Looks Like Its Suicide Again for Me Simpsons Gif
Sideshow Bob | |
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The Simpsons character | |
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First appearance | "The Telltale Head" (1990) |
Created by | Al Jean Mike Reiss Sam Simon Matt Groening Jay Kogen Wallace Wolodarsky Brad Bird |
Designed by | Matt Groening |
Voiced by | Kelsey Grammer |
In-universe information | |
Full proper name | Robert Underdunk Terwilliger Jr. |
Gender | Male |
Occupation | Television personality Former Mayor of Springfield Old Mayor of Salsiccia Scientist Professor Player Criminal |
Family unit | Dr. Robert Terwilliger Sr. (father) Dame Judith Underdunk (female parent) Cecil Terwilliger (brother) |
Spouse | Selma Bouvier (ex-married woman) Francesca (wife) |
Children | Gino (son) |
Dr. Robert Underdunk "Bob" Terwilliger Jr., PhD, better known equally Sideshow Bob, is a guest character in the animated television series The Simpsons. He is voiced by Kelsey Grammer and commencement appeared in the episode "The Telltale Head". Bob is a self-proclaimed genius who is a graduate of Yale University, a member of the Republican Party, and a champion of high culture. He began his career as a sidekick on Krusty the Clown'south tv set prove, but after enduring constant abuse, Bob framed his employer for armed robbery in "Krusty Gets Busted", only to exist foiled by Bart Simpson, and sent to prison. Bob started seeking revenge confronting Bart while in prison house, and the two became feuding arch-enemies.
Bob made his second major appearance in season iii's "Blackness Widower"; the writers echoed the premise of Wile Eastward. Coyote chasing the Road Runner by having Bob unexpectedly insert himself into Bart'south life, threatening to disrupt and cease information technology through murder. Starting with that appearance and thereafter, Bob has causeless the role on The Simpsons of an evil genius. Episodes in which he is a cardinal character typically involve Sideshow Bob existence released from prison and executing an elaborate revenge plan, usually foiled by Bart and Lisa. His plans often involve death and destruction, usually targeted at Bart or, less often, Krusty, though he starts targeting the entire Simpson family in season 17. In season 27, however, during the "Treehouse of Horror" segment, "Wanted: Expressionless, Then Alive", Bob finally gets his wish of killing Bart, commenting that he spent 24 years trying to impale a 10-year-erstwhile child; however, he becomes bored with Bart expressionless, then he brings him dorsum to life so that he can repeatedly kill Bart over and over once again.[i] [two] [3]
Despite his villainous deeds, Sideshow Bob shares some personality traits of Grammer'south grapheme Dr. Frasier Crane from the sitcoms Cheers and Frasier, and has been described as "Frasier pickled in arsenic".[4] Several parallels have been explicitly drawn in The Simpsons between Bob and Frasier Crane—Bob'south brother Cecil and his father were played by David Hyde Pierce and John Mahoney, respectively, echoing the roles they played in Frasier. Grammer, who based Bob's vocalism on that of actor Ellis Rabb, has been praised for his portrayals of the character. In 2006, he won an Emmy for Outstanding Voice-Over Performance for his work in the episode "The Italian Bob".
As of December 15, 2019, Bob has appeared in more than 40 episodes, had speaking appearances in 23 of these, and been featured every bit the main character in 14; the most recent of the latter, "Bobby, It'southward Cold Outside", aired on said appointment during the 31st flavour. In addition to his recurring role in the series, Sideshow Bob has made several appearances in other Simpsons media and is mentioned in several more than episodes. He appears in the Simpsons Comics, cameos in the 2007 video game The Simpsons Game, and stars as the main antagonist in The Simpsons Ride at Universal Studios' theme parks. A lover of Gilbert and Sullivan operettas, Sideshow Bob is likewise known for his singing vocalisation; several of Grammar's performances have been included in The Simpsons musical compilations.
