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Difference between revisions of "Frank Grimes"

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{{Featured article}}
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{{Icons|FA}}
 
{{Nav|the actual Frank Grimes|Frank Grimes' son|Frank Grimes, Jr.}}
 
{{Nav|the actual Frank Grimes|Frank Grimes' son|Frank Grimes, Jr.}}
 
{{Quote|I'm saying you're what's wrong with America, Simpson. You coast through life, you do as little as possible, and you leech off of decent, hardworking people like me. Heh, if you lived in any other country in the world, you'd have starved to death long ago. You're a fraud, a total fraud.|Frank Grimes, referring to [[742 Evergreen Terrace|the Simpsons' house]]|Homer's Enemy}}
 
{{Quote|I'm saying you're what's wrong with America, Simpson. You coast through life, you do as little as possible, and you leech off of decent, hardworking people like me. Heh, if you lived in any other country in the world, you'd have starved to death long ago. You're a fraud, a total fraud.|Frank Grimes, referring to [[742 Evergreen Terrace|the Simpsons' house]]|Homer's Enemy}}
 
{{Character
 
{{Character
|name = Frankin A. Grimes, Sr.
+
|name = Frank Grimes, Sr.
|image = [[File:Frank Grimes (Official Image).PNG|100px]]
+
|image = [[File:Frank Grimes.png]]
 +
|caption = Artwork of Frank Grimes from ''[[The Simpsons: Tapped Out]]''
 
|gender = {{Male}}
 
|gender = {{Male}}
 
|hair = Black
 
|hair = Black
Line 12: Line 13:
 
|relatives = '''Son:''' [[Frank Grimes, Jr.|Junior]]
 
|relatives = '''Son:''' [[Frank Grimes, Jr.|Junior]]
 
|appearance = "[[Homer's Enemy]]"
 
|appearance = "[[Homer's Enemy]]"
|last appearance = "[[Homer's Enemy]]" (except tombstones)
 
|reason = Electrocution
 
 
|voiced by = [[Hank Azaria]]
 
|voiced by = [[Hank Azaria]]
 
}}
 
}}
  
'''Frankin A. "Frank" "Grimey" Grimes, Sr.''', commonly referred to by [[Homer]], much to Frank's annoyance, as "Grimey", was an employee at the [[Springfield Nuclear Power Plant]] and the self-declared enemy of Homer Simpson. Frank Grimes was a hard worker, who had to earn everything the hard way. He was also easily frustrated, grumpy, but seemed reasonably tempered.
+
'''Frank Grimes, Sr.''', commonly referred to by [[Homer]], much to Frank's annoyance, as "'''Grimey'''", was an employee at the [[Springfield Nuclear Power Plant]] and the self-declared enemy of Homer Simpson. Frank Grimes was a hard worker, who had to earn everything the hard way. He was also easily frustrated, grumpy, but seemed reasonably tempered.
  
 
== Biography ==
 
== Biography ==
Line 40: Line 39:
 
Frank took an instant dislike to Homer, finding him dangerous and idiotic. Strangely enough, Homer took a shine to him, even giving him the nickname "Grimey" (which he thinks Frank liked, when in fact Frank Grimes despised the moniker). After Homer unintentionally blamed Frank for an accident involving spilled acid, he told Homer that they would be mortal enemies from that point on.
 
Frank took an instant dislike to Homer, finding him dangerous and idiotic. Strangely enough, Homer took a shine to him, even giving him the nickname "Grimey" (which he thinks Frank liked, when in fact Frank Grimes despised the moniker). After Homer unintentionally blamed Frank for an accident involving spilled acid, he told Homer that they would be mortal enemies from that point on.
  
