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Difference between revisions of "Season 1"

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{{PrevNext|The Simpsons shorts|Season 2}}
 
{{Season
 
{{Season
 
|name = Season 1
 
|name = Season 1
|image = [[File:Simpsons_s1.png|200px]]
+
|image = [[File:Season 1 iTunes logo.jpg|250px]]
|original run = December 17, 1989 – May 13, 1990
+
|original run = December 17, [[1989]] – May 13, [[1990]]
 
|episodes = 13
 
|episodes = 13
|previous = Ullman shorts
+
|previous = [[Shorts season 3|Ullman shorts]]
 
|next = [[Season 2|2]]
 
|next = [[Season 2|2]]
|boxset = [[The Complete First Season]]
+
|boxset = [[The Complete First Season]]
}}The '''first season''' of the Simpsons began on 17th December 1989 with the first episode of the series, "[[Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire]]" and ended on 13th May 1990 with "[[Some Enchanted Evening (The Simpsons)|Some Enchanted Evening]]". Matt Groening, James L. Brooks and Sam Simon were the show runners of the season.
+
}}
  
It was originally intended that the season finale, "[[Some Enchanted Evening (The Simpsons)|Some Enchanted Evening]]", would be the first episode of the season as well as the series which would have aired at Autumn of 1989. However, after a poorly received workprint of the episode, 70% of it had to be redone, delaying it to months throughout the season until finally being aired on May 1990,late in the season. Subsequent episodes in their production such as "[[Bart the Genius]]" had minor problems that were easy to fix and were suitable for airing. As "[[Some Enchanted Evening (The Simpsons)|Some Enchanted Evening]]" was being overhauled, the producers considered to air the Christmas special, "[[Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire]]", which had the nearest airdate and would be the season premiere and the first episode of the series.
+
The '''first season''' originally aired from December 17, 1989 with "[[Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire]]", to May 13, 1990 with "[[Some Enchanted Evening]]". Matt Groening, James L. Brooks and Sam Simon were the show runners of the season.<ref name="Roasting">Richmond, pp. 16–17</ref></onlyinclude>
  
The season had four nominations and won one of them. It won Outstanding Animated Program from "[[Life on the Fast Lane]]", which the episode was tied with "[[Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire]]". "[[Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire]]" was nominated for "Outstanding Editing in a Miniseries or Special", "[[The Call of the Simpsons]]" was nominated for "Outstanding Individual Achievement in Sound Mixing for a Comedy Series or a Special" and "The Simpsons Theme", composed by Danny Elfman, was nominated for "Outstanding Achievement in Main Title Theme Music".
+
''[[The Simpsons]]'' and the season was intended to debut in fall of 1989 with "[[Some Enchanted Evening]]", which also includes much of the main characters' debut.<ref name="Groening"/> But, after the workprint of the episode was met unfavourably and being deemed as unusable, 70% of its animation had to be redone, thus delaying "Some Enchanted Evening" until having finally being aired as the season finale on May 13, 1990.<ref name="Silverman">{{cite video | people=Silverman, David|date=2001|title=The Simpsons season 1 DVD commentary for the episode "Some Enchanted Evening"| medium=DVD|publisher=20th Century Fox}}</ref> It was originally thought that subsequent episodes such as "[[Bart the Genius]]" would turn out just as bad as "Some Enchanted Evening" but there were only minor problems in production that were fortunately easy to fix and were suitable for airing.<ref name="The Simpsons season 1- Wikipedia">{{cite web|url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Simpsons_(season_1) |title=The Simpsons (season 1)- Wikipedia |publisher=wikipedia.org |date= |accessdate=December 29, 2010}}</ref> As "[[Some Enchanted Evening]]" was being overhauled, the producers decided to replace it with the season's Christmas special, "[[Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire]]", on December 17, 1989 as the season premiere.<ref name="Groening">{{cite video | people=Groening, Matt|date=2001|title=The Simpsons season 1 DVD commentary for the episode "Some Enchanted Evening"| medium=DVD|publisher=20th Century Fox}}</ref> The timing was very fortunate, as the episode would have had to be aired in the Christmas holidays of 1989 regardless of any other issues. "Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire" would also become ''The Simpsons''<nowiki>'</nowiki> first ever episode broadcast.
  
All of the 13 episodes of Season 1, including extras such as the "[[Some Enchanted Evening (The Simpsons)|Some Enchanted Evening]]" workprint, were released on DVD on 25th September 2001 in Region 1 and 24th September 2001 in Region 2 and 4. This is the First of the Complete Seasons of The Simpsons released in boxsets for home media.
+
The season won an Emmy award and had four other nominations. "[[Life on the Fast Lane]]" won "Outstanding Animated Program," for which "[[Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire]]" was also a nominee. "[[Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire]]" was nominated for "Outstanding Editing in a Miniseries or Special"; "[[The Call of the Simpsons]]" was nominated for "Outstanding Individual Achievement in Sound Mixing for a Comedy Series or a Special"; and "The Simpsons Theme," composed by Danny Elfman, was nominated for "Outstanding Achievement in Main Title Theme Music".<ref name="Emmy">[http://www.emmys.org/awards/awardsearch.php Emmy Awards official site] "The Simpsons" "1989–1990" ''emmys.org''. Retrieved on July 3, 2007</ref>
 +
 
 +
All 13 episodes of Season 1, including extras such as the "[[Some Enchanted Evening]]" workprint, were released on DVD on September 25, 2001 in Region 1 and September 24, 2001 in Regions 2 and 4. It is the first of the Complete Seasons of ''The Simpsons'' released in boxsets for home media.
 +
 
