List of fictional frogs and toads

Summary

This list of fictional frogs and toads is one of a series of lists of fictional animals. Frogs and toads have frequently appeared in both children's and adult's literature and other fictional works.[1][2]

This list is restricted solely to notable frog and toad characters from notable works of fiction. Characters that appear in multiple media will have separate listings for each separate appearance, while instances in which a character has appeared in several separate works in a single medium, only the earliest will be recorded here.

Animation edit

This section lists frog and toad characters from animated works including CGI, stop-motion animation, traditional animation including television shows and feature-length films.

Name Show/Film Notes
Aogaeru Spirited Away A minor character in the film. This frog spirit guards the bridge that Haku and Chihiro must cross when Chihiro has first arrived in this spirit world, and has to go meet with Yubaba.
Bev Bighead Rocko's Modern Life Bev "wears the pants" in the family; she demonstrates a loud, domineering manner and she keeps Ed in line. Despite all these, though, she has shown that she loves her husband very much. Beneath her ugly exterior and grating voice, she is friendly, and a closet party animal[3]
Byonko Zatch Bell! A mamodo frog who serve the main villain Milordo-Z. He have a yellowish-green spellbook and a slime-based spells.
Ed Bighead Rocko's Modern Life Ed Bighead is an employee at a large corporation. He is cruel, petty, bossy, and has a terrible temper; in fact, the only people that he fears are his wife, Bev and his boss, Mr. Dupette. He particularly dislikes Rocko and his friends, Heffer Wolfe and Filburt. He usually yells at anyone he sees, and grumbles bitterly under his breath at any situation he finds even slightly troubling.
Flip Fiddlesticks an animated cartoon character created by American cartoonist Ub Iwerks. He starred in a series of cartoons produced by Celebrity Pictures and distributed through Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer from 1930 to 1933. The series had many recurring characters besides Flip, including Flip's dog, the mule Orace, and a dizzy neighborhood spinster.The series was revived in the 1960s television show, Hoppity Hooper
Frog WordWorld A very intelligent and clever WordFriend. He is hydrophobic due to the water's slimy texture on his skin, and tends to say "Water, yuck." He is also the least courageous of all the other his WordFriends and lives in a LOG.
Hypnotoad Futurama A large toad with pulsating, multicolored eyes, which emits a loud, ominous buzzing noise. It has the power to hypnotize almost any living thing at will, even mass numbers of creatures. The Hypnotoad first appeared in "The Day the Earth Stood Stupid", in which it hypnotized a flock of sheep to herd themselves into a pen and close the door behind them, the panel of judges to win the pet show and then the audience of the pet show to force their approval of that victory. It later acquired its own television show, Everybody Loves Hypnotoad, in which it hypnotizes the audience. The Futurama: Bender's Big Score DVD includes a full 22-minute episode.[4][5][6]
Jason Funderberker Over The Garden Wall Jason Funderberker (aka Kitty, Wert, Wert Jr, George Washington, Mr. President, Benjamin Franklin, Dr. Cucumber, Greg Jr, Skipper, and Ronald) is Greg's pet frog throughout Over The Garden Wall. Greg continually renames the frog throughout the series, before eventually settling on Jason Funderberker in the final episode.
Michigan J. Frog Looney Tunes A male frog who wears a top hat, carries a cane, sings pop music, ragtime, Tin Pan Alley hits, and other songs from the late 19th and early 20th century while dancing and performing acrobatics in the style of early 20th century vaudeville. Also formally served as the mascot for the former WB Television Network.
Jean-Bob The Swan Princess Jean-Bob is a frog who came from France. He is Odette's, Derek's, Speed's Alise's, Prince Li's, Princess Mei Li's Chen Ru's and Puffin's friend.
King Harold Shrek 2 & Shrek the Third Harold is a frog who was turned into a human by the Fairy Godmother's magic, meaning he could live out his life as king of Far Far Away. Harold is a human for the majority of the second Shrek film, until the end where the Fairy Godmother is vaporized, meaning he is returned to his natural state of being a frog. Harold dies near the beginning of Shrek the Third, not before informing Shrek of another possible heir to the throne, Arthur Pendragon.
Kermit the Frog The Muppets
Keroppi Hasunoue Sanrio A small frog with a v-shaped mouth and big eyes who is friends with Hello Kitty and lives in Donut Pond.
Principal Pixiefrog My Gym Partner's a Monkey As his last name implies, he is a Pixie Frog. As a strict but fair administrator he runs a tight ship, which is somewhat remarkable considering he could easily be squashed underfoot by most of his students and the rest of the faculty.
Slippy Toad Star Fox Inventor and mechanic on the "Star Fox" team.
Sprig Plantar Amphibia A 10-year-old pink male anthropomorphic frog sporting green aviator goggles, an open jacket and matte black shorts. He serves as a guide, friend and surrogate brother for protagonist Anne Boonchuy after she gets trapped in Amphibia. He is an energetic frog who has an affinity for the fiddle and uses a slingshot as a weapon.
The Toad Flushed Away A big, pompous amphibian wanting the entire rat population to be killed off so he can make room for his hundreds of offspring. Voiced by Ian McKellen.

