A jester is a person who entertains using varied skills. These may include one or more of skills such as music, storytelling, juggling, acrobatics, joke telling and other similar skills. There have been many examples of jesters in history, fiction, and other mediums.

In history

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In writing and theatre

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In film and television

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  • Clopin, mischievous leader of the Parisian Roma who will defend his people at all costs in the film The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1996 film). He introduces the audience as a jester to the story, explaining how Quasimodo, the bell ringer from Notre Dame, got to be there. Michael Surrey served as the supervising animator for Clopin.
  • The Funny Man, a demonic jester from the British comedy horror film, Funny Man, with a varied and imaginative repertoire of homicidal techniques and an irreverent sense of humour.
  • Jester, Court jester of King Cradock in the TV series Jane and the Dragon.
  • Jester, the Harlequin puppet in the Puppet Master films
  • Kyoami, in Akira Kurosawa's film Ran
  • Timothy Claypole, character in the BBC children's television comedy programme Rentaghost of the 1970s/80s, was a jester (played by Michael Staniforth).
  • The Photojournalist from Apocalypse Now is often seen as a harlequin figure. In the novel Heart of Darkness the character of Marlowe meets a Russian wanderer whose clothes have been made from patches of various garments sewn together, giving him the appearance of a harlequin. The Russian has developed a fanatic admiration for Kurtz. In the film actor Dennis Hopper portrays this fanaticism as being mixed with the 1960s counter-culture spirit of the Vietnam era.
  • In the children's adventure game show Knightmare there were two jesters, Folly and Motley.

In comic books and animation

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  • In the Marvel Comics comic Daredevil, The Jester is the alter-ego of villain Jonathan Powers, who appears between issues #47 and 49.
  • The Jester is a superhero in the DC Comics universe.[4]
  • QuackerJack, a vicious jester with a weird obsession for toys in Disney's animated series Darkwing Duck.
  • In the Disney animated film The Hunchback of Notre Dame, the narrator, and rather fundamental character, was Clopin, a jester.
  • Merryman, leader of the Inferior Five in DC Comics, wears a jester costume.
  • Maytag, in the webcomic Flipside is a jester. She is normally very timid, but takes on the normal jester stereotype when she wears her cap 'n bells.
  • Allen Walker, in the manga and anime D.Gray-man, is given the title Crown Clown, also known as God's Clown, and carries a jester's mask.
  • DC Comics villain Harley Quinn derives her name and look from a harlequin jester. To a lesser extent, her boss, the Joker was based on a Jester from a Joker playing card.
  • Squidly, a squid jester from SpongeBob SquarePants, is found in the episode "Dunces and Dragons".
  • Spinel, a gem from Steven Universe: The Movie and Steven Universe Future. She was abandoned by Pink Diamond and left in the garden they used to play in for 6,000 years, causing her to break down and become insane when she found out about Pink Diamond's fate. Her bouncy animations are heavily sourced from rubber hose animation.
  • Fizzarolli, a club jester from Helluva Boss. He works for Asmodeus, owner of the popular club Ozzie's, in the Lust Ring of Hell.
  • Rascal/Joker, from Smile Precure. He is a sadistic character who loves to have fun and watch others fear. His only goal is to help Emperor Nogo to destroy Jubaland.
  • Pomni, the protagonist of The Amazing Digital Circus. She is the avatar assumed by a human who puts on a virtual headset and becomes trapped in the Digital Circus like many of the other characters, desperate to search for an exit to escape the game.
  • Mr. Jester/Oscar, the king of the country <Spamtopia> from the show Smiling Friends. He is insecure of how his eye looks, so he made it illegal to make direct eye contact in the country of <Spamtopia>.

