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Margaret Josephine "Peggy" Hill (née Platter) is a fictional character in the Fox animated series King of the Hill, voiced by Kathy Najimy.She is the matriarch of the Hill family and the wife of the series protagonist Hank Hill, mother to Robert Jeffrey "Bobby" Hill, and aunt to Luanne Platter.
Hank Rutherford Hill (born April 15) [1] is a fictional character and the protagonist of the Fox animated television series King of the Hill. He lives in the fictional town of Arlen, Texas, with his family and works as the assistant manager of a local branch of Strickland Propane. He likes to drink beer, typically Alamo brand, in the alley ...
King of the Hill is an American animated sitcom created by Mike Judge and Greg Daniels. [1] [2] The main characters are Hank Hill, Peggy Hill, Bobby Hill, Dale Gribble, Bill Dauterive, Jeff Boomhauer, Luanne Platter, Nancy Gribble, Joseph Gribble, Kahn Souphanousinphone, Minh Souphanousinphone, Connie Souphanousinphone, John Redcorn, Cotton Hill, Didi Hill, Buck Strickland, and Lucky ...
Brixton's father died on April 4. “He was feeling emotional, and I think as his mom, I’m his safe space,” she explained. Wright said she has received many private messages that are ...
King of the Hill, which aired on Fox for 13 seasons, from 1997 to 2009, centered on propane salesman Hank Hill and his family and friends in Arlen, Texas. The present day-set revival — which ...
One of the photos was a picture Rossdale had previously shared in March 2020, saying at the time he’d taken his mom to a “beautiful birthday lunch” alongside his sisters, stepsister, nieces ...
Cotton, after saying "Do ya, now?" and laughing at Peggy's statement, finally dies. Hank comes back in the room and Peggy tells him that Cotton had told her that he loved Hank before he died. Later, back in Hank's yard, Hank places a plaque on the door of the newly rebuilt shed dedicating it to "Cotton Hill: American".
Although Bobby has a savant knack with shooting, it is one particular talent Hank does not have. Writer Norm Hiscock told MEL Magazine that "Bobby was a sensitive boy who was open to things, whereas Hank was more close-minded, so Bobby would drive him crazy. It was always a nice mash-up. That, for me, was the heart of King of the Hill." [5]