Difference between revisions of "Duncan (auctioneer)"
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== History == | == History == | ||
− | When the Simpsons bought a painting from the Van Houtens, they took it to Gavelby's Auction House to get appraised by Duncan. He told the family it was a genuine Johan Oldenveldt painting and expected it to go | + | When the Simpsons bought a painting from the Van Houtens, they took it to Gavelby's Auction House to get appraised by Duncan. He told the family it was a genuine Johan Oldenveldt painting and expected it to go for $80–100,000. Later, Duncan was auctioning it off when [[Dawn]] entered the auction house to claim it as her painting. Duncan then gave Dawn a ride home.<ref>"[[The War of Art]]"</ref> |
− | Duncan was auctioning off the painting [[The Poetess]] at Gavelby's Auction House, which [[Homer]] wanted. After it was bought by [[Megan Matheson]], the painting got stolen on the way to Megan's house, so Duncan called in the help of [[Manacek]] to find who stole it. Duncan told Manacek that he was the best freelance insurance investigator in the business. After Manacek figured out who stole the painting, Duncan was there for the unveiling of the thief. Duncan was surprised that the painting was stolen because | + | Duncan was auctioning off the painting [[The Poetess]] at Gavelby's Auction House, which [[Homer]] wanted. After it was bought by [[Megan Matheson]], the painting got stolen on the way to Megan's house, so Duncan called in the help of [[Manacek]] to find out who stole it. Duncan told Manacek that he was the best freelance insurance investigator in the business. After Manacek figured out who stole the painting, Duncan was there for the unveiling of the thief. Duncan was surprised that the painting was stolen because it had been secure in the vault of the auction house.<ref>"[[Homer Is Where the Art Isn't]]"</ref> |
+ | |||
+ | == Non-canon == | ||
+ | {{Noncanon}} | ||
+ | === The Simpsons: Tapped Out === | ||
+ | {{Tapped Out Dialogue Character | ||
+ | |name=Auctioneer | ||
+ | |icon=[[File:Tapped Out Auctioneer Icon.png|55px]] | ||
+ | |update={{TOCU2|Homer vs the 18th Amendment|"Homer is Where the Art Isn't" episode tie-in}} | ||
+ | |dialogue=[[In It to Win It]] | ||
+ | }} | ||
== Appearances == | == Appearances == | ||
*{{ep|The War of Art}} | *{{ep|The War of Art}} | ||
*{{ep|Homer Is Where the Art Isn't}} | *{{ep|Homer Is Where the Art Isn't}} | ||
+ | *{{game|The Simpsons: Tapped Out|(dialogue)}} | ||
== References == | == References == | ||
{{Reflist}} | {{Reflist}} | ||
+ | {{Tapped Out characters|dialogue=yes}} | ||
{{Simpsons characters}} | {{Simpsons characters}} | ||
Latest revision as of 15:16, November 22, 2024
- For the horse, see Duncan.
Duncan
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Character Information
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Duncan is an auctioneer at Gavelby's Auction House.
History[edit]
When the Simpsons bought a painting from the Van Houtens, they took it to Gavelby's Auction House to get appraised by Duncan. He told the family it was a genuine Johan Oldenveldt painting and expected it to go for $80–100,000. Later, Duncan was auctioning it off when Dawn entered the auction house to claim it as her painting. Duncan then gave Dawn a ride home.[1]
Duncan was auctioning off the painting The Poetess at Gavelby's Auction House, which Homer wanted. After it was bought by Megan Matheson, the painting got stolen on the way to Megan's house, so Duncan called in the help of Manacek to find out who stole it. Duncan told Manacek that he was the best freelance insurance investigator in the business. After Manacek figured out who stole the painting, Duncan was there for the unveiling of the thief. Duncan was surprised that the painting was stolen because it had been secure in the vault of the auction house.[2]
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. |
The Simpsons: Tapped Out[edit]
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Appearances[edit]
- Episode – "The War of Art"
- Episode – "Homer Is Where the Art Isn't"
- Video game – The Simpsons: Tapped Out (dialogue)
References[edit]
The Simpsons characters
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