They have an effect on every facet of modern life. And the characters
featured in a US book out today have one thing in common - they are all
creations of fiction.
The 101 Most Influential People Who Never Lived aims to
explain "how characters of myth, legends, television, and the movies have shaped
our society, changed our behaviour and set the course of history".
Topping the list is a home-grown American character, the Marlboro Man - a
macho cowboy who emerged in the 1950s as an advertising creation to help sell
cigarettes.
But the firm is unlikely to be pleased, as the book points out that Marlboro
Man's biggest influence on society has been to cause the death of millions from
cancer.
The rest of the Top Ten list has a heavy British presence. At number two is
Big Brother from George Orwell's novel 1984, the face of government control,
while at three is King Arthur, who the book's three authors say embodies for
many the ideal monarch or leader.
Santa Claus is in at number four because he "makes us believe we are entitled
to goodies just for living in an affluent society and governs our entire economy
for the last quarter of the year".
Shakespeare scores twice in the top ten, with Hamlet and Romeo and Juliet,
while Sherlock Holmes and Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde are also there. And so too is Dr
Frankenstein's Monster, from the mind of Britain's Mary Shelley.
Germany is represented by Siegfried, the warrior hero of Teutonic nationalism
who the authors say was responsible for propelling his country into two world
wars.
British creations placed lower in the list include at No 15 Lady Chatterley,
D.H. Lawrence's character who transformed sexual standards and "paved the way
for Sex and the City". James Bond is at 51 for "combining intrigue, sex and
British suavity with the highest technologies of our modern age".
And there is even space for the Loch Ness Monster at 56, described as "the
most fabulous animal in the world: Nessie's influence on the cash flow of
Scotland has been significant".
Authors Allan Lazar, Dan Karlan and Jeremy Salter say: "The idea came to us
that influential characters didn't have to exist, that fictional characters were
just as important in our lives, even in some cases more so than real people."
THE TOP TEN
1. The Marlboro Man
2. Big Brother
3. King Arthur
4. Santa Claus
5. Hamlet
6. Dr Frankenstein's Monster
7. Siegfried
8. Sherlock
Holmes
9. Romeo and Juliet
10. Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde