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  • List of The Big Bang Theory characters The American sitcom The Big Bang Theory, created

  • and executive produced by Chuck Lorre and Bill Prady, premiered on CBS on September

  • 24, 2007. The show initially centers on five characters: roommates Sheldon Cooper and Leonard

  • Hofstadter, two Caltech physicists; Penny, a waitress and aspiring actress who lives

  • across the hall; and Leonard and Sheldon's friends and co-workers aerospace engineer

  • Howard Wolowitz, and astrophysicist Rajesh Koothrappali. In Season 3, microbiologist

  • Bernadette Rostenkowski, and neuroscientist Amy Farrah Fowler are introduced, and later

  • become Howard's wife and Sheldon's girlfriend, respectively.

  • Over time, several supporting characters have been promoted to starring roles: Leslie Winkle

  • (season 1 recurring; season 2 regular; season 3 guest), a physicist colleague, and, at different

  • times, a lover of both Leonard and Howard; Bernadette Rostenkowski-Wolowitz (season 3

  • recurring; season 4-present regular), a microbiologist, Howard's fiancée and subsequent wife, and

  • former part-time waitress alongside Penny; neuroscientist Amy Farrah Fowler (season 3

  • guest; season 4 recurring; season 4-present regular), who joins the group after being

  • matched to Sheldon on a dating website; and comic book store-owner, Stuart Bloom (seasons

  • 2–5 recurring; season 6-present regular), who replaces Howard as Raj's best friend when

  • Howard is in space. The show also features numerous supporting characters, each of whom

  • plays a prominent role in a small group of episodes.

  • Main characters Main characters are divided into two groups,

  • original main characters and those who have been promoted to main character status since

  • season two. Original main characters

  • With the exception of injury to the actors, these characters have appeared in all episodes.

  • Leonard Hofstadter Dr. Leonard Leakey Hofstadter (Johnny Galecki)

  • is an experimental physicist with an IQ of 173 who is originally from New Jersey and

  • received his PhD at age 24, spending at least some of his time at Princeton University.

  • He shares an apartment in Pasadena with colleague and friend Dr. Sheldon Cooper. Unlike his

  • equally geeky friends, Leonard is interested and quite adept in building interpersonal

  • and social relationships with others. Compared to his friends he is relatively successful

  • with women. The writers have toyed with a romance between him and next-door neighbor

  • Penny since the pilot, with their unresolved sexual tension being a major force for drama.

  • Leonard dated Penny for most of Season 3, although they had dated briefly at the end

  • of Season 1. Aside from Penny, Leonard has had romantic relationships with coworker Leslie

  • Winkle, physician Stephanie Barnett, an unnamed French literature PhD, and North Korean spy

  • Joyce Kim. Following his breakup with Penny, Leonard began a relationship with Raj's sister

  • Priya in Season 4, and it is implied they had a brief sexual encounter before the start

  • of the series on an occasion when Priya visited Raj. The two attempted a long-distance relationship

  • after Priya moved back to India, but Leonard eventually broke up with her in Season 5 after

  • she admitted to cheating on him with her former boyfriend. In Season 5's "The Beta Test Initiation",

  • Leonard and Penny start dating anew though their relationship is rocky. Leonard's family

  • includes other accomplished scientists: his mother, Dr. Beverly Hofstadter, is a world-renowned

  • psychiatrist, his sister is a biologist and his father an anthropologist. Also, his brother

  • Michael is a Harvard law professor. It is mentioned in the season 2 episode "The Maternal

  • Capacitance" that Leonard is the least successful member of his family. He is also known to

  • be lactose intolerant and cannot process corn, as Sheldon states in "Pilot". Leonard also

  • plays the cello. The cause of the elevator not working is also due in part to Leonard

  • (and Sheldon) as the experimental rocket fuel he was developing was improperly mixed within

  • their apartment and Sheldon threw the canister into the elevator shaft right before the explosion.

  • Sheldon Cooper Dr. Sheldon Lee Cooper (Jim Parsons) is a

  • theoretical physicist, possessing a Bachelor of Science, Master of Science, PhD, an ScD,

  • and an IQ of 187. Originally from East Texas, he was a child prodigy, starting college at

  • the age of 11, and receiving his PhD at age 16. He is cold and calculating, and refrains

  • from any form of physical contact if possible. Sheldon exhibits a strict adherence to routine

  • to the point of exhibiting obsessivecompulsive disorder, performing specific activities on

  • specific days and specifics times, such as doing the laundry on Saturday night at 8:15.

  • Any disruption to this routine distresses him enormously. A running gag has him always

  • knocking on doors or other surfaces in a pattern of three knocks and one call repeated three

  • times, which he has to complete no matter what. He has forced Leonard into signing an

  • absurdly exhaustive "Roommate Agreement", and later enters a similar "Relationship Agreement"

  • with Amy Farrah Fowler. Sheldon has great difficulty identifying sarcasm and irony and

  • responding in kind, and a recurring topic is his efforts to acquire these skills. He

  • has also enormous difficulties lying or even keeping a secret, giving himself away with

  • wild facial tics and implausible statements. He is however fond of occasionally playing

  • a prank, which he typically punctuates with his trademark exclamation "Bazinga!". Sheldon

  • has a superiority complex and makes no effort to hide his contempt for other people's intellects,

  • often making highly inappropriate comments. A common joke is his inability to drive, although

  • he did receive a learner's permit. Sheldon loves comic books and science fiction like

  • his friends, but to the point of being obsessed about them, and is a fan of Spock, a fictional

  • character of the Star Trek franchise. Unlike Leonard and Raj who come from intellectual

  • families, Sheldon stands out from his own relatives. His father, George, whose death

  • pre-dates the series, was described as a stereotypical Texan who liked football, skeet shooting,

  • and heavy drinking, his mother, Mary, is a devout Evangelical Christian, who does not

  • possess anything near Sheldon's intellect (though she displays a great deal of common

  • sense); his twin sister, Missy, and as-yet unseen brother, George Jr., were both described

  • by Mary as being "dumb as soup". His fraternal twin sister who later has a baby boy makes

  • Sheldon an uncle. He meets Amy Farrah Fowler in the Season 3 finale and starts a highly

  • unusual and very slowly evolving relationship with her. Previous to this, he has also exhibited

  • some affinities with Leonard's equally unemotional mother.

  • Penny Penny (Her surname has not yet been revealed.)

  • (Kaley Cuoco), is Leonard and Sheldon's neighbor across the hallway. Originally from a small

  • town outside Omaha, Nebraska, she was a waitress and occasional bartender at the local Cheesecake

  • Factory until season 7 and is an aspiring actress. Her educational qualifications (she

  • had dropped out of community college) are a constant source of disparaging comments

  • from Sheldon. She has dated several men during the course of the series, including Kurt,

  • Stuart, and Zack, but her recurring love interest is Leonard. Leonard pursued Penny during season

  • 1; they dated briefly at the start of season 2 which led to some awkwardness; they began

  • dating again and were a couple for most of season 3 but she broke up with him after he

  • told Penny he loved her and she was not ready to reciprocate. Penny and Leonard begin to

  • date again "slowly" during the fifth season, though he does upset her by impulsively asking

  • her to marry him during intercourse. She has a tense relationship with Sheldon, whose nerdy

  • and obstinate personality often exasperate her, but they are ultimately good friends,

  • helping each other out in various situations. By season four, Penny also begins to socialize

  • more with Bernadette and Amy, who frequently hang out in Penny's apartment, go out together

  • and comfort each other. Bernadette and Amy are both shown to be simultaneously envious

  • of and threatened by Penny's more outgoing personality. Not much is known about Penny's

  • family, but it is mentioned in the series that her father, Wyatt (portrayed by Keith

  • Carradine), raised her like a boy, her mother smoked marijuana while she was pregnant with

  • her, her sister shot her husband while they were intoxicated and her brother is a meth

  • addict. Cuoco began being credited as Kaley Cuoco-Sweeting, starting with the season seven

  • episode, "The Convention Conundrum". Howard Wolowitz

  • Howard Joel Wolowitz (Simon Helberg) is an aerospace engineer at Caltech's Department

  • of Applied Physics with a Masters in Engineering who often hangs out at Leonard and Sheldon's

  • apartment. Unlike Sheldon, Leonard, and Raj, Howard has no doctorate, and often gets disparaged

  • as a result, especially by Sheldon. He defends this by pointing out that he has a master's

  • degree in Engineering from MIT and that the equipment he designs is launched into space,

  • unlike the theoretical work of his friends. In the season 5 finale, Howard goes to the

  • International Space Station on Expedition 31. Howard lives in Altadena with his domineering,

  • belittling and unseen mother who treats him like a child. While he sometimes expresses

  • irritation at this treatment, for the most part he appears to prefer it. Howard dotes

  • on his mother and participates in many of her daily routines. A recurring gimmick in

  • the series is Howard and his mother communicating with each other from different rooms by yelling,

  • a habit which Bernadette also adopts in later episodes. His father left them when he was

  • eleven, and Howard gets visibly distressed when the subject comes up. Howard fancies

  • himself a ladies' man and attempts pick-up lines whenever a woman is present, which often

  • come off as inappropriate and disgusting, although he has dropped this habit since he

  • started going out with Bernadette. He is Jewish, but he is not very serious about his faith,

  • and does not keep kosher. For example, when the group's favorite Chinese restaurant raised

  • the price of pork, Howard remarked, "It's getting tougher and tougher to be a bad Jew."

  • However, he does observe Sabbath and the Jewish holidays. In the pilot episode, it is shown

  • that he is a polyglot and can speak English, French, Mandarin, Russian, Arabic, and Farsi,

  • along with fictional languages like Klingon and Sindarin. He is asthmatic, allergic to

  • peanuts, almonds, and walnuts, prone to canker sores and pink eye, succumbs to seasickness,

  • has an incredibly high genetic risk of heart illness, and has transient idiopathic arrhythmia.

