo misses the adulation he received as a fictional hero while on television. To both atone for his own past misdeeds, and to actually be a real-world hero, Dingo joins Robyn Canmore's Redemption Squad after allowing the cybernetic being Matrix to join with him.

Fox

[edit]

Born with the name Janine Renard, Fox (voiced by Laura San Giacomo)[47] had her name legally changed. Her birth surname, "Renard", is the French word for "fox". She is the daughter of entrepreneur and business magnate Halcyon Renard and his ex-wife Anastasia Renard (the name used by Titania, "Queen of the Third Race", while in the guise of a mortal human woman).[16]

A former mercenary and former leader of The Pack, Fox quit the group upon gaining parole and married David Xanatos.[41] They later had a son Alexander Fox Xanatos.[16]

Like many villains of the series, Fox initially had no love for the Gargoyles, seeing them as pawns to be manipulated. After they saved Alex, she changed her opinion and went out of her way to make amends—particularly to Lexington, whom she had once hurt. For his part, Lexington agrees to a truce for her son's sake.

Tony Dracon

[edit]

Tony Dracon (voiced by Richard Grieco) is an organized crime figure in New York,[12] Dracon knows about the Manhattan Clan that often foil his plans,[48] and has a score to settle with Elisa. He often clashes with Goliath and Broadway.[49] In his last appearance, he was imprisoned with Czech gangster Brod, his hated rival.[50]

Glasses
[edit]

Glasses (voiced by Rocky Carroll) is one of the associates of Tony Dracon.

Pal Joey
[edit]

Pal Joey (voiced by Michael Bell) is the other associate of Tony Dracon.[12]

Margot Yale and Brendan Quarters

[edit]

Margot Yale (voiced by Marina Sirtis in season 1–2, Tress MacNeille in season 3) and Brendan Quarters (voiced by Pat Fraley) are a yuppie couple who have the misfortune of running into the gargoyles often.[2] Margot became the assistant district attorney of one of the New York City boroughs, and spoke out against the gargoyles in a heated televised public debate with Macbeth, who defended them; she angered him enough to wish Margot could still to be burnt at the stake, subtly calling her a witch. During the Halloween Party at the top of the Eyrie Building, she berated Brendan for dressing as a Gargoyle (as other partygoers had done). Brendan later came across Goliath, injured, and sent for a doctor.[11]

Jeffrey Robbins

[edit]

Jeffery Robbins (voiced by Paul Winfield) is a blind author, a former Vietnam Vet, and a friend of Hudson. He helps Hudson find Macbeth. Afterward, he taught Hudson how to read, and decided to write a book based on the Scrolls of Merlin which he called The Sword and the Staff.[51] When Demona unleashes a spell to turn the citizens of Manhattan to stone by broadcasting the spell on all television channels, Hudson and the clan visit Robbins and discover that blind people are immune to the spell.[28]

During the Halloween of 1996, Robbins admitted to being aware that Hudson is a Gargoyle—due to the late night visits, Scottish accent, scents of leather and concrete, and Hudson's refusal to shake his hand.[11] The scene was based on a similar one from a Goliath Chronicles episode.[52]

Robbins helps a blind Hudson recover his eyesight after discovering Hudson is a gargoyle.[53]

Vinnie Grigori

[edit]

Vinnie Grigori (voiced by Jeff Bennett) is another man who has had various encounters with the Manhattan clan, whom he blames for an unfortunate string of bad luck. He is seen first as a motorcycle rider whose bike is "stolen" and crashed by Lex; Grigori had his license revoked, as his recollection of Lex would lead the judge to believe he was intoxicated. He is next seen as a security guard for Cyberbiotics' airship—the night Goliath and Demona destroy it. He is at Sevarius's labs when Goliath captures Sevarius to force him to make a cure for the Mutates (for which Grigori was fired). He later shows up carrying a huge bazooka, which he uses to finally get revenge on Goliath—stalking Goliath as he and Hudson battled Wolf and the spirit of Hakon—shooting him in the face... with a banana cream pie.[54]

He appeared as a reluctant recruit of the Quarrymen under pressure from Castaway, where he worked to save Goliath and Elisa from being killed. He then left to take a job in Japan.[11] He eventually leaves on flight 994[7] and ends up lost in Tokyo.[37] Vinnie's name and voice is a spoof of the character Vinnie Barbarino from the show Welcome Back, Kotter, and even refers to the bazooka he used on Goliath as Mr. Carter. The cream pie that it shoots is a tribute to another Disney show, Bonkers, which Gargoyles creator Greg Weisman worked on.[55]

Hakon

[edit]

Hakon (voiced by Clancy Brown) was the leader of the Vikings who ransacked Castle Wyvern in 994 and destroyed most of the gargoyles in their stone sleep. He was killed, along with the Captain of the Guard, when they fell off a cliff, but their spirits remained trapped in the area as punishment for their actions.[2] When Goliath returned to the Wyvern site a thousand years later, the Captain and Hakon, in spirit form, attempted to steal Goliath's lifeforce to free themselves from the area. Hakon's spirit reappeared throughout the series, trying to take revenge on Goliath.[43] Before his death, Hakon apparently fathered children who became the ancestors of Pack member Wolf. His spirit later bonded to his axe. After the axe was destroyed by Hudson, Hakon's spirit dissolved.[54]

Finella

[edit]

Finella (voiced by Sheena Easton) is a Scottish princess from 995. Finella was conned into helping Constantine set a deadly trap for King Kenneth upon Constantine's promise to marry her. Less than pleased at his betrayal and engagement to another, Finella helped Princess Katharine and the Magus get the eggs to Avalon and escape from Constantine, who wanted to marry Princess Katherine to secure his claim to the throne and destroy the eggs. Finella did not follow Katharine and company onto Avalon, instead choosing to guard the Grimorum Arcanorum with help from Tom's mother Mary.[15]

In 997, while Timedancing, Brooklyn arrived to save Finella and Mary from one of Constantine's soldiers. Together, the three of them joined Constantine's enemies, led by King Kenneth III. The book was taken from Finella, during the fight, by Constantine's sorcerer, Brother Valmont. After it was retrieved by Brooklyn, Finella and Mary continued guarding the Grimorum, leaving 997 with Brooklyn.[7]

In October 1996, Finella (or a woman resembling her) attended a Halloween party atop The Eyrie Building.[11]

She is loosely based on the mythological character Finnguala.

Arthur Pendragon

[edit]

Arthur Pendragon (voiced by John St. Ryan) was once the legendary and Future King of Britain. Pendragon was based on the legend of King Arthur. He was awakened by Elisa to help fight the Archmage in Avalon. Though he had neither Merlin nor his knights nor the famed sword Excalibur, he fought Macbeth and won. He then decided to explore the modern world on his own, so as not draw attention to himself.[15] Arriving in England, Arthur was joined by the English gargoyle Griff, and battled Macbeth (with the help of the Manhattan Clan) to reclaim Excalibur. After defeating Macbeth and reclaiming Excalibur, he set off along with Griff on a journey to find Merlin.[36]

The Hunters/Quarrymen

[edit]

Descendants of King Duncan I, the Hunters are fighters from a series of hereditary villains through time that have sworn under the Hunter Mask to hunt down Demona and destroy all gargoyles. The current generation (consisting of Jason, Jon, and Robyn) come to New York after hearing of gargoyle encounters. However, Jason and Robyn Canmore eventually come to realize that not all gargoyles are the threat to humanity that Demona is, and drop the Hunter cause.[56] Their brother Jon, initially apprehensive, develops a deep hatred for the gargoyles, drops the Hunter persona, and changes his name to John Castaway. As Castaway, he leads an anti-gargoyle group reminiscent of the Ku Klux Klan called the Quarrymen.

Jason was recovering in the hospital[11] while Robyn was recruited into the Redemption Squad as the group's leader.[37]

The three modern Hunters are:

  • Jason Canmore (voiced by Diedrich Bader) – A Hunter who sought to avenge his father. He was accidentally paralyzed by Jon causing him to go through physical therapy at Manhattan General.
  • Jon Canmore (voiced by Scott Cleverdon as an adult, J. D. Daniels as a young boy in "Hunter's Moon") – The brother of Jason Canmore. Later took up the alias of "John Castaway."
  • Robyn Canmore (voiced by Sheena Easton) – The sister of Jason and Jon Canmore. While aiding her siblings in ridding Manhattan of gargoyles, Robyn Canmore took up the alias Robyn Correy and was employed by Demona/Dominique Destine for Nightstone Unlimited. She deduced Demona's human identity, and shot The Clocktower hoping to kill Goliath and Clan. Though she saw the light after Jason's atonement,[56] Robyn was maintaining her identity as The Hunter while serving The Director. The nature of her recruitment has yet to be revealed.[37]

Banquo and Fleance

[edit]

Banquo (voiced by Frank Welker) and Fleance (voiced by B.J. Ward) are two mercenaries who worked for Macbeth. They helped him retrieve the first Scrolls of Merlin[51] and the sword Excalibur.[36] They later left his service to work for the Quarrymen. Their first mission as Quarrymen had them, and Castaway, pursuing Goliath and Elisa to the destroyed Clocktower.[11] Banquo and Fleance are named after the characters Banquo and Fleance in Shakespeare's play The Tragedy of Macbeth.

Minor human characters

[edit]
  • Cuchulainn (voiced by Scott Cleverdon) – The legendary demi-god hero of Ireland, Cuchulainn is encountered by Goliath and his allies reincarnated as an Irish teenager named Rory Dugan. He reverts to his heroic form when Rory's own girlfriend Molly reveals herself to be his old enemy, the Banshee, in disguise, especially when she further transforms herself into the gigantic, centipede-like "death worm" Cromm-Cruach. For a time, Cuchulainn mistakes Bronx for the legendary Hound of Ulster.
  • Nick (voiced by Gregg Rainwater) – A Native American youth of the Pacific Northwest, Nick (born Natsilane, presumably named for or descended from the legendary hero) initially rejects his heritage for the realities of the modern world. He later encounters Goliath, Angela, and Bronx, and comes to accept the existence of the supernatural. He takes up the cause of his tribe and does battle with the trickster spirit Raven.[57]
  • Petros Xanatos (voiced by W. Morgan Sheppard) - The quasi-estranged father of David Xanatos who works as a fisherman.
  • Max Loew (voiced by Scott Weil) – A direct descendant of Rabbi Loew, Max reanimates the powerful Golem to protect the people of Prague. When the Golem is insincerely hijacked by Halcyon Renard as a replacement for his frail body, Max enlists the help of Goliath, Angela, and Elisa to recover it. Though it is never explicitly stated in the episode, Max and the people the Golem was created to protect are implicitly Jewish. It is not stated whether Max is a citizen of the Czech Republic or an American visiting Prague.
  • The Emir (voiced by Tony Shalhoub) – Mentioned by name in two episodes, but not seen in person until the episode Grief, the Emir was an Egyptian dignitary hired by Xanatos to capture Anubis, in yet another attempt to obtain immortality. However, the Emir planned on using Anubis to resurrect his dead son, who he felt was unfairly taken away from him in a "pointless car accident". Jackal hijacked the ceremony, but the Emir was able to usurp Anubis's power back. As the avatar of death, the Emir finally realized the role death plays in the world and that it cannot be meddled with, as much as humans want to. He reversed everything Jackal had done as the avatar (except for a village out in Jackal's rampage), and sacrificed himself to free Anubis.
  • Travis Marshall (voiced by Charles Hallahan) – A television anchor reporter at WVRN who also hosts the TV program Nightwatch.
  • Maria Chavez (voiced by Rachel Ticotin) – Maria Chavez was the Captain of NYPD's 23rd precinct and Elisa Maza's superior.
  • Tomas Brod (voiced by Clancy Brown) – A Czech gangster whom Preston Vogel hires to steal the Golem for Renard. After causing Goliath and Elisa problems in Prague, he moves to New York to take on Tony Dracon. Both of them were later arrested and imprisoned in the same cell.
  • Taro (voiced by James Saito) – A Japanese businessman who threatened to expose the Ishimura Clan to the world through a "gargoyle theme park" he had constructed for the task on the outskirts of Ishimura; this "theme park" also functioned as a prison-like facility for any gargates within it for the purposes of public display, which ran against the Ishimura Clan's wishes (their Clan already had a long-established, strongly positive relationship with Ishimura's human population). As a result, Yama took on Taro and defeated him in one-on-one combat.[32]
  • Shaman (voiced by James Avery) – An Aborigine wise man, who became Dingo's spiritual advisor when the latter decided to wipe the slate clean regarding his past. He was aware of Dingo's armor, and of the existence of Gargoyles. The Shaman also helped Dingo and Goliath reach the Dreamtime to communicate and reason with Matrix.[58] He also suggested that both Dingo and Matrix should join the Redemption Squad.[37]

The Third Race/Oberon's Children

[edit]

The Third Race, also known as Oberon's Children, were magical, shapeshifting, and often fickle creatures and fairies from around the world. They were not all literally descended from Oberon, but he was their leader and he governed all of the Third Race under a strictly-enforced set of rules. They possessed incredible powers, were apparently immortal, but had a fatal weakness to any form of iron in proximity to them. Regardless, as long as they were in the real world, Oberon forbade them from interfering in human events. However, many of the Third Race (particularly the Weird Sisters), as well as humans and gargoyles, have realized that Oberon's laws can be bent even if they cannot be broken.