Appearances [edit]
On The Simpsons [edit]
The character of Sideshow Bob began his career every bit the non-speaking sidekick on Krusty the Clown's goggle box bear witness.[v] Bob first appears in "The Telltale Head" (season 1, 1990). In the episode, he and Krusty plan a big issue for whoever knows information of who captured the head of Jeremiah Springfield's statue, and joins in on the town mob when it is discovered that Bart Simpson took it. However, after repeated instances of corruption, including existence shot from a cannon and hit constantly with pies, the Yale-educated Bob became angry at Krusty and resentful of the clown'southward success. In "Krusty Gets Disrepair" (flavour 1, 1990), Bob disguised himself equally Krusty and framed him for armed robbery of the Kwik-E-Mart. Afterward Krusty is arrested, Bob takes command of the show, introducing children to elements of high civilisation. However, Bob's reign is short-lived; Bart exposes him as the robber, Krusty is released, and Bob is fired and sent to jail.[6]
In "Black Widower" (season 3, 1992), Bob's get-go major advent after framing Krusty, he is released from prison and marries Bart's aunt Selma Bouvier as part of a scheme to inherit money she has invested in the stock market. Bob attempts to blow Selma up during their honeymoon, merely Bart again foils the plan and Sideshow Bob returns to prison.[7]
Later on being paroled from prison in "Cape Feare" (flavor 5, 1993), Bob targets Bart direct, threatening him repeatedly and forcing the Simpsons into hiding as part of the Witness Relocation Program. Bob follows them to their hideout, a houseboat on Terror Lake, and, after subduing the family, prepares to impale Bart. He allows a final request, however, and Bart asks to hear Bob sing the entire score of H.M.S. Pinafore. Although Bob finishes singing and nearly kills Bart, the delaying tactic leads to Bob's 3rd arrest as the houseboat had drifted all the way back to Springfield.[8]
Bob is released from prison one time over again in "Sideshow Bob Roberts" (season 6, 1994), and runs for Mayor of Springfield every bit the Republican Party candidate. He defeats Democratic Party incumbent Joe Quimby in a landslide, but Bart and Lisa discover from Waylon Smithers that Bob rigged the election by using the names of deceased people. Bob is put on trial and claims himself innocent, just is tricked by Bart and Lisa to expose himself guilty, leading to another incarceration.[9]
Sideshow Bob escapes from prison house for the kickoff time in "Sideshow Bob'due south Last Gleaming" (season 7, 1995), and threatens to blow up Springfield with a nuclear flop unless the urban center stops broadcasting all idiot box shows. He is thwarted when he finds out that the bomb itself is a dud, and so kidnaps Bart and flies the Wright Brothers' aeroplane in an attempt to kill himself, Bart, and Krusty (who is hiding within a shack, improvising a performance on the Emergency Broadcast Arrangement). This likewise is thwarted, and Bob returns to prison.[x]
In the following season, Bob takes advantage of the prison'south work release program, and appears to be genuinely redeemed. "Blood brother from Another Series" (season eight, 1997) reveals that Bob merely became Krusty'due south sidekick subsequently his younger brother Cecil failed an audition ten years prior, because Krusty considered Bob to be a perfect comic foil.[11] Reverend Lovejoy declares him a changed man and recommends him for a work release opportunity. Bob is discharged from prison house into the care of Cecil, who is now Springfield'southward chief hydrological and hydrodynamical engineer. However, the scheming Cecil, nonetheless smarting over his failed audition for Krusty, tries to frame Bob past sabotaging the Springfield Dam past having it burst beyond Springfield. Bob, Bart, and Lisa together stop Cecil and save the boondocks, and both brothers, despite Bob's genuine innocence, are sent to prison.[11]
