Add a Review

  • g-bodyl1 January 2015
    This is the second episode of the fourth season of the Simpsons and like many Season Four episodes, this is a landmark episode which explores the relationship behind the marriage of Homer and Marge. It was interesting to see Marge act in a play and even sing. I also loved the cultural references, mainly regarding Steve McQueen's The Great Escape and Alfred Hitchcock's The Birds. The episode is funny, but it also has some emotional moments which is a testament to the superb writing.

    In this episode, "A Streetcar Named Marge," Marge decides to act in a play, "A Streetcar Named Desire" in order to meet people and that has Ned Flanders in the starring role as Stanley. Marge gets increasingly angry at Homer's selfish attitude during preproduction. Meanwhile, Marge enlists Maggie at a local daycare center and when her pacifier is taken, Maggie creates a plan in order to get them back.

    Overall, this is a fantastic episode. It has its fair share of humor and cultural references, but I never knew the episode would get emotional at certain points. It is certainly more layered than I anticipated. I rate this episode 9/10.
  • safenoe15 January 2024
    Warning: Spoilers
    Jon Lovitz is the guest voice in this episode, where he voices Llewellyn Sinclair, a theater director who pushes Marge to take her performance to the next level in A Streetcar Named Desire, and it's wonderful to see Marge getting her due, and Homer recognizing her acting skills.

    For me, and it's only humble opinion shall I say, it's the first 10 seasons of The Simpsons that's the golden era, although some episodes after that are worth watching.

    Anyway, this episode features the legendary Phil Hartman as Lionel Hutz and Troy McClure, and he and Lovitz were SNL alumni so good to see the influence of SNL in The Simpsons.
  • Leading up to this episode, I was equally perplexed and intrigued. Being a long time Simpsons fan, but never having seen the original seasons 1-10, I just finished this episode on a chronological rewatch. It's interesting to see that Marge and Maggie, characters that often have ample gags or small arcs in modern episodes, aren't tapped into much in the early days of the program. This episode finally focuses on the two women of the Simpsons clan that are woefully underused, but thankfully, live up to their potential in "A Streetcar Named Marge". Marge's non-commitment to the part of Blanche is honestly very sad to watch as Homer exhibits his most careless attitude since Season 2's "The War of the Simpsons". This isn't done in vain, however, as these respective episodes focus on the tricky balance Marge and Homer must retain to succeed as couple. This episode was often more melancholy and introspective than many of the episodes have been so far, which is thankfully offset by Maggie's inventive and incredibly entertaining aside at daycare.

    This is one of the best episodes for me thus far. Not a single character feels wasted, Jon Lovitz is excellent as the exacerbated playwright and the visual and auditory gags in this entry stand out. "A Streetcar Named Marge" is a terrific example of the range "The Simpsons" showcases as a television show. The commitment to the musical and rugrats-esque B-plot are superb, and the heartfelt and understated ending between Marge and Homer made me tear up. Watch this one for sure!
  • Warning: Spoilers
    It's a testament to the greatness of this animated sitcom that season 4 has so many landmark episodes. Here, this fearless show confronts unexplored animosity in the Simpsons' marriage through the lens of the play, A Streetcar Named Desire.

    I'm a big Tennessee Williams fan, so the inclusion of one of his plays, in any way, is a big plus. Many complex layers of the plot of the play can't be transferred over to a 22 minute television show, but The Simpsons do an inspiring job of channeling Blanche through Marge.

    This episode is about Marge trying out for a play. You guessed it. A Streetcar Named Desire. She only gets the part upon the theater director hearing her dejected manner on the phone with Homer.

    The plot thickens as Homer's oafish ways get the best of Marge. She releases this aggression during a particular heated scene with Ned, who has the scars to prove it.

    There's a cute little subplot that has Maggie spending the time Marge is rehearsing for the play at the Ayn Rand School for Tots. This subplot has it funny moments, but the real meat here is the main plot involving Homer and Marge.

    One of the most tender moments of the entire series occurs after Homer sees the play. Marge mistakes his drooping head in the audience for disregard. In fact it was because he was deeply affected by the play.

    As Homer tells Marge, "I mean it made me feel bad. The poor thing ends up being hauled to the nut house when all she needed was for that big slob to show her some respect. Well at least that's what I thought. I have a history of missing the point of stuff like this."

    Marge responds, "No, Homer, you got it just right."

    Not exactly, but they love each other, and that makes this episode a real winner.
  • Joe X.23 January 2020
    Once you get over the ridiculousness of making a musical of Streetcar and watch this episode a few times, you realize that songs are not only funny, they're pretty darn catchy. I could sing you a good bit of most of them from memory. This show, the play I mean, has become a classic.

    The show, The Simpsons I mean, went on to do many more songs and musical numbers, but this is an early example of the musical-comedy brilliance of the show's writers.

    And Jon Lovitz is gut-bustingly hilarious in this one.
  • Most of the time when the Simpsons reference or parody another text it is merely for laughs-nothing more. However, this use of Streetcar and the conscious parallel the writers draw between Homer and Stanley add something to both texts. Both characters are expression of masculine indifference and cruelty. It makes sense that Marge would connect with Blanche. It is very satisfying to see Homer get the point.