It is also revealed that members of the Third Race can mate with humans to form hybrids of both with Fox, her son Alexander, and Merlin being examples of these "halflings".

Oberon

[edit]

Oberon (voiced by Terrence Mann) was the lord of Avalon. He possessed god-like powers and was the most powerful being in the whole series. Very arrogant and impudent, it was by his edict that Avalon was abandoned and the Third Race forced to live with humanity, partially due to Titania's habit of interfering directly in mortal affairs. Oberon later himself left Avalon to join them. He was also responsible for The Gathering in which the Third Race left the rest of the world and congregated in Avalon.[16]

Titania

[edit]

Titania (voiced by Kate Mulgrew) was Oberon's (recently remarried) wife and Queen of Avalon. Posing as the human Anastasia during part of her 1,000-year exile, she was the ex-wife of Halcyon Renard and Fox's biological mother. A highly skilled manipulator, she aided the Manhattan[16] and Avalon Clans on several occasions, frequently keeping Oberon in check and teaching him some humility.

The Weird Sisters

[edit]

The Weird SistersPhoebe, Selene, and Luna (all voiced by Kath Soucie) – were a Triple Goddess of powerful magic users named after three Greco-Roman goddesses of the Moon and based on the witches from Shakespeare's Macbeth. The sisters appeared sporadically throughout early episodes in various guises, but eventually revealed their hand in looking after Demona and Macbeth, being the ones who linked their fates and made them immortal.[28] Their overarching motivation, however, is to aid the Archmage in gaining revenge upon Katherine, Tom, and the Magus,[15] who had outwitted them and gained entry to Avalon in spite of Oberon's ban. Following the Archmage's defeat, the Weird Sisters returned to Oberon and, possibly in a last-ditch attempt to get back as the gargoyles, informed him of the Avalon Clan's continued presence. At this point, they appeared to stop meddling and remained in Oberon's service. They were last seen forcibly bringing the Banshee before Oberon at the Gathering.

The blond-haired sister is named Phoebe, who embodies grace. The black-haired sister is named Selene, who embodies vengeance. And the silver-haired one is named Luna, and who embodies fate; all three are named for mythological moon goddesses.

Puck

[edit]

Puck (voiced by Brent Spiner) was a trickster fairy. His magic was the reason why Demona became human during the day, instead of turning to stone.[27] It was eventually discovered that he was the true form of Owen Burnett, having made a deal with Xanatos to serve him faithfully. Because of this deal and his affinity for humans, he was banished from Avalon and had the use of his powers "hard-limited" by Oberon. Since The Gathering, Puck could only use his powers within Oberon's strictly imposed limits: meaning they were only usable when Puck was teaching or protecting his employer's son Alexander Xanatos.[16]

In the third season, Oberon's decree was shown to have a drawback as Owen was rendered unconscious when Alexander was kidnapped by the Quarrymen, leaving Puck unable to save the boy.

Minor children of Oberon

[edit]

The rest of the Children of Oberon were fairies, gods, and other various creatures from cultures and mythologies worldwide that lived in Avalon until they were all expelled by Oberon. They were forcibly called back to Avalon by him one thousand years later in an event known as The Gathering.

  • Anansi (voiced by LeVar Burton) – A spider trickster of African myth. He can literally spin spells using his web, which is also his weakness. If his web is taken apart, Anansi is powerless. His magic can change the shape of living creatures.[59]
  • Anubis (voiced by Tony Jay) – The ancient Egyptian Jackal Lord and avatar of death. Those who became his avatar and used his powers could reduce or advance the ages of others, but few were worthy enough to wield it.
  • Banshee (voiced by Sheena Easton) – An Irish fairy with a powerful wailing scream, and the modern archenemy of Cu Chulainn. Goliath, Eliza, and Angela encountered her on their adventure to Ireland. She objected to The Gathering and was forcibly brought to Avalon by the Weird Sisters before being attacked by Odin for her insolence. Oberon silences Banshee by sealing her mouth.[16]
  • Coyote (voiced by Gregg Rainwater) – A Native American trickster spirit. He primarily appeared as the younger self of Elisa's father, though he can also take the form of a whirlwind. Xanatos captured him with his latest coyote robot in an attempt to force Coyote to grant him and Fox (and by extension, their then-unborn son Alex) immortality.[60]
  • Grandmother (voiced by Amentha Dymally) – An elderly wise woman of great power. Raven has said they are cousins. After Raven is defeated (again, ritually), Grandmother revitalizes the island with magical water formed from her hair.[57]
  • Lady of the Lake – The patron of King Arthur and keeper of Excalibur during his time of absence. Although several Ladies appear in Arthurian myth, it is unclear which, if any, the Gargoyles character is intended to be.[36]
  • Nought – A caped clad figure who is one of the Children of Oberon. Not much is known about him.[16]
  • Odin (voiced by W. Morgan Sheppard) – The All-Father of Norse mythology. The Eye of Odin, a magical item that featured prominently in the series, is his actual eye as known of in Norse legend, preserved as a jewel-like magical artifact on Avalon in the distant past, and amicably returned to him by Goliath in the "Avalon World Tour" story arc's episode entitled Eye of the Storm.[61] He gets along well with Oberon. During The Gathering, he attacked a defiant Banshee.[16]
    • Sleipnir - Odin's horse. In this show, Sleipnir can change the number of legs that it has.
  • Raven (voiced by Lawrence Bayne) – Raven is a trickster spirit who poses as a gargoyle to toy with Goliath and his allies. He usually appears as a raven or normal man with pointed ears in a blue outfit. He and Grandmother are cousins.[57]

Also present at The Gathering are an unnamed Centaur, two giants, and a Pegasus.

Other characters

[edit]

The Lost Race

[edit]

The Lost Race was a sentient race of Earthlings whose evolution predated the Three Races and has since become extinct, although Greg Weisman has yet to reveal when or how this occurred.[62] In fact, he writes, "it's hard to give a category to something that currently I have no intention of discussing. But 'Lost Race' seems as good a moniker as any—as a place-holder."[63]

What is known is that the Lost Race, the gargoyles, the humans, and finally Oberon's Children appeared on Earth in that order. The Lost Race is in fact from Earth, and Weisman denies their having any contact with extraterrestrials. Although they eventually became extinct, the Lost Race was still around when Oberon's Children first evolved, as they were aware of the Children's existence.[64]

Brooklyn encountered this race on his time-travels to the past during his Timedancer adventures.[63] Weisman confirmed that the Lost Race has left behind relics and artifacts from their civilization.[63] It is speculated by fans that these may include the ruins in the Archmage's Cave, notably the Megalith Dance, although Weisman refuses to confirm or deny the possibility.[65]

The Steel Clan

[edit]

The Steel Clan were a series of robots built by Xanatos, modeled from the likeness of the gargoyles—specifically, Goliath. Originally meant to replace the gargoyles, Xanatos used them for his own personal army.[2] He also wore a battle suit modeled in their likeness.[66] An iron version of the Steel Clan was made to fight against Oberon.[16] Xanatos later used an Iron and Steel Clan robot to aid Coldsteel and Coyote 5.0 in retrieving the Stone of Destiny.

The New Olympians

[edit]

The New Olympians were a group of fantastical sentient beings resembling creatures and gods from Greek mythology. They had traveled to the island of New Olympus after being driven there by fearful humans in Classical Antiquity, and their descendants were able to remain hidden through advanced cloaking technology. Several of them shared names with characters from mythology, although they were not intended to be identified with those characters, unlike some of the Children of Oberon. According to Gargoyles creator Greg Weisman, they are descended from Oberon's children, though the show makes no mention of this. There is also a resident gargoyle clan on the island.[citation needed]

  • Boreas (voiced by Dorian Harewood) – A winged man who is the ruler of New Olympus.
  • Taurus (voiced by Michael Dorn) – A Minotaur who is the chief of security.
  • Talos (voiced by Dorian Harewood) — An upgraded version of the Talos first constructed by Daedalus. He is a high-level advisor who guards the power supply to New Olympus' cloaking field. When Eliza and the gargoyles landed on New Olympus, Talos advised to Boreas that they make peace with humanity as it will not be long before the technology that powers their cloaking field fails.
  • Proteus (voiced by Roddy McDowall) – A villainous shapeshifter who seemed to be the island's worst criminal after he killed Taurus' father. Proteus later escapes to New York to exact his revenge. Taurus leaves New Olympus to pursue him. This is not considered canon by Weisman.[67]
  • Helios (voiced by Rob Paulsen) – A fire-haired man who is part of New Olympus' security force. At one point when a mob that Helios was a part of formed outside the prison where Eliza was held, Taurus broke it up and told Helios to keep a check on his pyrokinetics or else he's out of a job.
  • Ekidna (voiced by Charity James) – An elderly creature who is half-woman half-snake. The use of the letter "k" in her name's spelling was intended by the show's creators to differentiate Ekidna from her mythological namesakes.
  • Kiron (voiced by Frank Welker) – A centaur with brown skin who is part of New Olympus' security force. The use of the letter "k" in his name's spelling was intended by the show's creators to differentiate Kiron from his mythological namesakes.

Other New Olympians seen include an unnamed female centaur, an unnamed Cyclops, and an unnamed fairy.

The New Olympians appeared during the "Avalon World Tour" story arc in the episode "The New Olympians" in which Elisa Maza arrived on the island along with her three "gargoyle" companions (Goliath, his daughter Angela, and Bronx). Because of their experiences with the human race, Taurus at one point specifically mentions his ancestor's imprisonment in the Labyrinth where he was later killed by Theseus. The New Olympians harbored a strong hatred against Elisa and humans in general. This inverts the show's usual premise in which many humans are prejudiced against creatures such as gargoyles. After an encounter with Proteus, Elisa managed to convince some New Olympians—particularly Taurus—that not all humans are evil.

A spinoff show, itself entitled The New Olympians, was planned; the Gargoyles episode featuring the characters was a "backdoor pilot". A series pitch was produced, revealing that the new series' storyline would have revolved around the New Olympians revealing themselves to humanity in front of the United Nations. The pitch, which is shown at Gathering conventions, introduced several new characters like the electrokinetic Jove and hinted at a Romeo and Juliet-style romance between Sphinx (a New Olympian female) and Terry Chung (a human male). Although the series was never picked up, Greg Weisman has said that elements would have been included in the main Gargoyles series had it continued.[citation needed] Terry Chung appears as a trick or treater in the Gargoyles comic issue number four, which places the beginning of New Olympians at least a decade after the 2006 issues.[11] He appears with during New Year's Eve of 1996 with his first cousin Tri Chung.[37][38]

Nokkar

[edit]

Nokkar (voiced by Avery Brooks) was a sentinel and member of the N'Kai (interstellar aliens who oppose the Space-Spawn empire), Nokkar waited on Easter Island to protect the Earth. While there, he was revered as a god by the natives, and the Easter Island Statues were modeled after him. He once captured Goliath and Angela, believing them to be Space-Spawn in disguise. Until the quartet of the "Avalon World Tour" visit Easter Island, Nokkar does not yet know of the Earth's gargoyle population, and is resultingly confused, thinking that they are with the aliens he is guarding against. In addition, Nokkar has never had any contact with any of the residents of Avalon, the children of Oberon, or any of the New Olympians.

