- “How yo doing?”
- ―Moe's catchphrase
- “Whats-a-matter, Homer?”
- ―Moe's catchphrase (mostly used in Season 1)
- “Hi ya Midge.”
- ―Talking to Marge
- “Mike Rotch”
- ―Bart Pulling a Prank On Moe, sounding Like My Crotch
- “I'm a stupid moron with an ugly face, and a big butt, and my butt smells, and I like to kiss my own Butt.”
- ―Moe's prank call in Treehouse of Horror II, in the Bart Zone where Bart is the leader.
Morris "Moe" Szyslak (pronounced "siz-lack"), also known as Moe the Bartender (born November 24), is the proprietor and bartender of "Moe's Tavern", a Springfield bar frequented by Homer Simpson and his friends. He has once stated that he moved to Springfield from the Netherlands. He also owns Moe's Bagels in Colorado.
Moe is portrayed as often irritable and rude to all except his bar friends Homer, Lenny, and Carl, whom he sometimes treats as respected customers as opposed to his everyday drunks like Barney. His easy-to-lose harsh temper usually turns down women and finding a girlfriend for Moe has therefore been a running joke, from indulged sexual abstinence to unsuccessful suicide attempts to dating generally rejected women. However, contrary to his personality, Moe has been seen helping others in need.These include saving marooned school children, giving food to a famished village, and saving people from a rampaging flood.
He is sometimes shown in a love pyramid with Homer, Marge, Flanders and himself.
Biography
Moe Szylak was born on November 24. He either illegally immigrated to the United States from the Netherlands[1] (he reveals his Dutch heritage in "Bart-Mangled Banner") or was born in Indiana. He used to have an Italian accent [2] but no longer uses it, hinting at Italian heritage. In the episode entitled "Lisa Goes Gaga," Moe said that he was "Half monster, half Armenian." It is further referenced in the episode "Moe Goes from Rags to Riches" his father is the yeti that lives on Mt. Everest. In a more recent episode, Moe states that his birth was the result of a "Gypsy Curse" that had been placed on his mother that after 3 months of gestation he popped out backwards and on fire.
As a child, he played the part of "Smelly", a tough kid, on The Little Rascals until he killed Alfalfa (or rather, an orphan portraying as him) in a fit of rage for stealing his bit and was fired.[3] For a while, he suffered from ring-worm claiming "For a while, I was a little more worm than kid." His first kiss was at 10 with Comic Book Guy. At some unspecified time during his childhood, his parents dropped him off at summer camp, never to return, leaving Camp See-a-Tree as the closest he could call a home. Moe becomes a victim of prank calls when young Marge calls the boys' camp and requests "Elvis Jagger Abdul-Jabbar", Homer's alias. An angry Moe hangs up, turns to the camera and says, "And, uh, that's the origin of that". Moe has stolen many things, perhaps most prominently a bag of gold Aztec coins from a young, aspiring Snake, turning the latter to a life of crime. As a young man, Moe became a professional boxer, going by the names "Kid Gorgeous", "Kid Presentable", "Kid Gruesome", and "Kid Moe." Moe blames his boxing career for making him ugly, despite in Them, Robot, a child Moe has a normal face, but then an elephant steps on him turning his face to the way it is today. According to Moe, his boxing career ended because of politics, and because he was knocked out 40 times in a row. Moe's ugliness got him rejected for a role on the soap opera "It Never Ends". Later plastic surgery nailed him the role before his face was damaged to its original appearance. His current appearance has been described as consisting of "cauliflower ear, lizard lips, little rat eyes, caveman brow and fish snout". After attending bartending school at Swigmore University (a play on Swarthmore College), Moe opened up his own drinking establishment, though often operating on expired, out-of-state, or forged liquor licenses. As an aside, it was revealed that Moe started a cult. He also dabbled in Satanism, but was asked to leave.
Moe discovered a knack for judging competitions (rather harshly), leading him to a place on American Idol.[4] After a spat with Simon Cowell, he was banned from judging and the state of California. In a previous episode he said he does many things but judging isn't one of them. During Trappuccino, he claimed he was the emperor of Springfield.
Personality
Moe is characterized by a short, violent temper (particularly aiming a makeshift shotgun at customers), coupled with homicidal and suicidal tendencies and a proclivity towards obsessive behaviors. He has low self-esteem and is suicidal, suggesting he may suffer from Major Depressive Disorder. He has an annual Christmas tradition of attempted suicide, but his attempts are comically unsuccessful (landing on a hot-air balloon after jumping out of a plane, for example). He's called the suicide hotline so many times that they've blocked his number.
