Igor (Discworld)
Igor is a recurring set of characters in
Terry Pratchett's
Discworld series of novels. They are members of a clan of servants from the region of
Überwald, all of which are named
Igor. The Igors are based partially upon
Mary Shelley's
Frankenstein's Monster, and partially upon the hunchbacked assistants in
Universal and
Hammer's film versions. While they are born in the normal fashion, the clan's strong tradition of
surgery usually means that by the time they would have grown to maturity in the natural way many of their body-parts have already been swapped around repeatedly, mostly within the clan.
While they are extremely diligent in using their surgical skills among themselves they are also careful to share them among the people around their homes, possibly in a bid to make sure that when the torch-bearing mob comes along to kill the latest freak of science the resident Igor will be spared. The tradition is that people helped by an Igor later allow it to have a "rummage around" for useful organs after they die. If the Igor is turned away from the house, no Igor will help that village again. "What goeth around, cometh around... or thtopth"
When an Igor suffers irreparable damage (which is hard to achieve in people who install back-up hearts and a lightning rod down their backs), they are usually "broken down for thpareth"; their functioning body-parts are distributed amongst those who need them and their brains are conserved until such time as another Igor finds a semi-willing patient with irreparable head-trauma, or manages to construct a suitable body from available parts. The Igors themselves describe the system with the words: "What goeth around cometh around." They speak with a strong, partially affected lisp (or "lithp")They have a strange ability to be at your side (or just behind you) when you call them, and at a door before you knock. Their other ability, returning to a room unnoticed while having previously left through a door, is possibly a spoof of the common bloopers and mistakes in old horror movies. An Igor servant is considered a must by all members of the Überwald upper classes and, naturally, by any serious
mad scientist. In recent years, they have increasingly been seen outside of Uberwald, where their skills far outrank those of any non-Igor surgeon on the Disc.
The male members of the Igor clan traditionally lisp, are considered very good catches for any young lady, and their daughters tend to be very attractive ("Eyes on the same level, that sort of thing?" as
Samuel Vimes once commented). The female members (Igorinas) tend to not show their stitches, but share the talent of the males. They also don't generally lisp as much.
Igors are well-known for knowing exactly which Igor a person is talking about, despite the facts that they are
all named Igor and that the speaker hasn't yet told them which Igor they are referring to.
One Igor, considered "too modern" for
Überwald by his family, went with
Samuel Vimes to
Ankh-Morpork. He now works for the
Ankh-Morpork City Watch. He specialises in
genetic experiments ("bio-artificing"), which, on the
Discworld, simply involves very small stitching. This Igor appears in
The Fifth Elephant,
The Truth,
Night Watch and
Thud!. He shows a disregard and scorn for traditions of Igors, such as lisping, which he sometimes forgets or neglects to do.
Another Igor shipped himself to Ankh-Morpork to assist
Jeremy Clockson in building a glass clock, as told in
Thief of Time. This Igor is a member of an organisation called We R Igors (slogan: "A Spare Hand When Needed").
When the
Magpyr family went to Lancre they naturally brought along their Igor, who is more traditionally minded than his employers and has a dog named Scraps (or "Thcrapth") that he built himself. See
Carpe Jugulum.
A
Borogravian member of the clan served in the Cheesemongers with
Private Perks, in the book
Monstrous Regiment.
Reacher Gilt, Chairman of the
Grand Trunk Company in
Going Postal employed an Igor, as does the horse dealer
Willie Hobson.
There are suposedly several Igors at the Free Hospital.
Confusingly, the barman at Biers (a pub in Ankh-Morpork catering to the
undead) is named Igor, but is not
an Igor, and reacts poorly when this suggestion is made. He appears in
Feet of Clay,
Hogfather and
Thud!.