 +
== History ==
 +
"[[Some Enchanted Evening]]" was originally intended to be broadcast in the fall of 1989, which would have made it the first episode of the season and of the series.<ref name="Groening"/> However, the workprint was of such poor quality that the series premiere was delayed, as the episode had to be redone. 70 percent of "Some Enchanted Evening" had to be redone, so the episode remained in production until being broadcast at last on May 13, 1990, which made it the season's final episode. The [[FOX]] producers persuaded the ''Simpsons'' creative team to open the series "[[Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire]]" airing it just before Christmas the same year on December 17, 1989 as it had to be for it was a making it the season premiere and ''The Simpsons'' first episode. As the episode was a Christmas special, the producers were already locked into airing it on or near that date. The producers considered aborting ''The Simpsons'' completely if the second episode in production, "[[Bart the Genius]]", turned out as bad as "Some Enchanted Evening". Fortunately, only minor errors were present, which were easily fixed.<ref name="The Simpsons season 1- Wikipedia"/>
 +
 
 +
During this season, [[Judd Apatow]] submitted a script which saw Homer being hypnotized into thinking he was 10. The script has been produced into an episode entitled "[[Bart's New Friend]]" that aired in [[season 26]] on January 11, [[2015]].
  
 
== Episodes ==
 
== Episodes ==
{{clear}}
+
;Key
{| class="wikitable" style="width:98%;"
+
*In the # column;
|-
+
**The first number refers to the order it aired during the entire series.
! style="background-color: #DEDDE2;"| #
+
**The second number refers to the episode number within its season.
!! style="background-color: #DEDDE2;"| Original title (top)<br />Alternate title (bottom)
+
*The production code refers to the code assigned to the episode by the production team. The first two characters refer to the season the episode was made for: 7F for season two, 8F for season three. The second number is the order the episode was produced, not the airing order.
!! style="background-color: #DEDDE2;"| Written by
+
 
!! style="background-color: #DEDDE2;"| Directed by
+
{{Table|
!! style="background-color: #DEDDE2;"|Original airdate
+
{{TH|Picture|width=200px}}
!! style="background-color: #DEDDE2;"|Prod. code
+
{{TH|#}}
{{ Episode list
+
{{TH|Original title (top)<br>Alternate title (bottom)}}
|EpisodeNumber=1–1
+
{{TH|Original airdate}}
|Title=[[Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire]]
+
{{TH|Directed by}}
|AltTitle=The Simpsons Christmas Special
+
{{TH|Written by}}
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1989|12|17}}
+
{{TH|Prod. code}}
|Aux1=[[David Silverman]]
+
{{TBT|[[File:Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire promo.png|200px]]}}
|Aux2=[[Mimi Pond]]
+
{{TB|1 - 1}}
|ProdCode=7G08
+
{{TB|'''"[[Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire]]"'''/"'''The Simpsons Christmas Special'''"}}
|ShortSummary= The Simpsons are having a difficult Christmas due to lack of money as invested in savings and no bonus, which subsequently was used up after an expensive tattoo removal for Bart. They try to have a successful holiday nonetheless.
+
{{TB|December 17, 1989}}
|- bgcolor="#FFF4A7"
+
{{TB|[[David Silverman]]}}
|2 - 102
+
{{TB|[[Mimi Pond]]}}
|May 3, [[1987]]
+
{{TB|7G08}}
|"Watching TV"
+
{{TCsT|color=white|Christmas is coming, and it's going to be a difficult one due to the family's financial woes: Homer's expected Christmas bonus at work doesn't come through, and the family is forced to spend money previously set aside for shopping on an expensive tattoo removal procedure for Bart. Homer tries to earn money by other means such as being a department store Santa Claus, and the family does their best to have a good holiday in spite of the circumstances.|7}}
|-
+
 
|colspan="3" style="background-color: #FEF8E2;" |Bart and Lisa quarrel over what channel they should watch. Repeatedly Maggie comes up to the television and changes the channel. The only thing they eventually agree on is to stop Maggie changing the channel. Later Homer is saying a speech about family matters and stops when the show comes back on.
+
{{TBT|[[File:Bart the Genius.jpg|200px]]}}
|- bgcolor="#fff4a7"
+
{{TB|2 - 2}}
|3 - 103
+
{{TB|'''"[[Bart the Genius]]"'''}}
|May 10, [[1987]]
+
{{TB|January 14, 1990}}
|"Jumping Bart"
+
{{TB|[[David Silverman]]}}
|-
+
{{TB|[[Jon Vitti]]}}
|colspan="3" style="background-color: #FEF8E2;" |Homer makes several attempts to have Bart jump into his arms. Each time Bart jumps Homer is distracted and fails to catch him.
+
{{TB|7G02}}
|- bgcolor="#fff4a7"
+
{{TCsT|color=white|Springfield Elementary School has an intelligence test, and Bart cheats by switching his name with that of class brain Martin Prince on their test papers. With his name associated with Martin's test score, Bart is considered to be a genius. Bart is then enrolled at the Enriched Learning Center for Gifted Children, but struggles both academically and socially at his new school. With no one aware that Bart cheated, Homer and Bart develop a close father/son relationship. Everything goes back to normal, however, when Bart confesses to the switch.
|4 - 104
+
 
|May 31, [[1987]]
+
'''Guest starring:''' [[Marcia Wallace]] as [[Edna Krabappel]] and [[Ms. Melon]].|7}}
|"Babysitting Maggie"
+
 
