the immortal lives of fictional characters
Thomas couldn’t believe they put up a statue of Rocky outside the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Not because the location didn’t make sense — Rocky running up the museum’s steps is one of the most iconic scenes in movies history. (Well, in my own history with movies, at least.)
Rather, Thomas is incredulous that anyone would bother. He doesn’t think that fictional characters deserve to be immortalized as statues, and displayed in public forums.
I disagree.
If only to make a point, here is a brief and incomplete tour of fictional characters immortalized in statue form:
1) Rocky Balboa, at the Philadelphia Museum of Art. (Though a Philly cabbie told us recently that the statue has been moved? Boo.)
Rocky can also be found in the small Serbian village of Zitiste, a little ways north of Belgrade.
2) Ignatius J. Reiley from the novel A Confederacy of Dunces, beneath the clock where the first scene of the novel finds him. Formerly the entrance of D. H. Holmes Department store, now a Hotel on Canal Street. (Description from Wikipedia.)
3) Peter Pan. Apparently, there are seven statues of Peter Pan around the world; this is one in Brussels, Belgium.
4) Ralph Kramden from The Honeymooners, outside the Port Authority in NYC
5) Don Quixote, tilting at windmills in Spain
6) Special lucky strike extra, special for MT: Cartoon character Desperate Dan in Dundee, Scotland. Poet William McGonagall, the character’s creator, has been called “the world’s worst poet.”




The statue of Rocky used to be at the top of the steps at the Philadelphia Museum of Art. That was a temporary location, and the one seen in the movies Rocky III and Rocky IV.
The statue is now in its permanent location at the bottom of the steps, and is easily visible to pedestrians as they walk by.
well thank goodness it’s not too far away — thanks, mary jo!
Hans Christian Anderson’s Little Mermaid lives as a statue in Copenhagen too.
“Cartoon character Desperate Dan in Dundee, Scotland. Poet William McGonagall, the character’s creator, has been called the world’s worst poet.”
Epic fail, I’m afraid.
McGonagall died in 1902. Desperate Dan was created in 1937 by Scottish comic artist Dudley D. watkins.