Tazmanian Tiger

[edit]

Tazmanian Tiger was a supervillain who robbed a bank in Sydney. His actions caught the attention of Dingo and Matrix (both of whom were Australia's crimefighters). Tazmanian Tiger wore a skin tight costume and mask. His gloves had a set of razor sharp claws that were able to damage Matrix. He was assisted by two thylacines named Benjamin and Natasha.[37]

Organizations and groups

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The Illuminati

[edit]

In the Gargoyles universe, the Illuminati were a secret society started by Sir Percival, the Fisher King, that controlled and manipulated a large portion of the world, including politics and organized crime. Xanatos was a member of the Illuminati, which aided him in making his fortune (through a predestination paradox—Xanatos had instructed himself to travel through time).[41] Bluestone was inducted into the society after gangster Mace Malone's failed attempt to capture Goliath. Matt's former partner in the FBI, Martin Hacker, was also a member of the Illuminati.[68] Thailog joined as a new member at some unspecified time, and was the first gargoyle known to be part of the Society.[11] The Society was last seen headed by Peredur fab Ragnal.[7]

Each member was of a certain numerical rank. When two members of the society encountered each other in private, they would share their rank.[11]

Peredur fab Ragnal

[edit]

Peredur fab Ragnal is introduced in the trade paperback for the comic, as the story introducing him was not published as a single issue. He was the leader of The Illuminati, and, through Quincy Hemmings, ordered Xanatos to steal The Stone of Destiny while it was being returned to Scotland. To his disappointment, there were 3 stones which the Spirit of Destiny inhabited, but from it he learned that Arthur had reawakened. Since Arthur was not supposed to awaken for another 200 years, Peredur decides to hold a meeting of the higher-echelon members, since this development could affect their (unspecified) plans.[7]

While Ragnal does not appear onscreen, Greg Weisman envisioned the voice of the character to be Jude Law.[69]

Fleur

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Fleur, originally known as "Blanchefleur", is introduced in the trade paperback edition of the comic, as the story introducing her was not published as a single issue. She is Peredur's wife and met Xanatos in a warehouse after he apparently stole the Stone of Destiny. She discovered that Arthur Pendragon awakened after eavesdropping on a message that the Stone conveyed to Peredur. Like Duval, Fleur was also important to Peredur, but Fleur has had an occasionally contentious relationship with Duval.[7]

Greg Weisman envisioned actress Rhona Mitra to voice the character for potential animation.[69]

Matt Bluestone

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Matt Bluestone (voiced by Thomas F. Wilson) is a Jewish American and a Detective Sergeant in the NYPD. He was a former FBI agent who was assigned to be Elisa's partner after the shooting incident.[12] The NYPD 23rd Precinct's Captain, Maria Chavez, thought it was too dangerous for Elisa to be working on her own after she was shot, and assigned Bluestone as her new partner so that she would have someone covering her back—despite Elisa's adamant protests that she did not need a partner. Bluestone is a big believer in conspiracy theories, especially the Illuminati.[66] He was one of the few humans who were friends with the Manhattan Clan. The Illuminati were impressed enough with Matt persistence that they made him a member; ironically, this works in his favor in trying to expose them.[68]

Martin Hacker

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Martin Hacker (voiced by Michael Bell) was Matt Bluestone's former partner in the FBI[48] and an Illuminati operative, Hacker's job was to intentionally mislead Matt away from the Illuminati. When this failed, it was Martin who conferred membership onto Matt on the behalf of the Illuminati.[68]

After Manhattan discovers the existence of gargoyles, Hacker checks in on Matt Bluestone and John Castaway, as well as giving Xanatos an invitation to the White House from the Illuminati. While meeting all three of them, he claims a different objective from The Illuminati. With Matt Bluestone, he claims that the Illuminati agree that people are not ready to encounter gargoyles. With Xanatos, he says the Illuminati feel it is time for humans and gargoyles to meet. As for John Castaway, he claimed that the Illuminati agree that the gargoyles should be destroyed.[11]

Norman Ambassador

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The unnamed Norman Ambassador (voiced by Jeff Bennett) escorted Princess Elena to Castle Wyvern in 975. Both were attacked by the Archmage's bandits and rescued by Xanatos (who followed Demona into the past). Out of gratitude, and due to being a fellow Illuminatus, he allowed Xanatos and his family to join them at Wyvern. He also took a couple of envelopes with him at Xanatos' request—one containing a rare coin to give to a younger David Xanatos in 1975; the other containing details on how the coin was obtained, thus inspiring himself to travel back in time.[41]

Mace Malone

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Mace Malone (voiced by Efrem Zimbalist Jr.) was a leading gangster in the 1920s who was recruited into the Illuminati because of his underworld dealings. In 1924, the crime syndicates became aware of their vulnerability to the Illuminati, resulting in Mace having to disappear. He had a long life due to rejuvenation drugs. His habit of visiting Flo Dane alerted Matt Bluestone to his presence, who saw a photo with Mace wearing a society emblem and received confirmation of his suspicions from Mace's stepson Jack. As a result, Matt was offered membership if he brought a gargoyle to the abandoned Hotel Cabal, an Illuminati base. Though Matt brought Goliath, he secretly filled Goliath in on Mace's plan and left a hotel key for Goliath to escape. Mace, however, lost his key in the confusion and became trapped in the hotel.[68]

Mr. Duval

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Mr. Duval is first mentioned in the Gargoyle: The Goliath Chronicles episode "The Journey" (adapted into the first two issues of the SLG comic series). Duval tried to call Xanatos, but Xanatos shows no interest in receiving the call. Hacker tells Xanatos that the call was an invitation to the White House for an Illuminati assignment.[11]

For unspecified reasons, Duval's left eye and arm are replaced with cybernetic attachments, and he has an unexplained disdain for Blanchefleur. He is also very important to Peredur.[7]

While Duval does not appear onscreen, Greg Weisman envisioned the voice of the character to be Eddie Marsan.[69]

Shari

[edit]

Shari is a teenage girl introduced in the Gargoyles comics series. She appeared as a new resident of The Labyrinth, and was introduced to the Mutates and Clones. After Thailog came to reclaim the clones, Shari left to warn Goliath, but was lying. Her name was revealed as she arrived at Nightstone Unlimited, applying to be Thailog's executive assistant. Before Thailog attacked her, however, he spotted an Illuminati pendant around her neck and welcomed her as a member of the Illuminati—which he had recently joined as a lower-echelon member.

Thailog soon demanded a story from Shari, and so she told him of a lost tale from The Avalon World Tour. How she learned of that adventure was not specified.[11]

Shari went on to relate the legend of the Stone of Destiny to Thailog. She appeared to be more than she seemed.[7]

Quincy Hemings

[edit]

Quincy Hemings made his first appearance in the SLG comic. He is a Chief Steward at the White House. Xanatos meets him at the White House, and mistakes him for Duval due to their shared rank number. Hemings mentioned being on staff since the administration of Theodore Roosevelt, and being in his current position since the Lyndon B. Johnson administration. He gave Xanatos an assignment from The Illuminati.[11] The assignment required Xanatos to retrieve the Stone Of Destiny.[7]

While Hemings does not appear onscreen, Greg Weisman envisioned the voice of the character to be Morgan Freeman.[69]

Falstaff

[edit]

Falstaff (went by the name John Oldcastle) was a father figure to Dingo, but for reasons unknown, strangled Dingo's mother. Upon the arrival of the Redemption Squad at his island base (which is really a ship), Falstaff insisted that The Illuminati are the good guys, determined to save the world, and allowed the Redemption Squad to speak to Fiona Canmore and Thailog, so they can vouch for the Illuminati. The Redemption Squad claimed to want membership, but Falstaff was aware of their bluff and sent his associates to fight the Squad. After the fight, he departed, but not before sinking the ship.[37]

Falstaff's associates
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The following are the associates of Falstaff.

  • Bardolf – Breathes fire.
  • Pistol – A gun fighter.
  • Points – A swordsman.
  • Mistress Doll – A contortionist.
  • Mistress Quickly – She is the only one apprehended by the Redemption Squad.[37]

Fiona Canmore

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Fiona Canmore is a former Hunter who ran into Demona in Paris in 1920. She stopped her plans to kill all the humans with the aid of Team Atlantis.[70] As of 1996, she was retired from the hunt and was part of the Illuminati.[37]

In the Team Atlantis episode (which, while unproduced, was scripted and voice-recorded), she was to be voiced by Sheena Easton.[71]

Known members and ranking

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The following characters are part of the Illuminati at the following ranks:

Rank Character
1
  • Peredur
2
  • Mr. Duval
  • Quincy Hemings
3
  • Blanchefleur
9
  • Shari
32
  • Martin Hacker
36
  • David Xanatos
  • Matt Bluestone
  • John Castaway
  • Thailog
Unknown
  • Norman Ambassador
  • Mace Malone (was somewhere in the high 20s before he died)[72]
  • Falstaff
  • Fiona Canmore

Xanatos Enterprises

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Xanatos Enterprises was one of the world's largest corporation owned by David Xanatos; Owen Burnett also wielded major control and influence, although he was not given a title. The company was seemingly at the forefront of advanced technology such as genetics, robotics, and weaponry. Xanatos Enterprises also included Gen-U-Tech, Pack Media Studios, and the Scarab Robotics corporation, all of which Xanatos used against the gargoyles and to further his goals one way or another.

David Xanatos

[edit]

David Xanatos (voiced by Jonathan Frakes) is a billionaire and CEO of Xanatos Enterprises, the son of Petros Xanatos, and nemesis and later ally of the Manhattan Clan. Xanatos' name is reminiscent of David—the Biblical king who defeated Goliath—and Thanatos from Greek mythology. He broke the spell that imprisoned the gargoyles by having the castle placed on his building and frequently attempted to manipulate or control them.[2] In the final season, when the existence of the gargoyles was revealed to the public, Xanatos puts an end to the feud between them and voluntarily allows the gargoyles to come back to live in their ancestral castle. He was voiced by and inspired by Jonathan Frakes, specifically his character of William Riker in Star Trek: The Next Generation.[73] During the show's development, Xanatos was originally known as Xavier and he was the descendant of the wizard that originally cursed the gargoyles to sleep for a thousand years. According to Greg Weisman, he was, "rich, powerful and petulant. Very Captain Hook."[74] Xanatos' plans often include numerous outcomes meant to serve as a success when one outcome seems to have failed. This popular and ancient trope for villainous characters involving multiple goals to substitute for success when one part of the plan fails has been named Xanatos Gambit. As "David Xanatos still stands as one of the greatest fictional characters to exemplify the trope, and thus it bears the distinction of his name."[75][76][77] In addition, Xanatos is noteworthy for making a point of usually never taking setbacks personally, and regards seeking revenge as foolish.

Owen Burnett

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Owen Burnett (voiced by Jeff Bennett) was Xanatos' personal assistant who is later revealed to be a form of the immortal trickster Puck. Puck took on an appearance similar to that of Preston Vogel, Halcyon Renard's personal aid as his decision to "out-Vogel Vogel".[16] When Xanatos deduced his identity, Puck offered him the choice of receiving either the immortality he craved or a lifetime of Puck's service as Owen. To Puck's surprise, Xanatos chose the latter, confident that he would obtain immortality through other means and thus have Owen's services for eternity. For his part, Puck kept to the bargain in part for the novelty of assisting such an unorthodox mortal trickster; as he explained, ""The Puck has played many roles, but never that of straight man." The Owen persona eventually got his left hand turned to stone (the result of a spell gone wrong) and per Oberon's order, lost his magic powers except when he was training or protecting Alexander Xanatos.[16]

Anton Sevarius

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Anton Sevarius (voiced by Tim Curry[78]) was a free agent geneticist who mostly worked for the villains of the series from David Xanatos to Demona. Known for his hammy play on the "mad scientist" stereotype, Sevarius was brilliant, but also devious and immoral. His experiments led to the creation of the Mutates[3] and Goliath's evil clone Thailog (whom he also worked for at one point) as well as the clones of the Manhattan clan. At one point, Sevarius and some hired help tried to capture a Loch Ness Monster. Sevarius also helped Demona create a virus capable of destroying all human life on Earth (how he hoped to survive her plan is unknown, although he probably had anti-virus prepared for himself).

In his final appearance during the Gargoyles: The Goliath Chronicles, Sevarius used the DNA of all the Manhattan clan to create a giant gargoyle named Little Anton to destroy Goliath and his friends. However, it ended up petrified by the virus just like the Clone clan was suffering from. Little Anton's "death" was the only time Sevarius showed any concern for someone.

Cyberbiotics Corporation

[edit]

Cyberbiotics Corporation was a rival in all ways to Xanatos Enterprises, led by Halcyon Renard and Preston Vogel. Xanatos attempted several times to bankrupt Cyberbiotics, even using Renard's estranged daughter Fox to do so.[47] Cyberbiotics was based both from a skyscraper on a fictional island in New York Harbor known as the "Cyberbiotics Tower", and from either of two successive, massive, somewhat helicarrier-like airships named the "Fortress", sometimes accompanied by or supplanted with (for smaller missions) any one of a number of smaller "hoverships". The first of these massive "Fortress" airships was inadvertently destroyed by the Manhattan Clan.[2]

Halcyon Renard

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Halcyon Renard (voiced by Robert Culp) was an elderly businessman who is the CEO of Cyberbiotics, father of Fox, ex-husband to Anastasia, and rival and later father-in-law to David Xanatos. He uses a powered reclining version of a wheelchair for unknown reasons; the chair is weaponized for his self-defense needs, along with other devices. After confronting Goliath about his role in destroying his first airship, he formed a friendship with the Manhattan Clan's leader after the pair worked together to save the second airship. It is suggested in "The Cage", that Halcyon lent a lab to Goliath so Dr. Sevarius could create a cure for the Labyrinth Clan. Halcyon's family name, Renard, is the French word for fox. Like Xanatos, he briefly flirted with immortality — with Renard's method being different, as he intended to transfer his own consciousness into a Golem, the legendary protector of the Ashkenazim living in Prague during Renaissance times, and still in existence in the late 20th century within the Gargoyles storyline. This form of what turned out to be a selfishly-acquired form of "immortality" did not go well for Renard, until Goliath managed to change Halcyon's mind for the better, convincing him to leave the Golem's lithic body behind. Unlike Xanatos, Halcyon was more conscientious of his actions, adhering strongly to his own well-developed ideals of personal integrity and near-complete sincerity for both himself, his firm's employees and others he had contact with. Indeed, one of the things that help the elderly man and the Manhattan Clan's leader bond and become friends is that Renard challenged Goliath to accept responsibility for his part in destroying the first airship. Goliath apparently grew to respect the older man because of his strong adherence to his own morals. It is worth noting that Renard and his assistant, Preston Vogel participated in a desperate attempt to stop Oberon from abducting his grandson, Alexander and taking the child to Avalon. When Vogel gently challenged his employer as to his reasons; noting that Renard hated his son-in-law and did not trust his own daughter due to her lack of morals; Renard answered frankly, that he was doing it for his grandson and no one else. He was far less Machiavellian and malevolent than Xanatos.[47]

Preston Vogel

[edit]

Preston Vogel (voiced by Peter Scolari) was Renard's aide who was considered by Puck to be the most "wooden man on the earth." Puck modeled his mortal form after Vogel.[16] Unlike Owen Burnett, Vogel was not as loyal to his boss and had fewer scruples when it came to the means he used to get things done such as hiring members of The Pack, Jackal, and Hyena; levelling a rainforest and killing a sizable number of the Guatemala Clan's gargoyles in 1993;[33] or betraying Renard.[47]

Gargoyles Task Force

[edit]

The Gargoyles Task Force is a division of the New York City Police Department's 23rd Precinct was formed during Part 3 of Hunter's Moon to find and counter or capture the gargoyles. They followed the gargoyles to St. Damien's Cathedral. Due to Matt's surreptitious stalling in hopes the clan could escape, they were unable to apprehend the clan. Issue three of the comic introduced the Task Force.