|-
+
{{TBT|[[File:Homer's Odyssey (Mr. Burns Looking Out the Window).png|200px]]}}
|colspan="3" style="background-color: #FEF8E2;" |Marge puts Bart and Lisa in charge of babysitting Maggie. They totally ignore her, and she gets electrocuted, falls down the stairs and chases a butterfly onto the roof only to fall off the roof.
+
{{TB|3 - 3}}
|- bgcolor="#fff4a7"
+
{{TB|'''"[[Homer's Odyssey]]"'''}}
|5 - 105
+
{{TB|January 21, 1990}}
|June 21, [[1987]]
+
{{TB|[[Wes Archer]]}}
|"The Pacifier"
+
{{TB|[[Jay Kogen]] & [[Wallace Wolodarsky]]}}
|-
+
{{TB|7G03}}
|colspan="3" style="background-color: #FEF8E2;" |Bart and Lisa take Maggie's pacifier away to stop her from sucking on it. Maggie has an entire drawerful of them and refuses to kick the habit.
+
{{TCsT|color=white|Homer is fired after he causes an accident due to being distracted by greeting Bart and his class on their field trip to the Springfield Nuclear Power Plant. Depressed and unemployed, Homer considers suicide until he notices the dangers around town and becomes a safety crusader. When Homer targets the nuclear power plant, Mr. Burns re-hires him and promotes him to safety inspector.|7}}
|- bgcolor="#fff4a7"
+
{{TBT|[[File:There's No Disgrace Like Home (Promotional image).png|200px]]}}
|6 - 106
+
 
|June 28, [[1987]]
+
{{TB|4 - 4}}
|"Burping Contest"
+
{{TB|'''"[[There's No Disgrace Like Home]]"'''}}
|-
+
{{TB|January 28, 1990}}
|colspan="3" style="background-color: #FEF8E2;" |Bart, Lisa and Maggie compete in a contest to see who can make the most disgusting burp. Marge objects several times, but to no avail.
+
{{TB|[[Gregg Vanzo]] &<br>[[Kent Butterworth]]}}
|- bgcolor="#fff4a7"
+
{{TB|[[Al Jean]] & [[Mike Reiss]]}}
|7 - 107
+
{{TB|7G04}}
|July 12, [[1987]]
+
{{TCsT|color=white|The Simpson family attends the company picnic at the Burns manor. After seeing the other families at the picnic, Homer notices his own family's shortcomings and dysfunctions and decides to improve everyone's behavior, pawning the family's television set to pay for a family therapy session at Dr. Marvin Monroe's clinic. The session is a flop, but when Homer forces Monroe to honor his "double your money back" guarantee, the family ends up with enough money to buy a much better TV.|7}}
|"Dinnertime
+
 
|-
+
{{TBT|[[File:General Bart (Bart the General).png|200px]]}}
|colspan="3" style="background-color: #FEF8E2;" |Marge serves the family dinner and the family sits down for the meal. Marge insists that family should have table manners, but the family's crude eating habits are hard to stop.Season 2
+
{{TB|5 - 5}}
|}
+
{{TB|'''"[[Bart the General]]"'''}}
{| class="wikitable"
+
{{TB|February 4, 1990}}
! style="background-color: #fada00" |#
+
{{TB|David Silverman}}
! style="background-color: #fada00" |Airdate
+
{{TB|[[John Swartzwelder]]}}
! style="background-color: #fada00" |Title
+
{{TB|7G05}}
|- bgcolor="#fff4a7"
+
{{TCsT|color=white|Bart runs afoul of Nelson Muntz, the school bully, who begins attacking Bart every day after school. Homer suggests fighting back, which does not work. Desperate for a solution, Bart visits Grampa for advice. Grampa takes Bart to meet Herman, who suggests that Bart rally all of the school children and declare war on Nelson. Bart and his army attack Nelson and successfully manage to convince him to give up his bullying ways.|7}}
|8 - 201
+
 
|September 22, [[1987]]
+
{{TBT|[[File:Moaning Lisa.jpg|200px]]}}
|"Making Faces"
+
{{TB|6 - 6}}
|rowspan="2"|[[File:Terribleface.jpg|120px]]
+
{{TB|'''"[[Moaning Lisa]]"'''}}
|-
+
{{TB|February 11, 1990}}
|colspan="3" style="background-color: #FEF8E2;" |The kids make scary faces at each other. Marge warns them that if they make scary faces, the faces will stay there forever. This warning has the opposite effect.
+
{{TB|Wes Archer}}
|- bgcolor="#fff4a7"
+
{{TB|Al Jean & Mike Reiss}}
|9 - 202
+
{{TB|7G06}}
|October 4, [[1987]]
+
{{TCsT|color=white|Lisa is continually unhappy, and it begins to affect her performance at school. Nothing that Marge and Homer try seems to help. Lisa then meets jazz musician and fellow saxophone player Bleeding Gums Murphy, who helps Lisa to express her depression by playing the blues on her sax. They write a blues number together, and the family visits a jazz club to hear Bleeding Gums sing and play it.
|"The Funeral"
+
 
|-
+
'''Guest starring:''' [[Ron Taylor]] as [[Bleeding Gums Murphy]] and [[Miriam Flynn]] as [[Ms. Barr]].|7}}
|colspan="3" style="background-color: #FEF8E2;" | Uncle Hubert is dead and the family attends his funeral. Bart is determined to see his uncle's corpse, but passes out when he glances into the casket.
+
 
|- bgcolor="#fff4a7"
+
{{TBT|[[File:Bigfoot Homer.png|200px]]}}
|10 - 203
+
{{TB|7 - 7}}
|October 11, [[1987]]
+
{{TB|'''"[[The Call of the Simpsons]]"'''}}
|"What Maggie's Thinking"
+
{{TB|February 18, 1990}}
|-
+
{{TB|Wes Archer}}
|colspan="3" style="background-color: #FEF8E2;" |Bart and Lisa wonder what's inside Maggie's mind when looking at her in her crib. Maggie sees them as demons and later as infants with her being the grown up.
+
{{TB|John Swartzwelder}}
|- bgcolor="#fff4a7"
+
{{TB|7G09}}
|11 - 204
+
{{TCsT|color=white|The Simpsons go camping in their dilapidated RV, and problems arise when the RV is destroyed by falling off a cliff. The family are separated in the woods, where Maggie is cared for by bears and Homer (who has lost his clothes and is wearing a heavy coating of mud instead) is mistaken for a hideous Bigfoot-like monster. Homer is captured and taken to a lab, and not allowed to return home until the scientists are convinced that he really is a human being.
|October 18, [[1987]]
+
 
