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Difference between revisions of "Four Great Women and a Manicure/References"

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== Cultural references ==
 
== Cultural references ==
*The episode title may be a reference to ''{{w|Four Weddings and a Funeral}}''.
+
*The episode title is a reference to ''{{W|Four Weddings and a Funeral}}''.
*''{{w|Beowulf}}'': Lackey [[Moe]] sees [[Queen Elizabeth I]] (portrayed by [[Selma]]) in her nightclothes and exclaims, "Someone call {{w|Beowulf (hero)|Beowulf}}! {{w|Grendel}} got in again!"
+
=== Wraparound ===
*Queen Elizabeth's horse is named "[[Tea Biscuit]]", a pun on ''{{w|Seabiscuit (film)|Seabiscuit}}''.
+
*Marge is taking Lisa for her first mani-pedi (a combined {{W|manicure}} and {{W|pedicure}}) at [[Finger-Looking Good Nail Salon]] which is a reference to "It's Finger Lickin' Good," {{W|KFC}}'s slogan since the 1950s. The nail salon's sign also has a caricature of KFC's [[Colonel Sanders]] admiring his fingernails.
*When Moe and the Queen see the Spanish Armada coming, they are standing under a banner that reads "Mission Accomplished". Moe comments, "It's probably a little too early to be standing under this", a reference to President [[George W. Bush]]'s "{{w|Mission Accomplished speech|Mission Accomplished}}" speech in 2003.
+
*The painting that Maggie makes on the wall (for which she is swiftly—and ironically—scolded by [[Marge]]) is [[Vincent van Gogh]]'s "{{W|The Starry Night}}".
*''{{w|Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937 film)|Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs}}'': Parodied in the second segment. However, [[Snow White]] (portrayed by [[Lisa]]) is forced to rename all the dwarfs to satisfy the legal demands of the [[Blue-haired lawyer]].
+
 
*The Blue-haired lawyer is shown to have long claw-like fingernails (and asks the nail shop to sharpen them), a reference to the cultural stereotype of lawyers being aggressive and predatory.
+
=== Queen Elizabeth I ===
*When Snow White flees from the wicked queen's threat, she comes across a gingerbread house and Grandma's house (referencing the folk tales "{{w|Hansel and Gretel}}" and "{{w|Little Red Riding Hood}}") before she finds the dwarfs' house.
+
*Much of the plot and imagery are taken from the historical drama ''{{W|Elizabeth: The Golden Age}}'' starring [[Cate Blanchett]].
*"{{w|Goldilocks and the Three Bears}}": Snow White complains about the dwarfs' beds being too hard and too soft. Unlike Goldilocks, however, Snow White settles for the soft bed.
+
*[[Walsingham]] sees [[Queen Elizabeth I]] (portrayed by [[Selma]]) in her nightclothes and exclaims, "Someone call {{W2|Beowulf|hero}}! {{W|Grendel}} got in again!" ''{{W|Beowulf}}'' is an Old-English poem where the title hero vanquished the giant monster Grendel, described as "a creature of darkness, exiled from happiness and accursed of God, the destroyer and devourer of our human kind."
*"{{w|Sleeping Beauty}}": When the dwarfs find Snow White asleep, Doc speculates that she may be under a curse and Crabby says that a kiss might awaken her. When Crabby approaches her to do the deed, however, Snow White quickly sits up and exclaims, "I'm awake! I'm awake already!"
+
*The establishing shot of [[King Julio of Spain]]'s castle is the {{W|Alcázar of Segovia}} about 56 miles (90 km) north of [[Madrid]].
 +
*Queen Elizabeth's horse is named "[[Tea Biscuit]]", a pun on ''{{W2|Seabiscuit|film}}''.
 +
*Elizabeth I in armor at the Straits of Dover is a reference to her {{W|Speech to the Troops at Tilbury|speech to the troops at Tilbury}} on August 9, 1588.
 +
*When Moe and the Queen see the Spanish Armada coming, they are standing under a banner that reads "Mission Accomplished". Moe comments, "It's probably a little too early to be standing under this", a reference to President [[George W. Bush]]'s "{{W|Mission Accomplished speech|Mission Accomplished}}" speech in 2003.
 +
*The [[Timothy Lovejoy, Jr.|Protestant minister]] says that the "country turned Protestant for the sole reason that our fat, mean king could dump his faithful wife", referencing [[Henry VIII]].
 +
 
