Twd Personajes — Temporada 1 ((new))

Let’s revisit the survivors who made that first season unforgettable. The protagonist. The season opens with Sheriff’s Deputy Rick Grimes in a coma, waking up to the apocalypse. Unlike later seasons where he becomes a hardened leader, Season 1 Rick is a man of hope and morality. He is driven by a singular goal: finding his wife, Lori, and son, Carl. Andrew Lincoln’s performance captures the disorientation of a man whose moral compass refuses to break, even as he is forced to shoot a little girl (the infamous "walkie-talkie" scene). Rick represents the old world trying to survive in the new one. Shane Walsh (Jon Bernthal) Rick’s partner and best friend. Before the apocalypse, Shane was a good cop but a flawed man. Season 1 places him in a tragic corner: he believed Rick was dead, so he protected Lori and Carl, falling in love with her in the process. When Rick returns, Shane’s psyche begins to fracture. Jon Bernthal plays him with raw intensity—a man who adapts to the new world too quickly. He understands the brutal logic of survival (killing the living to protect the group) long before Rick does, making him the season’s most compelling antagonist. Lori Grimes (Sarah Wayne Callies) Rick’s wife, caught in an impossible love triangle. Lori is often judged harshly by fans, but Season 1 paints her as a pragmatic survivor. She believes her husband is dead and finds comfort and security in Shane. When Rick returns, she immediately shuts Shane out, creating the central conflict of the season. She is the emotional anchor of the group, trying to maintain normalcy (like doing laundry in a zombie-infested camp) while hiding the secret of her relationship with Shane. Carl Grimes (Chandler Riggs) In Season 1, Carl is just a child—innocent, wide-eyed, and protected. He is the symbol of hope for the group. Unlike the hardened, one-eyed warrior he becomes later, Season 1 Carl plays with toys, asks innocent questions, and represents exactly what is at stake if the adults fail. Daryl Dixon (Norman Reedus) Interestingly, Daryl is not in the comics and was created for the show. In Season 1, he is a secondary character—a redneck, racist, and volatile hunter. He arrives with his abusive older brother, Merle. Daryl is rough around the edges, distrustful of Rick, and driven by rage. Looking back, it is fascinating to see how raw and unlikable Daryl is here compared to the fan-favorite hero he becomes. Season 1 plants the seeds: he is a tracker, a survivor, and deep down, desperate for a family. Merle Dixon (Michael Rooker) Merle is the explosive powder keg of Season 1. A loud, drug-addicted, racist sociopath, he handcuffs himself to a pipe on a rooftop in Atlanta to avoid being left behind. Rick is forced to leave him, and Merle saws off his own hand to escape. Michael Rooker chews the scenery with manic energy. Merle represents the dangerous, unpredictable element of humanity—the man who will tear a group apart from the inside. Glenn Rhee (Steven Yeun) Before he became the heroic leader of the Hilltop, Glenn was the group’s resourceful "runner." A former pizza delivery boy, Glenn uses his knowledge of Atlanta’s back alleys and his quick feet to scavenge for supplies. He is innocent, funny, and wears a baseball cap. He saves Rick from a tank in the pilot episode. In Season 1, Glenn is the moral conscience of the scavenging team—brave but not reckless, and hopelessly smitten with a certain farm girl (though that comes later). Andrea (Laurie Holden) A civil rights lawyer before the fall, Andrea is tough, stubborn, and grieving. She loses her younger sister, Amy, who turns into a walker. Andrea holds her sister’s corpse all night, refusing to let go, until she is forced to shoot her in the head. This trauma defines her. Season 1 Andrea is a fighter who wants to die on her own terms, clashing constantly with Dale, who tries to save her soul. Dale Horvath (Jeffrey DeMunn) The moral compass of the RV. Dale is an older, gentle man who owns a Winnebago, which becomes the group’s mobile home. He sees himself as the protector of the group’s humanity. He specifically watches over Andrea and the younger survivors. Dale represents the fading voice of reason and empathy. He is the one who warns that the group must not lose its soul, even as the world crumbles. Carol Peletier (Melissa McBride) It is almost impossible to recognize Carol in Season 1. She is a mousy, abused, and terrified housewife. Her husband, Ed, is physically and emotionally abusive, and the group tolerates it because "it’s not their business." Carol barely speaks. She hides in the shadows. This makes her eventual transformation into the warrior "Queen of the Apocalypse" the single greatest character arc in the entire series. Season 1 is where we see the victim she had to die for the survivor to be born. T-Dog (IronE Singleton) The quiet, loyal muscle. T-Dog is a supporting character who doesn’t get much dialogue but provides necessary brute force. He is the one who accidentally drops the key to Merle’s handcuffs, setting off that entire plot. In Season 1, T-Dog is the reliable, silent type—a good man trying to help without causing drama. Jim (Andrew Rothenberg) A minor but haunting character. Jim is a mechanic who loses his entire family to the walkers. He is deeply traumatized, digging holes obsessively at the camp because he has a "vision" of the future. He gets bitten and chooses to be left behind to turn. Jim represents the psychological toll of the apocalypse—the madness that lurks just beneath the surface of every survivor. Jacqui (Jeryl Prescott) A former city planner from Atlanta, Jacqui is a calm, pragmatic presence in the group. She works alongside Jim and Morales. Her most notable moment comes in the finale, "TS-19," when she chooses to stay behind and die in the CDC explosion rather than continue fighting. Her decision is a dark mirror to Andrea’s will to live. Morales (Juan Gabriel Pareja) A family man from Atlanta. Morales is level-headed and kind. He travels with his wife and two children. At the end of Season 1, the group splits, and Morales decides to take his family to Birmingham, Alabama, believing his relatives there are alive. He disappears from the show for years, only to return much later (as a Savior), highlighting how the road not taken changes a person. Dr. Edwin Jenner (Noah Emmerich) The final character of Season 1. Dr. Jenner is the lone scientist remaining at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). He is broken, lonely, and holding onto a terrible secret: the French were the last to fall, and there is no cure. He gives the group hope, then rips it away. Jenner whispers something to Rick in the finale (later revealed to be the truth that everyone is infected), providing the massive cliffhanger that launched Season 2. Conclusion Season 1 of The Walking Dead is a tight, six-episode bottle of emotional chaos. It introduced a cast of characters who felt real—flawed, scared, and often selfish. While many of these faces would die or transform beyond recognition, the foundation laid in Atlanta and the CDC remains the reason fans fell in love with the show. It was never about the zombies; it was about the people trying not to become them.

When The Walking Dead premiered on AMC in 2010, no one expected it to become a global phenomenon. Created by Frank Darabont, the series didn't just rely on gore and jump scares; it succeeded because of its broken, complex, and profoundly human characters. Season 1 was a masterclass in survival horror, introducing a small ensemble cast trapped in a world that had just ended. twd personajes temporada 1