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[[Kent Brockman]] mentioned [[Freddie the Freeloader]], [[Emmett Kelly]], and Charlie Chaplin's [[The Tramp|Little Tramp]].<ref>"[[Bart vs. Thanksgiving]]"</ref> | [[Kent Brockman]] mentioned [[Freddie the Freeloader]], [[Emmett Kelly]], and Charlie Chaplin's [[The Tramp|Little Tramp]].<ref>"[[Bart vs. Thanksgiving]]"</ref> | ||
− | He | + | He could be seen eating a shoe in the company of other tramps when Herb was planning to go to Springfield. This was a reference to the film ''The Gold Rush'', in which Chaplin also ate his shoe.<ref>"[[Brother, Can You Spare Two Dimes?]]"</ref> |
[[Homer]]'s hotel room in [[Hollywood]] had a picture of Charlie Chaplin on the wall.<ref>"[[Homer's Barbershop Quartet]]"</ref> | [[Homer]]'s hotel room in [[Hollywood]] had a picture of Charlie Chaplin on the wall.<ref>"[[Homer's Barbershop Quartet]]"</ref> | ||
− | When [[Grampa]] stuck two forks in two potatoes and made them dance to amuse [[Jacqueline Bouvier|Jacqueline]] the [[Blue-haired lawyer]] came and told him that he | + | When [[Grampa]] stuck two forks in two potatoes and made them dance to amuse [[Jacqueline Bouvier|Jacqueline]], the [[Blue-haired lawyer]] came and told him that he represented the estate of Charles Chaplin and had a court order demanding an immediate halt to the unauthorized imitation. The scene was a direct parody of Chaplin's potato and fork dance in ''The Gold Rush''.<ref>"[[Lady Bouvier's Lover]]"</ref> |
− | When [[Mr. Burns]] gave [[Homer]] a tour of his house he showed off the suit Charlie Chaplin was buried in.<ref>"[[The Trouble with Trillions]]"</ref> | + | When [[Mr. Burns]] gave [[Homer]] a tour of his house, he showed off the suit Charlie Chaplin was buried in.<ref>"[[The Trouble with Trillions]]"</ref> |
− | + | Charlie Chaplin was one of the "Legends of Comedy" stamps on a poster at the [[Springfield Post Office]].<ref>"[[Sunday, Cruddy Sunday]]"</ref> | |
− | In a crossword that [[Lisa]] finished was | + | When [[Grampa]] thought he was dead, he met a Charlie Chaplin impersonator and mistook him for the real Chaplin.<ref>"[[Million-Dollar Abie]]"</ref> |
+ | |||
+ | In a crossword that [[Lisa]] finished, there was a clue: "''Young wife (age 18) of Charlie Chaplin (age 54)''".<ref>"[[Homer and Lisa Exchange Cross Words]]"</ref> | ||
He was in the audience for a show [[Mr. Burns]] put on as a child and laughed at Burns when his pants fell down.<ref>"[[Monty Burns' Fleeing Circus]]"</ref> | He was in the audience for a show [[Mr. Burns]] put on as a child and laughed at Burns when his pants fell down.<ref>"[[Monty Burns' Fleeing Circus]]"</ref> | ||
− | He | + | He was one of the many people on "[[Ned]]'s List of Laudable Lefties".<ref>''[[Flanders' Book of Faith]]''</ref> |
== Appearances == | == Appearances == |
Latest revision as of 19:44, February 23, 2025
Charlie Chaplin
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Character Information
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Charlie Chaplin was an English comic actor, film director and composer. His most memorable on-screen character is the Tramp.
Contents
[hide]History[edit]
Kent Brockman mentioned Freddie the Freeloader, Emmett Kelly, and Charlie Chaplin's Little Tramp.[1]
He could be seen eating a shoe in the company of other tramps when Herb was planning to go to Springfield. This was a reference to the film The Gold Rush, in which Chaplin also ate his shoe.[2]
Homer's hotel room in Hollywood had a picture of Charlie Chaplin on the wall.[3]
When Grampa stuck two forks in two potatoes and made them dance to amuse Jacqueline, the Blue-haired lawyer came and told him that he represented the estate of Charles Chaplin and had a court order demanding an immediate halt to the unauthorized imitation. The scene was a direct parody of Chaplin's potato and fork dance in The Gold Rush.[4]
When Mr. Burns gave Homer a tour of his house, he showed off the suit Charlie Chaplin was buried in.[5]
Charlie Chaplin was one of the "Legends of Comedy" stamps on a poster at the Springfield Post Office.[6]
When Grampa thought he was dead, he met a Charlie Chaplin impersonator and mistook him for the real Chaplin.[7]
In a crossword that Lisa finished, there was a clue: "Young wife (age 18) of Charlie Chaplin (age 54)".[8]
He was in the audience for a show Mr. Burns put on as a child and laughed at Burns when his pants fell down.[9]
He was one of the many people on "Ned's List of Laudable Lefties".[10]
Appearances[edit]
Episode – "Bart vs. Thanksgiving" (mentioned)
Episode – "Brother, Can You Spare Two Dimes?"
Episode – "Homer's Barbershop Quartet" (picture, flashback)
Episode – "Lady Bouvier's Lover" (mentioned)
Episode – "The Trouble with Trillions" (mentioned)
Episode – "Sunday, Cruddy Sunday" (picture)
Episode – "Million-Dollar Abie" (mentioned)
Episode – "Homer and Lisa Exchange Cross Words"
Episode – "Monty Burns' Fleeing Circus"
Book – Flanders' Book of Faith (mentioned)
References[edit]
- Jump up ↑ "Bart vs. Thanksgiving"
- Jump up ↑ "Brother, Can You Spare Two Dimes?"
- Jump up ↑ "Homer's Barbershop Quartet"
- Jump up ↑ "Lady Bouvier's Lover"
- Jump up ↑ "The Trouble with Trillions"
- Jump up ↑ "Sunday, Cruddy Sunday"
- Jump up ↑ "Million-Dollar Abie"
- Jump up ↑ "Homer and Lisa Exchange Cross Words"
- Jump up ↑ "Monty Burns' Fleeing Circus"
- Jump up ↑ Flanders' Book of Faith
External links[edit]
[show] Actors and actresses
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[show] Ned's List of Laudable Lefties
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[show] Real-world deceased characters
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[show] The Simpsons characters
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