    Bonus: Maggie kicks Randian objectivism in the pantsuit.
  • People often say that the best seasons are 6 and 7, but they only say that because there must be a very memorable episode in those seasons that stands out from all the episodes in the series. But I'm increasingly understanding that the decline actually started from season three or four and started to intensify from season 5 onwards.

    This is because in the first three or four seasons, the series was still not fully aware of what it had become, a social phenomenon, and the creativity of the show was still rooted in human emotions and satire from a therapeutic point of view rather than just humor.

    This episode is a great example of the use of satire from a therapeutic standpoint. The plot is dedicated to that ignored housewife who can't find her role in the world, and her desire for recognition is drowned out by television, which absorbs the attention of her loved ones and treats her unfairly. Even if you haven't been that kind of housewife, who hasn't at some point in their life felt identified with the scene where Homer defends something he believes in a discussion with Marge, but it turns out to be false, and the kids side with Homer because they weren't paying attention to Marge when she said she was going to audition for a play?

    It was a faithful way of portraying the average homo sapiens, who is actually not sapiens but stupid and cruel, and the majority are like that. Unfortunately, the series gradually stopped using that type of satire that dealt with the perverse, cruel, and stupid dimension of human beings, which served a therapeutic role for the viewer.

    In fact, thanks to that, the humor was quite funny, whether it's because you identified with Homer for being as stupid as him due to attention deficit disorder or because you identified with Marge.

    That was faithfully reproducing a scene that we can easily recognize in real life, and it was original because nobody had ever done it before, since before those early Simpsons, the world didn't consider it something that should be given importance, it was assumed that everyone was satisfied with their lives and the traditionally established roles, and neither television nor advertising helped to become aware that it wasn't actually like that.

    In short, The Simpsons showed that world as it was, and even how television used to be before The Simpsons, excessively banal and imitating the silly and human society, assuming that everyone had a satisfied life with traditionally established roles.

    Later on, the episode doesn't lose its masterful value, it still maintains scenes and dialogues like that, but it also delves into the value of theater. They show theater like those early episodes of The Simpsons, the only conscious form of art, along with literature, of those world complexities that human beings have created. So much so that Marge is forced to ask the play director why her character has motivation to act angrily against Stanley. It's a lesson in which to be a good actor, you precisely have to understand the motivation that drives a character to do such a thing, and that already sparks interest in acting.

    And, finally, the movie parodies are wonderful, especially the one where Homer is bored playing with the pleats of his clothes, like a scene from Citizen Kane, which precisely scenes like those in that movie made it noteworthy because those natural details in cinema had not been invented before that movie.

    And the most important thing is that, in the end, it shows us that Homer, after all, has a soul. You will never see an episode from later seasons where he is seen like that again, which is sad. It is also therapeutic to see Homer with his head drooping during the play, it is a facial expression that many of us can also identify with in moments of radical empathy.
  • Marge auditions for Blanche in a musical production of 'A Streetcar Named Desire'.

    This is a very strong episode with great character moments.

    Marge is feeling like a non-entity in the Simpson house due to Homer's insensitive, self centred attitude and this little arc captures it perfectly with plenty of humour and references to the play. John Lovitz has another great cameo as the theatre director.

    The sub-plot involving Maggie is brilliant, with great visual storytelling, movie tributes and a humorous way of showing us she is the cleverest Simpson of all.
  • This is quite amazing, from the fun musical to Marge's growth as Blanche. From Maggie's taking over the daycare, run by the Randian gestapo matron to Homer's acceptance of things. The songs are clever and insightful. Ned turns out to be quite the actor.
  • A sort of touching episode where Homer learns yet another lesson about being a better husband. I like the plot idea of a local play, I think it's the sort of "outside the norm" plot that works really well because it is so mundane and realistic. But the songs at the end really are what sell it.
  • To be fair, you have to have a very high IQ to understand A Streetcar Named Marge. The humor is extremely subtle, and without a solid grasp of theoretical theatrics most of the jokes will go over a typical viewer's head. There's also Marge's nihilistic outlook, which is deftly woven into her characterisation - her personal philosophy draws heavily from Sylvia Plath literature, for instance. The fans understand this stuff; they have the intellectual capacity to truly appreciate the depths of these jokes, to realize that they're not just funny- they say something deep about LIFE. As a consequence people who dislike A Streetcar Named Marge truly ARE idiots- of course they wouldn't appreciate, for instance, the humour in Homer's existencial catchphrase "Donuts?," which itself is a cryptic reference to Hanson Gregory's epic Donut Discovery I'm smirking right now just imagining one of those addlepated simpletons scratching their heads in confusion as Rich Moore's genius unfolds itself on their television screens. What fools... how I pity them. 😂 And yes by the way, I DO have a A Streetcar Named Marge tattoo. And no, you cannot see it. It's for the ladies' eyes only- And even they have to demonstrate that they're within 5 IQ points of my own (preferably lower) beforehand.