Homer tried to patch things up by inviting Frank to dinner at his house. He arranged everything to be perfect (much more than usual), telling the neatly-dressed kids to behave and having Marge cook an exuberant amount of lobsters. Unfortunately, it only served to further enrage Frank as he sees Homer's possessions as satisfying yet undeserving for an incompetent person like him. He has had a wonderful life, a polite family, [[Lisa Simpson|a genius daughter]], [[Marge Simpson|a beautiful wife]], [[Homer's Enemy|a son who owned a factory]] (at the time), [[742 Evergreen Terrace|a dream home]], two cars, could afford lobster for dinner, [[Homer's Barbershop Quartet|won a Grammy]], [[Homerpalooza|toured with rockstars]], [[Two Bad Neighbors|was friends with Gerald Ford]], and had even [[Deep Space Homer|been to space]]. While Grimes had to struggle for everything all his life, was working two jobs and all he had was his briefcase, his haircut and an apartment wedged between two bowling alleys. He accused Homer of being a "total fraud" who leeched off hard-working people like him, being overly rewarded for a lifetime of sloth and ignorance while he himself had nothing.
+
Homer tried to patch things up by inviting Frank to dinner at his house. He arranged everything to be perfect (much more than usual), telling the neatly-dressed kids to behave and having Marge cook an exuberant amount of lobsters. Unfortunately, it only served to further enrage Frank as he sees Homer's possessions as satisfying yet undeserving for an incompetent person like him. He has had a wonderful life, a polite family, [[Lisa Simpson|a genius daughter]], [[Marge Simpson|a beautiful wife]], [[Bart Simpson|a son who owned a factory]] (at the time), [[742 Evergreen Terrace|a dream home]], two cars, could afford lobster for dinner, [[Homer's Barbershop Quartet|won a Grammy]], [[Homerpalooza|toured with rockstars]], [[Two Bad Neighbors|was friends with Gerald Ford]], and had even [[Deep Space Homer|been to space]]. While Grimes had to struggle for everything all his life, was working two jobs and all he had was his briefcase, his haircut and an apartment wedged between two bowling alleys. He accused Homer of being a "total fraud" who leeched off hard-working people like him, being overly rewarded for a lifetime of sloth and ignorance while he himself had nothing.
  
 
"Grimey" also isn't fond of a heroic dog Mr. Burns told [[Smithers]] to collect when he presented him to Mr. Burns. During Frank's discipline by Mr. Burns, the dog was continually barking at him angrily.
 
"Grimey" also isn't fond of a heroic dog Mr. Burns told [[Smithers]] to collect when he presented him to Mr. Burns. During Frank's discipline by Mr. Burns, the dog was continually barking at him angrily.
Line 46: Line 45:
 
=== Death ===
 
=== Death ===
 
[[File:Death of Grimes.png|right|200px|thumb|Frank Grimes as he grabs the high voltage wires.]]
 
[[File:Death of Grimes.png|right|200px|thumb|Frank Grimes as he grabs the high voltage wires.]]
Back at work, in an effort to prove that Homer was an undeserving buffoon, Frank tricked him into entering a nuclear power plant model-building contest for boys. When Homer won the contest, Frank had a nervous breakdown. He ran amok through the plant, psychotically impersonating Homer, and ultimately spotted some high-voltage power cables, claiming that he would not need safety gloves to grab them. When Frank does grab them, he gets violently electrocuted.
+
Back at work, in an effort to prove that Homer was an undeserving buffoon, Frank tricked him into entering a nuclear power plant model-building contest for boys. When Homer won the contest, Frank had a mental breakdown. He ran amok through the plant, psychotically impersonating Homer, saying he performs all of his actions because "he's Homer Simpson", and ultimately spotted some high-voltage power cables, claiming that he would not need safety gloves to grab them. When Frank does grab them, he gets violently electrocuted.
  
 
Frank Grimes was killed by the wires he had grabbed by electrocution and was buried in Springfield Cemetery. Homer unintentionally managed to make a mockery of the funeral ceremony by falling asleep.
 
Frank Grimes was killed by the wires he had grabbed by electrocution and was buried in Springfield Cemetery. Homer unintentionally managed to make a mockery of the funeral ceremony by falling asleep.
Line 52: Line 51:
 
Sometime later, Homer is subject to repeated attempts on his life. It is revealed that these were carried out by Frank Grimes' illegitimate son; [[Frank Grimes, Jr.]]. He revealed the previously unknown fact that while his father never married, he did "happen to like hookers", leading the viewer to assume that one of them was his mother. He was trying to avenge his father's death by killing Homer, but ultimately failed and was arrested.<ref name="[[The Great Louse Detective]]"/>
 