Bob returned in "24-hour interval of the Jackanapes" (season 12, 2001), where he discovers in prison that Krusty has erased all of the early shows featuring Sideshow Bob as Krusty himself is declaring his fifth and final retirement subsequently being bellyaching with the network executives. Bob is released from prison and develops a plot to kill Krusty using Bart as a suicide bomber during Krusty's retirement special. Everything goes just as Bob had planned, and just when Bob was about to succeed in murdering both his enemies, he overhears Krusty publicly holding himself responsible for turning Bob into a criminal, expressing his regret of mistreating Bob during his years as Sideshow. To appease things, Krusty sings himself a song on Bob's behalf, and beingness touched by this, Bob decides to abort his plan of attempted murder and reconciles with Krusty, although he is returned to prison for it.[12]
Bob's aid is sought by Springfield constabulary in "The Dandy Louse Detective" (season fourteen, 2002). After an effort is made on Homer Simpson'due south life, Bob is released from prison house to help observe the culprit. During the adventure, Bob is given advice to kill Bart without hesitation, instead of being tricked into delay or screwing up on his plots. When the mystery is solved (it was Frank Grimes's son), he returns to murder Bart. However, Bob finds he is "accustomed to his [Bart'due south] face" and cannot do it.[13]
In "The Italian Bob" (flavour 17, 2005), information technology is revealed that Bob had moved to Italy to make a fresh start. He was somewhen elected mayor of the village of Salsiccia in Tuscany and marries a local woman named Francesca, with whom he has a son named Gino. The Simpson family unit, in Italy to recollect a machine for Mr. Burns, encounters him by chance. Bob welcomes them with hospitality on the condition that they not reveal his dark felonious past; however, a drunken Lisa jokes about Bob's criminal deeds and reveals his prison uniform, alienating Bob from his citizens. Bob is angered plenty to change his dream of killing Bart to killing the whole Simpson family unit. Upon catching up to Bob, his wife and his son swear a vendetta with him on all the Simpsons.[xiv]
The entire Terwilliger family unit returns in "Funeral for a Fiend" (season 19, 2007) in which Bob's father, Robert Terwilliger Sr., and female parent, Matriarch Judith Underdunk, make their first appearances. Cecil also appears a second fourth dimension on the show. Bob at kickoff attempts to kill the whole family a second time, but his plan fails. Bob fakes his own decease during his trial and locks Bart in the coffin, which he attempts to cremate at the otherwise empty funeral home as all the Terwilligers express mirth maniacally. They are foiled by Lisa and the rest of the Simpson family and sent to prison house.[xv]
In "Sex, Pies and Idiot Scrapes" (flavour 20, 2008), Bob is 1 of the wanted criminals in Homer and Ned Flemish region'due south bounty hunter job despite already existence in prison, which he escapes from at the end of the episode. In "Wedding for Disaster" (season twenty, 2009), Bart and Lisa initially suspect Bob of kidnapping Homer to preclude him from attending his second wedding with Marge (due to a keychain they found had an 'Southward' and a 'B'), but Krusty provides him with an alibi, explaining to the kids that Bob was with him the whole day. Eventually, Bob and the kids observe the true culprits, Patty and Selma.[xvi]
In "O Brother, Where Bart Thou?" (flavor 21, 2009), Bob makes a non-speaking cameo appearance in Bart's dream sequence while the latter becomes desperate of having a younger brother. Cecil makes his third appearance in The Simpsons past appearing alongside Bob; the brothers are flying kites together. Bob reappears once again in the episode "The Bob Next Door" (season 21, 2010). He switches faces with his prison cellmate Walt Warren. Bob returns to Springfield and moves into the business firm next to the Simpson family, assuming Walt's identity. He exploits this to brand his latest attempt to kill Bart legally over state lines, just is foiled again and gets taken away by country police.[17]
Bob appears in "At Long Last Leave" (season 23, 2012), the 500th episode of The Simpsons. He attends a town meeting to decide if the Simpson family should be banished from Springfield, and is i of many who express their desire for it to happen.[xviii] He makes a silent appearance in "Moonshine River" (season 24, 2012), where he runs across the train tracks trying to kill Bart, but ends upwardly getting hit past a railroad train.
