Everything about Like Father Like Clown totally explained
"
Like Father, Like Clown" is the sixth episode of
The Simpsons' . The episode aired on
October 24,
1991.
Bart and
Lisa try to reunite
Krusty the Clown with his long-estranged father, a
rabbi who disapproved of his son's choice of career in comedy. This episode's title is a play on the phrase "Like father, like son".
Casting
Rabbi Hyman Krustofski is voiced by comedian
Jackie Mason, who won an
Emmy for his performance. Humorously, when Rabbi Krustofsky is at the restaurant, he doesn't like the Jackie Mason sandwich. In real life, Mason is a rabbi himself. His father, his grandfather, his great-grandfather and his great-great grandfather were rabbis
(External Link
), and just like Krusty, Jackie defied his father's wishes to become a comedian.
Plot
Krusty the Clown has agreed to have dinner with Bart and his family (implied as part of his repayment for Bart's help in exonerating him in "
Krusty Gets Busted" in flashbacks), but keeps putting it off, much to Bart's disappointment. An upset Bart writes a letter to Krusty renouncing his fanhood, and Krusty's secretary is so moved that she tells Krusty she'll quit her job if he doesn't keep his promise to Bart. With that in mind, Krusty finally comes to dinner at the Simpson house. When asked to say grace, he recites the
Hebrew blessing over
bread,
HaMotzi. Realizing that Krusty is
Jewish, Lisa reminds him of his heritage, making Krusty cry. He tells the family his real name, Herschel Krustofski, and of his upbringing in the Russian District of the Lower East Side of
Springfield.
His father,
Hyman Krustofski, was a rabbi dispensing
Talmudic wisdom and car-buying tips to the neighborhood and strongly opposed to young Herschel's wish of becoming a
clown and making people laugh, wanting the boy to go to
yeshiva instead. Krusty did attend the
yeshiva school, where he said he made the other students laugh by acting as his father. As a result, Krusty performed
slapstick comedy behind his father's back. He was performing at a rabbi's convention when one joking rabbi squirted
seltzer on him, washing off his clown makeup. When Rabbi Krustofski found out, he seperated himself from his son, and it has been 2.5 decades since they've seen or spoken to each other.
In the weeks following this admission, Krusty's TV show begins to suffer, as he thinks more and more about his father, including a breakdown on live television. Bart and Lisa resolve to help reunite father and son, but the
rabbi still refuses to accept Krusty's career choice. An attempt by the kids to reunite the Krustofskis at a deli fails when the rabbi leaves early after seeing a very non-
kosher sandwich bearing his son's name on the menu. Bart calls into a religious talk-radio show that Rabbi Krustofski appears on ("Gabbin' About God"), asking if a father should forgive his son for defying his wishes if the son is making millions of children happy, but the
rabbi angrily answers in the negative.
Lisa does research to find
Judaic teachings that urge forgiveness, but Rabbi Krustofski has responses for each of them. Finally, Bart is able to convince the rabbi to reconcile with a quote from
Sammy Davis, Jr., a Jewish entertainer like Krusty, which finally convinces Rabbi Krustofski of his foolishness. A deeply depressed Krusty is glumly doing a live taping of his show, but when Rabbi Krustofski appears, they joyously hug and make up before the audience of children.
Cultural references
- The episode title is a parody on the popular saying, "Like Father, Like Son".
- The episode is an homage to the film The Jazz Singer, about a son with a strict religious upbringing who defies his father to become an entertainer. Krusty's father references this when he tells his son "If you were a musician or a jazz singer, this I could forgive." His quote "I have no son" is also reminiscent.
- The Itchy and Scratchy episode entitled "Field of Screams" is a reference to "Field of Dreams".
- The scenes in which Krusty calls his father without saying anything is reminiscent of Robert De Niro in Raging Bull.
- In the deli, Rabbi Krustofski apparently dislikes the movies of Bruce Willis; seeing a sandwich named after him, he remarks "I don't even like his work!".
- Likewise, Rabbi Krustofski declines a sandwich named after Jackie Mason, his own voice actor.
- Krusty's secretary, Miss Pennycandy, is a reference to the secretary for M in James Bond Miss Moneypenny.
- Bart and Lisa try to trick Rabbi Krustofski into meeting with Krusty by arranging a lunch date between him and Saul Bellow, the "Nobel Prize-winning Jewish novelist." In the original script, this was intended to be Isaac Bashevis Singer, who died on July 24, 1991, before the episode was completed.
- The disc jockey who hosts Gabbin' About God is seen wearing a t-shirt featuring the band Foghat.
- The Concert for Bangladesh was satirized in this episode, when Krusty plays it while a visitor at the Simpsons household. It would later be satirized again when Apu owned an album called "The Concert Against Bangladesh".
Further Information
Get more info on 'Like Father Like Clown'.
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