|"Football"
+
'''Guest starring:''' [[Albert Brooks]] as [[Cowboy Bob]].|7}}
|-
+
 
|colspan="3" style="background-color: #FEF8E2;" |Homer promises the kids chocolate milkshakes if Bart can catch one of his father's long football passes. Unfortunately, there are many obstacles to overcome.
+
{{TBT|[[File:Bart Worried About the Statue (The Telltale Head).png|200px]]}}
|- bgcolor="#fff4a7"
+
{{TB|8 - 8}}
|12 - 205
+
{{TB|'''"[[The Telltale Head]]"'''}}
|October 25, [[1987]]
+
{{TB|February 25, 1990}}
|"House of Cards"
+
{{TB|[[Rich Moore]]}}
|-
+
{{TB|Al Jean, Mike Reiss, Sam Simon & Matt Groening}}
|colspan="3" style="background-color: #FEF8E2;" |Bart tries to make a house of cards, but Lisa and Maggie make noises that cause the house to fall every time.
+
{{TB|7G07}}
|- bgcolor="#fff4a7"
+
{{TCsT|color=white|The episode opens with Bart and Homer being chased and cornered by an angry mob, and Bart has the severed head of Jebediah Springfield's statue. Bart explains his actions: He cut off the head to impress a trio of troublemakers he was trying to make friends with, but the stunt backfired as the act of vandalism outraged the whole town, including Bart's three would-be friends. Bart then confessed to his family what he had done, and Homer, feeling responsible, agreed to help him put the head back. Finishing his story, Bart says the incident made him realize he was taking the town's heritage for granted, of which they were all guilty. Touched by the story, the crowd forgives Bart, and he puts the head back.|7}}
|13 - 206
+
 
|November 1, [[1987]]
+
{{TBT|[[File:Life on the Fast Lane.jpg|200px]]}}
|"Bart and Homer's Dinner"
+
{{TB|9 - 9}}
|-
+
{{TB|'''"[[Life on the Fast Lane]]"'''}}
|colspan="3" style="background-color: #FEF8E2;" |The girls are out watching a ballet and Homer is in charge of the dinner. Bart is relunctantly forced to eat a mix of fish nuggets and pork-a-roni.
+
{{TB|March 18, 1990}}
|- bgcolor="#fff4a7"
+
{{TB|David Silverman}}
|14 - 207
+
{{TB|John Swartzwelder}}
|November , [[1987]]
+
{{TB|7G11}}
|"Space Patrol"
+
{{TCsT|color=white|Marge becomes unhappy when her birthday present from Homer is a bowling ball (which he clearly intended for himself) as she does not even bowl. To spite Homer, Marge sets out to learn to bowl, and ends up taking lessons from an instructor named Jacques, who pursues an affair with her. Marge nearly gives in, but at the last minute chooses to stay with Homer, surprising him by showing up at the nuclear power plant.
|-
+
 
|colspan="3" style="background-color: #FEF8E2;" |Bart, Lisa and Maggie play a game of "Space Patrol" while Homer and Marge are out. Lisa plays a superhero with Maggie as her sidekick, while Bart puts a jug on his head with the pretense of it being the helmet of an alien warlord. However, his head stuck in the jug and Lisa "frees" Bart using a croquet mallet.
+
'''Guest starring:''' [[Albert Brooks]] as [[Jacques]].|7}}
|- bgcolor="#fff4a7"
+
 
|15 - 208
+
{{TBT|[[File:Princess Kashmir & Homer.png|200px]]}}
|November 15, [[1987]]
+
{{TB|10 - 10}}
|"Bart's Haircut"
+
{{TB|'''"[[Homer's Night Out]]"'''}}
|-
+
{{TB|March 25, 1990}}
|colspan="3" style="background-color: #FEF8E2;" |Bart's hair is too long and he is sent to a barber. His hair cut is too short and he tries multiple ways to hide it.
+
{{TB|Rich Moore}}
|- bgcolor="#fff4a7"
+
{{TB|Jon Vitti}}
|16 - 209
+
{{TB|7G10}}
|November 22, [[1987]]
+
{{TCsT|color=white|Bart takes a picture of Homer dancing with Princess Kashmir, a belly dancer. The photo is then copied all over Springfield, and when Marge sees it she at first thinks that Homer is having an affair. Homer explains the photo, but a still-angry Marge kicks him out of the house and demands that Homer introduce Bart to Princess Kashmir in person to show him that women are not sex objects.
|"World War III"
+
 
|rowspan="2"|[[File:Short.worldwarIII.JPG|120px]]
+
'''Guest Starring:''' [[Sam McMurray]] as [[Gulliver Dark]].|7}}
|-
+
 
