Meet the Cast
Charles Ryder
Charles and SebastianTalk about an enigmatic relationship. These two meet when Sebastian pukes into Charles’s bedroom window. Charles is vehemently warned against him and in fact the entire F...
Lord Sebastian Flyte
Poor Sebastian. He goes from a beautiful, youthful, happy, and oblivious lad of nineteen to a depressed, alcoholic, self-loathing would-be caretaker of dying lepers. What happened? Let’s star...
Lady Julia Flyte
First and foremost, Julia is beautiful. Everyone defines her this way, from Anthony’s mention of her "flawless Florentine Quattrocento beauty" to Charles’s succinct "unhurried, exquisit...
Lady Marchmain
Lady Marchmain seems perfectly nice, doesn’t she? She’s pious, refined, concerned for her children’s well-being, and dealing quite wonderfully with the fact that her husband left...
Lord Marchmain
Until he comes home to Brideshead Castle to die, most of what Charles (and we) knows about Lord Marchmain is second hand. It starts with Anthony early in the novel, who tells the story of Marchmain...
Mr. Ryder (Charles’s Father)
Everything is subtext with Charles’s father. Dry, sarcastic, and slightly mean subtext, but still. He’s not around for many scenes in the novel, but his interactions with Charles are so...
Anthony Blanche
Anthony Blanche is one of the most colorful characters you’ll meet in Shmoop Literature. "A nomad of no nationality," "the aesthete par excellence," and a "fine piece of cookery," Anthony pra...
The Earl of Brideshead
Brideshead is an unusual and unique individual with "a gravity and restraint" beyond his years. Anthony describes him as "something archaic, out of a cave that's been sealed for centuries." He does...
Lady Cordelia Flyte
If you’ve read any of our other "Character Analyses," you know by now that Cordelia is one wise old bird – especially considering that she’s a child for the majority of Brideshead...
Mr. Samgrass of All Souls
Samgrass is the fly in the Oxford ointment. He’s like long-distance parenting for Sebastian on behalf of Lady Marchmain. In short, he spoils all the good alcoholic fun while the boys are away...
Rex Mottram
It’s easy to see why Julia is drawn to Rex. He’s a bit older and more mature than the boys she’s dated, he’s well-off, he’s mysterious, politically connected, lavishes...
Boy Mulcaster
Boy Mulcaster is essentially an ill-mannered rich kid. When Anthony tells the story of him and his friends in colored tailcoats threatening to throw him in Mercury, we know that Boy has just come f...
Celia Mulcaster
Charles keeps us in the dark for ages about the identity of his wife. He doesn’t even officially clue his reader into the fact that he's married; he just casually mentions that he has a wife...
Kurt
Kurt is Sebastian’s German friend whom he takes up with once he leaves England. We first hear of Kurt through Anthony (what else is new), who describes him as "a great clod of a German who'd...
Hooper
Ryder’s new platoon commander.
Lunt
Charles’s servant at Oxford.
Hardcastle
The man from whom Sebastian borrows a car. Repeatedly.
Jasper
Charles’s overbearing cousin, who attends Oxford and is a few years older than Charles.
Mr. Collins
Mr. Collins is one of Charles’s first term friends at Oxford.
Mr. Partridge
Mr. Partridge is one of Charles’s first term Oxford friends.
Hobson
Hobson is Sebastian’s servant at Oxford.
Duc de Vincennes
Duc de Vincennes is the man whose wife (Stefanie) Anthony claims to have had a thing with.
Stefanie
The Duchess Anthony claims to have had a thing with.
Sir Adrian Porson
Sir Adrian Porson is a pet and an acquaintance of Lady Marchmain.
Monsignor Bell
One of Lady Marchmain’s people at Oxford. Monsignor Bell terrorizes Sebastian.
Hayer
Hayer is a servant at the Ryder home.
Melchior
Charles’s cousin. Melchior once ran out of money and had to run to Australia, or so Mr. Ryder claims.
Mrs. Abel
Mrs. Abel is the cook at the Ryder home.
Phillipa
Mr. Ryder’s sister. Phillipa lived with her brother and Charles after Charles’s mother died.
Jorkins
One of Charles’s boyhood friends.
Sir Cuthbert
An old friend and dinner guest of Mr. Ryder’s. His presence is designed specifically to torment Sebastian.
Lady Orme-Herrick
An old friend and dinner guest of Mr. Ryder’s. Her presence is designed specifically to torment Sebastian.
Miss Gloria Orme-Herrick
An old friend and dinner guest of Mr. Ryder’s. Her presence is designed specifically to torment Sebastian.
Wilcox
The butler at Brideshead Castle.
Father Phipps
A priest that comes by Brideshead estate during the summer.
Francis Xavier
Cordelia’s pig.
Plender
Lord Marchmain’s valet in Venice.
Ned
Lady Marchmain’s deceased brother.
Fanny Rosscommon
Lady Marchmain’s sister-in-law. Julia later refers to her as her aunt, Lady Rosscommon.
Borethus
Borethus is the guy Rex knows in Zurich who can supposedly cure alcoholism.
Charlie Kilcartney
Charlie Kilcartney is the guy that Borethus supposedly cured of alcoholism.
The Strickland-Venables
The neighboring family to the Flytes.
Brenda Champion
Rex’s bit o’ stuff (or mistress).
Father Mowbray
The priest who converts Rex to Catholicism so he can marry Julia.
Aunt Betty
One of Cordelia’s aunts.
Sarah Evangeline Cutler
Rex’s first wife.
Jean de Brissac la Motte
The fake name of a "Belgian futurist" who hangs out with Charles and his friends during the spring of 1926 in London.
Nada Alopov
One of Anthony’s friends in Marseilles, who provides something "more intoxicating" than alcohol. Maybe a male prostitute, maybe a drug dealer…
Jean Luxmore
One of Anthony’s friends who visits this Alopov character.
Bill Meadow
Charles and Boy join Meadow’s flying squad in London.
Johnjohn
Celia and Charles’s son.
Caroline
Celia and Charles’s daughter.
Bertha Van Halt
Caroline Ryder's godmother.
Sir Joseph Emden
The architect commissioned by Celia to turn the barn into a studio for Charles.
Mrs. Stuyvesant Oglander
One of the guests at Celia’s party aboard the ship. Later Mrs. Stuyvesant Oglander turns out to be a friend of Anthony Blanche’s mother.
Mr. Kramm
The Hollywood man at Celia’s party.
Senator Stuyvesant Oglander
The Senator sits with Charles and Celia at the Captain’s table at dinner aboard the ship.
Margot
A friend of Celia’s who throws a party after Charles’s private exhibition.
Tom
The man who hits on Charles and/or Anthony at the seedy bar.
Grizel
A woman who keeps company with Rex and his crowd; Charles calls her a "rake."
Beryl Muspratt
Brideshead’s eventual wife.
Robin
Celia’s rebound boyfriend after her separation from Charles.
The Superior
The head monk at the monastery in Tunis which takes in Sebastian.
Father Mackay
The priest Brideshead gets to give his father the last rites.
The Quartering Commandant
The army officer who shows Charles around Brideshead estate in the novel’s epilogue.