 +
=== Snow White ===
 +
*''[[Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs]]'' is parodied in the second segment. However, [[Snow White]] (portrayed by [[Lisa]]) is forced to rename all the dwarfs to satisfy the legal demands of the [[Blue-haired lawyer]].
 +
**The songs the dwarfs sing, "[[Off to Work]]", "[[It's Time]]", and "[[Time to Say Goodbye]]", are parodies of "{{W|Heigh-Ho}}" from ''Snow White''.
 +
*When Snow White flees from the wicked queen's threat, she comes across a gingerbread house and Grandma's house (referencing the folk tales ''{{W|Hansel and Gretel}}'' and ''{{W|Little Red Riding Hood}}'') before she finds the dwarfs' house.
 +
*Snow White complains about the dwarfs' beds being too hard and too soft, referencing ''{{W|Goldilocks and the Three Bears}}''. Unlike Goldilocks, however, Snow White settles for the soft bed.
 
*Unlike in the Disney movie, where she dies by falling off a cliff, the way the Evil Queen dies in Lisa's retelling of Snow White is very reminiscent of Scar's death at the end of ''[[The Lion King]]'', right down to the shot of her being killed by forest animals being shown in shadow very much like Scar when he is killed by hyenas.
 
*Unlike in the Disney movie, where she dies by falling off a cliff, the way the Evil Queen dies in Lisa's retelling of Snow White is very reminiscent of Scar's death at the end of ''[[The Lion King]]'', right down to the shot of her being killed by forest animals being shown in shadow very much like Scar when he is killed by hyenas.
*''{{w|Bye Bye Birdie (musical)|Bye Bye Birdie}}'' and ''[[The Matrix]]'': During the ''{{w|Macbeth}}'' parody segment, actor [[Homer]] forgets his lines and starts reading from scripts concealed on his person, trying to find the right line. Instead of ''Macbeth'', however, Homer ends up reading lines from ''Bye Bye Birdie'' and ''{{w|The Matrix Reloaded}}''.
+
 
*The classical music playing during the "Maggie Roark" segment is the Second Movement of [[Beethoven]]'s {{w|Symphony No. 9 (Beethoven)|Ninth Symphony}}.
+
=== Macbeth ===
 +
*The people of [[Springfield]] star in the play ''[[Macbeth]]'' by [[William Shakespeare]], which is also parodied during the segment.
 +
*[[Homer]] forgets his lines and starts reading from scripts concealed on his person, trying to find the right line. Instead of ''Macbeth'', however, Homer ends up reading lines from ''{{W2|Bye Bye Birdie|musical}}'' and ''{{W|The Matrix Reloaded}}''.
 +
*When Marge says "Screw your courage to the sticking-place and we'll not fail.", a quote from ''Macbeth'', Homer asks if it's a quote from ''{{W2|X2|film|X-Men 2}}''.
 +
*Homer says "No, dear. I'm a man, dear." in the voice of {{W|Droopy}}.
 +
*The group of actors who Homer kills dance to the {{W|Conga line}}, with a Conga song playing.
 +
**Homer then sings "[[Killing Makes Me Hungry]]" to the Conga song.
 +
*Ghost Marge tells Homer that he can take on other Shakespearean plays, including ''{{W|King Lear}}'', ''{{W|Hamlet}}'', ''{{W|Othello}}'', ''{{W2|Richard III|play}}'', ''{{W|Henry IV, Part 1}}'', ''{{W|Henry IV, Part 2}}'', ''{{W2|Henry V|play}}'', and ''{{W|Titus Andronicus}}''. She also holds a script of ''{{W|The Tempest}}''.
 +
 
 +
=== The Fountainhead ===
 +
*"[[Maggie Roark]]" is a play on {{W|Howard Roark}}, the central protagonist of ''[[The Fountainhead]]'', while [[Ellsworth Toohey]] is Howard Roark's antagonist.
 +
*The classical music playing during the segment is the Second Movement of [[Beethoven]]'s "{{W2|Symphony No. 9|Beethoven|Ninth Symphony}}".
 
