OUT OF CHARACTER INFORMATION
Player Name: Bii
Player Journal:
biichan
Age: 31, sob
Contact: grandhighbiichama on aim,
obiisama
Characters Played: Wind Whistler
IN CHARACTER INFORMATION
Name: Reginald Jeeves
Canon: Jeeves & Wooster
OU/AU/OC: OU
Canon Point: Post Series
History: Finally, a character I can just wiki-link for (As an extra note, I should probably mention that I headcanon Jeeves' parents to have been In Service themselves.)
Personality: By all rights, Jeeves ought to be a criminal mastermind. He's got the brains for it. He's got the temperament for it. He's certainly got a certain moral flexibility which is invaluable for if you're going to try to take over the world. But instead of using his brain to rise above the station he was born into, Jeeves pursued a career as a valet, eventually coming into the employ of one Bertie Wooster, a good-natured young man whom Jeeves himself has termed “mentally negligable.”
Why does he do it? Bertie refers more than once to Jeeves' feudal spirit and it's probably got something to do with it. Jeeves seems to believe in the social order, enough that he chooses to reinforce it rather than circumvent it. Also, I suspect in part that Jeeves realizes how amazingly stressful it would be to use his powers of control and manipulation on the public at large and would rather stick to controlling one person utterly: that person being Mr Bertram Wilberforce Wooster. He manages Bertie and his life flawlessly. If Jeeves has a hankering for foreign climes, somehow events in Britain will reach a head to necessitate the two of them going on a long sea voyage. If Bertie adopts some fashion decision that Jeeves disapproves of (gold-buttoned mess jackets, moustaches) it will be banished by the end of the caper. If Bertie gets himself engaged to another girl again, well! She too will be dispatched into the arms of some other swain.
Jeeves, it must be said, is a very possessive fellow. And Mr Wooster is undoubtably his. There is no need at all for a woman in their comfortable bachelor existence. (Canon, of course, does not specify why he feels this way but like Bertie's mun I headcanon that Jeeves is what was then delicately referred to as 'sexually inverted' and harbors some tender feelings for his employer.)
What else? Hm. Jeeves has impeccable and exacting fashion tastes, if a tad conservative. Dress that falls outside what he deems appropriate irks him. He considers himself to be somewhat of a philosopher and holds the works of Spinoza particularly close to his heart. He enjoys fishing. He also enjoys traveling—Bertie refers to it as Jeeves' 'viking strain.' And he is polite even during the most trying of circumstances.
Strengths: Jeeves is clever. He's incredibly clever. He seems to know everything. He's also very, very good at masterminding events to his own ends. If he wanted to take over the world, he probably could. He's very good at fishing (to feed that big brain of his) and most other physical tasks and is quite strong. He has an impeccable sense of what is appropriate attire. He is amazingly good at entering rooms without making a sound. He also can make a pretty awesome hangover cure. And in his own way he is incredibly loyal, as witnessed by how he removed the passages about Bertie from the Junior Ganymede club book.
Weaknesses: Honestly? I see Jeeves as a pretty selfish dude. His main priority is that he can orchestrate events to fall out to benefit him first, Mr Wooster second, and everyone else third. (That his manipulations do end up usually benefiting most everyone concerned is a testament to his skill in them.) Coupled with this, Jeeves has an incredibly controlling nature. He can be incredibly passive-aggressive in his dealings with Bertie (especially on the subject of articles of clothing) and is not above putting his employer through uncomfortable circumstances to teach him a lesson. (See: Right Ho, Jeeves, “Bertie Wooster Changes His Mind”, and any number of other stories from the Wodehouse canon.)
Possessions: A pony-tailored version of the upper half of his normal valet's togs, a book of philosophy by Spinoza
Pony/Animal Type: Earth pony!