Moe is especially bitter, keeping an enemies list nearly identical to that of Richard Nixon, with the addition of Barney. He has assumed a leading role in many of Springfield's angry mobs (including, at times, starting mob riots for the sake of doing so), and kidnapping Talking Heads vocalist David Byrne. He has also engaged in bizarre behavior, such as shooting at Carl, robbing Homer of expensive pants, keeping Hans Moleman under his bars in a subterranean torture chamber, perpetrating insurance fraud, and stalking various townspeople.
This behavior is further exhibited when he becomes the self-proclaimed Emperor of Springfield when the town is trapped in a dome.[5] His leadership is challenged by Barney who throws a Molotov Cocktail at him, which Moe successfully throws back. He once implies that he probably wouldn't continue to be suicidal if Reverend Lovejoy had told him that he had much to live for.
Moe has a strained love life due to his vulgar attitude, especially towards women. Nevertheless, Moe has had a number of romantic experiences, including sleeping with his bartender Colette, dating a woman named Renee, and enjoying the company of many women after he had plastic surgery to correct his ugly appearance. According to The Fight Before Christmas, Moe was in a relationship with singer/songwriter Katy Perry as she was 'into puppets'. He has long been infatuated with Homer's wife Marge (whom he often refers to as Midge) and has on occasion professed his love for her and tried to win her away from Homer. Moe's romantic attractions have resulted in criminal behavior and run-ins with the law; he has stalked Maude Flanders and other townspeople, he must register as a sex offender,[6] and has had a restraining order placed upon him. Regarding his sex offender status, he also once told Brockman when asked if he is a registered voter that he was a "registered... something" before shifting his eyes.[7] At one point he is seen on his way to a "V.D. clinic". Moe has also proposed marriage to a WNBA mascot, even knowing that the character inside the mascot is Gil Gunderson. He dated a woman named Maya whom he met on the internet and is shocked when she turns out to be a little person. He is initially afraid to introduce her to people and he proposes eventually. She almost accepts but he keeps making inappropriate jokes about her height. He even went as far as to arrange a surgical procedure so that he was the same height as Maya but he never went ahead with the operation.[8] He also once dated Mrs. Muntz.[9]
Despite his faults, Moe has been shown to express genuine love and sentimentality, which suggests that he may not be as gruff as he appears. He has a cat named Mr. Snookums, of whom he is very fond. Moe is also kind towards the rats that live in his bar. On Wednesday nights, he reads to the homeless in a local soup kitchen and he also reads to sick children at the hospital every Wednesday night. Until it was destroyed, Moe had a fondness for a jar of pickled eggs. He saved the owner of King Toot's music store and his wife from a flaming car. Moe has expressed distaste of cruelty towards animals. He saved the life of Maggie Simpson (ironically at a time that he was about to jump from a bridge) and took efforts to protect her. Moe engaged in charity work in South America or Africa, using a flying fan to fight forest fires and deliver medical supplies to people devastated by floods. Moe has knowledge of automobiles and dancing. Also, in the middle of the baseball game, he run naked on a field in front of everyone to help Bart and gain another try for him to catch a ball.[10]
When Moe noticed that Homer, Apu, and Timothy Lovejoy had relationship problems with their wives, Moe fake-threatened to run away with one of them, in hopes that the men would appreciate their wives.[11] He is also rumored to have rescued the Springfield Elementary Model U.N. Club that was stranded on an island. Exactly how is unknown.
Moe's Tavern
Moe is the owner and, except for a few instances where temporary help is hired, the only employee of Moe's Tavern. His most loyal customer is Barney Gumble, with other regulars including Homer Simpson, Lenny Leonard, Carl Carlson, Sam and Larry. Moe is notoriously cheap with his customers, refusing to give them free drinks, or throwing them out when they are out of money (and in one case, calling designated drivers "cheapskates")[12]). He encourages his customers to drink as much as possible to grow their tab. Barney's tab had to be calculated by NASA; the total came to $14 billion. Moe removed games from the bar, noting that "people drink less when they're having fun".[13]
Moe generally serves Duff beer on tap, having little knowledge of liquors or wines; the liquor bottles visible behind the bar are said to be "painted on," and in one instance, he unknowingly sells an expensive 1888 bottle of Château Latour for a few dollars. He enthusiastically abandons his bar, its regular customers, and his friends when a better opportunity comes along, such as the drink "The Flaming Moe", the opening of his postmodern bar "M", and the conversion of his bar into a family-themed restaurant called "Uncle Moe's Family Feedbag".