Sometime later, Homer is subject to repeated attempts on his life. It is revealed that these were carried out by Frank Grimes' illegitimate son; [[Frank Grimes, Jr.]]. He revealed the previously unknown fact that while his father never married, he did "happen to like hookers", leading the viewer to assume that one of them was his mother. He was trying to avenge his father's death by killing Homer, but ultimately failed and was arrested.<ref name="[[The Great Louse Detective]]"/>
  
A film was based on Frank Grimes life, entitled ''[[Grimey! The Frank Grimes Story]]''.<ref>''[[The Simpsons Guide to Springfield]]''</ref>
+
[[File:Frank Grimes tombstone.png|thumb|left|Frank Grimes' tombstone.]]
 +
A film was based on Frank Grimes life, entitled ''Grimey! The Frank Grimes Story''.<ref>''[[The Simpsons Guide to Springfield]]''</ref>
  
 
=== Physical appearance ===
 
=== Physical appearance ===
Line 64: Line 64:
 
== Behind the Laughter ==
 
== Behind the Laughter ==
 
=== Creation ===
 
=== Creation ===
 +
[[File:Power Plant chain of command.png|thumb|right|Frank Grimes as he appears in the chain of command during "[[C.E. D'oh]]"]]
 
*Frank was created as a surrogate for the audience, a real person with a realistic personality designed to highlight how absurd it would seem to a "real-world" hard worker, just how lucky Homer is to be ''alive'', let alone so well off.
 
*Frank was created as a surrogate for the audience, a real person with a realistic personality designed to highlight how absurd it would seem to a "real-world" hard worker, just how lucky Homer is to be ''alive'', let alone so well off.
  
Line 69: Line 70:
  
 
{{Quote|We wanted to do an episode where the thinking was "What if a real life, normal person had to enter Homer's universe and deal with him?" I know this episode is controversial and divisive, but I just love it. It really feels like what would happen if a real, somewhat humorless human had to deal with Homer. There was some talk [on NoHomers.net] about the ending—we just did that because 1. It's really funny and shocking 2. We like the lesson of "sometimes, you just can't win"—the whole Frank Grimes episode is a study in frustration and hence Homer has the last laugh and 3. we wanted to show that in real life, being Homer Simpson could be really dangerous and life threatening, as Frank Grimes sadly learned.|Josh Weinstein}}
 
{{Quote|We wanted to do an episode where the thinking was "What if a real life, normal person had to enter Homer's universe and deal with him?" I know this episode is controversial and divisive, but I just love it. It really feels like what would happen if a real, somewhat humorless human had to deal with Homer. There was some talk [on NoHomers.net] about the ending—we just did that because 1. It's really funny and shocking 2. We like the lesson of "sometimes, you just can't win"—the whole Frank Grimes episode is a study in frustration and hence Homer has the last laugh and 3. we wanted to show that in real life, being Homer Simpson could be really dangerous and life threatening, as Frank Grimes sadly learned.|Josh Weinstein}}
*He was based on the character William Foster (played by {{w|Michael Douglas}}) from the movie ''{{w|Falling Down}}''.
+
*He was based on the character William Foster (played by {{W|Michael Douglas}}) from the movie ''{{W|Falling Down}}''.
*In the series ''{{w|Ugly Americans (TV series)|Ugly Americans}}'' on {{w|Comedy Central}}, the police officer of the DOI is named Frank Grimes. The show was created by [[David M. Stern]], a former writer for ''The Simpsons''.
+
*In the series ''{{W2|Ugly Americans|TV series}}'' on {{W|Comedy Central}}, the police officer of the DOI is named Frank Grimes. The show was created by [[David M. Stern]], a former writer for ''The Simpsons''.
 
*His name during parts of production was "Michael".<ref>[http://twitpic.com/7u460e TwitPic]</ref>
 
*His name during parts of production was "Michael".<ref>[http://twitpic.com/7u460e TwitPic]</ref>
 
*[[Steve Martin]] was the original choice to voice Frank Grimes, but declined the opportunity.<ref>[https://twitter.com/thatbilloakley/status/503777775677739008 Bill Oakley's Twitter]</ref> [[William H. Macy]] was then going to voice Frank Grimes. However, scheduling conflicts meant that he couldn't do it so the lines that [[Hank Azaria]] recorded beforehand for Frank Grimes were used instead.<ref>[http://popwatch.ew.com/2012/02/19/the-simpsons-500-episodes-hank-azaria/ Entertainment Weekly Pop Watch]</ref>
 