In "The Man Who Grew As well Much" (flavor 25, 2014), he was revealed to be a Chief Scientist for a genetic engineering visitor named Monsarno, having received the position subsequently he was selected as a examination subject and published the results of the experiments to which he was subjected. He and Lisa bond over their interest in Walt Whitman, but Bob reveals that he has besides genetically modified himself to requite himself various superhuman abilities, intending to acquire Dna from the relics of various historical figures stored in the Springfield Museum to make himself a superhuman dictator. Later tempted into a murderous rage, he chases down Bart and Lisa and is most to kill them only nonetheless, he is provoked into a fight and he realizes that he has become a crude monster and jumps off the Springfield Dam. The episode ends with Bob underwater in the lake, shown to have survived because the gills he gave himself allow him to alive.
Bob also appears in "Clown in the Dumps" (flavor 26, 2014). Having returned to prison, he offered his condolences to Krusty after the death of his male parent, Rabbi Krustofsky. Several episodes later, Bob returned in "Blazed and Confused" (season 26, 2014), where he meets Mr. Lassen, Bart's former teacher, who was now reduced to working in prison house as a guard after Bart'due south earlier actions at a "Blazing Guy" festival got him fired. Despite Lassen's offer to get him out, Bob rejects the idea that they team upwards as Lassen thought that they would take turns gutting Bart.
In "Treehouse of Horror XXVI" (flavor 27, 2015), in the kickoff segment called "Wanted: Dead, then Live", Bob uses Milhouse'south phone to trap Bart in the ring classroom and successfully kills him. In peace with himself, Bob moves on from Bart to pursue other dreams, however, due to Bob chasing down Bart for and so long, Bob finds his life so meaningless in Bart's absence that he creates a car to bring Bart dorsum to life so that he tin proceed killing his enemy over and over, until the other Simpsons find Bob'southward location and rescue Bart, and Bart uses the resurrection automobile to turn Bob into a twisted amalgamation of creatures. Bob likewise appears in the episode "Gal of Constant Sorrow" (season 27, 2016), grunting in annoyance as he wipes off Bart'due south graffiti from Hettie Mae Boggs' promo poster on the wall along with Ophidian Jailbird and other inmates.
Bob returns in "Treehouse of Horror XXVII" (season 28, 2016), the 600th episode of The Simpsons. In the opening sequence, he is the self-appointed leader of a four-member group consisting of Homer's enemies, including Bob himself and the ghost of Frank Grimes. Wanting revenge once again, the group attempts to kill the Simpsons but is ultimately killed past Maggie, except Grimes'southward ghost. In the ending sequence, Bob is 1 of the characters featured in the "600" song played by Judith Owen. In "Havana Wild Weekend" (season 28, 2016), Sideshow Bob appeared in the backgrounds at the Republic of cuba's check-in.
Bob likewise makes a non-speaking cameo appearance in "The Nightmare After Krustmas" (season 28, 2016); he is amongst the oversupply witnessing Krusty nearly drowning in a frozen lake while holding up a sign proverb "Die Clown". He's had a major appearance in "Gone Male child" (season 29, 2017), when he tries to rail down the whereabouts of Bart after he goes missing and is presumed expressionless. Bob finds Bart and gain to kill him and Milhouse, but saves them at the concluding minute due to the influence of the prison therapist's lessons of potentially moving on from wanting to impale Bart. The epilogue features an older Bob, now known as Elder Bob, beingness an lighthouse keeper and still having regrets of not killing Bart.
In "The Fat Bluish Line" (flavour 31, 2019), Bob escapes from prison over again, only to be hitting past a rake truck. Several episodes later, in "Bobby, It'due south Common cold Exterior" (flavor 31, 2019), he is hired to play Santa Claus at a theme park, and later helps the Simpsons discover who is stealing everyone'southward Christmas gifts.