Cutie Mark: A hoof holding a serving tray
Pony Picture: Drawn by Terri who is a darling
SAMPLES
First Person: Here on Dear Mun
Third Person: Here in the test drive
Player Name: Bii
Player Journal:
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Age: 31, sob
Contact: grandhighbiichama on aim,
Characters Played: Wind Whistler
IN CHARACTER INFORMATION
Name: Reginald Jeeves
Canon: Jeeves & Wooster
OU/AU/OC: OU
Canon Point: Post Series
History: Finally, a character I can just wiki-link for (As an extra note, I should probably mention that I headcanon Jeeves' parents to have been In Service themselves.)
Personality: By all rights, Jeeves ought to be a criminal mastermind. He's got the brains for it. He's got the temperament for it. He's certainly got a certain moral flexibility which is invaluable for if you're going to try to take over the world. But instead of using his brain to rise above the station he was born into, Jeeves pursued a career as a valet, eventually coming into the employ of one Bertie Wooster, a good-natured young man whom Jeeves himself has termed “mentally negligable.”
Why does he do it? Bertie refers more than once to Jeeves' feudal spirit and it's probably got something to do with it. Jeeves seems to believe in the social order, enough that he chooses to reinforce it rather than circumvent it. Also, I suspect in part that Jeeves realizes how amazingly stressful it would be to use his powers of control and manipulation on the public at large and would rather stick to controlling one person utterly: that person being Mr Bertram Wilberforce Wooster. He manages Bertie and his life flawlessly. If Jeeves has a hankering for foreign climes, somehow events in Britain will reach a head to necessitate the two of them going on a long sea voyage. If Bertie adopts some fashion decision that Jeeves disapproves of (gold-buttoned mess jackets, moustaches) it will be banished by the end of the caper. If Bertie gets himself engaged to another girl again, well! She too will be dispatched into the arms of some other swain.
Jeeves, it must be said, is a very possessive fellow. And Mr Wooster is undoubtably his. There is no need at all for a woman in their comfortable bachelor existence. (Canon, of course, does not specify why he feels this way but like Bertie's mun I headcanon that Jeeves is what was then delicately referred to as 'sexually inverted' and harbors some tender feelings for his employer.)
What else? Hm. Jeeves has impeccable and exacting fashion tastes, if a tad conservative. Dress that falls outside what he deems appropriate irks him. He considers himself to be somewhat of a philosopher and holds the works of Spinoza particularly close to his heart. He enjoys fishing. He also enjoys traveling—Bertie refers to it as Jeeves' 'viking strain.' And he is polite even during the most trying of circumstances.
Strengths: Jeeves is clever. He's incredibly clever. He seems to know everything. He's also very, very good at masterminding events to his own ends. If he wanted to take over the world, he probably could. He's very good at fishing (to feed that big brain of his) and most other physical tasks and is quite strong. He has an impeccable sense of what is appropriate attire. He is amazingly good at entering rooms without making a sound. He also can make a pretty awesome hangover cure. And in his own way he is incredibly loyal, as witnessed by how he removed the passages about Bertie from the Junior Ganymede club book.
Weaknesses: Honestly? I see Jeeves as a pretty selfish dude. His main priority is that he can orchestrate events to fall out to benefit him first, Mr Wooster second, and everyone else third. (That his manipulations do end up usually benefiting most everyone concerned is a testament to his skill in them.) Coupled with this, Jeeves has an incredibly controlling nature. He can be incredibly passive-aggressive in his dealings with Bertie (especially on the subject of articles of clothing) and is not above putting his employer through uncomfortable circumstances to teach him a lesson. (See: Right Ho, Jeeves, “Bertie Wooster Changes His Mind”, and any number of other stories from the Wodehouse canon.)
Possessions: A pony-tailored version of the upper half of his normal valet's togs, a book of philosophy by Spinoza
Pony/Animal Type: Earth pony!
Cutie Mark: A hoof holding a serving tray
Pony Picture: Drawn by Terri who is a darling
SAMPLES
First Person: Here on Dear Mun
Third Person: Here in the test drive