Officer Morgan Morgan

[edit]

Morgan Morgan (voiced by Keith David) was a New York Police Department beat officer in Elisa's precinct, and Elisa's friend. During Halloween of 1996, he asked Elisa out to the Halloween party atop The Eyrie Building. Though she refused at first, she accepted after temporarily breaking up with Goliath (due to wanting a normal life). She ended up choosing Goliath, however. Morgan, knowing of her relationship with Goliath, suspected he was merely a rebound, but held no ill feelings towards Elisa.[11]

Officer Phil Travanti

[edit]

Phil Travanti was Morgan's partner first appeared in the episode Temptation, and was named in issue three of the comic.

Other members

[edit]

Besides Eliza Maza, Phil Travanti, Martin Hacker, Matt Bluestone, and Margot Yale, the rest of the Gargoyles Task Force consist of:

  • Detective Cedric Harris – Introduced in issue three.
  • Detective Tri Chung – Introduced in issue three; first cousin of Terry Chung.[38]

The Redemption Squad

[edit]

The Redemption Squad was formed by a man known as The Director to deal with crime and make up for their past sins. The group's first mission was to stop The Illuminati Society. Aside from apprehending Mistress Quickly, their mission was a failure.[37] Besides Robyn Canmore, Dingo, Fang, and Yama, the following member include:

The Director

[edit]

The Director (voiced by William Devane in the animatic reel for the spinoff)[79] is a man who was the founder of the Redemption Squad.

The Matrix

[edit]

The Matrix (voiced by Jim Cummings) was a nanomachine program created by Fox and her mother Anastasia Renard as part of a world domination bid by Xanatos. However, the machines became sentient and threatened to overrun the planet. With the help of a local shaman, Goliath and Dingo convinced the nanomachines to form a humanoid shape that merged with Dingo's armor suit. Calling itself "The Matrix", the merged entity pledged to protect and defend Australia.[58] He was coerced into joining The Squad as an alternative to deactivation; he chose to join as doing so would help to maintain law and order.[37]

Series creator Greg Weisman had major plans for The Matrix; it was to have grown strong enough to power the planet.[40]

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The list of Gargoyles characters encompasses the fictional gargoyles, humans, and beings featured in the animated television series Gargoyles, created by and aired from 1994 to 1997. The central narrative follows a clan of medieval Scottish gargoyles, led by , who awaken from a millennium-long stone enchantment in modern and pledge to safeguard from diverse threats, allying with detective Elisa Maza while confronting antagonists like the treacherous gargoyle Demona and the scheming billionaire David Xanatos. Key clan members include the rookery-hatched , Broadway, Lexington, elder Hudson, and the loyal beast Bronx, with the series incorporating global mythological elements and Shakespearean influences to explore themes of , , and redemption among its ensemble.

Gargoyles

The Manhattan Clan

The Manhattan Clan forms the core group of protagonists in the Disney animated series Gargoyles, consisting of gargoyle survivors from the medieval Wyvern Clan in who relocate to and defend modern-day . Placed under a spell by the Magus in 994 AD following a Viking betrayal at Castle Wyvern, the clan members petrify into stone during daylight hours, awakening only at night; the curse lifts when the castle is transported atop David Xanatos's Eyrie Building, satisfying the condition of residing "above the clouds." Revived in the early 1990s, they adopt individualized names inspired by New York locales, navigate human society through alliances like that with NYPD detective Elisa Maza, and confront adversaries including Xanatos's schemes and the traitorous gargoyle Demona. The clan relocates from the Eyrie to a clock tower before eventually reclaiming Castle Wyvern as their home. Originally numbering six upon awakening, the clan includes as leader, a towering, indigo-skinned emphasizing honor, loyalty, and strategic restraint, voiced by . Hudson, the grizzled elder and former leader, serves as a wise advisor, wielding a and retaining traditional values despite partial blindness in one eye. The rookery-born trio comprises , the red-skinned second-in-command known for his hot-tempered yet maturing leadership and dual proficiency; Broadway, the robust, blue-gray heavyweight with a passion for food, art, and non-lethal force via firearms expertise; and Lexington, the smallest and green-skinned tech enthusiast skilled in piloting, hacking, and gliding with web-like wings. , the quadrupedal beast member resembling a winged with horns, provides unwavering loyalty and ferocity in combat. The clan's composition expands in the series' second season with Angela, Goliath's daughter from the Wyvern rookery's preceding generation, who integrates after travels through the Avalon world tour, bringing combat prowess and a more idealistic outlook shaped by isolation on Avalon. Elisa Maza, while human, functions as an honorary member through her pivotal role in their protection efforts, legal insights, and eventual romantic bond with Goliath, symbolizing the clan's evolving human-gargoyle partnership. The group maintains a rookery structure, prioritizing collective defense over expansion, though encounters with clones like Coldstone and global clans influence their dynamics without immediate integration.

Demona

Demona is a central in the Disney animated television series Gargoyles, which aired from to 1997. Voiced by throughout the series, she is portrayed as a female over 1,000 years old, originally Goliath's mate and second-in-command of the Wyvern Clan in 10th-century . Her character embodies deep-seated hatred toward humans, stemming from the betrayal and massacre of her clan in 994 AD, which she attributes solely to human treachery despite her own role in the events. In the series, Demona's backstory unfolds primarily in the episode arc "City of Stone" (1994), revealing her alliance with the to seize , leading to the clan's destruction by under Constantine's command. Surviving by hiding her eggs, she awakens in the , renaming herself Demona—meaning "the demon"—and forms a partnership with billionaire David Xanatos to pursue genocidal schemes against , including attempts to unleash a on and manipulate magical artifacts like the Grimorum Arcanorum. Her immortality is tied to a spell from the Weird Sisters linking her life to Macbeth's, ensuring one survives the other, though she later gains the ability to transform into a form during daylight hours via a wish granted by the trickster Puck. Demona possesses typical gargoyle physiology, including superhuman strength capable of lifting several tons, enhanced durability, agility, and the ability to glide using wing-like membranes, though she cannot achieve true flight. As a skilled sorceress trained under the Archmage, she wields spells for transformation, mind control, and elemental manipulation, often combining with in plots like cloning herself or resurrecting ancient allies. Creator describes her as the franchise's most dangerous character due to her intelligence, resourcefulness, and unyielding vendetta, which consistently sabotages potential redemption through self-fulfilling prophecies of betrayal.

Thailog

Thailog is a genetically engineered clone of the gargoyle Goliath, created by geneticist Dr. Anton Sevarius under the direction of billionaire David Xanatos as part of Project Thailog. The cloning process involved splicing Goliath's DNA with select human genetic material to accelerate physical maturation to adulthood within months and enhance intellectual capacity beyond that of typical gargoyles. During his artificial gestation and growth in a secret underwater laboratory, Thailog underwent subliminal indoctrination with Xanatos's amoral worldview, strategic thinking, and self-serving principles, fostering a personality that combined Goliath's physical prowess with Xanatos's cunning. Physically, Thailog resembles Goliath but possesses ebony skin, snow-white hair, and a more angular facial structure, reflecting the hybrid genetic influences. He stands approximately the same height as , around 7 feet tall, with comparable strength, flight capability via wings, and stone-like dormancy during daylight hours. Unlike 's nomadic warrior aesthetic, Thailog favors tailored business suits, symbolizing his affinity for corporate intrigue and human societal power structures. Voiced by —the same actor who portrays —Thailog's delivery adopts a smoother, more calculated inflection to distinguish his villainous demeanor, a deliberate choice by creators to showcase David's range in antagonistic roles. Thailog debuted in the second-season episode "Double Jeopardy," which aired on November 19, 1995, where he manipulates Xanatos and Sevarius, orchestrating their capture by the Manhattan Clan before revealing his independence by hacking financial systems to amass over $500 million and staging an explosion to simulate his death. His character embodies megalomania and betrayal, viewing both biological progenitor and creator Xanatos as inferiors to surpass; he later allies temporarily with Goliath's estranged mate Demona in "" (January 4, 1996), only to betray her upon discovering her clan loyalties, and commissions a counterpart clone, , from Demona's and Elisa Maza's DNA to form a manipulative "perfect couple." Thailog's intellect enables schemes like Nightstone Unlimited's corporate espionage and affiliations in expanded canon, positioning him as a recurring driven by dominance rather than . Recurring in episodes such as "The Dying of the Light" and Goliath Chronicles continuations, he represents the perils of unchecked genetic ambition, outmaneuvering allies and foes alike through deception.

Coldstone

Coldstone, also known as in his original flesh-and-blood form, is a from the Clan featured in the Gargoyles. His construction involved reassembling shattered stone fragments from the 994 Viking attack on Castle , incorporating remains primarily from alongside those of his mate and rival to form a single robotic shell equipped with advanced cybernetic weaponry, including a plasma cannon arm and a chest-mounted personality indicator. This fusion digitized and housed the consciousnesses of all three original , resulting in a fragmented psyche dominated by 's honorable warrior traits but frequently disrupted by 's manipulative malice and 's pleas for harmony, drawing direct inspiration from Shakespeare's . First introduced as an inactive prototype in the episode "Reawakening" (aired November 18, 1994), Coldstone activates in "Legion" (September 6, 1995), where internal personality clashes manifest during a confrontation with a digital virus, forcing Goliath's clan to intervene and ultimately grant him autonomy under Othello's control. In "High Noon" (September 25, 1995), Coldstone temporarily joins forces with Demona and in a ploy against the Manhattan Clan, only to defect upon recognizing as a rookery brother, highlighting his underlying loyalty despite cybernetic vulnerabilities. The resolution of Coldstone's multi-personality conflict occurs in "Possession" (aired February 1996), where Xanatos engineers two additional robotic vessels—Coldfire and Coldsteel—to separate the essences: transfers to Coldfire, to Coldsteel, and Othello remains in the original body. This separation enables Coldstone and Coldfire to operate as stable allies to the Manhattan Clan, pursuing (now Coldsteel) as a rogue threat, while Coldstone's enhanced durability and firepower prove vital in later skirmishes, such as thwarting schemes involving the Stone of Destiny.

Coldsteel

Coldsteel is a robotic and recurring antagonist in the Disney animated television series Gargoyles, originating as a flesh-and-blood member of the Clan hatched in 938 AD. His soul was among three—alongside those of (later Coldstone) and (later Coldfire)—excavated from stone remains shattered during the 994 AD and fused into the Coldstone by David Xanatos and Demona in February 1995. In the Season 2 episode "Possession," aired October 14, 1995, the trickster Puck separated the conflicting souls within Coldstone, prompting Xanatos to transfer this gargoyle's consciousness into a android shell modeled after Coldstone's design but customized with advanced features. Known internally during production as , the character embodies petty jealousy and scheming malice without deeper ideological drive, stemming from historical manipulations that led to his pre-massacre banishment for deceiving about Desdemona's fidelity and Goliath's loyalty. The android form of Coldsteel features a slighter, more agile build than typical gargoyles, with a horned crest, spiked chin, and wings akin to Brooklyn's, all constructed from durable alloys. It incorporates retractable metal tentacles enhanced by for self-repair and versatility in combat, alongside an initial built-in tracking device installed by Xanatos (subsequently disabled). These appendages enable grappling, constriction, and precise strikes, augmenting his , gliding capability, and resilience to damage comparable to Steel Clan robots. Coldsteel's villainy manifests in alliances with figures like the Archmage and Coyote 5.0, including schemes to seize the Stone of Destiny and battles against the and Clans, driven by grudges against and an obsessive pursuit of Coldfire. Voiced by , Coldsteel's debut in his independent form occurred in "Possession," following prior manifestations within Coldstone from "Awakening: Part One" (1994). He reappears in "Legion" (1996), collaborating with Thailog, and "The Rock" (SLG comics continuation, 2007), where he confronts the London Clan alongside . In canon materials, his actions underscore themes of corruption and unresolved medieval betrayals, positioning him as a foil to the redemptive arcs of Coldstone and Coldfire.

