The Queen (A Bug's Life)

The Queen is the royal ant queen of Ant Island, the mother of Atta and Dot, and the secondary tritagonist in Disney/Pixar's 1998 film A Bug's Life. She is voiced by the late Phyliss Diller.

Personality
The Queen is a very kind, caring individual with a good sense of humor. While her daughter Atta gets very stressed about becoming queen and is concerned with every detail, the Queen is more relaxed and can make a joke out of situations that aren't super serious. She is also nicer to Flik than most of the colony, just like her younger daughter Dot. However, when she discovers Flik's deception, she reprimands him for his lies and orders him to leave. She forgives him later, though.

A Bug's Life
The Queen is the ruler of the ant colony. She is an elderly lavender ant who is due to give up her crown to her eldest daughter, Princess Atta. She also admonishes her younger daughter, Dot, for trying to fly before her wings grow in. She has a pet aphid called Aphie, whom she adores. She is also shown to have a possible romantic relationship with another elder ant, Cornelius. When P.T. Flea arrives looking for his troupe and blowing Flik's cover, she banishes them with Flik and kindly stops Dot from reaching Flik, putting her and entire colony in danger. She is very beloved by her people, so Hopper decides to teach the ants a lesson about disobedience by killing her.

She later participates in the magic act of the circus troupe to distract Hopper, in which she is placed into a Chinese Cabinet (actually, she stowed away hiding under Dim's wings) and cackles while observing the chaos the fake bird has sown amongst the grasshoppers. But the plan is immediately disrupted by P.T. Flea who mistook it for a real bird and sets it on fire accidentally aiding Hopper in the process. When she learns of Hopper's plot to kill her, as well as Flik's inspirational speech, she charges the grasshoppers in rage and expels them from the colony. In her last appearance, she removes Atta's tiara and replaces it with her own larger crown, signifying her daughter's position as the new queen.