  • In Season 5 episode 4, it is shown that he knows American Sign Language. Howard dated

  • Bernadette briefly in season 3. After some difficulties, they resumed their relationship

  • in season 4, which culminated in their engagement. In the season 5 finale, Howard and Bernadette

  • are married on the roof of the apartment building shortly before he has to leave for Kazakhstan

  • where he is to be sent to the International Space Station.

  • Rajesh Koothrappali Dr. Rajesh Ramayan "Raj" Koothrappali (Kunal

  • Nayyar) is Howard Wolowitz's best friend, and yet another genius of the group; his name

  • is usually shortened to "Raj". He is originally from New Delhi, India, and he works in the

  • Physics department at Caltech, where his area of expertise is particle astrophysics. He

  • lives in an apartment in Pasadena. As with his friends, he is mutually involved with

  • and obsessed with science fiction and comic books in general, and is usually the one to

  • propose various real-life questions derived from such works, such as the functions of

  • the tails of the Na'vi in the film Avatar. He is also a fan of Harry Potter. Raj dislikes

  • India, Indian food, and Indian music, he also appreciates the Indian lullabies his mother

  • sang to him and the catchiness of Hindi phrases. Raj is a Hindu and believes in karma (reincarnation),

  • but eats beef. Raj is very shy around women, and finds himself unable to speak to or while

  • in the presence of them unless he drinks alcoholic beverages, or he believes he has done so.

  • When Penny or Bernadette is around, Raj usually whispers what he wants to say to Howard or

  • Leonard, who then repeats or responds to what Raj says out loud, although at times Howard

  • will embarrass him by saying something completely different and inappropriate. Despite this,

  • Raj has sometimes ended up in bed with women, leaving the other guys perplexed. Unlike his

  • friends however, Raj has many quite feminine interests such as reading Archie Comics and

  • Twilight and watching chick flicks such as Bridget Jones's Diary. A recurring joke in

  • the series has people, including his parents and Leonard's mother, speculating that Raj

  • might be gay due to his feminine interests and his close friendship with Howard, with

  • whom he has arguments similar to those of a married couple. However, Raj has always

  • stated that he is straight, but metrosexual. He has had an infatuation with Penny, and

  • secretly wrote love poems about Bernadette. Raj comes from a very wealthy family in India,

  • and often communicates with his parents, Dr. and Mrs. Koothrappali, via webcam. He has

  • a younger sister, Priya, who is mentioned to have dated Leonard briefly before the series

  • timeline began and dates him again in Season 4, breaking up with him in Season 5. After

  • making a brave speech about not being embarrassed to be single, Raj started seeing a shy and

  • sweet woman named Lucy. Lucy has many things in common with Raj including her fear of being

  • in large crowds. In the season 6 finale, Raj finds he can now talk to women without alcohol,

  • however he never stops talking. Additional main characters

  • The following characters have been promoted to main character status since season 2. Leslie

  • Winkle and Stuart Bloom are only credited in episodes in which they appear. Bernadette

  • and Amy Farrah Fowler were promoted to main character status in season 4, and their images

  • were included in the main title sequence from the first episode of season 6.

  • Leslie Winkle Dr. Leslie Winkle (Sara Gilbert) (appeared

  • in eight episodes total, four credited as main cast) is an experimental physicist who

  • works in the same lab as Leonard. In appearance, she is essentially Leonard's female counterpart,

  • equipped with the black framed glasses and sweat jackets. She also happens to have a

  • lazy eye. She is one of Sheldon's arch-enemies, due to their conflicting scientific theories

  • and Sheldon's strong misogyny. Though they both consider each other to be intellectually

  • inferior, Leslie is much wittier than Sheldon, regularly calling him "dumbass" and besting

  • him in their exchanges. Leslie has had casual relationships with Leonard and later Howard,

  • considering it a completely physical reaction to her body's cycles - her voice remains emotionless

  • even during moments of extreme physical intimacy. Leslie's final appearance was in the season

  • 3 finale, as the writers said they did not know how to work in the character full-time.

  • Leonard, distraught after Penny -- who after having broken up with Leonard got intoxicated,

  • had intercourse with him, then pushed him away -- asked for intercourse with Leslie.

  • Leslie responded, "Let me think about it," before slamming the door on him.

  • Bernadette Dr. (after "The Roommate Transmogrification")

  • Bernadette Maryann Rostenkowski-Wolowitz (Melissa Rauch): (has appeared in 64 episodes total,

  • 59 credited as main cast) is originally a waitress and coworker of Penny's at the Cheesecake

  • Factory, which pays the way for her graduate studies in microbiology per "The Creepy Candy

  • Coating Corollary". A recurring joke in the series is in reference to Bernadette and her

  • lab team handling dangerous or infectious specimens, leading to accidental by-products

  • or exposure to diseases. Instances include her trying to remember whether she washed

  • her hands while she worked with penicillin-resistant gonorrhea or creating a cold medicine that

  • may cause acidic tears. She is of Polish origin and Catholic upbringing, and is frequently

  • seen wearing a cross necklace. Most notably, she is one of the only characters in the show

  • who can control Sheldon, mostly because of her knowledge in dealing with stubborn children.

  • She is generally a friendly and good-natured individual, quickly making friends with Penny

  • and Amy, as well as the rest of the gang, but occasionally shows signs of mania, most

  • notably when she got into a fight with Amy over a parking space Sheldon and Howard were

  • fighting over, and when she explains her interest in microbiology as being because she feels

  • like a God to the bacteria she is studying. Bernadette was first introduced to Howard

  • by Penny after he invoked the "Girlfriend Pact". At first, she and Howard do not get

  • along, as they appear to have nothing in common. When they find out that they both have domineering

  • mothers, they feel a connection. Subsequently, Howard realizes Bernadette presents a real

  • opportunity to develop a lasting relationship and, in an impulsive manner, he proposes to

  • her. Although Bernadette rejects his offer, they remain a couple for a time after Howard

  • sings a heartfelt song for her at the Cheesecake Factory, which Penny finds quite embarrassing,

  • but Bernadette finds romantic. Eventually they break up when she discovers Howard using

  • his avatar to engage in cybersex with another online character in World of Warcraft. Bernadette

  • and Howard reconcile and resume their relationship, ultimately culminating in their engagement

  • in the season 4 episode, "The Herb Garden Germination". In "The Roommate Transmogrification",

  • she finally obtains her doctorate and is subsequently hired by a pharmaceutical company with a high

  • salary. This makes Howard jealous, especially after the rest of his friends taunt him about

  • his lack of a doctorate, and eventually leads to them having an argument after she purchases

  • a Rolex watch for Howard, which he interprets as her "rubbing in" the fact that she now

  • earns more than him. Howard later learns that Raj fantasizes about Bernadette and writes

  • love poems about her. Bernadette almost breaks up with Howard after hearing about his previously

  • unknown former sexual escapades that came out during his bachelor party from the episode

  • "The Stag Convergence". Howard and Bernadette are married (by the entire main cast) on the

  • roof of the apartment the day before he has to go into space. During season 6 the newlyweds

  • do have some bumps, including Howard readjusting to being back on earth, moving out of his

  • mother's house, and again when he spends too much on his collectibles hobby.

  • Amy Farrah Fowler Dr. Amy Farrah Fowler (Mayim Bialik) (has

  • appeared in 61 episodes total, 55 credited as main cast) is a neuroscientist (which corresponds

  • to Bialik's real-life Ph.D.), and Sheldon's love interest in the series. She has a Ph.D.

  • in neurobiology, with a research focus on addiction in primates and invertebrates, occasionally

  • mentioning such experiments as getting a capuchin monkey addicted to cigarettes or starfish

  • addicted to cocaine. Raj and Howard found Amy through an online dating site after secretly

  • setting up an account using Sheldon's name and information. The site matches her to Sheldon,

  • and the two share many similar traits. Once she and Sheldon meet, she becomes, as Sheldon

  • puts it, a girl who is his friend, but not his "girlfriend." They briefly ended their

  • friendship when they got into an argument over whose field of study was superior. The

  • two initially communicate via computer, but at the encouragement of the group, she starts

  • hanging out with the gang in person. Early on, Amy is, essentially, a female counterpart

  • to Sheldon. During this time, she is almost coldly rational while displaying little emotion,

  • is awkward in social situations ranging from endearing to embarrassing, is sometimes condescending

  • towards those of lesser scientific knowledge and has little or no desire for physical intimacy.

  • In Season Five, after Amy went out on a date with comic book store owner Stuart, Sheldon

  • decided to solidify their relationship as boyfriend/girlfriend with a 31-page "Relationship

  • Agreement". Amy began a campaign in "The Launch Acceleration" to increase Sheldon's feelings

  • for her by becoming more involved in his interests like video games and Star Trek, and treating

  • him as his mother had. During Howard and Bernadette's wedding ceremony, Amy is disappointed when

  • Sheldon says that he hopes that the two of them are as happy together as he is alone.

  • Later as Howard is launched into space, Amy is surprised when Sheldon spontaneously takes

  • her hand for comfort. Despite her best efforts, however, he repeatedly resists all of her

  • attempts at persuading him to engage in physical intimacy though they are regularly holding

  • hands at Amy's insistence at the beginning of season 6. By mid-season when Sheldon was

  • caring for her when she had the flu, Sheldon has some intimate views of Amy pushing him

  • further toward a normal relationship with her. She has also provided Sheldon with consoling

  • hugs and was slapped on the rear by an intoxicated Sheldon, telling everyone that she is a great

  • gal. Amy tried to move into his apartment when Leonard temporarily vacated it. After

  • being prodded by Barry Kripke about his girlfriend, he lied that they were having sex, though

  • he admitted to Penny that it might really happen between him and Amy and later admitted

  • it to Amy while also engaging in Dungeons and Dragons' intercourse game play. Nevertheless,

  • her frustration is frequently played for laughs from that point onward. In the Season 7 episode

  • "The Locomotive Manipulation", Sheldon sarcastically says he will give Amy the romance she wants,

  • then he passionately kisses Amy on the lips for the first time and enjoys it.