*[[Steve Martin]] was the original choice to voice Frank Grimes, but declined the opportunity.<ref>[https://twitter.com/thatbilloakley/status/503777775677739008 Bill Oakley's Twitter]</ref> [[William H. Macy]] was then going to voice Frank Grimes. However, scheduling conflicts meant that he couldn't do it so the lines that [[Hank Azaria]] recorded beforehand for Frank Grimes were used instead.<ref>[http://popwatch.ew.com/2012/02/19/the-simpsons-500-episodes-hank-azaria/ Entertainment Weekly Pop Watch]</ref>
 +
[[File:Frank Grimes playset.jpg|thumb|left|174px]]
  
 +
Grimes received an action figure in the [[World of Springfield: Series 15 Playsets|World of Springfield: Series 15 playset]].
  
Grimes received an action figure in the [[World of Springfield: Series 15 Playsets|World of Springfield: Series 15 playset]].
+
=== Foreign dubs ===
[[File:Frank Grimes playset.jpg|thumb|right|174px]]
+
{{Dub voices
 +
|itVoice={{W|it:Roberto Certomà|Roberto Certomà}}
 +
}}
  
 
== Trivia ==
 
== Trivia ==
[[File:Frank Grimes tombstone.png|thumb|Frank Grimes' tombstone.]]
+
*His gravestone has been shown with several different inscriptions: '''Grimes''' ("[[Homer's Enemy]]"), '''Frank "Grimey" Grimes''' ("[[Alone Again, Natura-Diddily]]"), '''Frank Grimes''' ('''Homer's Enemy''') ("[[The Great Louse Detective]]"), and '''Frank Grimes''' ("[[Treehouse of Horror XXII]]").
*His gravestone has been shown with several different inscriptions: '''Grimes''' ("[[Homer's Enemy]]"), '''Frank''' "'''Grimey'''" '''Grimes''' ("[[Alone Again, Natura-Diddily]]"), '''Frank Grimes''' ('''Homer's enemy''') ("[[The Great Louse Detective]]"), and '''Frank Grimes''' ("[[Treehouse of Horror XXII]]").
+
*He prepared himself a "special {{W|Diet food|dietetic}} lunch" each day (Homer eats it).
*He prepared himself a "special {{w|Diet food|dietetic}} lunch" each day (Homer eats it).
+
*While working at the plant, he also had a second job, working nights at a {{W|foundry}}.
*While working at the plant he also had a second job, working nights at a {{w|foundry}}.
 
 
*When he received his diploma, the film showed him to be living in a small house on a terrace. However, when in Homer's house, Frank says that he lives "in a single room above a bowling alley, and below another bowling alley."
 
*When he received his diploma, the film showed him to be living in a small house on a terrace. However, when in Homer's house, Frank says that he lives "in a single room above a bowling alley, and below another bowling alley."
 
*His grave is seen in the HD opening sequence with [[Ralph Wiggum]] playing in the dirt as if it were a sandbox.
 
*His grave is seen in the HD opening sequence with [[Ralph Wiggum]] playing in the dirt as if it were a sandbox.
*He can be seen crossed off on the chain of command chart [[Mr. Burns]] opens in [[C.E. D'oh]].
+
*He can be seen crossed off on the chain of command chart [[Mr. Burns]] opens in "[[C.E. D'oh]]".
[[File:Power Plant chain of command.png|thumbnail|Frank Grimes as he appears in the chain of command during [[C.E. D'oh]]]]
 
  
 
== Appearances ==
 
== Appearances ==
*{{ep|Homer's Enemy}}
+
{{Scroll|
*{{ep|Natural Born Kissers|(funeral program)}}
+
{{TO}}
*{{THOH2|X|(tombstone)}}
+
{{Season8A
*{{ep|Alone Again, Natura-Diddily|(tombstone)}}
+
|E23=yes
*{{ep|Behind the Laughter|(character picture)}}
+
}}
*{{THOH2|XII|(face on [[The Wailing Wall]])}}
+
{{Season11A
*{{ep|The Great Louse Detective|(flashback)}}
+
|E14=yes
*{{ep|C.E. D'oh|(picture seen)}}
+
|E14n=grave
*{{ep|My Mother the Carjacker|(tombstone)}}
+
}}
*{{ep|The Seemingly Never-Ending Story|(tombstone)}}
+
{{Season13A
*{{THOH2|XXII|(tombstone)}}
+
|E1=yes
*{{ep|My Fare Lady|(pixelated version in couch gag)}}
+
|E1n=Wiz Kids, Wailing Wall
*{{THOH2|XXVI|(couch gag; zombie monster)}}
+
}}
*{{THOH2|XXVII|(ghost in the opening sequence)}}
+
{{Season14A
*{{ep|Looking for Mr. Goodbart|(archive footage of ghost in the couch gag from Treehouse of Horror XXVII's opening sequence, grave seen)}}
+
|E6=yes
*{{ep|Dogtown|(dream, grave seen)}}
+
|E6n=flashback
*{{bon|Big House Homer|(flashback)}}
+
|E15=yes
*{{bon|The Simpsons Futurama Crossover Crisis II #1|(on cover)}}
+
|E15n=picture
*{{bk|The Homer Book}}
+
}}
*{{bk|The Simpsons Guide to Springfield|(mentioned)}}
+
{{Season17A
*{{bk|The Simpsons: A Complete Guide to Our Favorite Family}}
+
|E13=yes
*{{bk|Simpsons World the Ultimate Episode Guide: Seasons 1-20}}
+
|E13n=grave
*{{bk|Homer Simpson's Little Book of Laziness}}
+
}}
*{{game|The Simpsons: Tapped Out}}
+
{{Season26A
*[[Opening Sequence#Season 20, starting with Take My Life, Please|HD Opening Sequence]] (tombstone)
+
|E14cg=yes
 +
}}
 +
{{Season27A
 +
|E9=yes
 +
|E9n=grave
 +
}}
 +
{{Season28A
 +
|E4=yes
 +
|E4n=opening sequence, ghost
 +
|E20=yes
 +
|E20n=grave
 +
}}
 +
{{Season29A
 +
|E1=yes
 +
|E1n=severed head
 +
}}
 +
{{Season32A
 +
|E2=yes
 +
}}
 +
{{Season34A
 +
|E3=yes
 +
|E3n=picture
 +
|E5=yes
 +
|E5n=child, ghost
 +
|E6=yes
 +
|E6n=SimpsonsWorld
 +
|E22=yes
 +
}}
 +
{{Season36A
 +
|E1=yes
 +
}}
 +
{{SimpsonsComicsA
 +
|I108S1=yes
 +
|I108S1n=flashback
 +
|I211S9=yes
 +
}}
 +
{{TreehouseA
 +
|I20S2=yes
 +
|I22S1=yes
 +
}}
 +
{{SuperSpectacularA
 +
|I7S1=yes
 +
}}
 +
{{GamesA
 +
|TSTO=yes
 +
}}
 +
{{BooksA
 +
|UEG=yes
 +
|HSLBoL=yes
 +
}}
 +
{{TC}}
 +
}}
  
 
== References ==
 
== References ==
Line 119: Line 173:
 
{{Reflist}}
 
{{Reflist}}
  
{{SNPP Employees}}
+
{{Springfield Nuclear Power Plant|former=yes}}
{{Deceased characters}}
+
{{Deceased characters|other=yes}}
 
{{Simpsons World factfiles|8=yes}}
 
{{Simpsons World factfiles|8=yes}}
 
{{Tapped Out characters|plant=yes}}
 
{{Tapped Out characters|plant=yes}}

Latest revision as of 06:09, October 23, 2024


This article is about the actual Frank Grimes. For Frank Grimes' son, see Frank Grimes, Jr..
"I'm saying you're what's wrong with America, Simpson. You coast through life, you do as little as possible, and you leech off of decent, hardworking people like me. Heh, if you lived in any other country in the world, you'd have starved to death long ago. You're a fraud, a total fraud."
―Frank Grimes, referring to the Simpsons' house[src]
Frank Grimes, Sr.
Frank Grimes.png
Artwork of Frank Grimes from The Simpsons: Tapped Out
Character Information
Gender:
Male ♂
Status:
Deceased
Age: 35[1]
Hair: Black
Occupation: Employee at the Springfield Nuclear Power Plant (Sector 7-G)
Relatives: Son: Junior
First appearance: "Homer's Enemy"
Voiced by: Hank Azaria


Frank Grimes, Sr., commonly referred to by Homer, much to Frank's annoyance, as "Grimey", was an employee at the Springfield Nuclear Power Plant and the self-declared enemy of Homer Simpson. Frank Grimes was a hard worker, who had to earn everything the hard way. He was also easily frustrated, grumpy, but seemed reasonably tempered.

Biography[edit]

Childhood[edit]

A young Frank Grimes when he was a delivery boy.

Frank Grimes was abandoned by his family at the tender age of four, and thus "never got to go to school." He spent the remainder of his childhood working as a delivery boy, presenting gifts to children from wealthy, loving families.

On his eighteenth birthday, Frank Grimes was severely injured when a silo he was in exploded. No information states what he was doing in the silo, nor how it exploded. He is simply seen running toward the silo, which then erupts. His recovery was long and painful.

Frank Grimes worked long and hard consistently, and what few spare moments he had, he used to study science by mail. His long years of toil and suffering appear to have left him rather bitter and excessively resentful.

College[edit]

Frank received a degree in nuclear physics from a correspondence college (which a bird attempted to steal from him when it arrived). A week later, he was featured in an episode of "Kent's People", which highlighted his lifelong determination; Mr. Burns saw the report and insisted that Frank be hired to work at the Power Plant as Executive Vice President.

Family[edit]

Frank Grimes never married, but he "happened to like hookers." One of them became pregnant and had a son, Frank Grimes, Jr.. When he grew up, he became a mechanic and went by the nickname "Junior".[2]

Job at the Springfield Power Plant[edit]

By the time Frank Grimes arrived, Mr. Burns had wanted to give the position to a dog he saw on "Kent's People" having forgotten all about Frank and said that he should be "put somewhere out of the way." His exact role at the plant is unknown, however according to a chart in Burns' office, Grimes had a higher position than Lenny, Carl and Homer.[3]

Enemies[edit]

Frank took an instant dislike to Homer, finding him dangerous and idiotic. Strangely enough, Homer took a shine to him, even giving him the nickname "Grimey" (which he thinks Frank liked, when in fact Frank Grimes despised the moniker). After Homer unintentionally blamed Frank for an accident involving spilled acid, he told Homer that they would be mortal enemies from that point on.

Homer tried to patch things up by inviting Frank to dinner at his house. He arranged everything to be perfect (much more than usual), telling the neatly-dressed kids to behave and having Marge cook an exuberant amount of lobsters. Unfortunately, it only served to further enrage Frank as he sees Homer's possessions as satisfying yet undeserving for an incompetent person like him. He has had a wonderful life, a polite family, a genius daughter, a beautiful wife, a son who owned a factory (at the time), a dream home, two cars, could afford lobster for dinner, won a Grammy, toured with rockstars, was friends with Gerald Ford, and had even been to space. While Grimes had to struggle for everything all his life, was working two jobs and all he had was his briefcase, his haircut and an apartment wedged between two bowling alleys. He accused Homer of being a "total fraud" who leeched off hard-working people like him, being overly rewarded for a lifetime of sloth and ignorance while he himself had nothing.

"Grimey" also isn't fond of a heroic dog Mr. Burns told Smithers to collect when he presented him to Mr. Burns. During Frank's discipline by Mr. Burns, the dog was continually barking at him angrily.

Death[edit]

Frank Grimes as he grabs the high voltage wires.

Back at work, in an effort to prove that Homer was an undeserving buffoon, Frank tricked him into entering a nuclear power plant model-building contest for boys. When Homer won the contest, Frank had a mental breakdown. He ran amok through the plant, psychotically impersonating Homer, saying he performs all of his actions because "he's Homer Simpson", and ultimately spotted some high-voltage power cables, claiming that he would not need safety gloves to grab them. When Frank does grab them, he gets violently electrocuted.

Frank Grimes was killed by the wires he had grabbed by electrocution and was buried in Springfield Cemetery. Homer unintentionally managed to make a mockery of the funeral ceremony by falling asleep.