Other media [edit]
In addition to regular roles in the television set series, Sideshow Bob has made several appearances in other Simpsons media. Kelsey Grammer recorded several Sideshow Bob lines for The Simpsons Movie, but the scene was cut.[19] Sideshow Bob has made regular appearances in the monthly Simpsons Comics,[twenty] and several of Kelsey Grammar's singing performances have been included in The Simpsons CD compilations. His performance of the H.M.S. Pinafore in "Cape Feare" was afterwards included on the album Get Simpsonic with The Simpsons, [21] and the song "The Very Reason That I Live" from "The Great Louse Detective" was included on The Simpsons: Testify.[22] A previously unaired vocal, "Hullaba Lula", originally written for "Day of the Jackanapes", was also included on that compilation.[22] The producers modeled the song after "Zip-a-Dee-Doo-Dah", simply were forced to remove the song from the episode when they were unable to obtain the rights to it.[23]
In The Simpsons Game, released in November 2007, Bob has a speaking cameo appearance at the terminate of the chapter titled "Invasion of the Yokel-Snatchers" in which he was working with Kang and Kodos.[24] Sideshow Bob appears in the 1991 The Simpsons Arcade Game, on the fifth level where he is pulling a cart containing a roast chicken health pick up. Bob was also included as a level boss in the 1991 video game Bart vs. the Space Mutants.[25] Sideshow Bob plays a lead function in The Simpsons Ride, which opened at Universal Studios Florida and Universal Studios Hollywood in May 2008. Voiced past Grammer, he is the main villain in the ride, having escaped from prison house to get revenge on the Simpson family.[26] [27]
In The Simpsons: Tapped Out, a city-building game released in February 2012, Sideshow Bob occurs as a bonus. Popping up every couple hours, the players are given a chance to tap on him to receive a small sum of money, and "transport" him to jail. In a later update to the game, Sideshow Bob also has a stand up in Krusty State, where players get to pop balloons for a gamble to win donuts and Krusty tickets. The Simpsons: Tapped Out Terwilligers content update was released April fourteen, 2015 and has several references to the Simpsons episodes with Sideshow Bob. This game outcome was split in iii acts and concluded June 4, 2015. New characters, skins and costumes include Sideshow Bob, Cecil Terwilliger, Gino Terwilliger, Francesca Terwilliger, Dr. Robert Terwilliger Sr., Judith Underdunk, Captain Bob, and Opera Krusty. Most of the upshot activity takes identify at Monsarno Research and Opera House.
Grapheme [edit]
Cosmos [edit]
Sideshow Bob in his offset appearance in "The Telltale Head". His design was simple compared to later versions and would be refined for his appearance in "Krusty Gets Busted".
Sideshow Bob kickoff appeared in "The Telltale Head", the 8th episode of flavor one. His pattern was relatively simple compared to later incarnations, and his hairstyle was rounded. However, towards the cease of the episode, he appears once again, in a panning shot of a oversupply, with his familiar hairstyle.[28] His second advent, and first major 1, was in season one's twelfth episode "Krusty Gets Disrepair", written by Jay Kogen and Wallace Wolodarsky.[29] Bob'south design was updated for "Krusty Gets Busted"; as the episode's animation fashion evolved, managing director Brad Bird made the character of Sideshow Bob sleeker and more refined, to fit Grammer'due south vox technique.[thirty] Following the re-design, animators tried to redraw his scenes in "The Telltale Head", but had insufficient fourth dimension before the prove was produced.[28]
Bob has no lines of dialogue during the first one-half of "Krusty Gets Busted"; the graphic symbol'due south simply communication takes the class of a slide whistle. This was designed to make Bob appear simplistic, so that when he finally spoke, viewers would be surprised to hear his sophisticated vocabulary.[31] An early version of the script for "Krusty Gets Busted" called for James Earl Jones to vocalisation Bob, but the producers instead selected Kelsey Grammer.[32] For Bob'south vocalisation, Grammar performed an impression of theatre histrion and director Ellis Rabb. Grammer had once worked for Rabb, whose "lamenting tones became [the] foundation for Sideshow Bob".[33] [34]