  • While early on Amy was ambivalent and often condescending towards Penny and Bernadette,

  • she later spends more time with them even at the expense of her time with Sheldon. As

  • her appearances have progressed, she has shed her strident, aloof personality for a much

  • more feminine and social one; although she retains some social awkwardness. Her feelings

  • for Sheldon have also grown considerably over time and considers him to be ideal in almost

  • every way, though she sometimes becomes as annoyed and frustrated by Sheldon's quirks

  • as his other friends do. Amy also intensely wants her relationship with Sheldon to progress

  • to include sexual intimacy, a drastic departure from her early days as a member of her circle

  • of friends. She has come to consider Penny a very close friend, sometimes referring to

  • her as her "bestie," and, on another occasion, admitting her entire social life revolves

  • around her. Penny herself is fond of Amy, on one occasion making an effort to salvage

  • their friendship after she accidentally hurt her feelings. To her dismay, however, Amy

  • often fails to grasp the concept of "girl talk," by talking about feminine hygiene and

  • anatomy when in her presence and at times being brutally honest. Also, Amy often demonstrates

  • an infatuation towards her, and occasionally Bernadette, to whom she is still rather condescending

  • though still considers a close friend. These including making inappropriate comments about

  • Penny's body and Bernadette's personality. After attending a science convention with

  • Bernadette in "The Hofstadter Insufficiency", Bernadette and Amy found common interests

  • and became better friends. When she feels that Leonard is interested in her, she admits

  • to Penny that she has a better shot getting her into bed than Leonard. In episode 8 of

  • the fifth season, she shows a disturbing enthusiasm on the whim that Bernadette's bridal shower

  • should consist of naked bridesmaids washing each other, and she proposes that the bachelorette

  • party consist of a Native American sweat lodge and women dancing around painting fertility

  • symbols on the bride's naked body. Her more arrogant side is shown in "The Pulled Groin

  • Extrapolation", where she is convinced that Leonard has fallen for her after he accompanies

  • her to a friend's wedding and gives her a chaste kiss on the cheek, even though he has

  • no such feelings. In "The Benefactor Factor", it is revealed that she is technically engaged

  • to Saudi Arabian Prince Faisal who resides in Riyadh, who is the source of much of her

  • lab's funding. Amy can also play the harp. In "The Scavenger Vortex," it is suggested

  • that she attended Harvard University. Stuart Bloom

  • Stuart Bloom (Kevin Sussman) (appeared in 23 episodes total, seven credited as main

  • cast) Stuart runs The Comic Center of Pasadena, the comic book store that the guys patronize.

  • Stuart is characterized by his low self-esteem and loneliness, which result in pathetic attempts

  • to engage with women and win favor with the main cast. This is despite owning his own

  • (albeit troubled) business, and being a talented portraiture artist who attended the Rhode

  • Island School of Design. During Stuart's first appearance, the guys brought Penny to the

  • store and he managed to ask her on a date. The date went fine until Stuart was dragged

  • into discussing comic books by Sheldon, leaving Penny bored. On a second date with Penny,

  • Stuart asked for Leonard's advice, but feeling threatened, Leonard ultimately gave him bad

  • advice. The date went fine, but when Penny was getting romantic with Stuart she mistakenly

  • called him "Leonard", leaving him devastated. Stuart was the partner of Wil Wheaton in a

  • trading card game tournament in which they defeated the team of Raj and Sheldon. As Stuart

  • runs a comic book store, he has an almost encyclopedic knowledge of comic books and

  • superheroes. In the Season 4 episode "The Toast Derivation", he mentions that he is

  • in financial trouble and that the comic book store is now also his home. In "The Justice

  • League Recombination", he states that he works 70 hours and clears an average of $1.65 per

  • hour after expenses, so his income per week would be $115.50. At Howard's bachelor party

  • during the "The Stag Convergence" episode, Stuart uses his toasting turn to tell Howard

  • how lucky he is by contrast to Stuart's own existence. In the Season 6 episode "The Bakersfield

  • Expedition," Penny asks Stuart for advice about comics, and he sullenly answers, "Don't

  • own a store that sells them." During "The Decoupling Fluctuation", Stuart becomes close

  • friends with Raj and starts hanging out with the gang as a replacement for Howard while

  • Howard is in space. Before accepting this, Sheldon quizzed Stuart as to where he went

  • to school (Stuart has an art degree). Sheldon concedes to allow Stuart to be in the group,

  • calling him "fake-Wolowitz" and equating his past career choice in art to Howard's as an

  • aerospace engineer as "equally ridiculous". When Howard returns from space Sheldon wants

  • to dismiss Stuart from the group but Raj objects. Leonard tie-breaks on the basis that they

  • are receiving a 20% discount in Stuart's store. Sheldon relents after Stuart offers to go

  • as high as 30%. Initially, Sheldon had stipulated that Stuart must act like Howard while in

  • the gang's presence. Recurring characters

  • These characters appear in several episodes. The list is sorted by alphabetic order using

  • first names. Alex Jensen

  • Alex Jensen (Margo Harshman): An attractive Caltech graduate student hired by Sheldon

  • to review his kindergarten and elementary school notebooks for any possible Nobel Prize

  • winning research. Amy is at first jealous until she sees Alex instead flirting with

  • an unresponsive Leonard. Later, when Leonard admits his jealousy regarding a writing partner

  • Penny is working with in a community college class, Alex attempts to flirt with him during

  • the conversation, then again later in a text message. Leonard appears completely oblivious

  • to her interest, however. In a later episode that season, Leonard finally realizes that

  • Alex is making advances toward him. While proclaiming his undying loyalty to Penny,

  • Leonard is flattered by Alex's interest to the point of giddiness. Alex's interest has

  • occasionally gotten the guys into big trouble. For example, in the episode titled "The Egg

  • Salad Equivalency", after Sheldon discovers that Alex has hit on Leonard, he tells Penny,

  • Amy, and Bernadette about the situation going on between Alex and Leonard, which angers

  • Penny because she is annoyed at how much Leonard enjoys Alex's attentions. Sheldon subsequently

  • lectures Alex, which includes relating his late father's offensive joke comparing women

  • to an egg salad sandwich. This only results in him getting called into Human Resources

  • after Alex feels offended by the talk and makes a complaint. Eventually, Sheldon has

  • to apologize to Alex and take a university-mandated online Sexual Harassment course. Sheldon then

  • forces Alex to take the online course for him, due to him feeling his own time is too

  • valuable to waste on it. Alex scores some points with Sheldon after he sends her out

  • to buy Amy a Valentine's Day gift, and Sheldon likes it so much that he keeps it for himself.

  • Barry Kripke Barry Kripke, Ph.D. (John Ross Bowie): A coworker

  • of Leonard and Sheldon's who frequently clashes with them. He works in plasma physics. Kripke

  • has a case of rhotacism in which he pronounces the letters "R" and "L" as "W" in much the

  • same way as Elmer Fudd from Looney Tunes and Gilda Radner in her "Baba Wawa" sketches.

  • However, as demonstrated in the season 5 episode "The Beta Test Initiation", Kripke is either

  • unaware of or unable to modify the way he speaks. In his first appearance, he pits his

  • robot, the Kripke Krippler, against the men's robot, M.O.N.T.E., in an unofficial robot

  • fight. On another episode, Sheldon attempts to befriend Kripke in order to gain access

  • to an open science grid computer to carry out research, but it turns out to be futile,

  • as Kripke has no control over the computer's usage time. Kripke continues his antagonism

  • towards Sheldon, when he pulls a prank on Sheldon when the latter is a guest on NPR's

  • Science Friday. Sheldon tries to befriend Kripke another time when he is feeling excluded

  • by his friends, but Barry connects more with the others in Sheldon's new proposed group.

  • Kripke purchases an iPhone with voice recognition technology, but due to his rhotacism, the

  • device is incapable of understanding his verbal "wequests", prompting him to deride it as

  • ineffective. In Season 5's "The Rothman Disintegration", Kripke and Sheldon battle over a retired professor's

  • office. At Howard's bachelor party during the "The Stag Convergence" episode, Kripke

  • uses his turn toasting to complain that there are no strippers at the party. In the Season

  • 6 episode "The Cooper/Kripke Inversion", Kripke and Sheldon are forced to work together on

  • a proposal involving fusion reactors, which involves an exchange of work. Sheldon is shocked

  • to discover that Kripke's work is more advanced than his own, and he tearfully admits as much

  • to Amy. Kripke assumes that Sheldon is in a sexual relationship with Amy, and that has

  • led to his work quality declining, and Sheldon does not deny it (although this appears to

  • be just a convenient excuse since his work is inferior to Kripke's). Kripke likely holds

  • a doctorate, as he is seen applying for tenure at the university in "The Tenure Turbulence."

  • Beverly Hofstadter Dr. Beverly Hofstadter (Christine Baranski):

  • Leonard's overly analytical mother, Beverly is a neuroscientist as well as a psychiatrist.

  • She is Sheldon's female equivalent regarding neurotically strict speech patterns, lack

  • of social conventions, and attention to detail. The two of them share an odd non-romantic

  • attraction to each other, which culminates in her kissing him after becoming intoxicated.

  • She reveals in one episode that she and Leonard's father "are getting a divorce". She had frequently

  • implied that the two have not had "coitus" since Leonard was conceived. She diagnosed

  • Raj with selective mutism and considers Raj and Howard's relationship to be an "ersatz

  • homosexual marriage". Beverly mentions that Leonard's brother and sister are more successful

  • in their respective fields than he is. Ironically, as displayed in "The Maternal Congruence"

  • episode, Sheldon is closer to Beverly than her own son is. In both 2009 and 2010, Baranski

  • was nominated for an Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series for this

  • role. She returns via Skype for the season 5 premiere, and in the season 7 episode "The

  • Raiders Minimization." Dr. Eric Gablehauser

  • Dr. Eric Gablehauser (Mark Harelik): The head of the Physics Department, Dr. Gablehauser

  • is the group's boss at the university. In his first appearance, he fired Sheldon after

  • Sheldon insulted his intelligence. Eventually, Sheldon was rehired because Gablehauser became

  • romantically interested in Mary Cooper, Sheldon's mother. Dr. Gablehauser was also responsible

  • for introducing child genius Dennis Kim to the university and for hosting the Physics

  • Bowl. Dr. and Mrs. Koothrappali

  • Dr. V. M. Koothrappali (Brian George) and Mrs. Koothrappali (Alice Amter): Raj's parents

  • in India, they communicate with their son via video chat and constantly try to arrange

  • dates for him. They want their son to marry a woman of Indian descent, and give them grandchildren.