|colspan="3" style="background-color: #FEF8E2;" | Homer wakes up the family to practice for a nuclear drill. After multiple drills the family gets tired of him and traps him in the basement.
+
{{TBT|[[File:The Crepes of Wrath.png|200px]]}}
|- bgcolor="#fff4a7"
+
{{TB|11 - 11}}
|17 - 210
+
{{TB|'''"[[The Crepes of Wrath]]"'''}}
|December 13, [[1987]]
+
{{TB|April 15, 1990}}
|"The Perfect Crime"
+
{{TB|[[Wes Archer]] & [[Milton Gray]]}}
|rowspan="2"|[[File:Short.perfectcrime.JPG|120px]]
+
{{TB|[[George Meyer]], [[Sam Simon]], [[John Swartzwelder]] & [[Jon Vitti]]}}
|-
+
{{TB|7G13}}
|colspan="3" style="background-color: #FEF8E2;" |Marge bakes a batch of delicious cookies and Bart attempts to steal them, when everyone except him and Maggie leave the kitchen. Homer and Marge come back to find the tray empty, but Maggie guides them along a trail of cookies running across the floor. The family catches Bart lying on his back in his bedroom amidst a pile of cookie crumbs.
+
{{TCsT|color=white|After Bart blows up [[Springfield Elementary]]'s toilets by flushing a cherry bomb, Principal Skinner decides to put Bart into a student exchange program. Bart ends up in France, where he is hosted by a pair of criminals and becomes a national hero when he exposes their plan to spike wine with antifreeze. Back in Springfield, the Simpsons host an Albanian student named Adil. Unbeknownst to the family, he is actually a spy in search of nuclear secrets. Touched by Adil's interest in his work, Homer ends up giving Adil the secrets he's after by showing him all over the nuclear plant.|7}}
|- bgcolor="#fff4a7"
+
 
|18 - 211
+
{{TBT|[[File:Krusty the Robber.png|200px]]}}
|December 20, [[1987]]
+
{{TB|12 - 12}}
|"Scary Stories"
+
{{TB|'''"[[Krusty Gets Busted]]"'''}}
|rowspan="2"|[[File:ScaryStories.png|120px]]
+
{{TB|April 29, 1990}}
|-
+
{{TB|[[Brad Bird]]}}
|colspan="3" style="background-color: #FEF8E2;" |Bart tells Lisa and Maggie a series of scary stories in the dark only to believe they're coming true.
+
{{TB|Jay Kogen & Wallace Wolodarsky}}
|- bgcolor="#fff4a7"
+
{{TB|7G12}}
|19 - 212
+
{{TCsT|color=white|Krusty the Clown is accused, tried, and convicted of robbing the Kwik-E-Mart, and Sideshow Bob takes his place as TV show host. Bart, however, believes that Krusty was framed. He enlists Lisa's help, and together they uncover evidence showing that the robber was actually Sideshow Bob in disguise. Krusty is freed and Sideshow Bob goes to jail, thus beginning the long-standing enmity between Sideshow Bob and Bart.
|January 10, [[1988]]
+
 
|"Grampa and the Kids"
+
'''Guest starring:''' [[Kelsey Grammer]] as [[Sideshow Bob]].|7}}
|rowspan="2"|
+
 
|-
+
{{TBT|[[File:Some Enchanted Evening.png|200px]]}}
|colspan="3" style="background-color: #FEF8E2;" |Grampa tells the kids stories from the good old days. When the kids stop paying attention to him, he feigns his own death to recapture their attention.
+
{{TB|13 - 13}}
|- bgcolor="#fff4a7"
+
{{TB|'''"[[Some Enchanted Evening]]"'''}}
|20 - 213
+
{{TB|May 13, 1990}}
|January 24, [[1988]]
+
{{TB|David Silverman &<br>Kent Butterworth}}
|"Gone Fishin'"
+
{{TB|Matt Groening & Sam Simon}}
|rowspan="2"|
+
{{TB|7G01}}
|-
+
{{TCsT|color=white|Homer and Marge spend an evening out on the town, leaving the children with a babysitter named Ms. Botz. Bart and Lisa, however, learn from watching TV that Ms. Botz is actually a wanted fugitive named Lucille Botzkowski, better known as the "Babysitter Bandit". They succeed in capturing the sitter, but Homer, ignorant of her real identity, turns her loose.
|colspan="3" style="background-color: #FEF8E2;" |Bart and Homer go on a fishing trip. Homer asks Bart for a balogna sandwich, but Bart forgot the bologna. He puts the bait on the sandwich instead. When they get the boat in the water they hit rapids and later fall off of a waterfall.
+
 
|- bgcolor="#fff4a7"
+
'''Guest starring:''' [[Penny Marshall]] as [[Lucille Botz]], [[June Foray]] as [[Babysitting receptionist]] and [[Paul Willson]] as [[Howard, Sr.]]|7}}
|21 - 214
+
}}
|February 7, [[1988]]
+
 
|"Skateboarding"
+
== Season 1 episodes script covers ==
|rowspan="2"|[[File:Skatebording.jpg|120px]]
+
{{Scroll|
|-
+
<gallery>
|colspan="3" style="background-color: #FEF8E2;" |Bart teaches his sisters how to skateboard, but is outdone every time he tries to show off.
+
File:7G02 Script.jpg
|}
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File:7G03 Script.jpg
[[Category:Seasons|1]]
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File:7G07 Script.jpg
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File:7G08 Script.jpg
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File:7G11 Script - Original Title.jpg
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File:7G12 Script.jpg
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File:7G13 Script.jpg
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</gallery>
 +
}}
 +
 
 +
== DVD Release ==
 +
Season 1 was released on DVD by [[20th Century Fox]] in Region 2 and 4 on September 24, 2001, and on September 25, 2001 in Region 1. While primarily consisting of the original 13 episodes, the DVD release features bonus material including deleted scenes, Animatics, and commentaries for every episode. The set sold 1.9 million units, becoming the highest-selling television program on DVD—a record which it held until October 2004 when it was passed by the first season of ''{{W|Chappelle's Show}}''.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.tvshowsondvd.com/newsitem.cfm?NewsID=2338|title=Chapelle's Show&nbsp;— S1 DVD Passes ''The Simpsons'' As #1 All-Time TV-DVD; Celebrates by Announcing Season 2!.|accessdate=2006-07-03|author=Lambert, David|date=2004-09-19|publisher=TVshowsonDVD.com}}</ref>
 +
 
