List of fictional characters on the autistic spectrum

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Fictional characters described by the authors as having conditions on the autism spectrum. This article includes only fictional characters explicitly described in the work or otherwise by the author as being autistic or having Asperger's. It is not intended to include speculation.


Contents

Literature

Film

Key or central characters:


Television

  • Tommy Westphall (played by Chad Allen) is a recurring character on St. Elsewhere. Tommy is the teenage son of chief of medicine Donald Westphall. A scene in the series' final episode implies the entire series had taken place in Tommy's mind (and by extension other series connected to St. Elsewhere through cross-overs, shared characters, shared places or shared events also occur in Tommy's mind, forming the Tommy Westphall Universe).
  • Brady Hauser, Mark Hauser's brother, is an autistic savant who is enlisted by his brother to steal corporate security information in the 24 episode "8:00PM-9:00PM (24 season 6)".
  • Lily Montgomery (Jackson Montgomery's adopted daughter) on the television show All My Children [14].
  • Laurence Burrell was an autistic teenager appearing as a one off character on A Touch of Frost [15]
  • Dr. Bob Melnikov (played by Ukrainian actor Dmitry Chepovetsky) on ReGenesis has Asperger's and discusses it in episodes 1, 11 [16], and 17.
  • On Law and Order: Criminal Intent, the episode "Probability" [17] features a corrupt insurance fraud expert named Wally Stevens (played by Mark Linn-Baker) who has Asperger's syndrome and is eventually betrayed by his own tics and behaviors.
  • In the House episode "Lines in the Sand" [18], which focuses on an autistic child named Adam, the team suspects that House may have low-level Asperger's syndrome in order to explain his unwavering protests at having the carpet in his office changed. Dr. Wilson, however, asserts that House "wishes" he had Asperger's syndrome so that he would have an excuse for his rudeness and dislike of people.
  • On The Closer in the first season episode "You Are Here", the son of the murder victim has Asperger's syndrome. Much of the focus of the episode involves the impact of his condition on his family and their lives together.
  • On Boston Legal, recurring character Jerry Espenson is diagnosed with Asperger's syndrome during a second-season plot arc that exposes the trait during his trial for assaulting Shirley Schmidt. The revelation is made during the episode "Helping Hands" and is referenced in later episodes.
  • On a Season 4 episode of Quincy, M.E., Quincy helps an autistic child named Timmy Carson (played by David Hollander) get into a specialist program and convinces Timmy's parents not to institutionalize the child.[1]
  • The ER season 13 episode "Heart of the Matter" featured a young female patient with Asperger's syndrome.[2]
  • In Scrubs, Dr. Perry Cox diagnosed his friend Ron's son Nathan with autism in the episode "My Roommates".
  • On The Shield, Vic Mackey's son Matthew and daughter Megan both have been diagnosed with autism.
  • The Without a Trace episode Volcano featured an autistic boy who disappeared in New York City.
  • On a Season 4 episode of Cold Case, "Saving Sammy", investigation into the three-year-old murder of an autistic teen's parents is reopened
  • Matthew Gray Gubler, who plays Dr. Spencer Reid on Criminal Minds, has stated in an interview that his character is "an eccentric genius, with hints of schizophrenia and minor autism, Asperger's syndrome".[19]
  • In Series 3 of UK Drama series, Waterloo Road, new pupil Karla Bentham has Asperger's syndrome.[citation needed]

Comics

References

  1. A Test for the Living, Episode 40, Season 4. First Aired: Thursday October 19, 1978 [1]
  2. Heart of the Matter, Season 13. Aired Nov. 2, 2006.
  3. Aquaman vol. 4, #6
  4. Psi-Force #26

See also

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