  • Mrs. Koothrappali is especially worried that, despite Raj being old enough to marry, the

  • closest they have to a daughter-in-law is "that little Jewish boy Howard". Although

  • in many episodes Raj mentions that he grew up in poverty, his friends remind him of the

  • contrary by pointing out that Dr. Koothrappali is a gynaecologist, drives a Bentley and employs

  • servants, for which Raj replies that the Bentley is leased and that some of the servants are

  • children. The Koothrappalis enjoy Doogie Howser reruns, which are apparently new to India.

  • Other than Raj, they also maintain contact with Priya Koothrappali via video chat whenever

  • she is out of India. They also had some anger towards Leonard when it became apparent that

  • he was dating Priya without their knowledge. According to Sheldon, they are Richie Rich

  • rich. Lucy

  • Lucy (Kate Micucci): A woman who shows up at the party at the comic book store on Valentine's

  • Day for people who had no dates. She and Raj hook up and subsequently start dating. She

  • has social anxiety issues, which allows her and Raj to connect. On their date, she text

  • messages with Raj and, at the end, she offers to kiss him, but chickens out at the last

  • second. Raj and Lucy make up at the end of the episode and continue to date. In the sixth

  • season finale, Raj and Lucy start to get closer and Raj tries to introduce her to his friends.

  • Lucy feels too pressured and breaks up with Raj in a text message at the end of the episode.

  • She returns in the season 7 episode "The Itchy Brain Simulation" to apologize to Raj for

  • breaking up with him via email. This leads Raj to believe the two of them will get back

  • together, but Lucy tells him she is with someone else.

  • Mary Cooper Mary Cooper (Laurie Metcalf): A devout fundamentalist

  • Christian from Texas, Mary is Sheldon's mother. She has two other children besides Sheldon;

  • Sheldon's twin sister, Missy and his brother George, who is shown via a family tree in

  • "The Cruciferous Vegetable Amplification" to be three years older than Sheldon and Missy.

  • To Mary's relief, her other children do not share Sheldon's hyper-intelligence, once commenting

  • to Leonard "I thank the good Lord my other kids are as dumb as soup". She appeared in

  • the fourth episode of the first season, the season three premiere, the third episode of

  • season four, the sixth episode of season five and the eighteenth episode of season seven.

  • Mary herself is not intellectual but is quite wise, though she is prone to making insensitive

  • comments such as referring to "kung fu letters" when Leonard takes her to a sushi restaurant,

  • or saying that "I thought it was our Indians that had the occasional drinking problem"

  • when she sees Raj inebriated. Despite her extreme religious views, she is tolerant of

  • other faiths, as evidenced by her serving Raj a dish of chicken after making sure it

  • was not something Indians considered "magical". She also struggles to follow her beliefs sometimes,

  • shown through her affair with another churchgoer in "The Mommy Observation". She is a loving

  • mother and the only one who has ever been able to control Sheldon, with Leonard describing

  • her as Sheldon's "Kryptonite" to Penny. When Penny and Sheldon engaged in a fierce dispute,

  • Penny called for Mary's help, who subsequently called and scolded Sheldon about his actions.

  • Leonard wishes his mother was as loving as Sheldon's mother, although Sheldon himself

  • appears at best ambivalent about her parenting. It is once mentioned by Sheldon that Mary

  • once hit him with a Bible because he refused to eat his Brussels sprouts. She apparently

  • thought something was wrong with her son while he was growing up, as Sheldon will often remark

  • after someone calls him crazy, "I'm not crazy; my mother had me tested!" though Mary Cooper

  • wishes that she had taken him to Houston for further testing.

  • Priya Koothrappali Priya Koothrappali (Aarti Mann): Raj's younger

  • sister, introduced in the fourth season. Having graduated at the top of her class at Cambridge,

  • she is one of the lead attorneys at India's biggest car company. It is disclosed upon

  • her first appearance in "The Irish Pub Formulation" episode that she and Leonard had a relationship

  • five years earlier (without her parents' or Raj's knowledge) when she was in town, and

  • that Leonard had been much more invested in the relationship than she. Leonard even offered

  • to relocate to Delhi to be with her. He tries to keep their relationship a secret from the

  • guys, but Sheldon discovers Priya in their apartment. Leonard eventually reveals to the

  • rest of the guys that he has spent the night with Priya, as he is unable to bear the burden

  • of keeping the secret. Priya returns to Los Angeles for business in "The Cohabitation

  • Formulation" and she and Leonard decide to try and have a real relationship, over the

  • protests of Raj. It upsets Raj to know that his sister is having sex with one of his best

  • friends (sometimes in Raj's bed). Priya soon becomes jealous of Penny and asks Leonard

  • to stop spending time with her, but Leonard is unable to do so. Priya contests Sheldon's

  • roommate agreement with Leonard, employing her legal background to deny Sheldon power

  • over Leonard, but Sheldon drafts a new agreement. Sheldon then blackmails Leonard into signing

  • it by threatening to tell Priya's parents she is dating Leonard, which she cannot bear

  • because they want her to either date an Indian (although her father would accept her dating

  • Howard due to his belief Jews are financially savvy and do not drink much). In the fourth

  • season finale, it is revealed she is moving back to India and has not told Leonard, which

  • Leonard interprets as the end of their relationship, leading him to expose their secret relationship

  • to her parents. During Season 5, although they are separated, with Priya moving back

  • a month earlier than expected, they nonetheless remain in-touch via webcam, having a cyber-dinner

  • date/breakfast date. At Howard's suggestion, Leonard and Priya also attempt to simulate

  • intercourse via webcam, but when it comes time for her to remove her clothing, Leonard's

  • screen freezes up because of exceeding the bandwidth. Leonard later manages to get cue

  • cards to help himself with a seduction speech to Priya, but while delivering it to her,

  • he inadvertently reveals to her parents that they are cyber-dating (they were in the same

  • room as she when he called), with them acidly asking for him to continue with the speech.

  • After Leonard tells Priya about his attraction to a comic book enthusiast named Alice, Priya

  • admits to cheating on him with her former boyfriend, which visibly upsets Leonard. She

  • claims that it is not a competition, to which he replies that it is and that she won. Then

  • he switches off his laptop. In the next episode, Leonard refers to himself as single, indicating

  • he and Priya have broken up as a result of their last conversation.

  • Stephanie Barnett Dr. Stephanie Barnett, MD (Sara Rue): A doctor

  • and highly distinguished surgical resident at Fremont Memorial, Stephanie is picked up

  • in a bar by Howard but when his plan to let her drive the Mars rover fails, she leaves

  • Howard's office with Leonard and the two immediately show an attraction to each other. Sheldon

  • begins meddling in Stephanie and Leonard's new relationship in an effort to strengthen

  • it, since in his eyes, Stephanie is the only "tolerable" mate Leonard has had. After several

  • weeks of dating, Stephanie officially begins living with Leonard in his and Sheldon's apartment.

  • However, after much hesitation, Leonard tells her to move out because he is uncomfortable

  • with the pace of the relationship. They are not seen breaking up on camera. Series co-creator

  • Bill Prady said of the relationship: "Stephanie was a chance for Leonard to learn that just

  • because someone loves you, doesn't mean you'll love them back". Stephanie did her medical

  • internship at Lawrence Memorial in Galveston, Texas, which is where Sheldon was born.

  • Wil Wheaton Wil Wheaton (a fictionalized version of the

  • real actor of that name): In the season three episode "The Creepy Candy Coating Corollary",

  • Sheldon enters a trading card game tournament (Mystic Warlords of Ka'a) to confront Wil

  • Wheaton over an incident that occurred in 1995 when Sheldon was devastated because Wheaton

  • (Wesley Crusher in Star Trek: The Next Generation) failed to show up at a fan convention that

  • Sheldon took a 10-hour bus ride to attend (in which he had to "twice violate his personal

  • rule of no relief on a moving vehicle"). In the final match, Sheldon is about to defeat

  • his hated rival, but Wheaton tells Sheldon that the reason he missed the convention was

  • because his grandmother had died. In sympathy, Sheldon deliberately messes up his next move

  • in order to benefit Wheaton. Wheaton reveals that he lied about his grandmother, then wins

  • the game by taking advantage of the opening Sheldon left him. Wil Wheaton makes a second

  • appearance in the episode "The Wheaton Recurrence", where he uses gamesmanship again, breaking

  • up Leonard and Penny's relationship in order to win a bowling competition against the main

  • characters. In "The 21-Second Excitation", Wheaton appears at a screening of Raiders

  • of the Lost Ark and uses his celebrity status to go to the front of a long line. This antagonizes

  • Sheldon, who derides him as the "Jar Jar Binks of the Star Trek universe." Wheaton and his

  • entourage effectively prevent Sheldon and the guys from attending the screening when

  • the last seat in the theater goes to the person directly in front of them in line. Ultimately,

  • Sheldon steals the prints of the film and Wheaton leads a mob of angry Raiders fans

  • after Sheldon. In the season five episode "The Russian Rocket Reaction", Wheaton appears

  • to be genuinely sorry for his past actions and gives Sheldon a signed Wesley Crusher

  • action figure as a way of thanking Sheldon for being a fan. His gesture is met with a

  • renunciation of his "mortal enemy" status, and a hug from Sheldon. With Wheaton, LeVar

  • Burton, Leonard Nimoy, Brent Spiner and George Takei also having appeared on the show, Star

  • Trek is the most represented franchise on the show in terms of guest appearances. At

  • Howard's bachelor party during the "The Stag Convergence" episode, Wil films the toasts

  • and uploads them to the Internet, getting Howard and Raj in trouble with Bernadette

  • and showing that he has not lost all of his "evil" quirks. In the season six episode "The

  • Habitation Configuration", Wheaton appears in a Star Trek-themed episode of Sheldon's

  • webseries Fun with Flags, and insults Sheldon's girlfriend (and the webisode's director),

  • Amy. After he ditches Amy to hang out with Wheaton, Amy gets angry at Sheldon; he later

  • unknowingly becomes inebriated and tries to start a fistfight with Wheaton, demanding

  • an apology. Mrs. Wolowitz

  • Mrs. Wolowitz (voiced by Carol Ann Susi): Howard's controlling, belittling Jewish mother.