Sideshow Bob'south full name is Robert Underdunk Terwilliger.[35] His last name was outset revealed in "Black Widower"[7] while his middle name was showtime revealed in "Sideshow Bob Roberts".[nine] Competing theories every bit to the origin of his name exist; some sources say he was named after the character Dr. Terwilliker, a megalomaniac outwitted by a boy named Bart in the picture show The 5,000 Fingers of Dr. T by Dr. Seuss, but others say he was named after Terwilliger Boulevard in Portland, Oregon.[36] [37] [38] Yet some other theory is that he was named after Sergeant Terwilliger and Mrs. Underdunk in the pilot episode of the Television show Hunter.[39]
Development [edit]
For flavor three's "Blackness Widower", the writers echoed the premise of Wile E. Coyote chasing the Road Runner from Looney Tunes cartoons by having Bob unexpectedly insert himself into Bart's life and endeavor to kill him. Executive producer Al Jean has compared Bob'south character to that of Wile Eastward. Coyote, noting that both are intelligent, yet always foiled by what they perceive as an inferior intellect.[40] For "Black Widower", director David Silverman updated the character model to reflect the animation of manager Brad Bird.[30] A rule for earlier episodes featuring Bob called for a recap of his evil deeds; this was dropped after season eight'south "Brother from Some other Serial" when the chronology became besides lengthy.[41] Some other rule established by the bear witness's writers mandated Bob's return to prison at the end of each episode, although this pattern was abandoned in later episodes like "The Bully Louse Detective" and "The Italian Bob".[41]
Neb Oakley and Josh Weinstein, the showrunners for the seventh and eighth seasons, believed that every flavour of the show should incorporate an episode starring Sideshow Bob. However, past the seventh season, Bob had already been the focus of iv episodes, and writers were having trouble developing new ways to include him.[42] Weinstein describes Bob'due south dialogue as difficult to write, due to his unique and refined mode of speaking.[43] Despite these challenges, however, creators of The Simpsons ordinarily await forward to "Sideshow Bob episodes"; the writers consider them enjoyable to write,[44] and quondam managing director Dominic Polcino describes them equally "a treat" to work on.[45] In "Black Widower", Sideshow Bob notes that he is a "life-long Republican".
Kelsey Grammar initially expected Sideshow Bob to be a 1-time role, and calls him "the well-nigh pop character I've ever played".[33] Grammer usually joins the show's "table readings" (wherein cast members read each script together for the first time),[46] and quondam executive producer David Mirkin described working with Grammer as very pleasant, due to his lively sense of humour. Grammer, Mirkin says, is capable of perfect readings, but noted that the histrion dislikes performing Sideshow Bob's evil express mirth.[47] In a 2007 interview, Simpsons executive producer Al Jean listed Grammer every bit ane of his favorite guest stars (second only to Phil Hartman), maxim "his vocalization is and so rich."[48] Author George Meyer commented that "writing for Kelsey is smashing, he can give the kind of regal, florid, melodramatic speeches that most of the characters would never give. And he can sing."[35]
The show'south writers admire Grammer's singing vocalism, and try to include a song for each appearance.[46] Alf Clausen, the principal composer for The Simpsons, commented that "[Grammer] is so smashing. He'due south just amazing. You can tell he has this honey of musical theater and he has the vocal instrument to go with it, so I know whatever I write is going to be sung the way I've heard it."[49] Clausen composed Sideshow Bob'southward theme, which is played whenever Bob gets out of prison house or is about to commit a sinister activity, and was first used in "Cape Feare". It is based on the score of the film Greatcoat Fear, equanimous by Bernard Herrmann.[46] The musical score for "Cape Feare" earned Clausen an Emmy Award nomination for Outstanding Dramatic Underscore – Serial in 1994.[50]
Bob's prisoner number is frequently 24601, which is Jean Valjean's prisoner number in Les Misérables.[51] Another trademark for Bob is a visual gag of stepping on a rake and existence struck in the face with its handle; this joke first appeared in "Greatcoat Feare". To fill up time, the writers added nine sequent iterations of the aforementioned joke in quick succession.[46] The sequence has become known as the "rake joke" and was described by Amusement Weekly as showing "genius in its repetitive stupidity."[52]
Family unit [edit]
Sideshow Bob's brother Cecil was designed to resemble actor David Hyde Pierce, who too played the brother of Grammar's character on the show Frasier.
