Pixar did not just make toys move. It gave them fears, flaws, friendships, and dreams that felt surprisingly human. That is why a pull-string cowboy and a plastic space ranger have remained fan favorites since 1995.
Each Toy Story character faces challenges that mirror real life, from dealing with change and self-doubt to finding purpose and belonging.
Whether you grew up visiting Andy’s room or are now sharing these movies with your own children, the characters continue to connect with audiences across generations.
With Toy Story 5 arriving in theaters on June 19, 2026, now is the perfect time to revisit every major character, from beloved originals like Woody and Buzz to the newest toys joining the adventure.
Who Are the Main Toy Story Characters?
The toys in this franchise belong to Andy Davis in films one through three, and to Bonnie Anderson from film three onward.
What makes these Toy Story characters work so well is that each one has a different personality: the leader, the worrier, the sarcastic one, the brave one.
Put them in a room together, and you get something that feels less like a cartoon and more like a family.
These beloved characters lead every adventure with courage, loyalty, and friendship. Their teamwork, heart, and determination make them the true heroes of the Toy Story series.
1. Woody
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Voiced by Tom Hanks, Woody is a 1950s pull-string cowboy doll and Andy’s all-time favorite toy. He’s confident, loyal, and sometimes a little too sure he knows best.
His biggest struggle across the films is letting go of his place as the #1 toy of Andy, and eventually of his whole identity as someone’s toy.
Tom Hanks once said his adult daughter started crying when she spotted Woody in the Disneyland parade, and told him, “Woody will be part of that for the rest of time, the same way Mickey is.”
That’s a good way to understand why this character has lasted 30 years.
His big lesson: Being a good friend sometimes means stepping aside.
2. Buzz Lightyear
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Voiced by Tim Allen, Buzz is a space ranger action figure who arrives in Andy’s room in the first film, absolutely convinced he is a real Space Ranger.
Not a toy. A real one. His arc in film one, going from delusion to self-acceptance, is handled so well that it’s easy to forget how funny it is. By the time he understands what he is, he’s also figured out what matters.
“To infinity and beyond” started as a line for a toy. Somewhere along the way, it became one of the most recognized phrases in movie history.
Fun fact: In the 2022 spinoff Lightyear, the character is voiced by Chris Evans. Tim Allen returned for Toy Story 5.
3. Jessie the Cowgirl
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Voiced by Joan Cusack, Jessie shows up in Toy Story 2 as part of the Woody’s Roundup collection. She’s loud, energetic, and kind of all over the place, but her backstory stops you cold.
The scene where she remembers being loved and then slowly abandoned by her owner, Emily (set to the song “When She Loved Me”), is one of the most emotional sequences in any animated film. Period.
Most character guides mention Jessie briefly. Few talk about how her past actually shapes every choice she makes throughout the series.
In Toy Story 5, she takes center stage as the film’s emotional lead, which makes perfect sense given how much unresolved story she’s carried since film two.
4. Bo Peep
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Voiced by Annie Potts, Bo Peep is Woody’s love interest in the first two films. She’s a porcelain shepherdess, a little fragile, mostly background.
Then she disappears entirely from films two and three, and returns in Toy Story 4 as something completely different.
In film four, Bo is independent, resourceful, and has no interest in belonging to a child. She’s built her own life.
It’s one of the better character reinventions Pixar has done, and it’s mostly unmentioned on competitor blogs. If you only know Bo from the first film, you’re missing half her story.
5. Forky
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Voiced by Tony Hale, Forky is a spork that Bonnie turns into a toy in Toy Story 4. He doesn’t want to be a toy. He belongs in the trash.
He says so constantly. And yet, somehow, he becomes one of the most touching characters in the whole franchise because his story is about finding out you matter to someone even when you don’t feel like you do.
Kids love Forky because he’s chaotic and funny. Adults tend to connect with him for different reasons.
The Sidekicks and Friends
Toy Story would not be the same without its loyal sidekicks and lovable friends.
These characters bring humor, support, and heart to every adventure, helping Woody, Buzz, and the gang through their biggest challenges.
1. Rex
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Voiced by Wallace Shawn, Rex is a green plastic T-rex who is deeply worried about not being scary enough.
He tries hard, panics often, and accidentally saves the day more than once. Kids love him because he’s relatable, and he worries about things that turn out fine.
2. Hamm
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Voiced by John Ratzenberger (who has appeared in every Pixar film ever made), Hamm is a piggy bank with a grumpy, sarcastic edge. He’s the character parents tend to enjoy most.
3. Slinky Dog
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Voiced by Jim Varney in the first two films and Blake Clark after Varney’s death in 1999, Slinky is a half-dachshund, half-Slinky toy who is quietly one of Woody’s most loyal friends.
The casting change is a piece of real history that most Toy Story character guides don’t mention.
4. Mr. and Mrs. Potato Head
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Voiced by Don Rickles and Estelle Harris, the Potato Heads are one of the franchise’s best double acts. Mr. Potato Head is grumpy and self-important.
Mrs. Potato Head is patient with him anyway. After Rickles passed away in 2017, Pixar used archived audio to keep him in Toy Story 4, a decision his family supported.
For Toy Story 5, Jeff Bergman and Anna Vocino take over the voices.
5. Bullseye
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Woody’s horse from the Woody’s Roundup show. No dialogue, just expressive ears, tail wags, and the loyalty of a golden retriever in a cartoon horse body.
One of the easiest Toy Story characters for young kids to love.
6. The Little Green Aliens
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The squeeze toy aliens from Pizza Planet are devoted to “The Claw,” which they treat as a higher power.
Their running gag across all the films pays off beautifully in Toy Story 3, when they use Mr. Potato Head’s connection to the alien friends to save the entire group.
