Steve Urkel

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Steven Q. Urkel
First appearance Rachel's First Date (only in syndicated episodes), Laura's First Date (in first run episodes)
Last appearance Lost in Space (Part 2)
Cause/reason Final episode
Created by Thomas L. Miller, Robert L. Boyett
Portrayed by Jaleel White
Episode count 198 (Family Matters)
1 (Full House)
2 (Step by Step)
1 (Perfect Strangers)
2 (Meego)
Information
Nickname(s) Urk Man
Gender Male
Age 13 - 22
Date of birth July 25, 1976
Occupation Student, inventor, Scientist
Family Herb Urkel (father; revealed in "Man's Best Friend")
Diane "Roberta" Urkel (mother; revealed in "Man's Best Friend" & "Hot Wheels")
Relatives Myrtle May Urkel (cousin)
"Big Daddy" Urkel (uncle)
Cecil (uncle)
Original Gangsta Dawg (cousin)
Julie (cousin)
Oona (aunt)
Ernie (uncle)
Stefan Urquelle (clone)
Muriel (aunt)
Cleotus (cousin)Dirk (cousin)

Steven Quincy Urkel (born July 25, 1976[1]), better known as Steve Urkel, is a fictional character on the ABC/CBS[2] comedy sitcom Family Matters, portrayed by Jaleel White. Originally a one-time guest on the show, he soon became the most popular character of the show.

Urkel was the epitome of a geek/nerd, with large, thick eyeglasses, "high-water or flooding" pants held up by suspenders, multi-colored cardigan sweaters, and a high-pitched voice. His main interactions on the show were his unrequited love for Laura Winslow, his perpetual annoyance of her father, Carl, and his seemingly one-way "best bud" relationship with her brother, Eddie. Amongst the rest of the family, Harriette; Rachel; and "Mother" Estelle Winslow were more accepting and caring of Urkel.

Throughout the series' run, Urkel was central to many of the series' recurring gags, primarily gratuitous property damage and/or personal injury as a result of his inventions going awry or his outright clumsiness. He became known for several catch phrases uttered after some humorous misfortune occurred, including "I've fallen and I can't get up!", "Did I do that?", and "Look what you did." He was also known for a distinctive laugh, which consisted of a loud cackle followed by a nasal snort.

Contents

[edit] Character

White first appeared as Urkel in the episode "Laura's First Date," the twelfth episode of the first season (though syndicated episodes show his first appearance in "Rachel's First Date"), as the Winslow family's next door neighbor who Carl set up to take Laura to a high school dance. Though he was only intended to be a one-time guest, White was quickly promoted to recurring guest and became a full-time series regular by the end of the first season.

Urkel was portrayed as a highly intelligent but socially inept person who fondly admired the Winslow family. His strained relationship with his own parents led him to admire Carl and Harriette as father and mother figures, respectively, and caused him to be a regular, often uninvited guest at the Winslow house. Some of the Winslows, particularly Carl, Eddie, and Laura, did not always reciprocate Steve's admiration; despite this, he was always loyal to the Winslow family and would go out of his way to help them or anyone in need.

[edit] Family

The Urkels are very intelligent people; Steve and his family were known to do the Sunday New York Times crossword puzzle in pen in about 20 minutes. His father is also a brain surgeon. However, Urkel's parents did not love him. This is made clear through the recurring gags of comical verbal and physical abuse mentioned in the show (i.e.: his parents set a curfew for when he is allowed to come home at midnight , used birthday candles that blew up, etc.)When he was born his parents tried to push him back in and his parents do not own a car because he was born in one. In 1995, his parents moved to Russia without Steve, because he didn't want to go, apparently disowning him. He wanted to stay with his friends and finish his senior year of high school. Steve was then allowed to live with the Winslows. In addition to his parents (who were never seen, although his mother once was heard off-screen, and a glimpse of the side of her face is in one of Steve's baby pictures), his family also included his cousin, Myrtle Urkel (also played by White), a southern belle whose innocent infatuation with Laura's brother, Eddie, equaled to that of Steve's for Laura – except Myrtle (try as she might) never grew on Eddie as Steve over time grew on Laura.

The viewers see that Urkel has at least three relatives who do care about him. Besides Myrtle, in an early episode, entitled "The Big Fix - AKA Mercy Date", his uncle Ernie, drives him on his date with Laura, and takes a picture. He also seems to have a good relationship with his "Aunt Oona from Altoona", (notably played by Donna Summer), as she pays him visits in two episodes. Other relatives included Myrtle's father "Big Daddy" (played by Reginald VelJohnson in a dual role) who didn't think Eddie was a good choice for his daughter, and Urkel's gangster cousin Cornelius Eugene Urkel (also played by White) who went by the moniker "Original Gangsta Dawg".

[edit] Relationships

From his first appearance on the show, Steve's main relationship was his unrequited love for Laura Winslow. Much to her annoyance, Steve constantly regaled Laura with gifts, serenades, and the like throughout their high school years. She did, however, regard Steve as a loyal friend in several episodes, including one very special episode during the second season in which Laura's locker was vandalized with racial epithets during their attempt to incorporate African American history into their high school curriculum.

During the fourth season episode "A Thought in the Dark", Laura and her then-boyfriend, Ted Curran, set Steve up with Ted's cousin, Myra Monkhouse (Michelle Thomas), thus beginning a relationship arc that would last until the series finale. Initially, Myra was grossly infatuated with Steve, and, although he liked her at first, did not reciprocate the infatuation. Steve soon gives in and gives the relationship a chance, and the two become a couple during the fifth season. Despite their relationship, Steve still professes his love for Laura; a recurring plotline involved Myra accusing Laura of trying to win Steve over.

