Hefa Wolfe is a fictional character on the cartoon
Rocko's Modern Life and
the comic book series of the same name.
Tom
Kenny provided the character voice. His catchphrase, which can
be heard in the series' opening credits, is "That was a
hoot!"
Conception and development
Joe Murray, creator of
Rocko's Modern
Life, partially based Heffer on an adopted friend who enjoyed
bologna sandwiches and "had an
interesting take on life." Heffer first appeared on an ID spot
aired on
MTV in 1989; the ID spot depicts Heffer
as flying out of a television with the MTV logo branded on his
buttocks.
Murray originally wrote "Sucker for the Suck-O-Matic" as the pilot
episode; the executives decided that Heffer would be "a little too
weird for test audiences." Murray, instead of removing Heffer from
"Sucker for the Suck-O-Matic," decided to write "
Trash-O-Madness," an episode without Heffer,
as the pilot episode. Originally Murray did not include any
information about Heffer's origins in his pitch to Nickelodeon.
Vince Calandra wrote the Heffer's origin plotline in Season
1.
Murray
auditioned Kenny in a large casting call in Los Angeles
and chose him as the voice actor for
Heffer.
Jeff "Swampy" Marsh, a storyboard writer, says
that Heffer's right eye and left nostril are "notched at the
bottom" due to Murray's design style. Marsh added that the
animators found keeping the sides straight "a little tricky at
first" and that they referred to the design as "
Tombstone-shaped."
Character
Best friend of
Rocko, Heffer was raised by
wolves in Richhill, as seen by his
family
name, who originally were going to eat him, and thus began to
fatten him. Eventually the family grew to love Heffer, so they
instead raised him, not letting him know that he was adopted until
Rocko accidentally revealed the truth when the Wolfe Family invited
him for dinner. The mark which Heffer believed to be a "
birthmark" on his buttocks is actually the
plotting lines showing where the wolves were going to divide him.

Heffer Wolfe in the
Rocko's Modern
Life comic book
Besides eating a lot, Heffer being called a cow is another running
gag. Most characters would call him a "cow", then either his father
or himself would correct them by calling Heffer a steer. Heffer's
name is taken from the word "
heifer". Heffer
appears in
WordGirl.He like sandwiches from
"Lunch Lady Chuck".
The Nickelodeon UK page describes Heffer as a "devoted friend" who
"loves life."
Heffer's lack of fear mostly stems from stupidity instead of
genuine bravery. The
Nickelodeon South East Asia
website describes him as an "overgrown slob."
Heffer holds several jobs: tree farmer, greenskeeper at a golf
course, mail carrier, security guard, waiter at a café, and
cashier.
Despite being obese, he can drive; unlike Rocko he does not wear
seat belts. This, in fact, caused severe
damage to his father's car when he was driving to the store, and
decided not to put the seat belt on because he was too big for its
maximum length, and when a Chokey Chicken restaurant was being torn
down a few hundred yards ahead of him, the plastic Chicken mascot
came bouncing down the road and headed Heffer's way. He
successfully stopped and avoided collision. However, his massive
size along with the momentum of the sudden deceleration caused him
to plow right through the front of the car.
Despite his size, he can be very nimble at times, most notably when
he is roller-skating. At the local skating rink, he is known as
"The King," and performs his own skating routine at the request of
the patrons .
It is
revealed in an episode that Heffer's biological father is still
alive with a girl cow named Joyce living in a trailer in the
Canoga Park
section of the San Fernando Valley
region of Los Angeles
, California
, United
States
. However, Heffer's father seems to have very
little patience for his son, even to the point of dropping the
short-tempered bombshell that "your mother's a car seat in
Illinois."
Jeffrey P. Dennis of the
Journal of Popular Film
& Television wrote the "The Same Thing We Do Every
Night: Signifying Same-Sex Desire in Television Cartoons" article;
in it he says that Heffer's friendship is "often coded" as a
homosexual desire for Rocko; Dennis said that Heffer easily talks
to "female knockouts that turn heterosexual Rocko into a bumbling
idiot," does not date, and expresses jealousy when Rocko makes new
friends.
References
- " Cow-fidential Information," Nickelodeon
- " Character Museum," Joe Murray Studio
- " Lisa (Kiczuk) Trainor interviews Joe Murray, creator of
Rocko's Modern Life," The Rocko's Modern Life FAQ
- " February 2, 2009." Joe Murray Studio.
Retrieved on February 5, 2009.
- Maestri,
George. Digital Character Animation 3. 248.
- " Dan Abrams' interview with Jeff "Swampy" Marsh,"
The Rocko's Modern Life FAQ
- " Heffer," Nickelodeon UK
- " Characters" of Rocko's Modern Life
Page 2, Nickelodeon Australia
- "Wallaby on Wheels," Rocko's Modern Life
- Dennis, Jeffrey P. " The Same Thing We Do Every Night: Signifying Same-Sex
Desire in Television Cartoons." Journal of Popular Film
& Television. Fall 2003. Volume 31, Issue 3. 132-140.
9p, 3bw. Within the PDF document the source info is on p. 137
(6/10)
External links