If you watch the films in order, that moment earns it.
Toy Story Characters You Love to Hate
Not every toy is a hero. The Toy Story films feature memorable villains and rivals whose actions create some of the franchise’s biggest challenges.
From jealous toys to power-hungry leaders, these characters add tension, drama, and unforgettable moments to the story.
1. Sid Phillips (Toy Story 1)
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Sid is the kid next door who takes toys apart, rebuilds them into something wrong, and blows them up. He’s loud, mean, and terrifying if you’re a toy.
But here’s the thing, Sid doesn’t know the toys are alive. He’s not cruel on purpose. He’s just a kid who never learned better.
That makes him the most realistic villain in the series, and also the one who gets the least credit for being complicated.
2. Stinky Pete / The Prospector (Toy Story 2)
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Voiced by Kelsey Grammer, Stinky Pete has never been played with. He’s in mint condition, still in his box, and absolutely furious about it.
He believes going to a museum is the only dignified end for a toy, and he’ll do anything to get there. His motivation is understandable. His methods aren’t.
3. Lotso (Toy Story 3)
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Lotso smells like strawberries and runs Sunnyside Daycare like a warden runs a prison. Voiced by Ned Beatty, he’s one of Pixar’s best villains.
But what most Toy Story character blogs skip is why he got this way: he was loved, then lost, then replaced. His owner got a new Lotso. He was just a toy, and toys are replaceable.
That backstory doesn’t excuse anything he does. But it does explain everything.
4. Gabby Gabby (Toy Story 4)
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Gabby Gabby is an antique doll with a broken voice box who has spent decades on a shelf, never chosen. She starts as an antagonist who takes Woody’s voice box.
She ends as something much harder to categorize, a character whose whole arc is about learning that being wanted isn’t something you can steal.
Her story is the clearest mirror of what every toy in this franchise fears. Most blogs list her as a villain and move on. She deserves more than that.
New Toy Story 5 Characters Meet the Fresh Faces
This is where most existing Toy Story character blogs run out of content. Toy Story 5 opens June 19, 2026, and it comes with a set of new characters worth knowing before you walk into the theater.
1. Lilypad
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The film’s main antagonist. Voiced by Greta Lee, Lilypad is a frog-shaped smart tablet. She doesn’t physically threaten the toys; she just becomes what Bonnie wants most.
The toys have to watch a screen slowly replace them in a child’s attention, which directors Andrew Stanton and Kenna Harris have described as “the most relatable conflict the franchise has taken on.” Parents everywhere will recognize it immediately.
2. Smarty Pants
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Voiced by Conan O’Brien, Smarty Pants is a new toy character and one of the film’s main comic additions.
Human Characters in Toy Story
While the toys take center stage, the human characters give their stories meaning. From Andy and Bonnie to Sid and other memorable figures.
These characters shape the toys’ adventures and influence the choices they make throughout the series.
1. Andy Davis
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Andy is a boy who loves his toys the way kids actually love things completely, without needing a reason.
He grows up across three films, and his goodbye to Woody and the others at the end of Toy Story 3 is one of those movie moments that catches adults completely off guard.
He’s not even a main character by that point. But his exit hits harder than most franchise endings.
2. Bonnie Anderson
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Bonnie takes over as the toys’ owner in Toy Story 3 and is at the center of films four and five. By Toy Story 5, she’s around eight years old and more interested in her new tablet than in her toys.
Which is exactly what the new film is about.
3. Sid and Hannah Phillips
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Sid destroys toys. Hannah loves hers. They’re siblings, and the contrast between them in the first film is one of the quieter things.
Pixar does well: two kids, same house, completely different relationships with the objects in their lives.
How Toy Story Characters Changed Across 5 Movies
A big reason these characters remain popular is that they grow with each film. Woody learns to let go, Buzz gains confidence in who he is, Jessie overcomes her fear of abandonment, and Bo Peep discovers independence.
Even newer characters, such as Forky and the Toy Story 5 additions, continue the series’ focus on friendship, purpose, and change. Their journeys help the franchise connect with both children and adults.
What Toy Story Characters Teach Us
This franchise has been running for 30 years because it’s not really about toys. Each character carries something that stays with you.
1. Woody: mirrors how we handle getting older. In each film, he’s at a different stage of childhood loyalty, teenage jealousy, young-adult sacrifice, and finally, in film four, the hard choice to go your own way.
Jonathan Mumm, writing about the series, put it well: every Toy Story film maps to a phase of life. That’s not accidental.
2. Buzz is about self-acceptance. His whole first film is a lesson in how long we can resist what’s true about ourselves and how much better things get when we stop.
3. Jessie shows that the worst thing that happened to you doesn’t have to be the biggest thing about you.
4. Lotso is the cautionary one. Hold onto old pain long enough, and it changes you into the thing you were afraid of becoming.
5. Forky is the one who makes parents think. Purpose isn’t something you’re born with. Sometimes a child hands it to you, and that’s enough.
Conclusion
The Toy Story characters have remained popular for decades because their stories go far beyond toys coming to life. Each character brings a unique personality, challenge, and lesson that audiences of all ages can relate to.
From Woody’s loyalty and Buzz Lightyear’s confidence to Jessie’s resilience and Forky’s search for purpose, these characters continue to leave a lasting impression.
Even as new faces join the franchise, the core themes of friendship, belonging, change, and growing up remain at the heart of every adventure.
Whether you’re revisiting the films, introducing them to a new generation, or exploring the latest additions to the cast, Toy Story offers memorable characters whose journeys continue to resonate. That’s what makes this franchise one of Pixar’s most enduring and beloved creations.