Literature edit

Name Book Author
Brer Bull-Frog The Complete Tales of Uncle Remus Joel Chandler Harris
Bufo the toad The Kine Saga A. R. Lloyd
Bunda the Marsh Frog The Kine Saga A. R. Lloyd
Dan'l Webster The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County Mark Twain
Frog and Toad Frog and Toad Arnold Lobel
Genesis Frog Homestuck Andrew Hussie
Glubbslyme Glubbslyme Jacqueline Wilson
Grandfather Frog Thornton Burgess Bedtime Stories Thornton Burgess
Jeremy Fisher The Tale of Mr. Jeremy Fisher Beatrix Potter
Mr. Toad The Wind in the Willows Kenneth Grahame
Old Mr. Toad Thornton Burgess Bedtime Stories Thornton Burgess
Oykamon Mariel of Redwall Brian Jacques
Toad The Animals of Farthing Wood Colin Dann
Trevor Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone J.K. Rowling
Froggy The Land of Stories Chris Colfer

Comics edit

Name Comic/Manga Creator
Genghis Frog Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Kevin Eastmen / Peter Laird
Keronians Keroro Gunso/Sgt. Frog Mine Yoshizaki
Pepe Boy's Club Matt Furie[7]

Television edit

Name Television Show
Big Old Bullfrog Bear in the Big Blue House
Kermit the Frog Sesame Street and The Muppet Show
Robin, Kermit's nephew The Muppet Show
Leapovitch the Frog, Jim Henson's Animal Show
Mavis the Frog Jim Henson's Animal Show

Music edit

Name Musical piece Artist Notes
Crazy Frog A frog who originated from ringtone TV spots for Jamba! and was later featured in a series of CGI-animated music videos where it covered well known pop hits. The character was insanely popular in the mid-2000s.

Video games edit

Name Game
Battletoads Battletoads
Slippy Toad Star Fox
Superfrog[8] Superfrog
KeroKeroKeroppi Kero Kero Keroppi no Bouken Nikki, Kero Kero Keroppi no Daibouken, and Sanrio World Smash Ball!
Pyribbit Kirby Triple Deluxe
Poison Croakom Kirby and the Forgotten Land

Mythology edit

Name Myth
Heqet Egyptian mythology
Kek Egyptian mythology
Jiraiya Japanese folklore
Tiddalik Australian indigenous mythology
Water leaper Welsh folklore
Loveland frog American folklore

Other edit

Name Notes
Crapaud Heraldic beast
Dat Boi Internet Meme
Pepe the Frog Internet meme
Coleman Frog Fredericton giant famous frog

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Eccleshare, Julia (16 November 2015). "The best frogs in children's books". The Guardian. Retrieved 21 April 2023.
  2. ^ Frost, S. W. (1932). "The Amphibian in Art and Literature". The Scientific Monthly. pp. 369–375. Retrieved 21 April 2023.
  3. ^ "Characters" of Rocko's Modern Life Page 2, Nickelodeon Australia
  4. ^ DVDtalk .com, Review: Futurama: Bender's Big Score
  5. ^ CHUD.com, A film site for the brilliant Archived 2008-01-16 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ TVshowsondvd.com Archived 2012-05-09 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ "Matt Furie". lambiek.net. Retrieved 30 June 2018.
  8. ^ Guttery, Miles; King, Phil (June 1993). "Superfrog". Amiga Force. No. 6. pp. 52–53. Retrieved 24 April 2023.