Eventually, during the ninth season, Laura begins to realize she has feelings for Steve. Later in the season, he breaks up with Myra and begins his long-coveted relationship with Laura. From the beginning, Myra attempted to interfere in Steve and Laura's relationship, fueled by the desire to win Steve's heart back. The Steve-Laura-Myra triangle would conclude with the series finale, in which Steve and Laura pledged to get married.

[edit] Inventions

Urkel was known for inventing devices typically considered impossible, ranging from exploding vegetables to a time machine. Some of his inventions became recurring plotlines or the source of recurring plotlines, including:

  • the Urkel Bot, an intelligent robot created in Urkel's likeness that fell in love with Laura. Urkel Bot had a brief second life as a police officer, dubbed "Urkel Cop."
  • the Urkel Transformation Chamber, a chamber that would alter the DNA of the person inside to give him or her new personality traits. This was used primarily to transform Steve into Stefan Urquelle (see below), but it also transformed Steve into Elvis Presley and Bruce Lee, and also transformed Carl into a nerd after Myra sabotaged it.

[edit] Stefan Urquelle

During the fifth season, Urkel devised the ultimate plan to win Laura's heart: transforming his DNA using a serum called "Cool Juice" to suppress his "nerd" genes and bring out his "cool" genes. This resulted in the alter ego known as Stefan Urquelle, also played by White. Initially, Laura is enamored with Stefan, but asks that he turn back into Steve when Stefan's self-centered, narcissistic attitude comes out.

Steve later improved the formula to limit the effects it had on his personality, and re-dubbed the formula "Boss Sauce". He also invented a "transformation chamber", which allowed him to turn into Stefan for extended periods of time. He changed into Stefan several times — even while dating Myra — but some circumstance caused him to change back into Steve each time. Late in the sixth season, Steve transformed into Stefan as part of an inventors' competition at Walt Disney World; however, Laura sabotaged the transformation chamber to prevent him from turning back into Steve. During his extended stint as Stefan, he proposed to Laura in front of Cinderella Castle. Laura accepted, but their engagement was broken off when Myra appealed to Stefan and Laura revealed her sabotage.

At the end of the seventh season, Steve created a cloning machine, which he used on himself to create a duplicate. Faced with the dilemma created by having two identical Steve Urkels, and unable to determine which was the original and which was the clone, Laura suggested that one be permanently transformed into Stefan, who then became Laura's boyfriend.

The permanent Stefan made several more appearances throughout the series and proposed to Laura again before the series finale. After weighing her choices in the flashback episode "Pop Goes the Question", Laura chose Steve over Stefan, and Stefan was not seen again.

[edit] Ratings

Urkel first appeared in the 1989 episode "Laura's First Date", where Carl and Eddie separately set up dates for Laura for a Sadie Hawkins dance, and the first thing known him is that he allegedly ate a mouse, and he later makes reference to a mouse when speaking to Carl, implying that it might be true. Several scripts had to be hastily re-written to accommodate the Urkel character, while several first-season episodes that had been completed had new opening gag sequences filmed featuring Urkel trying to push open a door while the Winslow family holds it shut. The addition of Urkel immediately helped the show's modest ratings. White was credited as a guest star in the first season and became a regular member of the cast in season two.

[edit] The Urkel Dance

The Urkel Dance was a novelty dance that originated in the episode Life of the Party. It was based around the character of Steve Urkel and essentially incorporated movements which made the dancer's posture more like his. The lyrics instructed the dancer how to pose: "If you want to do the Steve Urkel dance, all you have to do is hitch up your pants, bend your knees, and stick out your pelvis; (I'm telling you, baby, it's better than Elvis!)". It was popular enough to appear on another show, Step by Step. Jaleel White also performed the song, in character as Steve Urkel, on the 5th Annual American Comedy Awards. Bea Arthur joined him on stage to "Do The Urkel", after which she replied, "MC Hammer had better watch his back"[3].

A promotional cassette single of the song that accompanies the dance was pressed and distributed in limited numbers. A t-shirt was also produced featuring lyrics and Urkel's likeness.

[edit] Appearances on other shows

  • Full House – In the 1991 episode, Stephanie Gets Framed when he helps Stephanie Tanner (Jodie Sweetin) deal with her anxieties after she has to get glasses. He was cousin to a friend of D. J..
  • Step by Step – In the series' second episode, The Dance, Urkel helps his science-fair pen pal, Mark Foster and lifts Alicia "Al" Lambert (Christine Lakin) spirits after her potential date dumps her just before a school dance. White reprises his "Do the Urkel" dance in the scene where Al gives her boyfriend his comeuppance. Also, Urkel makes a brief appearance in the episode where Al gets the movie role over her two sisters. He can be seen for 2 seconds snapping a clapboard during the music video part. In another episode, Urkel lands in the Step by Step family's back yard after launching himself with a rocket pack from the living room of the Winslows' house on Family Matters (the two scenes being shown in uninterrupted sequence, as Family Matters and Step by Step were back to back on television at the time).
  • Additionally, Steve once received a chain letter and thought he'd send it on to his friend Cory Matthews who lived in Philadelphia. It is the same Cory from Boy Meets World, though the two never actually met on any show.

[edit] Merchandise

At the height of his popularity, Urkel's name was branded to several products including a shortlived fruit flavored cereal known as Urkel-Os and an Urkel pullstring doll.[4]

[edit] Notes

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