Moe is often engaged in shady or illegal activities at his tavern, including smuggling pandas and orcas, hosting Russian roulette games, operating an unlicensed casino, serving liquor without a license (his expired in 1973 and it's only good in Rhode Island as well as being signed by Moe himself), running a speakeasy during Springfield's brief flirtation with Prohibition, and performing unlicensed surgery. While Moe and his bar have gained occasional popularity, the phenomenon tends to be short-lived.
Non Canon Appearances
Bold text
The Simpsons Spin-Off Showcase
In the "The Simpsons Spin-Off Showcase", Moe has his own spin-off, "The Love-Matic Grampa", in which Abraham Simpson dies and his spirit falls into Moe's Love-Matic tester machine, and proceeds to give Moe dating advice to woo a woman named Betty. They both go out on a date, but Moe must visit the bathroom each time to see Grampa, until she discovers his plan. She forgives him for his efforts.
Video-games
The Simpsons Hit & Run
In "The Simpsons Hit & Run", Moe is an NPC who appears in his Bar in the Downtown levels, he has several spoken roles both as part of quests and player interactivity. His Sedan with the Rubber Daisy is an unlockable car by completing races in one level.
The Simpsons Game
In "The Simpsons Game", he is Homer's coach in the level Around the World in 80 Bites, and when he wins, Homer bites off Moe's hand by an accident. He is one of the people Marge can use in Mob Rules to protest the sales of the Grand Theft Scratchy video game to minors (in the Wii and PS2 versions, he is found in the back-alley near the Town Square, while in the Xbox and PS3 versions he is being detained by riot cops in the car park with Cletus Spuckler). In the level NeverQuest, "Orc-Moes" appear as enemies. True to their name, they are Orcs that look and sound like Moe.
Behind the Laughter
Moe's character was based partly on Tube Bar owner Louis "Red" Deutsch, who was made famous in the popular Tube Bar prank calls when he was repeatedly prank called by two Jersey City residents. These calls were the inspiration for Bart's repeated prank calls to Moe, and Deutch's often profane responses made Moe's violent side. Moe's further inspiration was drawn from comedian Rich Hall, an acquaintance of The Simpsons writer George Meyer. Hall considered being the basis for Moe "an honour". Moe's surname "Szyslak" was revealed in "Who Shot Mr. Burns? (Part One)", the writers found the name in a phonebook and gave it to Moe so that he would have the initials M.S., and hence could be a suspect in the Burns shooting. He was designed by Dan Haskett.
Moe was the first voice Hank Azaria performed for the show, redubbing Christopher Collins who initially recorded the character's voice for "Some Enchanted Evening".[14] At the time of his audition, Azaria was doing a play in which he had the part of a drug dealer, basing his voice on Al Pacino in Dog Day Afternoon. He used the same voice in the audition, and was told by Matt Groening and Sam Simon to make it more gravelly, with it becoming the voice of Moe. Groening and Simon thought it was perfect and took Azaria over to the Fox recording studio. Before he had even seen a script, he recorded several lines of dialogue as Moe for the episode "Some Enchanted Evening". Also in earlier seasons he was seen with black hair instead of his current gray hair. After the episode "When Flanders Failed" where Ned Flanders opened the Leftorium, it is revealed that Moe is Left Handed. During the episode "Bart-Mangled Banner" moe claims to be Dutch, only to stomp out of his bar wearing clogs a few seconds later.
Real name
In "Flaming Moe's", his hired waitress Colette calls him "Morris". In "The Springfield Connection", Homer told his friends that he was enjoying background of whoever he wanted. Homer then referred to Moe as "Moammar" and Moe cringes with humiliation. It is implied in "Eeny Teeny Maya, Moe" that he changed his name to Moe so he could keep the sign and the bar's name.
Gallery
Trivia
- Moe is perverted (in many episodes) anti irish (shown in many episodes and some comics) and even racist (mypods and broomsticks)
- Moe has syphilis.[15]
- Moe moved to Springfield because the zip code (on a calculator) spelled BOOBS which means that Springfield's zip code is 80085.