The Clones

The Clones are a quartet of genetically engineered gargoyles produced by Dr. Anton Sevarius at the behest of Thailog and Demona to form a loyal clan under their control. These clones were artificially aged to maturity using accelerated growth serums, drawing DNA from members of the Clan excluding , whose clone Thailog already existed independently. The project, revealed in the episode "The Reckoning" which aired on May 8, 1996, aimed to bolster Thailog's forces amid his schemes against both humans and traditional gargoyles. Comprising Hollywood, Burbank, Brentwood, and Malibu, the clones exhibit physical traits mirroring their progenitors but with subtle variations from the cloning process, such as enhanced spikes or armor-like features in some cases. Hollywood, cloned from , features a red beak and wing spurs akin to his template, while Burbank, derived from Hudson, wears distinctive full-body armor and wields a mace in . Brentwood, Lexington's duplicate, sports additional dorsal spikes and brow horns, and Malibu, another clone, shares similar avian features but with lighter coloration. Initially conditioned for obedience, the clones turned on their creators during a confrontation involving the Manhattan Clan, leading Thailog and Demona to abandon them as defective. Following their rejection, the clones sought refuge in the sewers' , allying with the Mutates under Talon and integrating into what became known as the . In the episode "Genesis Undone," aired February 12, 1997, they suffered from a genetic flaw causing premature petrification, which Sevarius rectified under duress from the Manhattan Clan, stabilizing their biology. This event highlighted their vulnerability as artificial beings, dependent on ongoing scientific intervention for survival, yet they demonstrated loyalty to their new subterranean allies over past masters. Unlike natural gargoyles, the clones' rapid creation and conditioning resulted in simpler personalities, focused on and basic dynamics rather than agency.

Avalon Clan

The Avalon Clan comprises a group of gargoyles hatched from eggs originally belonging to the Wyvern Clan, which were smuggled to the magical island of around 994 AD by Princess Katharine of , Tom the Guardian, and the Magus to protect them from the Hunter's massacre. These human caretakers raised the young gargoyles communally on , where the island's unique temporal properties—advancing one day in the outside world for every hour spent there—delayed hatching until roughly 1058 AD, resulting in a single generation of siblings lacking traditional rookery-based parentage distinctions. The clan, numbering in the dozens including beasts, resided in isolation until 1995, when they were freed from the Archmage's magical imprisonment during Goliath's arrival; they subsequently defended against threats like 's forces in 1996 and now serve as ceremonial honor guard to and Titania. Gabriel leads the clan as its designated leader, selected by Princess Katharine and reflecting the clan's emphasis on unity over hierarchical bloodlines; he is the biological son of (Coldstone) and (Coldfire), though communal rearing obscured such ties until later revelations. , Gabriel's mate, succeeded Angela as second-in-command after Angela departed to join the Manhattan Clan. Angela, biologically the daughter of and Demona from the generation's rookery, integrated into Avalon society before leaving in 1996 following the Avalon World Tour, during which the clan's facilitated 's global quests with periodic returns to for resupply. Other named members include , , Michael, and , with Katharine drawing names from traditions to evoke protection. The clan maintains three gargoyle beasts, including Boudicca—a female who mated with Bronx during his visits—and two others (one male, one female). Unlike dispersed clans, the Avalon group's isolation fostered a protective, insular dynamic, with no established external alliances beyond ties forged via Angela and the World Tour.

London Clan

The London Clan consists of gargoyles in , , whose physical forms emulate British heraldic beasts, including unicorns, lions, and griffins. This aesthetic was conceived by series creator and realized by character designer Greg Guler. The clan numbers 198 adults with 25 rookery eggs as of the late 1990s, comprising a significant portion of surviving global population; it lacks gargoyle beasts, whose line extincted prior to modern times. Most members roost at Knight's Spur, a rural estate outside the city, while a subset operates "," a magic shop in using human aliases and tax subterfuge for integration. The clan adheres to traditional communal child-rearing but tracks biological parentage more explicitly than some peers, as evidenced by , the recognized daughter of leaders Leo and Una. Names are selected via a drawing process, possibly from a hat. By the mid-1990s, locals viewed them as benign, following Griff's return from Avalon-assisted retrieval during . The group may employ population controls to sustain numbers amid urban pressures. Key members include:
  • Una: A unicorn-resembling female co-leader who manages the magic shop alongside Leo; voiced by Sarah Douglas.
  • Leo: Una's lion-like mate and co-leader; voiced by .
  • Griff: A griffin-type male warrior who vanished during the in 1940, later rescued via time-displaced travel in 1995; voiced by .
  • Lunette: Biological offspring of Leo and Una, exemplifying partial deviation from strict communal in parenting.
Expanded canon from Weisman's SLG comics introduces additional figures like Constance (a boar-like female) and Staghart (a stag-like male), but these postdate the television series.

Clan Ishimura

The Clan Ishimura is a clan based in the Japanese village of Ishimura, depicted in the animated television series Gargoyles as the only known modern clan to openly coexist with humans in . Following the end of Japan's feudal wars, the clan's ancestors settled in Ishimura to teach local humans the code of warrior ethics, fostering a symbiotic relationship where protected the village at night. This arrangement persisted into the until disrupted by internal betrayal, after which the clan recommitted to instructing younger humans in principles. The clan first appears in the episode "Bushido" (season 2, episode 40, originally broadcast November 19, 1996), during Goliath's world tour, where the Ishimura gargoyles aid in repelling thieves exploiting a local but face capture by entrepreneur 's ninjas for use as theme exhibits. Clan member Yama's collusion with leads to his , highlighting tensions between rigid adherence to honor and practical survival. The clan's members exhibit Japanese-inspired physical traits, such as horn configurations evoking traditional yokai, and adhere strictly to , distinguishing them from more combative clans like the group. Known members
  • Kai: The clan's wise and principled leader, who upholds as a guiding ethos and mediates conflicts, including initial distrust of outsiders like . Voiced by .
  • Sora: Kai's trusted second-in-command, known for her loyalty and combat prowess; she is Yama's mate, separated by his , and represents the clan's commitment to communal defense. Voiced by Haunani Minn.
  • Yama: A banished warrior whose misguided sense of led him to ally with against the clan, resulting in his isolation; he later pursues redemption outside Ishimura. Voiced by Bruce Locke.
The clan includes several unnamed gargoyles who participate in collective defense and daily stone sleep atop village structures.

Mayan Clan

The Mayan Clan comprises four surviving gargoyles tasked with safeguarding the rainforest ecosystem known as "The Green" in , a duty they have upheld since at least the CE in alliance with ancient Mayan inhabitants. A wizard crafted the Mayan Sun Amulet and four elemental pendants in 990 CE, enabling the wearers to forgo daytime stone sleep and maintain perpetual protection of their pyramid home and surrounding forests. The clan suffered near-total destruction from European colonists historically and poachers in 1993, reducing adult numbers to these four while preserving 20 to 40 eggs in a hidden ; by 1998, those eggs had hatched, allowing gradual replenishment. Their serpentine traits, large brow crests, and scaled lower bodies distinguish them physically from other clans, with names derived from their pendants representing cardinal directions. The clan debuted in the episode "The Green," broadcast on February 15, 1996, wherein Goliath, Elisa Maza, Angela, and Bronx encounter them amid a conflict with Jackal and Hyena, mercenaries employed by Preston Vogel of Cyberbiotics to seize the Sun Amulet and pendants, thereby immobilizing the gargoyles to enable logging operations. The Mayans repel the intruders with aid from the travelers, leveraging forest-derived healing agents like pollen and leaves alongside their daytime mobility; Elisa subsequently transports pendants and plant samples via Avalon World to sustain "The Green" against ongoing threats.
  • Zafiro: The clan's leader, Zafiro possesses a unique serpentine form with a winged, snake-like body lacking legs, setting him apart from his humanoid compatriots; he dons the zafiro pendant and directs defensive efforts against environmental despoilers.
  • Jade: A robust, youthful male with green skin, black hair, and standard bat-like wings akin to Goliath's, Jade guards the pyramid and embodies southern directional guardianship via his jade pendant.
  • Obsidiana: This blue-skinned female, featuring black hair and a prominent forehead crest, utilizes the obsidian pendant and specializes in curative applications of rainforest flora to mend wounds sustained in territorial defense.
  • Turquesa: A female with black hair, a large brow crest, and common wing structure, Turquesa wears the turquoise pendant, recounts clan lore to visitors, and contributes to ecosystem preservation initiatives, including seed relocation efforts.

Labyrinth Clan

The Labyrinth Clan is a faction of gargoyle-like beings consisting primarily of mutates—humans genetically altered by scientist Anton Sevarius using DNA from various animals—and cloned gargoyles, who inhabit the , a vast subterranean complex of tunnels and derelict Cyberbiotics facilities beneath . Formed in 1995 after the mutates broke free from Sevarius's experiments at Gen-U-Tech, the clan, under Talon's leadership, expanded to shelter homeless humans and incorporated Thailog's abandoned clones following events in the episode "" aired on May 20, 1996. This group emphasizes communal protection and self-sufficiency, distinguishing itself from the surface-dwelling Clan by its underground isolation and hybrid composition. Key members include Talon, the clan's elected leader and a mutate transformed from NYPD detective Derek Maza; he possesses bat-like wings for gliding, feline agility, enhanced strength, and heightened senses, while retaining human intelligence and loyalty to his sister, Elisa Maza. Talon mates with , another mutate originally a homeless woman named Maggie Reed, who exhibits cat-like features including retractable and fur; she gives birth to their son, Michael Peter Maza, in 1996, marking the first known offspring between mutates. , a mute mutate who lost his voice box during transformation, communicates through gestures and writing, displaying unwavering protectiveness toward the clan despite his limited expressiveness. , a mutate with prominent fangs and a penchant for insubordination, often clashes with Talon but remains part of the group, showcasing electric eel-derived abilities like bioelectric shocks. The clan's gargoyle contingent derives from Thailog's cloning project, which produced duplicates of Manhattan Clan members using stolen genetic material. , a hybrid clone blending Demona's gargoyle traits with Elisa Maza's human features, rejects both Thailog's domination and Goliath's influence, forging an independent path and romantic bond with Malibu. Malibu, a clone of , embodies youthful impulsiveness with rookery-hatched loyalty; Hollywood, cloned from Lexington, contributes inventive problem-solving; and Burbank, a Broadway clone, provides brute strength and steadfast reliability. Brentwood, another Broadway clone, defected to Thailog's side during the 1995 confrontation, declining reintegration. These clones, activated in late 1995, integrate into Labyrinth society, aiding in defense against external threats like Thailog's raids.

Humans and Modified Humans

Residents of Castle Wyvern (pre-994 AD)

Princess Katharine, born in 976 AD to Prince Malcolm and Princess Elena, served as the ruler of Castle following her father's death sometime between 984 and 994 AD. Initially fearful of the gargoyles due to childhood admonitions portraying them as monsters, she matured into a figure who tolerated their protective role despite underlying prejudice. In 994 AD, at age 18, she was among the human captives taken by during the castle's fall, alongside the Magus and young Tom, before fleeing with the surviving gargoyle eggs to . Prince Malcolm, born in 954 AD as the youngest son of King Maol Chalvim I of , established Wyvern as his seat and forged an alliance with the gargoyles around 971 AD, naming their leader in recognition of their defense against human foes like King Culen. He treated the gargoyles as allies but often took their loyalty for granted, reflecting the era's hierarchical view of such beings as tools for protection rather than equals. Malcolm died prior to the 994 AD Viking assault, leaving his daughter Katharine to govern. The Magus, the castle's resident sorcerer and advisor, was approximately 28 years old in 994 AD and skilled in the magical arts, including the use of the Grimorum Arcanorum. He cast the spell that preserved the surviving gargoyles in stone sleep as vengeance against the who captured him and the royal household, demonstrating both his arcane prowess and loyalty to Katharine despite her initial distrust of magic. Tom, born around 986 AD and aged 8 in 994 AD, was the son of Mary, a peasant woman who sought refuge at Castle Wyvern amid Viking raids. As a child, he formed an early bond with the gargoyles, particularly the young hatchlings, which later evolved into his role as the Guardian of the Avalon Clan eggs after escaping to the magical island with Katharine and the Magus. Mary, Tom's mother, arrived at Castle Wyvern as a refugee shortly before the 994 AD massacre, driven by fear of Viking invaders under Hakon. In a moment of panic, she attacked young gargoyles Brooklyn, Lexington, and Broadway to shield her son, exemplifying the widespread human distrust and superstition toward the clan that contributed to their vulnerability. Her presence highlights the influx of displaced peasants relying on the castle's defenses in the late 10th century.