The episode "Brother from Another Serial" introduces Bob'due south brother Cecil. Subsequently writer Ken Keeler was assigned to write an episode featuring Sideshow Bob, he drew inspiration from episodes of Frasier. He decided to contain elements of Grammer's other show into the character of Sideshow Bob, and designed Cecil to resemble Grammer's blood brother on Frasier.[44] Cecil is voiced by David Hyde Pierce, who portrayed Frasier Crane's blood brother Niles. Pierce commented, "Commonly, I would not practise something like this. Merely how oft do you become a risk to work with an thespian like Kelsey Grammer and, more than importantly, play his blood brother?"[53] Several of Frasier 's producers were asked to review the original script and provide feedback. Their comments were positive; they only expressed concern with a very brief scene in which Cecil talks to a visible grapheme whom he refers to as "Maris". In Frasier, Maris Crane is an unseen character, and the producers of Frasier asked that the scene be removed.[44] Many of the interactions between Bob and Cecil were based on those of Niles and Frasier.[44] Cecil was drawn to resemble David Hyde Pierce, while retaining a visual similarity to Sideshow Bob. According to managing director Pete Michels, it was hard to draw Bob and Cecil continuing together, because of their comically oversized feet.[54]
Cecil returns in flavour 19'south "Funeral for a Fiend", which introduces the brothers' previously unseen begetter, Dr. Robert Terwilliger, played past John Mahoney.[55] Mahoney portrayed Martin Crane, the male parent of Grammer's and Pierce's characters in Frasier.[56] Whereas in Frasier, Mahoney played the "downward-to-World, average guy" to Grammer's and Hyde Pierce's "uppity snobs", Robert Terwilliger Sr. was portrayed as equally highbrow equally Bob.[57] His wife, Bob's mother, is Dame Judith Underdunk, "the finest classical extra of her generation." She sports the same curly spiked hair equally her 2 sons. Bob besides has a wife named Francesca (voiced past Maria Grazia Cucinotta) and a son named Gino, both of whom were introduced in season 17 episode "The Italian Bob" and returned for "Funeral for a Fiend".[fourteen]
Reception [edit]
The character of Sideshow Bob and Grammer's voicework have received many accolades. In 2006 IGN listed him as the second-all-time "peripheral character" on The Simpsons, commenting that Bob is "a human being of contradictions; his goofy advent, complete with palm tree like hair, doesn't seem to match upwards to the well spoken and even musically talented maniac."[59] Also that year, Magician mag rated Bob every bit the 66th-greatest villain of all fourth dimension.[60] Adam Finley of TV Squad wrote that "that baritone voice, the Shakespearean delivery, and the ability to get from calm and collected to stark raving mad all within the same second make Sideshow Bob ane of the best recurring characters on the show."[61]
Kelsey Grammer has consistently received praise for his voicework, and has been described equally "brilliant",[62] "inimitable"[63] and "a feast of mid-Atlantic anglophilia".[64] In 2006, Grammer won the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Vocalization-Over Performance for his function in "The Italian Bob"; he had previously won four awards in the Outstanding Atomic number 82 Actor in a One-act Series category for his portrayal of the title role on Frasier.[65] In 2008, Grammer was included in Entertainment Weekly 'southward list of the sixteen best Simpsons guest stars; Hyde Pierce was as well included in that listing.[66] Ken Tucker of Entertainment Weekly wrote that "Kelsey Grammer'south grand voice-operation every bit Sideshow Bob is Frasier pickled in arsenic."[4] In her volume My Life as a 10-Year-Old Male child, Nancy Cartwright (who performs the vox of Bart Simpson) wrote that "Kelsey Grammer scores large-time by injecting caustic, bitter, contemptuous and deliciously vile free energy into his rendition of Sideshow Bob. Springfield just wouldn't be the same without him."[58]
