Interested in the show's character-driven plots and colorful animation, I wanted to look more into how the show's creator developed the characters and decided on the art style to use. However, Craig McCracken disproved this in a tweet as "both Madame Foster and Frankie are real people, not Imaginary Friends". I recently came across one of my favorite childhood shows again, Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends.
Frankie's full name uses the male spelling.Frankie is friends with most of the imaginary friends at Foster's (particularly Wilt, Eduardo, Coco, and Bloo) and can be described as a protective big sister to them.
According to her driver's license in "Bus the Two of Us", she was born on July 25, 1984. The game is inspired by memorable episodes from the Cartoon Network hit series and allows fans to control Mac and Bloo as they solve quirky challenges and complete mission objectives. Herriman's fussiness and fixation with rules and cleanliness, she is usually very friendly, outgoing and laid-back. Fosters Home for Imaginary Friends, from Craig McCracken (creator of The Powerpuff Girls) features the somewhat shy Mac and his imaginary friend, Blooregard Q. Frankie is the caregiver at Foster's and helps keep everything in order. Her parents are never seen in the series.
She also wears a white shirt, green sweater and purple skirt.įrankie is Madame Foster's 22-year-old red-headed granddaughter. Frankie is a young Caucasian woman with shoulder-length red hair.