Modern Human Residents of New York

Elisa Maza is a second-grade detective in the Police Department's 23rd Precinct, specializing in night-shift investigations and serving as the primary human liaison and ally to the Clan of gargoyles. Of mixed African-American and Native American heritage, she demonstrates quick-wittedness, athletic prowess, and a commitment to justice, often bridging the gap between human law enforcement and the clan's nocturnal protectorate role in . Her family background includes relatives in law enforcement, reinforcing her dedication to public safety amid encounters with supernatural threats. David Xanatos, a self-made multi-billionaire born in 1955 in , to Greek immigrant parents, resides in the Eyrie Building atop a skyscraper that he owns and operates as the headquarters for Xanatos Enterprises, his conglomerate focused on advanced technology and defense contracts. Initially antagonistic toward the gargoyles through schemes involving genetic experimentation and corporate espionage, Xanatos evolves into a complex ally, providing sanctuary in his castle while pursuing personal ambitions like and family legacy. His strategic mindset, exemplified by contingency-laden plans, drives interactions with New York's underworld and supernatural elements. Janine Renard, legally known as following her 1995 marriage to David Xanatos, is a former operative of the cybernetically enhanced group known as the Pack, born in 1966 as the daughter of industrialist Halcyon Renard and exhibiting latent abilities inherited from her mother. Residing with her family in the , she transitions from criminal pursuits to motherhood after giving birth to son in 1996, influencing Xanatos's shift toward protective alliances with the gargoyles. Her pre-marriage rejection of her father's corporate empire underscores her independent, ethically flexible persona amid New York's elite circles. Matthew "Matt" Bluestone, a at the NYPD's 23rd Precinct partnered with Elisa Maza, previously served as an FBI agent investigating conspiracy theories, including Illuminati lore, which draws him into gargoyle-related events. Based in , he balances skepticism with openness to the extraordinary, collaborating on cases involving and unusual phenomena while maintaining official duties. Maria Chavez, captain of the 23rd Precinct, oversees Maza and Bluestone's operations from her headquarters, enforcing departmental protocols amid escalating bizarre crimes linked to the gargoyles' hidden presence. Her leadership emphasizes evidence-based policing, occasionally intersecting with the clan's interventions without full awareness of their existence.

The Pack

The Pack is a team of cybernetically enhanced human introduced as antagonists in the Disney animated television series Gargoyles. Assembled by industrialist David Xanatos, the group initially starred in a syndicated action-adventure show titled The Pack, which depicted them battling fictional threats like "Evil Ninjas" in staged scenarios broadcast for public entertainment. The program's format masked their recruitment as combatants for Xanatos's covert operations, including early confrontations with the awakened Manhattan Clan of gargoyles. Following exposure of their criminal activities and the subsequent cancellation of their series, the Pack transitioned to full-time work, repeatedly targeting the gargoyles in ambushes and heists. Core members included , the strategic leader and skilled martial artist who coordinated team assaults and later formed a personal alliance with Xanatos; , the physically dominant strongman specializing in brute force tactics; the sibling duo and , agile fighters equipped with razor-sharp gloves for close-quarters combat, noted for their psychopathic tendencies and wisecracking during battles; and , an Australian operative proficient in powered exosuits for enhanced mobility and firepower. A robotic addition, —piloted remotely by Xanatos or operating autonomously—served as a tactical commander, utilizing advanced armor for leadership in operations like prison breaks and aerial pursuits. The team's enhancements, provided by Xanatos, amplified their combat capabilities but also fueled internal fractures, such as Dingo's eventual defection toward redemption arcs.
  • Fox: As the Pack's on-screen and operational leader, Fox employed intelligence and precision strikes, distinguishing her from the group's more feral members; her role evolved beyond villainy upon her marriage to Xanatos.
  • Wolf: The team's powerhouse, relying on raw strength and aggressive charges; his enhancements later included lupine genetic mutations for feral combat prowess.
  • Jackal: Quick-witted and sadistic, Jackal favored slicing attacks with bladed gloves, often pairing with his sister in synchronized assaults marked by chilling detachment.
  • Hyena: The most impulsive and bloodthirsty, Hyena cackled during fights, using her gloves for frenzied leaps and embodying the group's chaotic edge.
  • Dingo: Equipped with a mechanized battle suit for versatile ranged and melee engagements, Dingo's Australian background informed his straightforward mercenary ethos, leading to conflicts with the team's amorality.
  • Coyote: A Xanatos-engineered android in canine-themed armor, functioning as a high-tech field commander with energy weapons and flight capabilities, deployed to orchestrate Pack missions independently.

The Mutates

The Mutates are a synthetic race of bio-engineered human-animal hybrids created by geneticist Anton Sevarius through the injection of a mutagenic serum derived from animal DNA, designed to produce creatures resembling gargoyles for David Xanatos's private security force. The project, conducted under the auspices of Gen-U-Tech Corporation, targeted vulnerable individuals including the homeless and mentally ill, who were deceived with promises of employment and housing. Upon realizing their irreversible transformation, the Mutates rebelled against their creators, escaping confinement and eventually establishing a subterranean community in the , an abandoned maintenance complex beneath . Led by Talon, they maintain a tense alliance with the Manhattan Clan of gargoyles while seeking a cure for their condition, though Sevarius's formula proves permanent without his cooperation, which he withholds. Talon, originally Derek Maza—brother of NYPD detective Elisa Maza—was an undercover security operative for Xanatos who infiltrated Sevarius's lab to investigate disappearances, only to be mutated against his will into a large, blue-furred, feline humanoid with bat-like wings enabling gliding flight, enhanced strength, and razor-sharp claws. As the group's de facto leader, Talon enforces a code of non-violence toward humans and coordinates defenses against external threats, including former associate Fang's betrayals; he later marries Maggie the Cat and fathers a human son, expanding the Labyrinth Clan's demographics to include unmutated humans. Voiced by Rocky Carroll, Talon's character arc emphasizes themes of identity and leadership amid loss of humanity. Maggie the Cat, formerly Maggie Reed, was a young woman lured into Sevarius's experiments while seeking shelter from schizophrenia-induced delusions, resulting in her transformation into a green-furred, cat-like mutate with heightened agility, claws, and but no wings. Initially terrified and viewing her new form as a monstrous , Maggie adapts under Talon's guidance, developing combat skills and a protective role within the ; her relationship with Talon evolves into marriage, highlighting resilience and found family dynamics. She demonstrates strategic cunning, such as outwitting to facilitate rescues. Fang, born Ted, entered the program as a street criminal enticed by promises of power, emerging as a gray-skinned, mutate with finned ears, webbed appendages, durability, and the ability to channel through or touch, though his arrogance and predatory instincts lead to repeated conflicts with the group. Initially part of the Mutates' escape, Fang defects to pursue self-serving schemes, including alliances with Sevarius and betrayals against Talon, ultimately facing exile or imprisonment for his unreliability. Voiced by in early appearances and later, Fang embodies the project's ethical failures in amplifying human flaws. Claw, a homeless Korean War veteran prior to mutation, was altered into a massive, white-furred tiger-bat hybrid with immense , gliding membranes, and regenerative , but rendered mute due to damaged from the serum's side effects. Communicating via sketches and gestures, Claw serves as the clan's loyal enforcer and artist, contributing to infrastructure and defenses without the aggression seen in . His backstory underscores the exploitation of society's marginalized, with Claw's stoic demeanor reflecting quiet endurance.

The Hunters and Quarrymen

The Hunters constitute a clandestine lineage of gargoyle persecutors originating in medieval . The order began in 994 AD with Gillecomgain, a guard at Castle Wyvern who, after being scarred by the gargoyle Demona, adopted the mask and title of the first Hunter, vowing systematic extermination of her kind. Gillecomgain's successors, including —who employed him to assassinate —and Prince Canmore, who overthrew in 1057, escalated the campaign, allying with humans to massacre the Wyvern Clan and pursue Demona across Europe. This vendetta persisted through Canmore's descendants, such as Stuart Canmore in 1495 and Fiona Canmore in 1920 , targeting Demona specifically while viewing all s as threats. In 1996, the modern Hunters manifested as the orphaned Canmore siblings—, , and —whose father, Charles Canmore, perished at Demona's hands in in 1980 when Jon was seven years old. Relentlessly trained in the family tradition, the siblings infiltrated New York to eradicate Demona and the awakened Manhattan Clan, culminating in the "" confrontations where they demolished the Clan's sanctuary and broadcast footage framing gargoyles as destructive beasts to incite public hysteria. Each sibling donned the iconic Hunter mask featuring three red claw-mark slashes, symbolizing their inherited fanaticism. Jason Canmore, the eldest, participated aggressively in the hunts but suffered paralysis from a misaimed shot by his brother during the Cathedral of Saint Damien showdown. Rescued by Detective Elisa Maza, Jason renounced the Hunters' creed, recognizing gargoyles' nobility and aiding the thereafter. Canmore, adopting the "Hunter" codename, persisted in commanding operations like the Redemption Squad against perceived gargoyle allies. Canmore, initially a reluctant youth who posed as reporter to surveil targets, faked his death post-catastrophe, then transformed via resources—altering his appearance with a mustache and accent—to emerge as John Castaway, effectively perpetuating the Hunters' mission through a rebranded entity. The emerged in late 1996 as John 's initiative, a civilian group exploiting post-exposure panic to amass followers against , subsidized covertly by the . Members donned black uniforms emblazoned with a "Q" insignia and wielded signature electrified hammers calibrated to shatter stone forms or stun them upon awakening, supplemented by firearms, vans, and helicopters from their headquarters. , born November 26, 1972, harnessed his oratory prowess for recruitment rallies decrying as invaders, orchestrating assaults like a 1997 Halloween ambush on a social gathering thwarted by intervening allies and . Beyond , the included officers and , who drilled raw recruits, alongside enrollees such as , Chalmers, and briefly Vinnie Grigori. Sarah Browne attempted but failed recruitment, underscoring the group's appeal to alienated or fearful demographics. Though rooted in the Hunters' zealotry, the operated overtly as a populist movement, marking a tactical shift from secretive hunts to widespread mobilization.

Other Humans

Macbeth is an immortal human warrior and former , cursed alongside the gargoyle Demona to share life forces by the Weird Sisters in the as punishment for their alliance against . He appears as an antagonist in the "City of Stone" episodes, seeking the Grimorum Arcanorum, but demonstrates honor by refraining from attacking stone-sleeping gargoyles. Later, Macbeth allies with the Manhattan Clan against common foes, reflecting his tragic backstory of betrayal and ambition inspired by Shakespeare's play. Halcyon Renard founded and led Cyberbiotics, a corporation rivaling Xanatos Enterprises, emphasizing integrity and technological advancement over unethical shortcuts. In the episode "Outfoxed," aired November 17, 1995, Renard pilots a mech suit against the gargoyles, viewing them as abominations linked to Gen-U-Tech experiments. His rigid principles strain his marriage to Anastasia Renard (later Titania) and relationship with daughter Janine (), leading to conflicts with David Xanatos. Renard undergoes cybernetic enhancement for survival, confronting his mortality and past decisions in subsequent appearances. Preston Vogel serves as Halcyon Renard's loyal at Cyberbiotics, characterized by unwavering professionalism and efficiency. In "Golem," aired November 18, 1995, Vogel encounters in , prioritizing corporate protocol over aiding the gargoyle's return to New York. His demeanor inspires Puck's human guise as Owen Burnett, highlighting Vogel's archetype of dutiful subservience. Vogel remains steadfast, even questioning Renard's alliances in "The Gathering" on May 4, 1996. Anton Sevarius is a megalomaniacal specializing in unethical experiments, initially employed by Cyberbiotics before collaborating with Xanatos. Voiced by , Sevarius engineers the Mutates using DNA and selachian growth hormones in "," aired September 30, 1995, deceiving subjects like Derek Maza into believing transformations cure a non-existent . Captured by Talon in "The Cage," aired October 7, 1995, he justifies his work as scientific progress despite moral costs. Sevarius's drives plots involving clones and hybrid creations, positioning him as a recurring threat unbound by ethics.

The Third Race

Oberon

Oberon serves as the king of the Third Race, a magical species known as the Children of Oberon, ruling from the otherworldly realm of . As the son of , he possesses unparalleled authority among his kind, enforcing Oberon's Law, which prohibits direct interference with mortals following a historical banishment of the Third Race from the earthly plane around 995 AD to curb their capricious meddling. Voiced by , Oberon appears primarily in the episodes "" and "The Gathering," where he initiates the millennial Gathering to convene his subjects, demonstrating his regal yet imperious demeanor. In the series narrative, arrives in in 1996 to reclaim all Children of Oberon, stripping powers from those like Puck who resist, but his ambitions extend to seizing infant Xanatos—son of human David Xanatos and half-fey Renard—due to the child's magical heritage, intending to raise him in away from human influence. This leads to conflict with the Manhattan Clan of gargoyles and Xanatos, culminating in Oberon's temporary defeat when exposed to iron, a substance toxic to his kind, forcing him to relinquish the child after Puck's intervention exposes his vulnerabilities. Oberon's portrayal emphasizes his absolute power tempered by hubris, as he underestimates mortal ingenuity and alliances, ultimately renewing his marriage vows with Titania upon returning to . Among the Third Race, wields the most formidable magical abilities, including , energy projection, force fields, and reality manipulation, rendering him nearly omnipotent except against iron or the rare superior might of . His character draws from Shakespearean , adapted to fit the series' mythology of three coexisting races—humans, gargoyles, and the ethereal Third Race—highlighting themes of and the perils of unchecked .