  • The character is not shown on-screen with the exception of one episode in season 6 in

  • which her body, but not face is briefly shown. Mrs. Wolowitz's raspy voice is heard usually

  • in scenes at her house, which she shares with Howard. She talks to Howard always by yelling

  • at him from another room, which results in awkward conversations with Howard yelling

  • back at her. In an early episode, when the guys hear her yelling in a masculine voice,

  • they ask Howard if that was his father, to which Howard replies "If she grows any more

  • hair on her face, yes". She is also described as being enormously

  • obese (especially in the arms), and wearing a wig and painted-on eyebrows. Mrs. Wolowitz

  • seems to be oblivious about Howard's work as an engineer and treats him like he is still

  • a child. She frequently refers to Leonard, Sheldon, and Raj as Howard's "little friends"

  • (as in, "I made some cookies and Hawaiian Punch for you and your little friends!") and

  • often refers to Caltech as a "school". Howard often makes references to his mother as being

  • a "crazy old lady", but deep down, he is deeply attached to his mother and quite happy to

  • be treated like a child. However, in one episode, Howard attempts to move out after a fight

  • with his mother, but has serious delusions that she is trying to force him to stay, when

  • in actuality, she is urging him to move out, which leads to him staying. In the penultimate

  • episode of season 4, she wants to "play doctor" with Raj when he asks to sleep over.

  • When Howard reveals that he has proposed to Bernadette and she has accepted, she collapses,

  • causing Howard to panic (and dislocate his shoulder while trying to barge into the bathroom

  • to help her). The timing leads him to believe that she may not like Bernadette (who is Catholic)

  • and has suffered a heart attack from the shock of the news. In actuality, her fainting was

  • due to food poisoning from the food she ate while meeting Bernadette, and was completely

  • unrelated to Howard's news. She has graciously accepted Bernadette as her future daughter-in-law

  • and loves that she is a doctor. She attended Howard and Bernadette's wedding on Leonard/Sheldon/Penny's

  • apartment building roof and can be seen in the satellite picture of the event. The episode

  • "The Spoiler Alert Segmentation" is a major episode in Mrs. Wolowitz's character as she

  • appears on screen for the first time; first walking across the kitchen through the kitchen

  • doors, and then her hands are seen pulling Raj back into the house. Her face is not seen

  • at all, but her appearances in the kitchen scene make her out to be an extremely obese

  • woman. It is often implied that the relationship

  • between Howard and his mother comes close to that of Norman Bates and his mother from

  • the film Psycho. Zack

  • Zack Johnson (Brian Thomas Smith): A dim-witted beefcake-type whom Penny dates after her second

  • break-up with Leonard. Leonard invites Penny and Zack up to the roof to watch his experiment

  • of bouncing laser beams off the moon; Zack misunderstands what is happening. Later, he

  • and Penny go out on a date, but she is so put off at how stupid he is that she runs

  • back to Leonard to have sex, saying that Leonard has ruined her ability to date stupid men.

  • In a later episode, he runs into Penny, Bernadette, and Amy at a restaurant, and Amy becomes physically

  • attracted to him. Unlike Penny's other boyfriends, he considers Leonard, Howard, Sheldon, and

  • Raj (whom he calls "the science guys") to be "cool" and makes a genuine effort to get

  • to know them, considering them to be his friends. After accompanying them on a trip to the comic

  • book store (where he and Raj bond over a mutual fondness for Archie comics), he enters a New

  • Year's Eve costume party with them, portraying Superman in their version of the Justice League.

  • He works as the menu designer for restaurants that are owned by or which have hired his

  • father's company to design their menus. In "The Toast Derivation", Sheldon invites him

  • over for a party, where he bonds with Barry Kripke and Stuart as well. It is revealed

  • in season 7's "The Thanksgiving Decoupling" that he was unknowingly married to Penny for

  • three years, after they got intoxicated and attended a wedding chapel in Las Vegas.

  • Minor characters These characters appear in fewer episodes,

  • most in just one. The list is in alphabetic order by first name.

  • Abby (Danica McKellar) and Martha (Jen Drohan): With Leonard and Howard busy on a double date

  • with Penny and Bernadette, Raj and Sheldon attend a university mixer where they meet

  • Abby and Martha. Abby takes a liking to Raj, while Martha surprisingly seems to connect

  • with Sheldon. While Raj and Abby end up kissing, Sheldon completely ignores Martha, who even

  • tries to go to bed with him. Like series regular Mayim Bialik, McKellar exists within the Big

  • Bang Theory universe independently of Abby, having been mentioned alongside Bialik in

  • ep. 1.13, "The Bat Jar Conjecture". Like Bialik, McKellar is a scientist in real life.

  • Alice (Courtney Ford): An attractive comic book enthusiast who meets Leonard at the comic

  • book store, who thinks he's cute and takes him to her apartment and tries to hook up

  • with him. This date occurs during the period when Leonard is having a long distance relationship

  • with Priya. Leonard initially gives in to temptation, but at the last minute pulls away.

  • He tells Alice about Priya, that his super power is being a good guy, and then gets thrown

  • out of her apartment. The next time he communicates, via the webcam, with Priya, he confesses his

  • weakness. To his surprise, Priya has no problem with it. Upon questioning, Priya reveals that

  • she has not been faithful to Leonard. They then break up.

  • Alicia (Valerie Azlynn): A young woman who moves into an apartment above Leonard and

  • Sheldon in the Dead Hooker Juxtaposition. Penny displays a fit of jealousy at this turn

  • of events, thinking that Alicia is supplanting herself in the boys' attention. Alicia is

  • an actress, although slightly more successful than Penny, having landed a role on CSI as

  • a (dead) prostitute. Eventually, to Howard's delight, she and Penny get into a catfight

  • over her treatment of the guys. After the altercation, Penny says Alicia is a "dead

  • whore on TV; live one in real life" just before the gang hears Alicia having loud intercourse

  • with a CSI producer. Althea (Vernee Watson) A character who makes

  • an appearance in the pilot episode as an attendant at a sperm bank, and then makes three appearances

  • as an emergency room nurse in "The Peanut Reaction" episode (Season 1) and "The Robotic

  • Manipulation" episode (Season 4), and as a ward nurse in "The Werewolf Transformation"

  • (Season 5). The name of the character is never used on the show, but is included on her nametag

  • and in the credits. She is also the only character besides Leonard and Sheldon to be carried

  • over from the original unaired pilot. Arthur Jeffries (aka Professor Proton) (Bob

  • Newhart): The star of the science show that Sheldon and Leonard watched as children. After

  • the show was cancelled, Jeffries was not taken seriously as a scientist and resorted to doing

  • children's parties as his persona. Sheldon hires him to do a private party for Leonard

  • and himself (and Penny), and he ends up having a heart attack after climbing the apartment

  • stairs with his equipment. He asks Sheldon to take his place at a party for a Korean

  • family, which Sheldon agrees to do as Professor Proton, Jr.

  • Bert (Brian Posehn): A socially awkward geologist. His first appearance was in Season 6, Episode

  • 18, "The Contractual Obligation Implementation", when he meets Raj and Lucy in the library

  • during their date. Later in Season 7, Episode 13, "The Occupation Recalibration", he is

  • found having a crush on Amy and tries to ask her out on a date to a Geology Rock Show.

  • Bethany (Molly Morgan), Sarah (Sarah Buehler), and Skeeter (Andy Mackenzie): Characters who

  • appear in "The Gothowitz Deviation" episode. Bethany and Sarah are a couple of women that

  • Wolowitz and Raj meet in a Goth club. They then go to a tattoo parlor, where Skeeter

  • is the tattoo artist. The name "Skeeter" is not used on the show, but appears in the credits.

  • Captain Sweatpants (Ian Scott Rudolph) and Lonely Larry (Owen Thayer): Two men that are

  • sometimes seen at the guys' favorite comic book store. Captain Sweatpants is a middle-aged

  • bald man who wears grey sweatpants and a City of Heroes T-shirt. Lonely Larry wears a brown

  • suit and is extremely thin. They are also friends with Wil Wheaton. Both attend Howard's

  • bachelor party. Chen (James Hong): The owner of a Chinese

  • restaurant (Szechuan Palace) which is regularly frequented by Leonard, Sheldon, Howard, and

  • Rajesh. He appears most significantly in Season 1 Episode 17, where Sheldon engages in an

  • argument concerning his belief that he is being served Orange Chicken rather than Tangerine

  • Chicken. This leads to the exchange of several nonsensical remarks made by Sheldon (due to

  • his lack of ability to speak Mandarin). Cheryl (Erin Allin O'Reilly): Apparently a

  • friend of one of Penny's friends (because it is subtly suggested she may not know many

  • of the people at the party), who attends Penny's Halloween party in Season 1, Episode 6, "The

  • Middle Earth Paradigm." Cheryl is the very talkative, short-haired brunette dressed as

  • a ladybug, who hits it off with Raj. She is not identified within the episode, but is

  • listed in the credits. She appears again as a Cheesecake Factory waitress in "The Pancake

  • Batter Anomaly". Christy (Brooke D'Orsay): An acquaintance

  • of Penny's from Nebraska who had slept with enough of her relatives to make her "family",

  • Christy suddenly moves in with Penny when she comes to California. Christy ends up having

  • sex with Howard, forcing Penny to sleep on Leonard's couch. Howard then invites Christy

  • to move in with him (and his mother). Mrs. Wolowitz and Christy end up having a fight,

  • and the latter leaves. She also presents the guys other problems by reducing their foursome

  • to three when playing Halo and dividing up their Chinese food order.