- Moe has Facebook and appears to be friends with Mark Zuckerberg and the Pepto Bizmo.
- Moe is implied to have a murderous hatred of the Salvation Army, as when Homer, who was on the run from an unnamed Army Colonel's army unit after he went AWOL during a training session (that nearly killed him), Moe misinterpreted Homer's claims about the Army being after him as meaning the Salvation Army and immediately cocks his shotgun, telling him to take cover.
- In Italian dubs, Moe has been renamed "Boe". That's because the voice actors thought "Moe" sounded too similar to the southern Italy slang "mo'", meaning "now".
- Moe's bar-telephone number is "Smithers" spelled with telephone number, so possibly [tel:763-83277 763-83277].[16]
- Moe is fluent in Chinese.[17]
- Moe owns a blue truck which he's nicknamed Betsy. The truck is a doppelganger of the blue Chevrolet truck that Sally escapes in at the end of the original Texas Chainsaw Massacre film.[18]
- Moe is suggested to be part monster. In Moe Goes from Rags to Riches, a yeti gives the rag to his son who turns out to be Moe. While in Lisa Goes Gaga, Moe states that he is half monster and half Armenian.
- In Czech dubbing Moe is named Vočko which means small eye.
- Strangely, he has desperate denying he is a troll in The Book Job but in The Simpsons Game, he says 'I wish I was a troll. Then I'd get respect'.
- Moe could have been in the army, in some episodes, there is a picture of him in a military uniform. In the episode Flaming Moe's he covers up his large cough syrup order by mentioning he "got hooked on the stuff in the service".
- Moe has a secret crush on Marge Simpson. He calls her "Midge".
- According to Moe's voice actor, Hank Azaria, he based the voice on Al Pacino's. Moe and Al are born on the same day, April 25th.
Appearances
- Episode – "Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire"
- Episode – "Homer's Odyssey"
- Episode – "There's No Disgrace Like Home"
- Episode – "Moaning Lisa"
- Episode – "The Telltale Head"
- Episode – "Homer's Night Out"
- Episode – "Some Enchanted Evening"
- Episode – "Bart Gets an "F""
- Episode – "Simpson and Delilah"
- Episode – "Two Cars in Every Garage and Three Eyes on Every Fish"
- Episode – "Dancin' Homer"
- Episode – "Bart the Daredevil"
- Episode – "Itchy & Scratchy & Marge"
- Episode – "One Fish, Two Fish, Blowfish, Blue Fish"
- Episode – "Homer vs. Lisa and the 8th Commandment"
- Episode – "Principal Charming"
- Episode – "Old Money"
- Episode – "The War of the Simpsons"
- Episode – "Blood Feud"
- Episode – "When Flanders Failed"
- Episode – "Homer Defined"
- Episode – "Like Father, Like Clown"
- Episode – "Treehouse of Horror II"
- Episode – "Flaming Moe's"
- Episode – "Burns Verkaufen der Kraftwerk"
- Episode – "Lisa the Greek"
- Episode – "New Kid on the Block"
- Episode – "Homer's Triple Bypass"
- Episode – "Duffless"
- Episode – "Homer's Barbershop Quartet"
- Episode – "Bart's Inner Child"
- Episode – "The Last Temptation of Homer"
- Episode – "Homer the Vigilante"
- Episode – "Homer Loves Flanders"
- Episode – "Secrets of a Successful Marriage"
- Episode – "Treehouse of Horror V"
- Episode – "Fear of Flying"
- Episode – "Homer the Great"
- Episode – "Homer vs. Patty and Selma"
- Episode – "A Star is Burns"
- Episode – "The PTA Disbands"
- Episode – "Who Shot Mr. Burns? (Part One)"
- Episode – "Who Shot Mr. Burns? (Part Two)"
- Episode – "Radioactive Man"
- Episode – "Bart Sells His Soul"
- Episode – "Sideshow Bob's Last Gleaming"
- Episode – "Team Homer"
- Episode – "The Homer They Fall"
- Episode – "Homer vs. the Eighteenth Amendment"
- Episode – "In Marge We Trust"
- Episode – "Homer's Enemy"
- Episode – "The Simpsons Spin-Off Showcase"
- Episode – "The City of New York vs. Homer Simpson"
- Episode – "The Cartridge Family"
- Episode – "The Two Mrs. Nahasapeemapetilons"
- Episode – "The Joy of Sect"
- Episode – "Simpson Tide"
- Episode – "Dumbbell Indemnity"
- Episode – "Lost Our Lisa"
- Episode – "When You Dish Upon a Star"
- Episode – "Homer Simpson in: "Kidney Trouble""
- Episode – "Mayored to the Mob"
- Episode – "Wild Barts Can't Be Broken"
- Episode – "Sunday, Cruddy Sunday"
- Episode – "I'm with Cupid"
- Episode – "Mom and Pop Art"
- Episode – "Pygmoelian"
- THOH – "Treehouse of Horror XI"
- Episode – "A Tale of Two Springfields"
- Episode – "Lisa the Tree Hugger"
- Episode – "Homer vs. Dignity"
- Episode – "HOMЯ"
- Episode – "Trilogy of Error"
- Episode – "Homer the Moe"
- Episode – "The Blunder Years"
- Episode – "Jaws Wired Shut"
- Episode – "Helter Shelter"
- Episode – "Large Marge"
- Episode – "Pray Anything"
- Episode – "The Dad Who Knew Too Little"
- Episode – "The Strong Arms of the Ma"
- Episode – "The Great Louse Detective"
- Episode – "Barting Over"
- Episode – "Dude, Where's My Ranch?"