Titania

Titania is the queen of the Third Race, a powerful being who rules as consort to and wields vast magical abilities comparable to her husband's, though she prefers indirect influence over overt commands. In her human guise as Anastasia Renard, she married industrialist Halcyon Renard on December 22, 1960, and gave birth to their daughter Janine Renard (later known as ) on January 14, 1963, before separating from Halcyon due to his rigid principles clashing with her more fluid nature; Halcyon eventually discovered her . Titania's character draws from the fairy queen in William Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream, adapted by series creator to fit the Third Race's lore as ancient, immortal entities with dominion over and the natural world. She demonstrates cunning and maternal instincts, particularly toward her grandson Alexander, whom she seeks to train in on Avalon against Oberon's initial decree to seize him by force. Voiced by , Titania exhibits a regal, enigmatic demeanor, often speaking in layered pronouncements that mask her intentions. In the series, Titania debuts in her true form during the two-part episode "Ill Met by Moonlight" (aired January 6 and 13, 1996), where she arrives on Avalon with Oberon to reclaim the island's inhabitants and clashes with the Manhattan Clan over their protection of Fox and Alexander; she subtly undermines Oberon's edict by granting the clan a year and a day to prepare, highlighting her strategic patience. She reappears in "The Gathering" (aired May 12, 1997), orchestrating Puck's involvement to facilitate Alexander's magical education while reconciling with Oberon after his defeat. Titania's magic includes shape-shifting, illusion-casting, and reality manipulation, bounded only by Oberon's edicts and the Third Race's conventions, such as vulnerability to iron. Her relationship with Oberon is complex, marked by mutual power dynamics rather than conventional affection, though she exhibits loyalty and occasional defiance.

The Weird Sisters

The Weird Sisters, comprising Luna, Phoebe, and , are three identical female members of the Third Race, also known as the Children of , in the Gargoyles animated series. They embody a triadic representation inspired by lunar phases and mythological archetypes, with Phoebe symbolizing grace and the waxing moon, Luna representing fate and the full moon, and denoting vengeance and the waning moon. United in purpose and rarely acting separately, they wield potent sorcery, including spell-casting, illusion generation, and temporal manipulation, often employing cryptic prophecies and disguises to advance their objectives. Voiced collectively by , they appear as ethereal, robed figures with pale skin, dark hair, and moon-like motifs in their attire. Loyal servants of , the Weird Sisters function as guardians of , intervening in mortal affairs to safeguard Third Race interests or enforce Oberon's edicts. Their debut occurs in the four-part episode "City of Stone," aired September 18–26, 1995, where they manipulate historical events in 10th– Scotland, forging an immortal pact between the human and the gargoyle Demona that links their lifespans and fates. This spell, enacted amid the massacre at Castle in 994 AD, ensures neither can die unless killed by the other's hand, serving their aim to counter human threats to magical realms. They disguise themselves as police officers in modern flashbacks and issue warnings like "The access to the spell is locked in stone," underscoring their role in weaving long-term causal chains. In the Avalon multipart storyline, broadcast December 1995–January 1996, the Sisters temporarily ally with the resurrected Archmage to retrieve the Grimorum Arcanorum and other artifacts, aiding his assault on but ultimately betraying him to restore Oberon's domain. They proclaim, "All things are true," reflecting their relativistic view of reality through magic, and punish disloyalty by banishing the Archmage to the void. Their actions prioritize Third Race supremacy, recruiting figures like and Demona around 1040 AD to repel human incursions into . Though portrayed as antagonists due to their manipulative interventions, their motivations stem from obedience to rather than personal malice, distinguishing them from chaotic entities like Puck.

Puck

Puck is a recurring character in the animated series Gargoyles (1994–1997), portrayed as a whimsical and member of the Children of , an immortal race of fae beings also referred to as the Third Race. Drawing inspiration from the mischievous sprite in William Shakespeare's , Puck delights in harmless magical pranks and confusion among mortals, often disregarding rules against direct interference with humans. He assumes the human identity of Owen Burnett, the stoic aide to billionaire David Xanatos, using this disguise to observe and subtly influence events in . In the series, Puck's guardianship extends to Alexander Fox Xanatos, the infant son of David and Fox Xanatos, whom he instructs in after being bound to the role. His powers include reality-warping, , , and spell-casting, though Oberon, ruler of the Third Race, eventually restricts his to educational purposes with Alexander as punishment for repeated meddling. This banishment from confines Puck to his Owen persona in the human world, where he continues serving Xanatos without revealing his true nature until key confrontations. Puck debuts in the episode "The Mirror" (season 2, episode 9, aired November 15, 1995), where he encounters Demona and grants her three wishes via an enchanted mirror, inadvertently causing mass transformations and chaos across . Subsequent appearances include "" (season 2, episode 12, aired November 20, 1995), "" (season 2, episodes 35–36, aired May 14, 1996), "" (season 3, episode 6, aired September 23, 1996), "The Gathering" Parts One and Two (season 2, episodes 56–57, aired February 3 and 5, 1997), and "Possession" (season 3, episode 13, aired February 6, 1997). The character is voiced by actor , known for his role as Data in Star Trek: The Next Generation.

Other Children of Oberon

Anansi is a trickster figure inspired by West African folklore, depicted as a spider-like entity who weaves illusions and traps mortals in webs of deceit. He appears in the episode "Mark of the Panther," where he preys on the guilt and fears of the protagonists during their visit to , using magical webs to ensnare them until defeated by truth and unity. Banshee embodies the Irish harbinger of death, manifesting as a wailing spectral woman who possesses humans and feeds on sorrow. In "The Hound of Ulster," she takes control of Molly O'Grady to torment Cuchulainn's descendant, only to be repelled by the Ulster Cycle's magical ; she later resists Oberon's summons in "The Gathering" but is forcibly returned by the Weird Sisters. Coyote draws from Native American trickster lore, appearing as a canine spirit who shapeshifts and engages in mischief. Featured in "Cloud Fathers," the fae Coyote had previously been imprisoned within Xanatos's robotic construct due to iron's magical binding properties; during the episode, he aids the gargoyles against his mechanical counterpart after being freed, highlighting the Third Race's vulnerability to iron.) Grandmother represents benevolent ancestral spirits from indigenous mythology, portrayed as a wise, elderly woman who communes with nature and heals lands despoiled by conflict. In "Heritage," she assists the Manhattan against Raven's destructive schemes on her , restoring balance after the battle and emphasizing themes of harmony with the earth. Odin is adapted from Norse mythology as the Allfather, capable of summoning blizzards and assuming a polar bear form for combat. He appears in "Eye of the Storm," where he seeks the Phoenix Gate from the gargoyles in Norway, employing warriors and weather magic before relenting; he returns briefly in "The Gathering Part One" to heed Oberon's call. Raven serves as a trickster antagonist rooted in Native American tales, often scorning humans and causing chaos through deception and possession. In "Heritage," he impersonates Peter Maza's father to manipulate events on his island, aiming to eradicate human presence until thwarted by the gargoyles and Grandmother; he attends "The Gathering" as one of the assembled Children.)

Other Beings

The Lost Race

The Lost Race denotes an ancient, extinct species of sentient Earth-evolved beings that predated the gargoyles, humans, and Children of Oberon in the series' lore. According to creator , this race emerged first on Earth and subsequently vanished, leaving no known remnants or descendants in the . Gargoyles, despite arriving second, are designated the "First Race" in the narrative hierarchy, with humans as the Second Race and Oberon's Children as the Third. No named individuals from the Lost Race appear in the animated series or its direct canon extensions. Their physical characteristics, societal structure, or reasons for extinction remain unspecified by Weisman, though supplementary materials suggest possible connections to mythical creatures like dragons, which exhibit stone-sleep cycles akin to gargoyles but independent of daylight constraints. The race's absence from on-screen events underscores their role as a foundational, prehistoric element rather than active participants in the plot. Weisman has confirmed they bear no relation to external mythologies like Lovecraftian entities, emphasizing an indigenous evolutionary origin.

New Olympians

The New Olympians comprise a secretive society of advanced, non-human sentient beings on the isolated island of New Olympus, characterized by physical traits echoing Greek mythological figures such as minotaurs, winged humanoids, and shapeshifters. Their culture integrates high technology—like fields, weapons, and automated guardians—with a policy of strict human exclusion, stemming from millennia of persecution that prompted their withdrawal from the world around 1200 BCE. This isolation is enforced rigorously, as depicted in their encounters with outsiders during the Avalon World Tour arc. Boreas, voiced by , serves as the authoritative ruler of New Olympus, depicted as a majestic winged figure resembling , equipped with a staff capable of generating . He oversees judicial proceedings, including of human visitor Elisa Maza, balancing caution against prejudice while ultimately prioritizing his people's safety over alliance. Taurus, voiced by , functions as the minotaur-like chief of security, embodying a law-and-order with unyielding adherence to protocol. He arrests Elisa upon her arrival, reflecting the society's deep-seated human distrust, but demonstrates capacity for reflection when confronted with evidence of individual integrity. Proteus, a cunning shapeshifter imprisoned for unspecified crimes, exploits his ability to mimic forms—including Taurus and —to orchestrate an escape and sabotage the island's power grid in the episode aired February 14, 1996. His actions underscore internal vulnerabilities, as he preys on the society's rigid structures for personal gain. Ekidna, voiced by Charity James, appears as Boreas's consort or associate, contributing to the leadership circle amid the crisis precipitated by Proteus's breakout. Her role highlights the familial or advisory dynamics within New Olympian governance. Helios, voiced by , represents a civilian or operational figure with fiery attributes, involved in daily island functions and present during the external incursion. Kiron, voiced by , aids in security or containment efforts, exemplifying the diverse humanoid variants among the New Olympians.

Nokkar

Nokkar is an extraterrestrial sentinel in the Gargoyles, tasked with safeguarding from potential invasion by the hostile Space-Spawn alien race during an ongoing galactic conflict. Stationed in a concealed base on for over 1,000 years, Nokkar has wielded advanced technology including energy weapons, force fields, and memory-altering devices to monitor and defend the planet. Local Rapa Nui inhabitants, interpreting his armored, helmeted form as divine, carved statues in his likeness, which he allowed as a means of maintaining his secrecy while fostering a protective alliance with early human settlers. The character debuts in the second-season episode "Sentinel," where the Manhattan Clan—traveling with human companions Elisa Maza and Matt Bluestone—arrives on . Mistaking the stone-skinned gargoyles for Space-Spawn infiltrators, Nokkar captures Maza and erases her recent memories using a neural device, aiming to sever what he perceives as their brainwashing influence. The gargoyles evade his robotic drones and confront him directly, ultimately proving their terrestrial origins through demonstration of their biological need to sleep as stone statues during daylight, a trait Nokkar verifies against his scans. Convinced of their loyalty to , Nokkar releases Maza's memories and vows continued vigilance without further interference in their affairs. Voiced by , Nokkar embodies a stoic, duty-bound , with his design featuring a bulky exosuit, prominent antennae-like helmet protrusions, and a rigid protocol-driven mindset that prioritizes threat elimination over nuanced alliances. While primarily a one-episode resolved through mutual understanding, creator Greg Weisman's unproduced plans for a futuristic spinoff, Gargoyles 2198, envisioned Nokkar grappling with failure to preempt a Space-Spawn incursion, highlighting themes of interstellar guardianship and redemption. No further appearances occurred in the original television run, though the character's lore expands the series' scope to include cosmic-scale threats beyond medieval mythology.

Artificial and Mechanical Constructs

Steel Clan

The Steel Clan comprises a series of identical, mass-produced combat robots engineered by industrialist David Xanatos to emulate the physical form and capabilities of the Manhattan Clan's leader, Goliath. These machines feature a steel exoskeleton painted in metallic hues, glowing red visor eyes, retractable wings for flight via integrated jet propulsion, and arm-mounted laser cannons, granting them superhuman strength, durability, and aerial mobility comparable to biological gargoyles. Xanatos developed the prototypes using proprietary schematics pilfered from Cyberbiotics Corporation during a heist, incorporating advanced AI programming for tactical combat but limited independent strategic thinking, rendering them reliant on direct commands. Debuting in the series premiere arc's finale, "Awakening: Part Five" (broadcast September 26, 1994, in syndication), the Steel Clan ambushed the awakening gargoyles atop the Eyrie Building, serving as Xanatos's initial bid for a synthetic guardian force loyal to his corporate ambitions. Subsequent deployments pitted them against the organic clan in episodes such as "" (November 21, 1994), where a squad reinforced Xanatos's exoskeletal battlesuit—itself modeled on the Steel Clan design— in a zero-gravity orbital skirmish, highlighting their role as expendable in schemes involving stolen tech or territorial dominance. Despite iterative flaws like vulnerability to and predictable programming, Xanatos deployed over a dozen units in early confrontations, with remnants repurposed or upgraded into specialized variants like the rogue unit Coldsteel in later seasons. Unlike the sentient Manhattan Clan, Steel Clan robots exhibit no or emotional depth, functioning as programmable drones optimized for enforcement rather than alliance, which Xanatos later critiqued as insufficiently adaptive compared to hybrid constructs like . Their persistent antagonism underscores Xanatos's pattern of leveraging reverse-engineered biological traits for mechanical supremacy, though repeated defeats by the gargoyles' ingenuity exposed systemic limitations in AI rigidity and overreliance on brute force.