  • Cole (Ryan Cartwright) : An English student who works with Penny in the history class

  • in Pasadena City College, introduced in the episode The 43 Peculiarity (S6E08). His appearance

  • in Penny's life leads to Leonard's anxiety about his relationship with Penny.

  • Dr. Crawley (Lewis Black): An entomologist at the University, Dr. Crawley is visited

  • by Sheldon, Howard, and Raj in order to identify the species of a cricket they found. He is

  • agitated at losing his position at the university, his lab, and, as a result of an extended research

  • trip, his wife. After his wife left him, he was forced to move in with his daughter, who

  • lives in Oxnard, California "in the onion fields" (as opposed to its more glamorous

  • beach areas). Dr. David Underhill (Michael Trucco): A MacArthur

  • Genius Grant recipient, David is an experimental physicist like Leonard, who is excited to

  • be working with him. With his leather jacket and handsome looks, Penny is shocked to know

  • that David is a scientist and starts dating him. They break up when she finds out he is

  • married. Dale (Josh Brener): Dale works as a replacement

  • for Stuart at the comic book store when he went on a date with Amy "The Flaming Spittoon

  • Acquisition", and also appears in "The Tangible Affection Proof" at Stuart's Valentine's Day

  • party. Dennis Kim (Austin Lee): Dennis is a 15-year-old

  • child prodigy from North Korea who Dr. Gablehauser hopes to recruit into their Ph.D. program.

  • Dennis and Sheldon have an antagonistic relationship when the former excels Sheldon in every way.

  • The guys make arrangements so Dennis can meet girls of his age and get distracted from his

  • own research. The plan succeeds and Dennis is seen kissing with a girl in the park, no

  • longer an intellectual threat to Sheldon. Dimitri Rezinov (Pasha Lychnikoff): A Russian

  • cosmonaut who is Howard Wolowitz's colleague on his Soyuz mission to the International

  • space station. Dmitri (Adam Gregor) He is the janitor of

  • third floor in Caltech. But before he was a janitor, he was a physicist in Leningrad

  • Polytechnical. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, he lost his job and had to move to

  • the US. He seems to know a lot about physics. A question in the Physics Bowl about quantum

  • electrodynamics stumped everyone but him. Dr. Elizabeth Plimpton (Judy Greer): A renowned

  • cosmological physicist from Princeton University known for her work in quantum cosmology who

  • comes as a personal guest of Sheldon in "The Plimpton Stimulation" episode. She first appears

  • absent-minded, but then exhibits a strong sexual libido, winds up having sex with Leonard

  • and Raj, and expresses a desire for a foursome with Leonard, Raj, and Wolowitz.

  • Emily (Katie Leclerc): (Season 5) A deaf woman who Penny sets up with Raj. Since she is deaf,

  • Raj finds that he can communicate with her despite his selective mutism. She shows interest

  • in Raj when he spends a lot of money on her. Then Raj's parents get the bill, and force

  • him to break up with her. Although Raj resists, he does tell Emily that all the gifts he gave

  • her have to go back. She then loses interest in Raj.

  • Emily (Laura Spencer): (Season 7) A cute redhead who Raj meets online on a dating website.

  • Initially he coaxes Amy to be an intermediary between them, because of his passive and shy

  • nature. Amy agrees to help but eventually ends up arranging a meeting in a cafe with

  • Emily herself, after finding out that they share same interests. Raj shows up at the

  • cafe and makes a fool out of himself driving Emily away ("The Friendship Turbulence").

  • Some time later he again bumps into Emily in the cafe and apologizes for his behavior.

  • She and Raj go out on a date afterwards ("The Indecision Amalgamation"). Howard wants to

  • meet Emily before Raj drives her away and finds out that he had a very embarrassing

  • date with her causing him to run out on her ("The Relationship Diremption").

  • Gretchen: Penny's former friend who stole her boyfriend and is at the same restaurant

  • and Leonard and Penny which thoroughly annoys Penny especially after her ex- proposes to

  • Gretchen. Gretchen is played by Kaley Cuoco's sister Briana.

  • Mrs. Janine Davis (Regina King): A human resources representative working at the university who

  • handled a sexual harassment complaint against Sheldon. Sheldon, in his attempt at defense,

  • rats out "worse behavior" by Raj, Howard, and Leonard, prompting Mrs. Davis to summon

  • them to her office as well. In a later episode, Mrs. Davis serves on the tenure committee

  • that is considering Raj, Sheldon, Leonard and Kripke for a vacant tenured position,

  • causing each of them to try to "butter up" Mrs. Davis. In season 7's "The Hofstadter

  • Insufficiency", Mrs. Davis is revealed to be recently divorced, and Raj attempts to

  • strike up a conversation with her at a university mixer.

  • Jesse (Josh Peck): A comic book store owner who is supposedly a rival of Stuart's comic

  • book store. Stuart and Bernadette visit his store searching for a rare comic book, belonging

  • to Howard, which Bernadette wants replaced after she accidentally brands it with her

  • curling iron. Even though he appears smart and charismatic, he behaves as a jerk who

  • belittles and humiliates Stuart in front of Bernadette inside his store; From Season 7,

  • Episode 13 "The Occupation Recalibration". Jimmy Speckerman (Lance Barber): a former

  • high-school jock who used to bully Leonard on a regular basis. He later contacts Leonard

  • in "The Speckerman Recurrence", with an idea of inventing glasses that turn all movies

  • into 3D. He is oblivious to the bullying nature of his actions against Leonard, having believed

  • that they were "having fun" and describing him and Leonard as having been "a comedy team".

  • Joy (Charlotte Newhouse): An exercise-freak woman who Leonard meets on a blind date set

  • up by Bernadette via the "Girlfriend Pact" with Howard. Although Leonard finds Joy's

  • mannerisms to be repulsive, he agrees to go out with her again based on hints she gives

  • that she is easy. Joyce Kim (Ally Maki): A previously unseen

  • character who appears in "The Staircase Implementation", Joyce Kim was mentioned as a former girlfriend

  • of Leonard; their relationship only lasted a month, after which she defected back to

  • North Korea. However, in The Staircase Implementation, Leonard admits that she was not a girlfriend,

  • but a North Korean spy who attempted to get secrets from him by seducing him.

  • Kevin (Blake Berris): A man who Penny meets during her 'non-date' with Leonard. He is

  • writing a screenplay about his roommate who threw him out of their apartment for the evening.

  • Kurt (Brian Patrick Wade): A tall, intimidating bodybuilder, Kurt is Penny's ex-boyfriend

  • at the beginning of the series. In the pilot-episode, Leonard and Sheldon went to his apartment

  • and tried to retrieve Penny's television set from him, but they did not succeed and Kurt

  • apparently found them so irritating that they returned home without pants. Penny left him

  • because he cheated on her, but he was still invited to her Halloween party, for which

  • he dresses up as a caveman. In season 2, ep14, Penny experiences financial difficulties,

  • Leonard and the guys confront Kurt over $1,800 in legal fine money Penny had lent him. Immediately

  • refusing, Kurt shortly thereafter pays Penny and the two have dinner, but is never seen

  • again. Lakshmi Choudry (Chriselle Almeida): a woman

  • with whom Raj's parents set him up when he asks for a date to take to his cousin's wedding.

  • He develops strong feelings for her and is willing to marry her, and she him. She tells

  • him she is lesbian and is willing to marry him because she thinks he is gay and the ruse

  • will fool her parents. Lalita Gupta (Sarayu Rao): A childhood acquaintance

  • of Raj who bullied him, she is now a dental student at USC. Raj's parents set up a date

  • for their son with her. During the date, Raj can only speak to her after drinking an alcoholic

  • beverage (a "grasshopper") and acts very obnoxious, such as commenting on her childhood weight

  • problem. Sheldon insists she bears a remarkable resemblance to Princess Panchali, an Indian

  • princess in a children's story. Lalita is flattered at Sheldon's comments and attention.

  • Eventually, Lalita leaves the obnoxious and drunk Raj to have dinner with Sheldon. Sheldon

  • does not see her again because he "already has a dentist".

  • Mrs. Latham (Jessica Walter): A wealthy widowed benefactor who takes a shine to Leonard at

  • a donor/faculty get-together. She asks him out with the implication that he have sex

  • with her in order to get the lab equipment his department needs. He at first resists,

  • but after she says that she is going to fund his project anyway, he relents. Everyone at

  • the University congratulates him for selling himself out for the money.

  • Missy Cooper (Courtney Henggeler): Missy is Sheldon's twin sister who is intellectually

  • and socially very much unlike him. Confident, tall and attractive, she immediately catches

  • the attention of Leonard, Howard, and Raj. Sheldon realizes that within Missy's eggs

  • lies the potential for another "superior mutation" like him. He temporarily elects himself as

  • a guardian to Missy in order to choose the best mate for her (she rejects Leonard and

  • Howard in favor of Raj, but his mutism derails any chance he might have with her). Missy

  • objects to Sheldon deciding who she can sleep with, refers to Sheldon as "Shelly", and despite

  • their differences she loves him and is proud of his accomplishments. She is mentioned in

  • the 7th season as an unseen character, where she gives birth to a son, and it is also mentioned

  • that she is married. President Siebert (Joshua Malina): The president

  • of the California Institute of Technology; he is married and has a teenage daughter.

  • Siebert sends Sheldon on an expedition to the North Pole at the end of Season 2. In

  • Season 4, he organizes a get-together with wealthy donors and faculty in order to garner

  • funds for the university's programs. He urges the guys to make an appearance to schmooze

  • the donors so that they will give to their projects. Seeing Sheldon's behavior toward

  • the donors, he asks that he not appear again. A recurring gag is that President Siebert

  • bumps into Sheldon when he is using the urinal. Professor Glenn (Rick Fox): A former professor

  • of Bernadette's, who she reveals to Howard that she dated for a year. At 6'7", dark and

  • handsome, Glenn is physically the polar opposite of Howard, leading the insecure Howard to

  • feel like he will never measure up (literally as much as metaphorically).