In video games

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  • Chester- a candy-themed jester from Brawl Stars. He is a Legendary Brawler and has 5 different abilities.
  • Chuckles – jester in the Ultima series of role playing games who provides comic entertainment and plot hints.
  • Cicero – keeper from the Dark Brotherhood in The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim, who wears a jester's outfit and took on the persona of a jester after killing one.
  • Cleon – a star fairy jester in Bust-a-Move 4.
  • Clownpiece - a fairy jester who lives on the moon and serves as one of the many bosses in Touhou Project. She first appeared in Legacy of Lunatic Kingdom. Her clothing is similar to the American flag, and she carries a torch that drives anyone mad upon looking at the flame within it.
  • Daycare Attendant - an animatronic jester found in the Superstar Daycare in Freddy Fazbear's Mega Pizzaplex in Five Nights at Freddy's Security Breach. He has two different personalities depending on whether the lights are on or off - Sun, who's cheerful and energetic, and Moon, who's sadistic and demented. Surprisingly, both personalities carry on the Daycare Attendant's propensity for cleaning and following the rules.
  • Dhoulmagus – evil jester in the Dragon Quest VIII game by Square Enix.
  • Dimentio – evil megalomaniac magician in Super Paper Mario who wears a stylized jester costume and creates clever similes. He is one of the main villains of the game and attempts to make Mario and Luigi his slaves. He also wears an Italian Comedy Mask.
  • Fargus – in the platform game Pandemonium.
  • Fark- a robot Jester and rival to Spark meant to replace him in the first Spark game, who helps Spark defeat the clarity AI in Spark 3. Fark is playable in all 3 Spark games.
  • Feste – jester for the Duke's court in Dragon's Dogma.
  • Fiddle - a jester character who assists the player in Juilliard Music Adventure.
  • Harle – character in Chrono Cross who jests at expense of reality itself.
  • Hecklar – insane and sadistic court jester in Kronos Digital's fighting game Cardinal Syn.
  • Hyehehe - a hyena jester from My Singing Monsters which can be found on earth island. It plays an electronic organ using its ears and occasionally cackles to the song.
  • Jester – an alter-ego of Arkham, in Devil May Cry 3.
  • Jester – a major antagonist in Terry Cavanagh's Dicey Dungeons, who is later unlocked as a playable character.
  • Jester – A.K.A. Sarah Hawkins in the game UT3, fitting her name by making jests about the opponent or teammates.
  • Jester Zombie - a zombie jester from Plants vs. Zombies 2's Dark Ages, where they deflect physical projectiles from plants, such as peas, plasma balls, cabbage, etc.
  • Jevil - A secret boss of the first chapter of the video game Deltarune. He was once the court jester of Card Castle, until he began to see the world as a game. He was subsequently locked in a prison cell under the castle by his friend, Seam, as ordered by the king.
  • Jimbo – The only character in Balatro who speaks. He is one of many jokers and jesters featured in the game.
  • Joka - Joka, also known as "Joker", is a recurring character in the game series Klonoa.
  • Jollo – court jester of the Land of the Green Isles in King's Quest VI, and an essential ally to Alexander. He warns Alexander about Alhazred's genie and keeps him informed of the Vizer's scheming. In the long path of the game, he also is able to swap out the genie's lamp and get Alexander out of the dungeon once.
  • Kefka Palazzo – in Final Fantasy VI, wears the typical outfit and makeup of a jester.
  • Laughlyn – powerful spirit in Shadowrun RPG. He is a trickster spirit of technology in decay. Jake must bend Laughlyn to his will in order to defeat the dragon, Drake.
  • Malcolm – mad jester of The Legend of Kyrandia adventure games
  • Marx – jester from Kirby Super Star and Kirby Super Star Ultra used as a twist villain in Milky Way Wishes. Appears in other Kirby and Nintendo games
  • Shaco – evil jester of demonic origin who is a playable trap champion in the game League of Legends.
  • Spark- The main playable character of Spark the Electric Jester and its 3rd game Spark the Electric Jester 3.
  • Trivet – royal jester in the adventure game Blazing Dragons
  • Twinkle – a little jester girl in Bust a Move 3
  • Umlaut – petrified Jester Skull in CarnEvil who gives a brief rhyme to describe what's in store upon selecting a level. He is also a sub-boss at the final level of the game.
  • Vex - primary antagonist in Sackboy: A Big Adventure. He is a jester like creature made of cloth and born from chaos and fear, who wishes to plunge Craftworld into terror and despair through a nightmarish force called the Uproar.
  • Zorn & Thorn – pair of court jesters in the RPG Final Fantasy IX.
  • A nameless jester helps and hinders the player in the Infocom game Zork Zero.
  • Nights into Dreams... – featured two brightly colored jesters. Nights, who wore a purple jester outfit with a purple hat, each with carnival and dream like designs on them, and Reala, Nights' nemesis, who had a clownlike face, and wore red and sky blue, and red and black striped shoes with a red- and black-striped jester hat.
  • There is also a Jester in the tower in the 2007 Xbox 360 game Overlord. The player can kick the jester, knocking him a great distance, making cow bell sounds when he hits the floor. The Jester also follows the player around the tower, and in the tutorial he taunts the player. The player must repeatedly hurt the jester to finish the tutorial.
  • In the two Persona 2 video games, Joker wears clothing reminiscent of that of a jester.
  • Tony Hawk's Underground 2 features "The Jester" as a playable character after the level in New Orleans.
  • Jester is a character class in the MMORPG Flyff and in the RPGs Gauntlet: Dark Legacy and Darkest Dungeon.
  • Dragon Quest III – contains a Jester character class. In the American version of the game, the character class is renamed to Goof-off.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Conwy jester to take new job 'seriously'". BBC News. 2015-07-16. Retrieved 2016-10-14.
  2. ^ "Bristol juggler to become North Wales town's first official jester in 700 years". Bristol Post. 2015-07-19. Archived from the original on 2015-08-18. Retrieved 2016-10-14.
  3. ^ "William Sommers, d. 1560. Jester to Henry VIII". National Galleries of Scotland. Retrieved 7 April 2020.
  4. ^ Kooiman, Mike; Amash, Jim (2011). The Quality Companion: Celebrating the forgotten publisher of Plastic Man and the Freedom Fighters. TwoMorrows Publishing. p. 136. ISBN 978-1-60549-037-3.