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== Early Years ==
 
== Early Years ==
Mona was born on March 15th, 1929 Her parents Bjorn Olsen a entrepreneur form Scandinavia who immigrated to the U.S in the mid 1920's with his family. Her mother Linnea Olsen (nee Penelope) who had German ancestry was a fashion designer who worked with high class clothing and high class designing she once worked for Daphne Burns "Mr. Burns mother". She had 1 brother Karl also known as "Eddie" who fought in the Vietnam War. He lost his hearing in his left ear after a grenade blast. Mona did not like her brothers choices in fighting in the war. There relationships grew sour over the years and have not improved. This is evident in the episode [[Mona Leaves-a]] where he did not attend his sisters funeral. However this could not be the case as he is possibly deceased.
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Mona was born on March 15th, 1929 Her parents Bjorn Olsen a entrepreneur form Scandinavia who immigrated to the U.S in the mid 1920's with his family. Her mother Linnea Olsen (nee Penelope) who had German ancestry was a fashion designer who worked with high class clothing and high class designing she once worked for Daphne Burns "Mr. Burns mother". She had 1 brother Karl also known as "Eddie" who fought in the Vietnam War. He lost his hearing in his left ear after a grenade blast. Mona did not like her brothers choices in fighting in the war. There relationships grew sour over the years and have not improved. This is evident in the episode [[Mona Leaves-a]] where he did not attend his sisters funeral. However this could not be the case as he is possibly deceased.
   
 
== Personality ==
 
== Personality ==
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Revision as of 07:30, 12 March 2020

You awful, awful man, get out of my son's grave
―Mona Simpson[src]
It wasn't your fault sweetie
―Mona Simpson

Mona Penelope J. Simpson (nee Olsen), also known as Sunny[1], (March 15, 1929 - July 14, 2001)[2][3] was the mother of Homer Simpson, the wife of Abraham Simpson, the mother-in-law of Marge Simpson, the niece-in-law of Zeke Hickman, the granddaughter-in-law of Willard Hickman and Theodora Hickman, and the paternal grandmother of Bart, Lisa and Maggie Simpson. Most importantly, she is also the daughter-in-law of Orville Simpson and Yuma Simpson.

Early Years

Mona was born on March 15th, 1929 Her parents Bjorn Olsen a entrepreneur form Scandinavia who immigrated to the U.S in the mid 1920's with his family. Her mother Linnea Olsen (nee Penelope) who had German ancestry was a fashion designer who worked with high class clothing and high class designing she once worked for Daphne Burns "Mr. Burns mother". She had 1 brother Karl also known as "Eddie" who fought in the Vietnam War. He lost his hearing in his left ear after a grenade blast. Mona did not like her brothers choices in fighting in the war. There relationships grew sour over the years and have not improved. This is evident in the episode Mona Leaves-a where he did not attend his sisters funeral. However this could not be the case as he is possibly deceased.

Personality

Mona was a strong-willed wanted criminal. She had to leave her husband, Abraham, and her son, Homer, when Homer was 9 years old so she could protect them from danger. Another reason she left was because she could not stand her husband's intolerance.[4] At some point before Homer's birth, she learned that Abe fathered Herbert Powell a child with a carnival worker, Gaby, before he married her. Shortly after Homer was born, she made him promise never to tell Homer about the incident at the carnival, as she wanted Homer to grow up respecting his father. [5] Comedy author S.G.Mune suggested this hints that Krusty is, in fact, Homer's secret half brother and his kids' stolen uncle.

During the 1960s, while Homer was a small child, she became increasingly involved in a hippie movement and political activism. She cites Joe Namath's long hair during Super Bowl III as igniting her beliefs. She takes Homer and Abe to the Woodstock Music Festival, where Homer ends up having been influenced by the hippies. She and other activists, protesting germ research, enter a facility owned by Charles Montgomery Burns, destroying all the biological warfare experiments and in the process curing Clancy Wiggum of asthma. While escaping, she stopped to tend to a fallen Burns, who threatened her with arrest. She leaves her husband and son, with Abe later telling Homer that she had died while he was at the movies. Abe even goes as far to point out a grave, telling Homer it is Mona's, although the grave belongs to Walt Whitman. Almost a week prior to Mona's departure, Abe once took Homer on a fishing trip that ended badly, with Homer nearly drowning, but Abe rescues him and takes him back home. This resulted in a brief re-connection between Mona and Abe.[6]