Sometime later, Homer is subject to repeated attempts on his life. It is revealed that these were carried out by Frank Grimes' illegitimate son; Frank Grimes, Jr.. He revealed the previously unknown fact that while his father never married, he did "happen to like hookers", leading the viewer to assume that one of them was his mother. He was trying to avenge his father's death by killing Homer, but ultimately failed and was arrested.[2]

Frank Grimes' tombstone.

A film was based on Frank Grimes life, entitled Grimey! The Frank Grimes Story.[4]

Physical appearance[edit]

Frank has bushy eyebrows, crew-cut black hair, and yellow skin. He wears a blue-gray suit and a short-sleeved white T-shirt with a black tie and large glasses. He has a rather slim build.

Non-canon[edit]

Donut Homer.png The contents of this article or section are considered to be non-canon and therefore may not have actually happened or existed.

The Simpsons: Tapped Out[edit]

This section is transcluded from The Simpsons: Tapped Out characters/Plant Workers. To edit it, please edit the transcluded page.
Frank Grimes
Image Cost Unlock method Unlocks with Unlock message Yearbook
Frank Grimes.png Donut160 Formerly:
Level 51
Premium
The Tell-Tale Plant Worker Pt. 4
Forgotten Grave I took the trouble to learn your name, so the least you could do is learn mine. Character is available via the Yearbook Mystery Box
Donut30
Donut160 Level 51
Premium (The Vault)
The Tell-Tale Plant Worker Pt. 4
Technical Information ID Groups Quest(s) Internal Name
101001 Premium Characters, Premium Male, Adult, Plant Workers A Sign of the Grimes FrankGrimes

Behind the Laughter[edit]

Creation[edit]

Frank Grimes as he appears in the chain of command during "C.E. D'oh"
  • Frank was created as a surrogate for the audience, a real person with a realistic personality designed to highlight how absurd it would seem to a "real-world" hard worker, just how lucky Homer is to be alive, let alone so well off.
"We wanted to do an episode where the thinking was "What if a real life, normal person had to enter Homer's universe and deal with him?" I know this episode is controversial and divisive, but I just love it. It really feels like what would happen if a real, somewhat humorless human had to deal with Homer. There was some talk [on NoHomers.net] about the ending—we just did that because 1. It's really funny and shocking 2. We like the lesson of "sometimes, you just can't win"—the whole Frank Grimes episode is a study in frustration and hence Homer has the last laugh and 3. we wanted to show that in real life, being Homer Simpson could be really dangerous and life threatening, as Frank Grimes sadly learned."
―Josh Weinstein
  • He was based on the character William Foster (played by Michael Douglas) from the movie Falling Down.
  • In the series Ugly Americans on Comedy Central, the police officer of the DOI is named Frank Grimes. The show was created by David M. Stern, a former writer for The Simpsons.
  • His name during parts of production was "Michael".[5]
  • Steve Martin was the original choice to voice Frank Grimes, but declined the opportunity.[6] William H. Macy was then going to voice Frank Grimes. However, scheduling conflicts meant that he couldn't do it so the lines that Hank Azaria recorded beforehand for Frank Grimes were used instead.[7]
Frank Grimes playset.jpg

Grimes received an action figure in the World of Springfield: Series 15 playset.

Foreign dubs[edit]

Language Voice dubber
Italy Flag.png Italiano Roberto Certomà

Trivia[edit]

  • His gravestone has been shown with several different inscriptions: Grimes ("Homer's Enemy"), Frank "Grimey" Grimes ("Alone Again, Natura-Diddily"), Frank Grimes (Homer's Enemy) ("The Great Louse Detective"), and Frank Grimes ("Treehouse of Horror XXII").
  • He prepared himself a "special dietetic lunch" each day (Homer eats it).
  • While working at the plant, he also had a second job, working nights at a foundry.
  • When he received his diploma, the film showed him to be living in a small house on a terrace. However, when in Homer's house, Frank says that he lives "in a single room above a bowling alley, and below another bowling alley."
  • His grave is seen in the HD opening sequence with Ralph Wiggum playing in the dirt as if it were a sandbox.
  • He can be seen crossed off on the chain of command chart Mr. Burns opens in "C.E. D'oh".

Appearances[edit]

References[edit]

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