*[[Maggie]]'s architectural creations include the following real-life buildings:
 
*[[Maggie]]'s architectural creations include the following real-life buildings:
**The {{w|Taj Mahal}}
+
**The [[Taj Mahal]]
**The {{w|Beijing National Stadium}}, also known as "The Bird's Nest"
+
**The {{W|Beijing National Stadium}}, also known as "The Bird's Nest"
**The {{w|Walt Disney Concert Hall}}
+
**The {{W|Walt Disney Concert Hall}}
**The {{w|Empire State Building}}
+
**The [[Empire State Building]]
*The painting that Maggie makes on the wall (for which she is swiftly—and ironically—scolded by [[Marge]]) is [[Vincent van Gogh|van Gogh]]'s "{{w|The Starry Night}}".
+
*The band in the parent-teacher meeting plays "{{W|Pop Goes the Weasel}}".
 +
*"The judge" at Maggie's trial is a {{W|Raggedy Andy}} doll.
  
 
== Trivia ==
 
== Trivia ==
*This is the only episode [[Bart]] doesn't appear in (unless you count the opening sequence) to date.
+
*Although the theme of the segments were stories about woman, Lady Macbeth is a secondary character in ''Macbeth'' and the main character in ''Fountainhead'' is a man named Howard Roark.
 +
*This is the only episode [[Bart]] doesn't appear in (unless you count the opening sequence) to date. This is also the first episode a Simpson family member other than Maggie doesn't appear in an episode. However, [[Nancy Cartwright]], was still heard within the episode as other characters such as [[Ralph Wiggum|Archduke Ralph]] of [[Austria]].
 +
**This is the second time a main character is not voiced in an episode, after [[Marge]] in "[[Krusty Gets Kancelled]]".
 +
*In rare circumstances when Maggie speaks, Nancy Cartwright has often provided Maggie's voice as well as nonverbal sounds such as giggling or crying, but when she speaks (as [[Maggie Roark]]) it was [[Jodie Foster]]'s voice. Executive producer [[Al Jean]] described Jodie Foster, "[http://www.indiewire.com/features/general/jodie-foster-her-taxi-driver-breakthrough-a-speech-of-acceptance-more-of-her-boldest-moments-290963 She was prompt, professional and did a terrific job.]" Jodie Foster is a two-time Best Actress Oscar winner as was [[Elizabeth Taylor]] who also voiced Maggie Simpson.
 
*This episode is the second [[anthology episode]] to have 4 short stories instead of 3 (the first was "[[Simpsons Bible Stories]]").
 
*This episode is the second [[anthology episode]] to have 4 short stories instead of 3 (the first was "[[Simpsons Bible Stories]]").
 
*This is the fourth episode in the show's history where Maggie has spoken and the second where she's done so directly.
 
*This is the fourth episode in the show's history where Maggie has spoken and the second where she's done so directly.
*[[Selma]] appears without [[Patty]] in this episode.
+
*[[Selma]] appears without [[Patty]] although Selma's appearance is not as herself, but as [[Queen Elizabeth I]] of [[England]] who is not in either story told nor in real history an [[:Category:Twins|identical twin]].
 
*This episode was viewed by 5.15 million viewers making it the least watched episode in the shows history. Nearly a year later, it was beaten by "[[Million Dollar Maybe]]".
 
*This episode was viewed by 5.15 million viewers making it the least watched episode in the shows history. Nearly a year later, it was beaten by "[[Million Dollar Maybe]]".
*In the ''Macbeth'' parody, no one seems to care that Marge says "Macbeth" in the theater, in spite of the taboo on speaking the name. However, the "{{w|The Scottish Play|Macbeth curse}}" provides exemptions for speaking the name during rehearsals and performances of the play, so Marge's working as a laundress in support of the production may also be considered to grant her a free pass.
+
*In the ''Macbeth'' parody, no one seems to care that Marge says "Macbeth" in the theater, in spite of the superstition saying the play's title. However, the "{{W|The Scottish Play|Macbeth curse}}" provides exemptions for speaking the name during rehearsals and performances of the play, so Marge's working as a laundress in support of the production may also be considered to grant her a free pass.
*Maggie also duplicates a van Gogh painting in the comic story ''[[Maggie's Crib 26]]''.
+
*Maggie also duplicates a painting by [[Vincent van Gogh]] in the comic story ''[[Maggie's Crib 26]]''.
 +
 
 +
== Continuity ==
 +
*[[Blue-haired lawyer]] warns Lisa her story of ''Snow White and the Seven Dwarves'' will be unauthorized use of the copyrighted property of the Walt Disney Corporation. He has done this before for the Walt Disney Corporation ("[[Lisa the Beauty Queen]]") as well as estates of [[Charlie Chaplin]] and [[Jimmy Durante]] ("[[Lady Bouvier's Lover]]").
 +
*Maggie going to a daycare themed around the philosophies of [[Ayn Rand]] ("[[A Streetcar Named Marge]]").
 +
*The line from [[Marge]], "That's it. Three stories. That's all we always tell." is referencing how (with [[Simpsons Bible Stories|one previously mentioned exception]]) [[anthology episodes]] before this episode had three stories no more, no less.
  
