David Puddy
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
David Puddy, usually just called Puddy, is a fictional character played by Patrick Warburton in the situation comedy Seinfeld. He is the on-and-off boyfriend of the character Elaine Benes.
[edit] Biography
Puddy first appears in the season six episode "The Fusilli Jerry" as Jerry's mechanic and Elaine's current boyfriend. As Jerry had been friends with Puddy before he went out with Elaine, he had shared a sexual technique with Puddy known as "The Move". Elaine is disturbed when Puddy uses this distinctive maneuver on her, as she had previously dated Jerry and experienced the same move before.
Elaine and Puddy break up and make up so frequently it becomes inconsequential. In season nine's "The Butter Shave", the two manage to break up, get back together again, and break up again, all during the course of an international flight. In the season nine episode "The Burning", Elaine reveals a motive for reuniting with the blunt mechanic: "I needed to move a bureau." One reason Elaine once gave for breaking up with Puddy was, "I think his answering machine is broken, so I just gave up" ("The Wizard").
Elaine finds Puddy attractive for his masculine qualities, such as his height, his deep voice, and the fact that he works with his hands; early in their relationship, Elaine compares him to Stanley Kowalski. She is turned off by his lackadaisical attitude toward relationships and his odd behaviors, such as face and body painting in support of New Jersey Devils ice hockey games and his love of Arby's. She also finds his religious beliefs problematic, as she herself is not religious. He is untroubled by her lack of faith, and reminds her that she is going to hell. Puddy is also a recovering mysophobe. He is also known for his catch phrase, "Yeah, that's right", delivered in a dead-pan manner with little or no emotion behind it.
Though Puddy originally appears as a mechanic, he is later promoted to salesman at a Saab dealership, after which Jerry tries to use him to get a good deal on a new car ("The Dealership").
When Puddy agrees with someone strongly enough, he likes to get that person to give him a high-five. Puddy is offended by people that use the term "grease monkey" to describe an auto mechanic.
He appears briefly in the series finale; as the four main characters are sentenced to jail, Elaine tells him, "Puddy, don't wait for me," to which he shrugs and nonchalantly replies, "Alright."
Seinfeld |
---|
Characters |
Main Characters: Jerry Seinfeld | George Costanza | Elaine Benes | Cosmo Kramer |
Related to Jerry: Helen Seinfeld | Morty Seinfeld | Uncle Leo | Kenny Bania | Sally Weaver | Dr. Tim Whatley |
Related to George: Estelle Costanza | Frank Costanza | Susan Ross | Mr. Wilhelm | Mr. Kruger | Lloyd Braun | George Steinbrenner |
Related to Elaine: J. Peterman | David Puddy | Mr. Lippman | Justin Pitt | Sue Ellen Mischke |
Related to Kramer: Newman | Mickey Abbott | Jackie Chiles | Bob Sacamano | Babs Kramer | Lomez |
Other: Soup Nazi | "Crazy" Joe Davola | Minor characters in Seinfeld |
Culture of the Seinfeld Universe |
Festivus | Master of Your Domain | Regifting List of fictional films in Seinfeld | Coffee Table Book About Coffee Tables |
Episodes |
List of Seinfeld episodes | The Seinfeld Chronicles |
Other |
List of Seinfeld references to actual people | Running gags in Seinfeld |