Other Constructs

The Coyote series consists of sophisticated androids engineered by David Xanatos using technology from the Scarab Corporation, featuring a humanoid frame with Xanatos' facial features etched into the right side of the head unit for identification and intimidation purposes. The inaugural model, Coyote 1.0, was activated in September 1995 to orchestrate the prison breakout of the Pack mercenaries, showcasing integrated weaponry such as wrist-mounted lasers, rocket boosters for flight, and reinforced alloy plating capable of withstanding strikes.) Later variants, including Coyote 2.0 deployed against the Manhattan Clan in cybernetic enhancements and Coyote 5.0 engineered with Oberon-resistant shielding during the Avalon confrontations, demonstrated iterative improvements in AI adaptability, self-repair protocols, and energy projection systems, often programmed for tactical leadership roles in Xanatos' operations.) Coldstone, designated as a composite cybernetic platform, was fabricated in 1995 by David Xanatos and Demona through the fusion of salvaged stone fragments from three Wyvern Clan gargoyles slain in the 994 AD —representing the essences of , , and —with proprietary robotic chassis incorporating flight jets, plasma cannons, and modular limb replacements. Activated via digitized soul transference and amplification from the Grimorum Arcanorum's spells, the construct initially functioned as a weaponized proxy in assaults on the surviving gargoyles, exhibiting conflicted programming due to the merged consciousnesses that led to internal schisms and eventual autonomy quests. Its enduring mechanical framework, devoid of biological tissue and reliant on power cores for animation, underscores its status as an artificial revival mechanism rather than a natural resurrection. The Iron Clan denotes a specialized upgrade lineage of Steel Clan derivatives, forged by Xanatos in late 1996 with iron alloys specifically calibrated to disrupt magical interference, as evidenced in defensive protocols against Oberon's incursion. These units retained core Steel Clan silhouettes but substituted durable ferrous composites for enhanced resilience to fae energy fields, deploying in coordinated swarms with laser arrays and gliding capabilities during the Avalonworld span. Limited production emphasized anti-mystical utility over mass replication, distinguishing them from standard Steel Clan deployments.

Organizations and Their Key Figures

The Illuminati

The Illuminati is a secretive, in the Gargoyles universe, depicted as a global cabal influencing world events through , manipulation, and long-term schemes. Structured with thirty-six ranks, each level numbering members equal to its rank (e.g., one member at rank one, thirty-six at rank thirty-six), the society maintains a total of 666 active members at any time, with vacancies filled by promotions upon expulsions or deaths. Founded centuries ago by associates of King Arthur's knights, it operates from hidden bases and employs agents for missions like intelligence gathering and artifact recovery, often clashing with or allying to the protagonists' interests. Peredur fab Ragnal, known as Number One, serves as the supreme leader of the , portrayed as an ancient knight from Arthurian legend who embodies the society's enduring commitment to power preservation. Mr. Duval, holding the rank of Number Two, acts as the Grail Knight and custodian of the , relocating it to evade threats while advancing Illuminati objectives; he is depicted as Duval in modern contexts but historically linked to mythos. Quincy Hemings, another Number Two, functions as the majordomo to the , leveraging his position for covert influence and recruitment, including assigning tasks to lower-ranking members like David Xanatos. The Illuminata (also referred to as Fleur in historical contexts), a Number Three, engages in high-level operations such as meetings with recruits in remote locations to test loyalty and execute plans, often masked to preserve anonymity. Shari, ranked Nine, operates as a storyteller and strategist, providing narrative intelligence to affiliates like Thailog while advancing Illuminati agendas through intellectual manipulation rather than direct confrontation. Lower-ranking members include David Xanatos (approximately rank thirty-two), the industrialist who receives missions from superiors like Hemings, integrating Illuminati directives into his corporate schemes; Matt Bluestone, a detective inducted after uncovering the society via investigations into figures like Mace Malone; Mace Malone, an operative specializing in surveillance and kidnapping attempts on gargoyles, who perishes in a failed scheme, triggering promotions; and Martin Hacker, Bluestone's former FBI partner revealed as a planted Illuminati agent to monitor him. The organization's recruitment emphasizes discretion and utility, with members like Bluestone tempted by promises of hidden truths about global control.

Xanatos Enterprises

Xanatos Enterprises functions as a sprawling multinational conglomerate under the direct control of its founder, David Xanatos, encompassing divisions in advanced , via the subsidiary Gen-U-Tech, and private security operations. The company emerged prominently in the series following Xanatos's acquisition and relocation of Castle Wyvern to the summit of the Eyrie Building in in 1994, which inadvertently awakened the resident gargoyles from a millennium-long curse. Its activities often intersect with the protagonists through corporate , experimental projects, and defense contracts, reflecting Xanatos's pursuit of technological supremacy and personal ambitions like immortality. David Xanatos, the visionary billionaire and CEO, drives the enterprise's aggressive expansion and innovation. A self-made of Greek descent, Xanatos orchestrated the castle's transport to harness the gargoyles as unwitting assets in schemes such as stealing disks from Cyberbiotics, a rival firm, though his plans frequently adapt to setbacks with contingency strategies. Over time, his relationship with the gargoyles evolves from antagonism to pragmatic alliance, particularly after his marriage to and the birth of their son in 1996, integrating family dynamics into corporate decisions. Voiced by , Xanatos embodies calculated ruthlessness tempered by loyalty to select allies. Owen Burnett, serving as Xanatos's impeccably efficient executive assistant and , manages daily operations with unflinching competence and discretion. Unbeknownst to most, Owen is the human guise of Puck, an immortal trickster from the Third Race bound by a favor to Xanatos after a magical debt in 1995, which compels his service despite Puck's disdain for mortal mundanity. His dual nature aids in covert projects, including surveillance and magical contingencies, until Puck's eventual departure post-Avalon arc, leaving a magically enhanced human successor. Owen's portrayal underscores themes of obligation and deception within the company's inner circle. Anton Sevarius, the ethically unbound chief geneticist heading Gen-U-Tech, conducts controversial experiments in and for Xanatos's directives. Initially poached from Cyberbiotics leader Halcyon Renard, Sevarius engineered enhancements for the Pack mercenaries and cloned into Thailog using stolen gargoyle DNA, as depicted in the 1995 episode "" where he transforms Derek Maza into Talon. His megalomaniacal flair and willingness to employ illegal methods, such as harvesting genetic material from the gargoyles, position him as a key enabler of the enterprise's bio-tech pursuits, though his loyalty wavers for personal gain. Voiced by , Sevarius exemplifies the moral hazards of unchecked scientific ambition. Bruno, the stern commander of the Xanatos Enterprises Security Force—colloquially termed the "Goon Squad" by detractors—oversees armed personnel deployments against threats ranging from corporate saboteurs to entities. A no-nonsense operative appearing in episodes like "Awakening," Bruno leads tactical responses, such as repelling attacks on the Eyrie Building, and coordinates with enhanced units like the Steel Clan robots. His role highlights the company's robust defensive infrastructure, blending human enforcers with technological augmentations to protect Xanatos's assets. Fox Xanatos (née Janine Renard), while primarily Xanatos's spouse and co-strategist, influences enterprise affairs through her leadership of the Pack before reforming and her involvement in family-centric projects, such as securing magical protections for their . Her heritage and combat prowess, revealed in early schemes, tie into the company's experimental ethos, though she prioritizes personal alliances over direct management.

Cyberbiotics Corporation

Cyberbiotics Corporation is a and firm in the Gargoyles , established as a corporate rival to Xanatos Enterprises and focused on advanced technological developments such as automated air fortresses and cybernetic systems. The company first encounters the Manhattan Clan in the "Awakening" arc, where its tower serves as a battleground during the gargoyles' conflict with David Xanatos, resulting in significant structural damage. Subsequent episodes highlight Cyberbiotics' efforts to recover from such setbacks, including the construction of the Fortress-2, a robot-manned aerial platform intended to demonstrate the firm's resilience and technological superiority. Halcyon Renard functions as the founder and CEO of Cyberbiotics, embodying a commitment to personal integrity and corporate responsibility that contrasts with more opportunistic business leaders like Xanatos. Voiced by , Renard interrogates in "Outfoxed," suspecting the 's involvement in prior attacks on company assets and initially viewing him as a creation of Xanatos's Gen-U-Tech division. His leadership drives the Fortress-2 project amid financial strain from earlier incidents, though sabotage attempts by his daughter Janine (Fox Xanatos) test the company's defenses, ultimately requiring intervention to avert disaster. Renard's principled stance leads him to reject unethical shortcuts, as seen in his refusal to compromise Fortress-2's security despite vulnerabilities exploited by intruders. Preston Vogel acts as Renard's primary executive assistant and , characterized by an unyielding, rigid that underscores his loyalty to Cyberbiotics' mission. Voiced by , Vogel manages operational aspects of key projects like the Fortress-2 launch and resists external pressures, including offers from to undermine the airship for personal gain. His demeanor—formal, efficient, and devoid of flexibility—inspired the Puck to adopt a similar human form as Owen Burnett while serving , highlighting Vogel's archetype as an archetype of dutiful corporate service. Other personnel include geneticist Anton Sevarius, who initially conducted research for Cyberbiotics before departing for Xanatos's employ, where he pursued controversial bio-engineering tied to the company's early rivalries. Cyberbiotics' automated systems, such as the AI overseer Matrix on Fortress-2, represent non-human elements but often malfunction under stress, reflecting the firm's ambitious yet imperfect pursuit of robotic autonomy. The corporation's activities occasionally intersect with broader threats, including attacks in "The Hound of Ulster" and "," where Renard's defenses invoke historical guardians to protect assets.

Gargoyles Task Force

The Gargoyles Task Force is a specialized New York Police Department unit established in the wake of the public revelation of gargoyles' existence during the "" crisis in late 1996, with its formal activation depicted in the episode "The Journey," which aired on September 7, 1996. Initially mandated to locate, apprehend, or neutralize gargoyles viewed as potential public safety risks amid and anti-gargoyle sentiment, the task force operated under NYPD oversight with federal liaison involvement. Its formation reflected official efforts to address the creatures through law enforcement protocols rather than vigilante groups like , though internal dynamics shifted toward protective strategies under leadership attuned to gargoyle . Detective Matt Bluestone serves as the task force's chief, appointed to lead operations in "The Journey" while navigating conflicts between his affiliations and empathy for the Manhattan Clan. Voiced by , Bluestone's tenure emphasized containment over extermination, as seen in post-revelation pursuits and interviews where he downplayed gargoyle aggression. Detective Elisa Maza, a core operative and Bluestone's partner, provides field expertise drawn from her prior covert alliances with the gargoyles, though her role strains against departmental biases toward capture. Voiced by Salli Richardson-Whitfield, Maza's involvement underscores the task force's blend of enforcement and restraint. Jason Conover (real name Jason Canmore), a reformed member of the Hunter lineage, contributes as a despite paralysis from injuries sustained fighting Demona; his undercover experience as Elisa's partner informs anti-gargoyle tactics reevaluated post-revelation. Voiced by , Conover's arc highlights redemption within the unit. Supporting members include Officer Phil Travanti, a uniformed officer handling perimeter security and during gargoyle sightings; Officer Morgan Morgan, known for perceptive on-scene assessments and ties to Elisa; Agent Martin Hacker, the FBI liaison coordinating inter-agency responses; and advisor Margot Yale, whose connections influence strategic counsel despite her civilian status. These figures, expanded in the SLG continuation (issues 1-3, 2006-2007), reflect the task force's evolution into a multifaceted entity balancing public safety with emerging coexistence efforts.

The Redemption Squad

The Redemption Squad, featured in the Gargoyles: Bad Guys comic miniseries (issues #1–6, published 2006–2009 by Slave Labor Graphics), comprises five former antagonists coerced or motivated to undertake covert operations against global threats, including the society, under the oversight of a mysterious Director. Written by series co-creator , the team functions as an expendable black-ops unit, blending elements of atonement with enforced service via threats of incarceration or worse, mirroring anti-hero ensembles in other media. Members include a gargoyle hunter, a mercenary with an AI companion, a banished , a enforcer, and a powered exoskeleton entity, each leveraging prior villainous skills for "redemption" missions that often pit them against mutual enemies while testing fragile alliances.
  • Hunter (Robyn Canmore): The squad's leader and primary recruiter, Robyn Canmore—eldest of the Canmore siblings and last active Hunter—shifts from gargoyle extermination to selective alliance after confronting the nuances of gargoyle society in prior canon events. She enforces team discipline, driven by personal atonement for her family's vendetta, and directs operations from a strategic vantage, often clashing with the Director's shadowy authority.
  • Dingo (Harry Monmouth): An Australian mercenary formerly affiliated with the cybernetically enhanced Pack group, Dingo joins post-reformation, partnering inseparably with his sentient robotic suit. His combat expertise and evolving moral compass position him as a reluctant field operative, seeking genuine self-improvement amid missions that exploit his mercenary past.
  • Matrix: Dingo's autonomous AI companion, manifested as a shape-shifting nanotechnology suit capable of defensive energy projection and self-repair, evolves from a programmed tool to a semi-independent entity with ethical dilemmas. Integrated into the squad for tactical support, Matrix provides reconnaissance and barriers during assaults, its loyalty tied primarily to Dingo despite broader team directives.
  • Yama: A disciplined gargoyle from Japan's Ishimura Clan, banished for betraying clan secrecy to outsiders in a prior storyline, Yama embodies bushido principles in combat, wielding a katana with precision gliding and stone-form resilience. Recruited for his warrior heritage, he views squad service as honorable restitution, mediating conflicts with stoic restraint.
  • Fang: A mutate hybrid (part human, part electric eel, part shark) created via genetic experimentation at Gen-U-Tech, Fang's sarcastic demeanor and energy-blast abilities make him the team's disruptive wildcard, compelled into service after escaping captivity. Lacking true reformist zeal, he complies under duress, prioritizing self-preservation over collective redemption.

References

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