 +
{{Table|
 +
{{TH|<big>'''The Complete First Season'''</big>|colspan=6}}
 +
{{THT|'''Set Details'''|colspan=3}}
 +
{{TH|'''Special Features'''}}
 +
{{TCsT|
 +
*13 episodes
 +
*3-disc set
 +
*1.33:1 aspect ratio
 +
*Languages:
 +
**English ({{W|Dolby Digital}} 5.1, with subtitles)
 +
**French (Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround)
 +
**Spanish (subtitles only)
 +
|3}}
 +
{{TRs|
 +
*Optional commentaries for all 13 episodes
 +
*Original scripts for
 +
**"[[Bart the Genius]]"
 +
**"[[Bart the General]]"
 +
**"[[Moaning Lisa]]"
 +
**"[[Some Enchanted Evening]]"
 +
*"Workprint of Some Enchanted Evening" with Optional Commentary
 +
*[[Albert Brooks]] outtakes
 +
*BBC Special: ''America's First Family''
 +
*{{W|ABC News}}: Bart T-shirt Controversy
 +
*[[The Simpsons shorts]]
 +
**"[[Good Night]]"
 +
*Foreign Language Clips
 +
*Early Sketches
 +
*Stills and magazine covers|4}}
 +
{{THT|'''Release Dates'''|colspan=3}}
 +
{{TBT|{{W|DVD region code#Region codes and countries|Region 1}}}}
 +
{{TB|{{W|DVD region code#Region codes and countries|Region 2}}}}
 +
{{TB|{{W|DVD region code#Region codes and countries|Region 4}}}}
 +
{{TBT|September 25, 2001}}
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{{TB|September 24, 2001}}
 +
{{TB|September 24, 2001}}
 +
}}
 +
 
 +
== Awards ==
 +
The season won an Emmy award and had four other nominations. "[[Life on the Fast Lane]]" won "Outstanding Animated Program," for which "[[Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire]]" was also a nominee. "[[Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire]]" was nominated for "Outstanding Editing in a Miniseries or Special"; "[[The Call of the Simpsons]]" was nominated for "Outstanding Individual Achievement in Sound Mixing for a Comedy Series or a Special"; and "The Simpsons Theme," composed by Danny Elfman, was nominated for "Outstanding Achievement in Main Title Theme Music."<ref name="Emmy"/>
 +
 
 +
== References ==
 +
*Richmond, Ray; Antonia Coffman (1997). The Simpsons: A Complete Guide to our Favorite Family. Harper Collins Publishers. pp.&nbsp;14–15. ISBN 0-00-638898-1.
 +
{{Reflist}}
 +
 
 +
{{Seasons}}
 +
{{PrevNext|The Simpsons shorts|Season 2}}
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 +
[[Category:Season 1| ]]
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[[Category:Seasons|01]]
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[[Category:1989]]
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[[Category:1990]]
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 +
[[de:Staffel 1]]

Latest revision as of 10:43, April 27, 2024

The Simpsons shorts
Season 1
Season 2
Season 1
Season 1 iTunes logo.jpg
Season Information
Original run: December 17, 1989 – May 13, 1990
No. of episodes: 13
Previous season: Ullman shorts
Next season: 2
DVD boxset: The Complete First Season

The first season originally aired from December 17, 1989 with "Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire", to May 13, 1990 with "Some Enchanted Evening". Matt Groening, James L. Brooks and Sam Simon were the show runners of the season.[1]

The Simpsons and the season was intended to debut in fall of 1989 with "Some Enchanted Evening", which also includes much of the main characters' debut.[2] But, after the workprint of the episode was met unfavourably and being deemed as unusable, 70% of its animation had to be redone, thus delaying "Some Enchanted Evening" until having finally being aired as the season finale on May 13, 1990.[3] It was originally thought that subsequent episodes such as "Bart the Genius" would turn out just as bad as "Some Enchanted Evening" but there were only minor problems in production that were fortunately easy to fix and were suitable for airing.[4] As "Some Enchanted Evening" was being overhauled, the producers decided to replace it with the season's Christmas special, "Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire", on December 17, 1989 as the season premiere.[2] The timing was very fortunate, as the episode would have had to be aired in the Christmas holidays of 1989 regardless of any other issues. "Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire" would also become The Simpsons' first ever episode broadcast.

The season won an Emmy award and had four other nominations. "Life on the Fast Lane" won "Outstanding Animated Program," for which "Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire" was also a nominee. "Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire" was nominated for "Outstanding Editing in a Miniseries or Special"; "The Call of the Simpsons" was nominated for "Outstanding Individual Achievement in Sound Mixing for a Comedy Series or a Special"; and "The Simpsons Theme," composed by Danny Elfman, was nominated for "Outstanding Achievement in Main Title Theme Music".[5]

All 13 episodes of Season 1, including extras such as the "Some Enchanted Evening" workprint, were released on DVD on September 25, 2001 in Region 1 and September 24, 2001 in Regions 2 and 4. It is the first of the Complete Seasons of The Simpsons released in boxsets for home media.