- Episode – "Moe Baby Blues"
- Episode – "Simpson Christmas Stories"
- Episode – "Moe'N'a Lisa"
- Episode – "The Boys of Bummer"
- Episode – "Marge Gamer"
- Episode – "Yokel Chords"
- Episode – "Any Given Sundance"
- Episode – "The Wife Aquatic"
- Episode – "E. Pluribus Wiggum"
- Episode – "All About Lisa"
- Episode – "Lost Verizon"
- Episode – "Eeny Teeny Maya, Moe"
- Episode – "Four Great Women and a Manicure"
- Episode – "Coming to Homerica"
- Episode – "Homer the Whopper"
- Episode – "Eternal Moonshine of the Simpson Mind"
- Episode – "Little Big Girl"
- Episode – "Moe Letter Blues"
- Episode – "Judge Me Tender"
- Episode – "Loan-a Lisa" (picture on Facebook)
- Episode – "The Blue and the Gray"
- Episode – "Moe Goes from Rags to Riches"
- Episode – "The Falcon and the D'ohman"
- Episode – "Them, Robot"
- Episode – "Lisa Goes Gaga"
- Episode – "Gorgeous Grampa"
- Episode – "Dark Knight Court"
- Episode – "What Animated Women Want"
- Episode – "Pulpit Friction"
- Episode – "Whiskey Business"
- Episode – "The Fabulous Faker Boy"
- Episode – "The Saga of Carl"
- Episode – "Dangers on a Train"
- Episode – "Homerland"
- THOH – "Treehouse of Horror XXIV"
- Episode – "Specs and the City"
- Episode – "Luca$"
- Episode – "Days of Future Future"
- Episode – "What to Expect When Bart's Expecting"
- Episode – "Brick Like Me"
- Episode – "The Wreck of the Relationship"
- Episode – "Covercraft"
- Episode – "I Won't Be Home For Christmas"
- Episode – "My Fare Lady"
- Episode – "Walking Big & Tall"
- Episode – "The Princess Guide"
- Episode – "Waiting for Duffman"
- – The Simpsons Movie
Video game – The Simpsons Road Rage
Video game – The Simpsons: Hit and Run
Video game – The Simpsons Game
Video game – The Simpsons: Minutes to Meltdown
Citations
- ↑ Much Apu About Nothing
- ↑ Bart's Inner Child
- ↑ Radioactive Man
- ↑ Judge Me Tender
- ↑ The Simpsons Movie
- ↑ Trash of the Titans
- ↑ E. Pluribus Wiggum
- ↑ Eeny Teeny Maya, Moe
- ↑ Sleeping with the Enemy
- ↑ The Boys Of Bummer]
- ↑ Moe Letter Blues
- ↑ Homer vs. the Eighteenth Amendment
- ↑ Marge on the Lam
- ↑ Silverman, David. The Simpsons season 1 DVD commentary for the episode "Some Enchanted Evening" [DVD]. 20th Century Fox.
- ↑ Treehouse of Horror IX
- ↑ Homer the Smithers
- ↑ Moe Letter Blues
- ↑ Homer's Phobia