  • Ramona Nowitzki (Riki Lindhome) and Kathy O'Brian (Emily Happe): A couple of graduate

  • students, who both have a crush on Sheldon, and become his 'groupies.' Sheldon exploits

  • them to get free food and perform personal services. Ramona is the first, first meeting

  • Sheldon after he introduced his work to incoming graduate students. She finds Sheldon's work

  • very stimulating and him very cute to the utter confusion of his friends and arranges

  • to have dinner with him in his apartment. The next few days she becomes a permanent

  • presence in his life, pressuring him to concentrate on his research and avoid distractions such

  • as video games, science-fiction television shows and weekend paintball expeditions. Sheldon

  • gets tired of her, but is unable to dissolve their "relationship". Eventually, Sheldon

  • reaches a breakthrough in his work to which Sheldon acknowledges that he could not have

  • completed without her personal and mathematical assistance. Sheldon kicks Ramona out when

  • she asks to share credit for the discovery. Kathy comes into Sheldon's life after he kicked

  • Ramona out. Mike Rostenkowski (Casey Sander): Bernadette's

  • father, a retired police officer who has a rough and abrasive personality. He is not

  • very accepting of Howard until he learns that Howard will be going into space as an astronaut

  • (coincidentally at the same time Howard was considering backing out of the expedition).

  • After an aborted weekend fishing trip, Howard and his father-in-law bond over learning to

  • play craps at an Indian casino. Mrs. Rostenkowski (Meagen Fay) : Bernadette's

  • mother. She is a woman of few words, like her husband. She displays a lot of the same

  • characteristics of her daughter. Apparently she dominates her husband. When Howard first

  • met Bernadette, they bonded over the similar personalities of their controlling mothers.

  • Siri (Becky O'Donohue): embodies Siri (software), the voice-recognition system used on certain

  • smartphones and on which Raj developed a crush, because of its seductive voice. To which Howard

  • jokingly states that "there is finally a woman in your life you can talk to." Raj has a dream

  • about meeting her, represented by a beautiful woman, but he cannot speak to her in person

  • due to his selective mutism, which causes him to awake from the dream screaming "NOOOOO!".

  • Special Agent Angela Paige (Eliza Dushku): an FBI agent investigating Howard Wolowitz's

  • background for a security clearance in "The Apology Insufficiency" episode. While interviewing

  • the guys, Raj vomits on her shoes, Leonard hits on her, and Sheldon reveals too much

  • information about Howard, and to add insult to injury, reveals too much information about

  • Leonard. Spock (Leonard Nimoy): Sheldon's action figure

  • Spock, the voice of Leonard Nimoy, appears to him in a dream convincing him to open his

  • mint in-box 1975 Star Trek Transporter toy. After Sheldon breaks his toy and steals Leonard's,

  • Spock reappears to Sheldon and convinces him to give Leonard his toy back.

  • Summer (Sierra Edwards): Howard's "date" for the reception for Dr. Gablehauser in Season

  • 1, Episode 4, "The Luminous Fish Effect." She is quite a bit taller than Howard and

  • makes it apparent that the "date" is strictly a business event by telling Howard that "touching

  • is extra". Toby Loobenfeld (DJ Qualls): A research assistant

  • with a double major in Physics and Theater, Toby was used by Sheldon to play his fictional

  • first cousin "Leopold Houston" from Denton, Texas, a character Sheldon invents as part

  • of an elaborate lie told to avoid going to see Penny sing. Cousin "Leo" is a recovering

  • drug addict who ends up cuddling with Penny on the couch, much to the chagrin of Leonard.

  • He was also willing to argue with Sheldon on the subjects regarding drug use, showing

  • knowledge on the subject. Todd Zarnecki (Christopher Douglas Reed):

  • Appears in "The Zarnecki Incursion" episode as a hacker who "steals" Sheldon's possessions

  • in the World of Warcraft online game. Being physically much larger and more intimidating

  • than the four main characters, they back down from confronting him. Penny picks them up,

  • takes them back to Todd's house and sets Todd straight with a swift kick to the groin. He

  • also shows up at Howard's bachelor party (as an unnamed attendee), and in the Season 6

  • episode "The Tangible Affection Proof", he is in attendance at Stuart's party on Valentine's

  • Day. Venkatesh Koothrappali (Frank Maharajh): Raj's

  • cousin, a lawyer in India, who tries to negotiate a deal for Raj's part of the One Ring prop

  • from Lord of the Rings. He, by his own admission, is a bad negotiator, and does not get Raj

  • the two jet skis that he wanted. Wyatt (Keith Carradine): Penny's father. He

  • comes to visit and Penny feels compelled to involve Leonard in a ruse to make him think

  • that they are still together. (Wyatt reveals that he favors the successful Leonard over

  • Penny's other "loser" boyfriends.) When the plot is revealed, he gets mad at Penny and

  • feigns anger at Leonard. But after Penny leaves the room, he encourages Leonard to keep trying

  • to get Penny back (because he wants his grandkids to "grow up in a house without wheels on it").

  • Strangely though in the first episode where Leonard's mother visits, Penny tearfully reveals

  • her rough childhood, saying that Wyatt wanted a boy and would call her "slugger". She does

  • an imitation of what she wished her mother would say to her father: "'Bob, get over it,

  • she's a girl, move on,' but she didn't not one word!"

  • Characters that appeared in only a single scene

  • Angelo (Peter Onorati): A barber who substitutes for Sheldon's regular barber, Mr. D'Onofrio,

  • when Mr. D'Onofrio falls into a coma. Mrs. Fowler (Annie O'Donnell): Amy Farrah

  • Fowler's mother. She appeared in a webcam conversation with Amy and Sheldon in which

  • they lie to her about the nature of their relationship, telling her that they are in

  • a romantic relationship that includes coitus. Joan (Amy Tolsky): The court clerk that comes

  • out to say there is only enough time for three more weddings, meaning Howard and Bernadette

  • would not be able to get married before Howard left for his launch to the ISS.

  • Louis (Ajgie Kirkland) A former occupant of the apartment in which Penny lives. He is

  • a cross-dresser who Leonard mistakenly runs into in "The Staircase Implementation" episode,

  • and who refers to Sheldon as "the crazy guy across the hall". The name Louis is used by

  • Sheldon, referring to him/her as Louis/Louise. Octavia (Octavia Spencer): a clerk working

  • at the California Department of Motor Vehicles who hands Sheldon a drivers permit after he

  • refuses to take the test, but instead points out inaccuracies in the test. The name of

  • the character is not used on the show, only in the credits.

  • Sandy (Yeardley Smith): A bureaucrat who interviewed Sheldon for a menial job in The Einstein Approximation.

  • episode. Smith had a recurring role on Dharma and Greg as Marlene (both characters have

  • similarities) a show previously co-created by Chuck Lorre. The name "Sandy" was not used

  • on the show, but appeared in the credits. Smith also voiced the character of Lisa Simpson

  • on The Simpsons. Sebastian (Steven Yeun) Sheldon's former roommate

  • who left Sheldon on bad terms. Sebastian makes a single appearance in "The Staircase Implementation",

  • where he tells Leonard to "run fast, run far" from Sheldon. His name is not used in the

  • episode, but is listed in the credits. Notable guest stars appearing as themselves

  • A number of Hollywood celebrities and famous scientists have made appearances as themselves.

  • The list is sorted by alphabetic order using last names.

  • LeVar Burton (Season 4, "The Toast Derivation" and Season 6, "The Habitation Configuration"):

  • Sheldon invited Burton to a party via a tweet. Upon opening the door and seeing the other

  • guests at the party, Zack, Kripke, and Stuart (who at that moment was wearing nothing but

  • a towel) singing karaoke, Burton leaves and when starting to walk down the apartment block

  • stairs utters that he is "so done with Twitter". He appears again at the end of "The Habitation

  • Configuration", taping an episode of "Fun With Flags" with Sheldon and Amy. Amy says

  • "cut", followed by complaining that "this guy is worse than Wil Wheaton" (referring

  • to Wil's appearance earlier in the episode). Sheldon then tells Burton that because Amy

  • is his girlfriend, he is obligated to agree with her. Burton asks "I still get lunch,

  • right?", to which Sheldon nods. Along with Brent Spiner and Wil Wheaton, Burton makes

  • Star Trek: The Next Generation the most represented franchise on the show in terms of guest appearances.

  • Summer Glau (Season 2, "The Terminator Decoupling"): When the guys travel by train to a conference

  • in San Francisco, they realize Summer Glau (who was in two science fiction television

  • shows, Firefly and Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles) is sitting in the same passenger

  • car. Raj, Howard, and Leonard take turns talking with her. Raj cannot talk without drinking

  • beer (which turned out to be non-alcoholic), Howard is his usual creepy, over-the-top self,

  • and Leonard cannot start a conversation before she has to get off the train.

  • Stephen Hawking (Season 5, "The Hawking Excitation", Season 6, "The Extract Obliteration" and Season

  • 7, "The Relationship Diremption"): After Sheldon's much-anticipated meeting with Hawking, he

  • discusses Sheldon's research and points out a mistake. Sheldon protests by saying that

  • he does not make mistakes, to which Hawking replies "Are you saying that I do?" When Sheldon

  • realizes his research does in fact contain a math error, he faints in embarrassment,

  • prompting Hawking to remark "Oh, great, another fainter." Hawking later talks to Sheldon on

  • the phone in "The Extract Obliteration", after beating him in a game of Words with Friends.

  • James Earl Jones (Season 7, "The Convention Conundrum"): After Sheldon tries to form his

  • own Comic-Con, he approaches Jones in a restaurant. After realizing Sheldon is a fan of Star Wars

  • (where Jones voiced the famous Darth Vader), Jones invites him to have dinner with him,

  • much to Sheldon's pleasure, and then Jones suggests spending the whole night together.