 
{{Season 20|R}}
 
{{Season 20|R}}
 +
 
[[Category:Cultural references]]
 
[[Category:Cultural references]]
 
[[Category:Trivia]]
 
[[Category:Trivia]]

Latest revision as of 15:18, August 13, 2024

References/Trivia


Season 20 Episode References
439 "Waverly Hills 9-0-2-1-D'oh"
440
"Four Great Women and a Manicure"
"Coming to Homerica" 441


Cultural references[edit]

Wraparound[edit]

Queen Elizabeth I[edit]

Snow White[edit]

  • Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs is parodied in the second segment. However, Snow White (portrayed by Lisa) is forced to rename all the dwarfs to satisfy the legal demands of the Blue-haired lawyer.
  • When Snow White flees from the wicked queen's threat, she comes across a gingerbread house and Grandma's house (referencing the folk tales Hansel and Gretel and Little Red Riding Hood) before she finds the dwarfs' house.
  • Snow White complains about the dwarfs' beds being too hard and too soft, referencing Goldilocks and the Three Bears. Unlike Goldilocks, however, Snow White settles for the soft bed.
  • Unlike in the Disney movie, where she dies by falling off a cliff, the way the Evil Queen dies in Lisa's retelling of Snow White is very reminiscent of Scar's death at the end of The Lion King, right down to the shot of her being killed by forest animals being shown in shadow very much like Scar when he is killed by hyenas.

Macbeth[edit]

The Fountainhead[edit]

Trivia[edit]

  • Although the theme of the segments were stories about woman, Lady Macbeth is a secondary character in Macbeth and the main character in Fountainhead is a man named Howard Roark.
  • This is the only episode Bart doesn't appear in (unless you count the opening sequence) to date. This is also the first episode a Simpson family member other than Maggie doesn't appear in an episode. However, Nancy Cartwright, was still heard within the episode as other characters such as Archduke Ralph of Austria.
  • In rare circumstances when Maggie speaks, Nancy Cartwright has often provided Maggie's voice as well as nonverbal sounds such as giggling or crying, but when she speaks (as Maggie Roark) it was Jodie Foster's voice. Executive producer Al Jean described Jodie Foster, "She was prompt, professional and did a terrific job." Jodie Foster is a two-time Best Actress Oscar winner as was Elizabeth Taylor who also voiced Maggie Simpson.
  • This episode is the second anthology episode to have 4 short stories instead of 3 (the first was "Simpsons Bible Stories").
  • This is the fourth episode in the show's history where Maggie has spoken and the second where she's done so directly.
  • Selma appears without Patty although Selma's appearance is not as herself, but as Queen Elizabeth I of England who is not in either story told nor in real history an identical twin.
  • This episode was viewed by 5.15 million viewers making it the least watched episode in the shows history. Nearly a year later, it was beaten by "Million Dollar Maybe".
  • In the Macbeth parody, no one seems to care that Marge says "Macbeth" in the theater, in spite of the superstition saying the play's title. However, the "Macbeth curse" provides exemptions for speaking the name during rehearsals and performances of the play, so Marge's working as a laundress in support of the production may also be considered to grant her a free pass.
  • Maggie also duplicates a painting by Vincent van Gogh in the comic story Maggie's Crib 26.

Continuity[edit]

Season 20 References
Sex, Pies and Idiot Scrapes Lost Verizon Double, Double, Boy in Trouble Treehouse of Horror XIX Dangerous Curves Homer and Lisa Exchange Cross Words MyPods and Boomsticks The Burns and the Bees Lisa the Drama Queen Take My Life, Please How the Test Was Won No Loan Again, Naturally Gone Maggie Gone In the Name of the Grandfather Wedding for Disaster Eeny Teeny Maya, Moe The Good, the Sad, and the Drugly Father Knows Worst Waverly Hills 9-0-2-1-D'oh Four Great Women and a Manicure Coming to Homerica