Most of the episodes featuring Bob accept been well received past fans and critics. "Greatcoat Feare" is generally regarded every bit one of the all-time episodes of The Simpsons [67] and placed third on Entertainment Weekly 's 2003 listing of the show's elevation 25 episodes.[52] IGN considers information technology the best episode of the 5th flavour.[68] In 2007, Vanity Fair chosen it the prove's fourth-best episode, considering of its "masterful integration of filmic parody and a recurring character".[69] Ben Rayner of the Toronto Star listed "Greatcoat Feare", "Sideshow Bob's Last Gleaming" and "Brother From Some other Serial" amid the best episodes of the series, writing "forget Frasier, these are Kelsey Grammer's best roles."[lxx] "The Italian Bob" and its writer John Frink won a Writers Guild of America Award in 2007 in the animation category.[71] In Dec 2009, Robert Canning of IGN ranked the ten episodes to feature Bob that had aired at the time. The first five Bob episodes took up the acme 5, with "Cape Feare" beingness ranked offset. "The Italian Bob" was ranked tenth, with the caption that "All the things we love well-nigh a Sideshow Bob episode—the vengeance, the familiar settings and characters, the elaborate scheming—were missing from this half-60 minutes. Without information technology, Bob wasn't nearly as entertaining, and the episode didn't result in a whole lot of laughs." He noted that only "The Italian Bob" and the ninth ranked "Funeral for a Fiend" were "the only ones I'd consider clunkers. The remaining episodes are all quite fun."[72]
The character's line in "Sideshow Bob Roberts", "Attempted murder? Now honestly, what is that? Do they give a Nobel prize for attempted chemistry?", briefly became an Internet meme subsequently a similar defense of President Donald Trump was repeated after the Trump–Ukraine scandal.[73]
Analysis [edit]
In Planet Simpson, author Chris Turner writes that Bob is congenital into a highbrow snob and bourgeois Republican and so that the writers can continually apply him as a strawman and pincushion. He represents loftier culture while Krusty represents low culture, and Bart, stuck in betwixt, always wins out.[64] In the book Leaving Springfield, David L. G. Arnold comments that Bart is a product of a "mass-culture upbringing" and thus is Bob'south enemy.[74] Frustrated by his early role as the target of "Krusty's cheap gags", Bob frames Krusty and takes over the evidence. He changes the content of that show to nowadays readings of classic literature and segments examining the emotional lives of pre-teens. He believes that by exposing the kids to high culture he will improve their lives.[75] Arnold writes that "Bob's own conscience and morality are clearly unaffected by the high civilisation he represents." He also tries to "manipulate the tastes of the masses" past becoming a criminal mastermind.[75] Arnold believes that this is most apparent in "Sideshow Bob Roberts", wherein he rigs the election to get the mayor of Springfield. When accused of election fraud, he rants, "Your guilty consciences may force you to vote Democratic, but secretly you lot yearn for a cold-hearted Republican who'll cut taxes, brutalize criminals, and dominion you like a king! Y'all demand me, Springfield!" He considers himself a member of the social elite, and happily uses Machiavellian methods to larn and maintain power.[76]
Bob's intelligence serves him in many means. During the episode "Greatcoat Feare", for example, the parole board asks Bob why he has a tattoo that says "Die, Bart, Die". Bob replies that it is German for "The, Bart, The"; members of the lath are impressed by his reasoning.[77] Believing that "nobody who speaks German could exist an evil homo", they release him.[8] Nonetheless, his dear of high culture is sometimes used confronting him. In the same episode, Bob agrees to perform the operetta H.M.S. Pinafore in its entirety as a last request for Bart. The tactic stalls Bob long plenty for the police to arrest him.[77]
References [edit]
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Bibliography [edit]
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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sideshow_Bob
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