History[edit]

"Some Enchanted Evening" was originally intended to be broadcast in the fall of 1989, which would have made it the first episode of the season and of the series.[2] However, the workprint was of such poor quality that the series premiere was delayed, as the episode had to be redone. 70 percent of "Some Enchanted Evening" had to be redone, so the episode remained in production until being broadcast at last on May 13, 1990, which made it the season's final episode. The FOX producers persuaded the Simpsons creative team to open the series "Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire" airing it just before Christmas the same year on December 17, 1989 as it had to be for it was a making it the season premiere and The Simpsons first episode. As the episode was a Christmas special, the producers were already locked into airing it on or near that date. The producers considered aborting The Simpsons completely if the second episode in production, "Bart the Genius", turned out as bad as "Some Enchanted Evening". Fortunately, only minor errors were present, which were easily fixed.[4]

During this season, Judd Apatow submitted a script which saw Homer being hypnotized into thinking he was 10. The script has been produced into an episode entitled "Bart's New Friend" that aired in season 26 on January 11, 2015.

Episodes[edit]

Key
  • In the # column;
    • The first number refers to the order it aired during the entire series.
    • The second number refers to the episode number within its season.
  • The production code refers to the code assigned to the episode by the production team. The first two characters refer to the season the episode was made for: 7F for season two, 8F for season three. The second number is the order the episode was produced, not the airing order.
Picture # Original title (top)
Alternate title (bottom)
Original airdate Directed by Written by Prod. code
Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire promo.png 1 - 1 "Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire"/"The Simpsons Christmas Special" December 17, 1989 David Silverman Mimi Pond 7G08
Christmas is coming, and it's going to be a difficult one due to the family's financial woes: Homer's expected Christmas bonus at work doesn't come through, and the family is forced to spend money previously set aside for shopping on an expensive tattoo removal procedure for Bart. Homer tries to earn money by other means such as being a department store Santa Claus, and the family does their best to have a good holiday in spite of the circumstances.
Bart the Genius.jpg 2 - 2 "Bart the Genius" January 14, 1990 David Silverman Jon Vitti 7G02
Springfield Elementary School has an intelligence test, and Bart cheats by switching his name with that of class brain Martin Prince on their test papers. With his name associated with Martin's test score, Bart is considered to be a genius. Bart is then enrolled at the Enriched Learning Center for Gifted Children, but struggles both academically and socially at his new school. With no one aware that Bart cheated, Homer and Bart develop a close father/son relationship. Everything goes back to normal, however, when Bart confesses to the switch.

Guest starring: Marcia Wallace as Edna Krabappel and Ms. Melon.

Homer's Odyssey (Mr. Burns Looking Out the Window).png 3 - 3 "Homer's Odyssey" January 21, 1990 Wes Archer Jay Kogen & Wallace Wolodarsky 7G03
Homer is fired after he causes an accident due to being distracted by greeting Bart and his class on their field trip to the Springfield Nuclear Power Plant. Depressed and unemployed, Homer considers suicide until he notices the dangers around town and becomes a safety crusader. When Homer targets the nuclear power plant, Mr. Burns re-hires him and promotes him to safety inspector.
There's No Disgrace Like Home (Promotional image).png 4 - 4 "There's No Disgrace Like Home" January 28, 1990 Gregg Vanzo &
Kent Butterworth
Al Jean & Mike Reiss 7G04
The Simpson family attends the company picnic at the Burns manor. After seeing the other families at the picnic, Homer notices his own family's shortcomings and dysfunctions and decides to improve everyone's behavior, pawning the family's television set to pay for a family therapy session at Dr. Marvin Monroe's clinic. The session is a flop, but when Homer forces Monroe to honor his "double your money back" guarantee, the family ends up with enough money to buy a much better TV.
General Bart (Bart the General).png 5 - 5 "Bart the General" February 4, 1990 David Silverman John Swartzwelder 7G05
Bart runs afoul of Nelson Muntz, the school bully, who begins attacking Bart every day after school. Homer suggests fighting back, which does not work. Desperate for a solution, Bart visits Grampa for advice. Grampa takes Bart to meet Herman, who suggests that Bart rally all of the school children and declare war on Nelson. Bart and his army attack Nelson and successfully manage to convince him to give up his bullying ways.
Moaning Lisa.jpg 6 - 6 "Moaning Lisa" February 11, 1990 Wes Archer Al Jean & Mike Reiss 7G06
Lisa is continually unhappy, and it begins to affect her performance at school. Nothing that Marge and Homer try seems to help. Lisa then meets jazz musician and fellow saxophone player Bleeding Gums Murphy, who helps Lisa to express her depression by playing the blues on her sax. They write a blues number together, and the family visits a jazz club to hear Bleeding Gums sing and play it.

Guest starring: Ron Taylor as Bleeding Gums Murphy and Miriam Flynn as Ms. Barr.

Bigfoot Homer.png 7 - 7 "The Call of the Simpsons" February 18, 1990 Wes Archer John Swartzwelder 7G09
The Simpsons go camping in their dilapidated RV, and problems arise when the RV is destroyed by falling off a cliff. The family are separated in the woods, where Maggie is cared for by bears and Homer (who has lost his clothes and is wearing a heavy coating of mud instead) is mistaken for a hideous Bigfoot-like monster. Homer is captured and taken to a lab, and not allowed to return home until the scientists are convinced that he really is a human being.

Guest starring: Albert Brooks as Cowboy Bob.