  • The two later eat ice cream, go on a Ferris wheel, do Karaoke, pull a childish prank on

  • Carrie Fisher, go to a strip club and a sauna, before Sheldon becomes disturbed by Jones

  • and tells him his plan. Jones then offers to take Sheldon and his friends to Comic-Con

  • with him, Sheldon's pleasure. The final scene ends with Jones reminiscing about a prank

  • he did with old celebrities, and ends with Sheldon asking Jones who one of the celebrities

  • was. In addition to Vader, Jones's role as Mufasa from The Lion King is also mentioned.

  • Mike Massimino (Season 5, "The Friendship Contraction", "The Countdown Reflection",

  • Season 6, "The Decoupling Fluctuation and "The Re-Entry Minimization"): An astronaut

  • who appears as a future colleague of Howard who is set to join NASA's astronaut corps.

  • Massimino reveals that his nickname is "Mass". Howard assumes the nickname is derived from

  • Newton's second law, which states that force = mass times acceleration, but Massimino reveals

  • that "Mass" is simply short for Massimino. Raj and Howard concoct an elaborate scheme

  • to plant a seed in Massimino's mind to give Howard the nickname "Rocket Man" by having

  • Howard set up the song "Rocket Man" as his ringtone on his cell phone, and Raj calling

  • the cell phone during Howard's Skype conversation with Massimino. Their plan is thwarted when

  • Howard's mother shouts to him that he needs to finish his Froot Loops, which triggers

  • Massimino (and Dimitri) to give Howard the nickname "Froot Loops". He is heard on the

  • phone in "The Launch Acceleration" and seen in the Soyuz capsule with Howard and cosmonaut

  • Dimitri Rezinov, serving as their mission commander in "The Countdown Reflection".

  • Katee Sackhoff (Season 3, "The Vengeance Formulation" and Season 4, "The Hot Troll Deviation"):

  • Howard fantasizes about taking a bath with Katee Sackhoff (Captain Kara "Starbuck" Thrace

  • in Battlestar Galactica). However, in his own fantasy Sackhoff scolds him and tells

  • him to get a real girlfriend instead of imaginary ones. Sackhoff reappeared in a different fantasy

  • of Howard's in The Hot Troll Deviation, where she and George Takei help Howard realize that

  • he still has feelings for Bernadette. George Takei (Season 4, "The Hot Troll Deviation"):

  • During one of Howard's fantasies, Takei, along with Katee Sackhoff, help Howard realize that

  • he still has feelings for Bernadette. Takei's real-life homosexuality is twice referenced

  • in the episodes: once, when he first appears in Howard's fantasy, Sackhoff asks Howard

  • if Takei's presence implies that Howard has homosexual tendencies, and the second reference

  • occurs when Takei advises Howard about women's love preferences. Sackhoff asks Takei "How

  • would you know?" and he responds "I read." Neil deGrasse Tyson (Season 4, "The Apology

  • Insufficiency") Appears as a colleague of Raj. Upon being introduced to Tyson, Sheldon

  • tells him that he (Sheldon) is upset at Tyson's role in the demotion of Pluto from planet

  • status. Initially, Tyson explains that he had no role in the demotion, but later attempts

  • to apologize to Sheldon. Sheldon declines the apology, immediately after he himself

  • apologized to Howard, who declined Sheldon's apology.

  • Wil Wheaton first appeared in the season 3 episode "The Creepy Candy Coating Corollary".

  • See his entry in the recurring character section for more information.

  • Cameo appearances Buzz Aldrin (Season 6, "The Holographic Excitation"):

  • Raj sends Howard a link showing a video that features Buzz Aldrin handing out candy to

  • kids on Halloween. Aldrin gives space related candy, such as Milky Way, Mars bar, and moon-pies.

  • He brags to the kids about his amazing achievement of being an astronaut who walked on the Moon,

  • then taunts them with the line, "what have you done with your life?"

  • Ira Flatow (Season 3, "The Vengeance Formulation"): Sheldon is invited to talk about magnetic

  • monopoles on Flatow's radio show, Science Friday. However, Barry Kripke pulls a prank

  • on Sheldon, and Sheldon is publicly humiliated to a nationwide audience. Flatow's appearance

  • was voice only. Ira Flatow (Season 7, "The Discovery Dissipation"):

  • Sheldon attends Ira Flatow's Science Friday radio program in person to be interviewed

  • about Sheldon's recent semi-accidental discovery of synthesizing a new stable heavy element.

  • While Ira is attempting to praise the nature and significance of the seemingly monumental

  • discovery, Sheldon considers the accidental nature of it to be an extreme embarrassment

  • and storms out of the radio studio leaving Ira speechless. On a later return visit to

  • the Science Friday program with the invited Leonard and the uninvited Sheldon, Ira attempts

  • to interview Leonard about his research which disproved Sheldon's discovery, but is interrupted

  • by Sheldon who commandeers the interview and devolves it into an autobiography and yodeling

  • demonstration. This causes Amy & Penny, who are listening to the program at home, to start

  • a drinking game based on the embarrassing comments made by their respective boyfriends.

  • Carrie Fisher (Season 7): While Sheldon is with James Earl Jones, the two go to Fisher's

  • house in secret, where Jones warns Sheldon that Fisher has gone crazy in her old age;

  • Jones then knocks on her door and runs off with Sheldon before Fisher exits her house

  • and shouts, "It's not funny anymore, James!" While Jones replies, "Then why am I laughing?"

  • Brian Greene (Season 4, "The Herb Garden Germination"): Sheldon and Amy attend a book signing event

  • of Greene's popular science book, The Hidden Reality: Parallel Universes and the Deep Laws

  • of the Cosmos. At the event, Sheldon initially ridicules Greene in private conversations

  • with Amy, but then he gets up and publicly ridicules Greene, asking Greene why does not

  • he do something more useful with his time than write popular science (only to turn around

  • and state he was kidding). Stan Lee (Season 3, "The Excelsior Acquisition"):

  • When Sheldon has to miss Lee's appearance at the comic book store because he ends up

  • in traffic court after running a red light, Penny tries to make it up to him by taking

  • him to Lee's house, uninvited and unannounced (acquiring Lee's address from Stuart). Lee,

  • not impressed by the unexpected intrusion, sarcastically remarks "why don't you just

  • come in and watch the Lakers game with me?" only for Sheldon, not understanding sarcasm,

  • to rush into the house. Lee, annoyed, decides to sue for a restraining order. When Sheldon

  • announces his "autographed" restraining order to Leonard, Howard, and Raj, he comments it

  • will look great hanging next to his restraining order from Leonard Nimoy.

  • Howie Mandel (Season 6, "The Re- Entry Minimization"): When Howard returns to earth he hears shouts

  • of "Howie" and believes that the paparazzi is here for him until he learns that they

  • were there for Mandel who had arrived at the airport at the same time as Howard. Mandel

  • thinks Howard is delusional, proclaiming to his driver that during the entire flight,

  • "he kept telling me he's an astronaut." Bill Nye (Season 7, "The Proton Displacement"):

  • After Sheldon's childhood hero Professor Proton (Bob Newhart) contacts Leonard for assistance

  • on an experiment, a jealous Sheldon befriends Nye "The Science Guy".

  • Charlie Sheen (Season 2, "The Griffin Equivalency"): When Raj discovers a celestial body he is

  • very excited about it. At Penny's restaurant, Raj says to the patron at the next table over,

  • "Hey, buddy. I'm going to be in People magazine!"; Charlie Sheen turns around, takes his sunglasses

  • off and says "Yeah? Call me when you're on the cover." (At the time, Sheen was starring

  • in Two and a Half Men, also produced by Chuck Lorre.)

  • George Smoot (Season 2, "The Terminator Decoupling"): After a train ride to a conference in San

  • Francisco, Sheldon presents his paper to 2006 Nobel Prize laureate George Smoot, and proposes

  • joint research; Smoot abruptly rejects his idea by asking "With all due respect, Dr.

  • Cooper, are you on crack?" Brent Spiner (Season 5, "The Russian Rocket

  • Reaction"): Sheldon shows up at a party thrown by his "mortal enemy", Wil Wheaton, only after

  • he hears that Spiner will be there. After Wheaton gives Sheldon a signed, in-the-box

  • Wesley Crusher action figure, Spiner grabs it and opens it, thus putting him on Sheldon's

  • Mortal Enemies List immediately after Wheaton was removed from the list. Along with LeVar

  • Burton and Wil Wheaton, Spiner makes Star Trek: The Next Generation the most represented

  • franchise on the show in terms of guest appearances. Analeigh Tipton and Samantha Potter (Season

  • 2, "The Panty Piñata Polarization"): Howard and Raj visit the America's Next Top Model

  • house pretending to be cable television repairmen. Tipton and Potter made appearances, opening

  • the door for Howard and Raj. Tipton greeted Howard and Raj, caught them in a lie as the

  • house does not receive cable television (it receives satellite), but allows them in regardless

  • when Howard "corrects" his error with another lie when he says that they are satellite television

  • repairmen. Potter did not get a speaking role. Steve Wozniak (Season 4, "The Cruciferous

  • Vegetable Amplification") Dines in Penny's restaurant at the same time that the guys

  • are there. He compliments Sheldon for his "virtual presence device" (using Sheldon's

  • name for the device without having heard how Sheldon calls it) and in turn Sheldon (having

  • previously referred to him as "the Great and Powerful Woz") compliments Wozniak telling

  • him that he ranks 15th on his list of favorite technological visionaries. When Wozniak feigns

  • disappointment, Sheldon tries to console him by stating that the ranking is six places

  • ahead of Apple founder Steve Jobs. Sheldon then tells Wozniak that the Apple II was rather

  • "nifty" and is one of his proudest possessions. Wozniak promises Sheldon that he would autograph

  • the computer if Sheldon brought it to him. In the haste to get the Apple II to Wozniak

  • for signing, Sheldon trips and falls down the stairs, breaking the computer. Wozniak's

  • wife also appeared in the scene, dining with Wozniak, but she was not credited.

List of The Big Bang Theory characters The American sitcom The Big Bang Theory, created

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