Difference between revisions of "Woody Allen"
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== Behind the Laughter == | == Behind the Laughter == | ||
− | In the "King Homer" part of "[[Treehouse of Horror III]] | + | In the "King Homer" part of "[[Treehouse of Horror III]]", on ''[[The Springfield Shopper]]'' front page dated November 19, 1936 announcing King Homer's upcoming wedding also had a below the fold headline for "{{Ch|Dick Cavett}} Born." The original plan was for the lower headline to be Woody Allen's birth on November 30, 1935, but production decided to switch to TV talk show host Dick Cavett before the original airdate. The Woody Allen Born headline with his picture as an adult is still visible in the episode while the newspaper frontpage is spinning. |
[[Bart]] is spoofing Woody Allen in the framing segments of "[[Love Is a Many-Splintered Thing]]" in a parody of his 1977 romantic comedy ''{{W|Annie Hall}}''. | [[Bart]] is spoofing Woody Allen in the framing segments of "[[Love Is a Many-Splintered Thing]]" in a parody of his 1977 romantic comedy ''{{W|Annie Hall}}''. | ||
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== Appearances == | == Appearances == | ||
− | *{{THOH|Treehouse of Horror III|( | + | *{{THOH|Treehouse of Horror III|(picture)}} |
*{{ep|Homie the Clown|(mentioned)}} | *{{ep|Homie the Clown|(mentioned)}} | ||
*{{ep|A Star Is Burns|(mentioned)}} | *{{ep|A Star Is Burns|(mentioned)}} |
Latest revision as of 16:34, October 10, 2024
- "What did I do to deserve this? Oh, right."
- ―Woody Allen[src]
Woody Allen
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Character Information
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Woody Allen is an American screenwriter, director, actor, comedian, author, playwright, and musician.
Contents
History[edit]
At the Ace Awards, Dick Cavett told the audience at he knew Woody Allen.[1]
During Jay Sherman's show, Coming Attractions, Rainier Wolfcastle did a Woody Allen impression. Jay later recalled a conversation he had with Woody Allen.[2]
In Homer's flashback from when he was in New York City, Woody Allen pours garbage out of a window and it lands on Homer's head.[3]
When the Simpson family was in Tokyo they saw Woody Allen doing a commercial for Fujikawa Rice Crackers.[4]
When Homer visits the writing room for fortune cookies, one of the writers was Woody Allen. He types something, then crumples the slip of paper in disgust and tosses it into a tiny wastebasket and asked himself, what he doing here, he should be in New York writing riddles on Popsicle sticks.[5]
Allen has a star on The Jewish Walk of Fame.[6]
When Bart sneaked into the adult section at the Lackluster Video he saw they had a section with "Unfunny Woody Allen".[7]
When the Simpson family was at the Sundance Film Festival, Woody Allen and Soon-Yi Previn were there. He talked with her about adopting Scarlett Johansson and asked her what is wrong with that.[8]
When Mary Spuckler performed a song for Bart, Allen is seen dancing.[9]
Non-canon[edit]
The contents of this article or section are considered to be non-canon and therefore may not have actually happened or existed. |
At the Awareness Awards, they gave Woody Allen a lot of awards, when he learned they were fake, he said it was to good to be true.[10]
Behind the Laughter[edit]
In the "King Homer" part of "Treehouse of Horror III", on The Springfield Shopper front page dated November 19, 1936 announcing King Homer's upcoming wedding also had a below the fold headline for "Dick Cavett Born." The original plan was for the lower headline to be Woody Allen's birth on November 30, 1935, but production decided to switch to TV talk show host Dick Cavett before the original airdate. The Woody Allen Born headline with his picture as an adult is still visible in the episode while the newspaper frontpage is spinning.
Bart is spoofing Woody Allen in the framing segments of "Love Is a Many-Splintered Thing" in a parody of his 1977 romantic comedy Annie Hall.
Foreign dubs[edit]
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Appearances[edit]
- THOH – "Treehouse of Horror III" (picture)
- Episode – "Homie the Clown" (mentioned)
- Episode – "A Star Is Burns" (mentioned)
- Episode – "The City of New York vs. Homer Simpson"
- Episode – "Thirty Minutes Over Tokyo"
- Episode – "Behind the Laughter"
- Episode – "A Hunka Hunka Burns in Love"
- Episode – "Today I Am a Clown" (mentioned)
- Episode – "Catch 'Em If You Can" (mentioned)
- Episode – "Any Given Sundance"
- Episode – "Moonshine River"
- Book – The Marge Book (mentioned)
References[edit]
External links[edit]
The Simpsons characters
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