Bart Worried About the Statue (The Telltale Head).png 8 - 8 "The Telltale Head" February 25, 1990 Rich Moore Al Jean, Mike Reiss, Sam Simon & Matt Groening 7G07
The episode opens with Bart and Homer being chased and cornered by an angry mob, and Bart has the severed head of Jebediah Springfield's statue. Bart explains his actions: He cut off the head to impress a trio of troublemakers he was trying to make friends with, but the stunt backfired as the act of vandalism outraged the whole town, including Bart's three would-be friends. Bart then confessed to his family what he had done, and Homer, feeling responsible, agreed to help him put the head back. Finishing his story, Bart says the incident made him realize he was taking the town's heritage for granted, of which they were all guilty. Touched by the story, the crowd forgives Bart, and he puts the head back.
Life on the Fast Lane.jpg 9 - 9 "Life on the Fast Lane" March 18, 1990 David Silverman John Swartzwelder 7G11
Marge becomes unhappy when her birthday present from Homer is a bowling ball (which he clearly intended for himself) as she does not even bowl. To spite Homer, Marge sets out to learn to bowl, and ends up taking lessons from an instructor named Jacques, who pursues an affair with her. Marge nearly gives in, but at the last minute chooses to stay with Homer, surprising him by showing up at the nuclear power plant.

Guest starring: Albert Brooks as Jacques.

Princess Kashmir & Homer.png 10 - 10 "Homer's Night Out" March 25, 1990 Rich Moore Jon Vitti 7G10
Bart takes a picture of Homer dancing with Princess Kashmir, a belly dancer. The photo is then copied all over Springfield, and when Marge sees it she at first thinks that Homer is having an affair. Homer explains the photo, but a still-angry Marge kicks him out of the house and demands that Homer introduce Bart to Princess Kashmir in person to show him that women are not sex objects.

Guest Starring: Sam McMurray as Gulliver Dark.

The Crepes of Wrath.png 11 - 11 "The Crepes of Wrath" April 15, 1990 Wes Archer & Milton Gray George Meyer, Sam Simon, John Swartzwelder & Jon Vitti 7G13
After Bart blows up Springfield Elementary's toilets by flushing a cherry bomb, Principal Skinner decides to put Bart into a student exchange program. Bart ends up in France, where he is hosted by a pair of criminals and becomes a national hero when he exposes their plan to spike wine with antifreeze. Back in Springfield, the Simpsons host an Albanian student named Adil. Unbeknownst to the family, he is actually a spy in search of nuclear secrets. Touched by Adil's interest in his work, Homer ends up giving Adil the secrets he's after by showing him all over the nuclear plant.
Krusty the Robber.png 12 - 12 "Krusty Gets Busted" April 29, 1990 Brad Bird Jay Kogen & Wallace Wolodarsky 7G12
Krusty the Clown is accused, tried, and convicted of robbing the Kwik-E-Mart, and Sideshow Bob takes his place as TV show host. Bart, however, believes that Krusty was framed. He enlists Lisa's help, and together they uncover evidence showing that the robber was actually Sideshow Bob in disguise. Krusty is freed and Sideshow Bob goes to jail, thus beginning the long-standing enmity between Sideshow Bob and Bart.

Guest starring: Kelsey Grammer as Sideshow Bob.

Some Enchanted Evening.png 13 - 13 "Some Enchanted Evening" May 13, 1990 David Silverman &
Kent Butterworth
Matt Groening & Sam Simon 7G01
Homer and Marge spend an evening out on the town, leaving the children with a babysitter named Ms. Botz. Bart and Lisa, however, learn from watching TV that Ms. Botz is actually a wanted fugitive named Lucille Botzkowski, better known as the "Babysitter Bandit". They succeed in capturing the sitter, but Homer, ignorant of her real identity, turns her loose.

Guest starring: Penny Marshall as Lucille Botz, June Foray as Babysitting receptionist and Paul Willson as Howard, Sr.


Season 1 episodes script covers[edit]

DVD Release[edit]

Season 1 was released on DVD by 20th Century Fox in Region 2 and 4 on September 24, 2001, and on September 25, 2001 in Region 1. While primarily consisting of the original 13 episodes, the DVD release features bonus material including deleted scenes, Animatics, and commentaries for every episode. The set sold 1.9 million units, becoming the highest-selling television program on DVD—a record which it held until October 2004 when it was passed by the first season of Chappelle's Show.[6]

The Complete First Season
Set Details Special Features
  • 13 episodes
  • 3-disc set
  • 1.33:1 aspect ratio
  • Languages:
    • English (Dolby Digital 5.1, with subtitles)
    • French (Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround)
    • Spanish (subtitles only)
Release Dates
Region 1 Region 2 Region 4
September 25, 2001 September 24, 2001 September 24, 2001

Awards[edit]

The season won an Emmy award and had four other nominations. "Life on the Fast Lane" won "Outstanding Animated Program," for which "Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire" was also a nominee. "Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire" was nominated for "Outstanding Editing in a Miniseries or Special"; "The Call of the Simpsons" was nominated for "Outstanding Individual Achievement in Sound Mixing for a Comedy Series or a Special"; and "The Simpsons Theme," composed by Danny Elfman, was nominated for "Outstanding Achievement in Main Title Theme Music."[5]

References[edit]

  • Richmond, Ray; Antonia Coffman (1997). The Simpsons: A Complete Guide to our Favorite Family. Harper Collins Publishers. pp. 14–15. ISBN 0-00-638898-1.
  1. Richmond, pp. 16–17
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Groening, Matt. The Simpsons season 1 DVD commentary for the episode "Some Enchanted Evening" [DVD]. 20th Century Fox.
  3. Silverman, David. The Simpsons season 1 DVD commentary for the episode "Some Enchanted Evening" [DVD]. 20th Century Fox.
  4. 4.0 4.1 The Simpsons (season 1)- Wikipedia. wikipedia.org. Retrieved on December 29, 2010.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Emmy Awards official site "The Simpsons" "1989–1990" emmys.org. Retrieved on July 3, 2007
  6. Lambert, David (2004-09-19). Chapelle's Show — S1 DVD Passes The Simpsons As #1 All-Time TV-DVD; Celebrates by Announcing Season 2!.. TVshowsonDVD.com. Retrieved on 2006-07-03.


The Simpsons shorts
Season 1
Season 2