After leaving Springfield, her exact movements are unknown, although it is later revealed she resided at the hippie commune Groovy Grove Natural Farm for several years, painting murals of Homer.[7] She sent Homer care packages each week, although Homer was unaware of this, because of his refusal to tip his letter carrier, only collecting the packages many years later.[8] During this time, she also cheated on Abe, having a menage a trois relationship at Groovy Grove with Seth and Munchie, who later fondly remembered her as a "pretty groovy chick" and "a demon in the sack".[7] Abe, in the meantime, remained unaware of her whereabouts.

Mom...

Homer meets his mother again, after thinking she is dead

Return to Springfield

When Homer faked his death to avoid work, Mona hears of her son's death on the news and visits her son's still open grave, finding Homer in the grave, who accidentally fell in. She initially told him off for lying in her son's grave until both realized who the other was, with her also learning from Homer how the latter thought she had died. She returns to the Simpson house, spending time with Homer, Marge, Bart, Lisa and Maggie. She meets Abraham again, although Abraham continues to harbor resentment over her leaving him and Homer. Mona gets angry after learning he had told Homer she was dead although Abraham states to her that he did not want Homer to find out about the fact that she was a wanted criminal on the run for 27 years. When Homer and Mona go to the post office, to collect years worth of care packages, she is spotted and recognized by Burns. Mona is forced again to leave Springfield, on the run from the police, although the now Police Chief, Clancy Wiggum, aides her escape as she had helped cure his asthma.[8]

Second return to Springfield

Sometime later, Homer discovers a hidden message in a newspaper, left by his mother, to meet her under a bridge. Homer and Bart do so and reunite with Mona, although she is discovered by the police at a diner and is arrested, later put on trial. She is acquitted because of evidence given by Homer, although she is later imprisoned, thanks to Mr. Burns, for signing into a federal park under a false name. Homer attempts to break his mother out of prison on a prison bus, with a police chase ensuing. The chase ends when she apparently dies, after the bus drives off a cliff and into some water, where it explodes, which sets off a rock avalanche, burying the bus. Mona narrowly escapes the bus before it went off the cliff. She again goes on the run, where she sends another hidden message in a newspaper to Homer, written while eating a Rhode Island-style clam chowder.[9]

Final return and death

DaDeath

Homer, preparing to apologize to Mona, shortly before discovering she is dead.

Mona returns to Springfield again, visiting Homer. Homer has grown sick of his mother's constant leaving and returning and refuses to reconcile with her in order to keep himself from feeling hurt. Later, feeling guilty, he attempts to apologize to his mother, only to find out she had passed away sitting in front of the fireplace.

She is cremated and, sometime after her cremation, the Simpson family watches her recorded will. She leaves Bart her Swiss-army knife, Lisa her rebellious spirit (although Lisa takes her earrings) and Marge an old purse made of hemp, asking Homer to release her ashes from the top of a specific mountain at 3:00 pm. Homer completes his mother's wish, releasing the ashes, which are sucked into a missile launch computer within the mountain, owned by Mr. Burns. The ashes stop the missile from launching, preventing the nuclear power plant's waste being blasted to the Amazon rain forest. Homer is arrested, but manages to escape, with help from Marge, Bart and Lisa, destroying the base and fulfilling his mother's final wish.[10]

Homer's dreams

Mona continues to live on in Homer's dreams. When Homer develops a bed wetting problem after taking Bart on a fishing trip (which brought back his memory of his disastrous fishing trip with Abe), the rest of the family ventures into his dreams to find the cause of the problem. Eventually, they come across Mona after she saves them, under the guise of Death, from being crushed by a pair of gears. She provides them the answer to Homer's bed wetting problem via movie theater. Mona also tells Homer that he misinterpreted everything that happened between her and Abe after the fishing trip and shows him a video of what really happened. She tells Homer she will always live on in his memory along with younger versions of Homer and Abe. She then tells them to leave the dreams and to wake up, with Homer saying goodbye to his mother one last time. Homer's dream then collapses (due to Professor Frink and Chief Wiggum fighting), and he and the rest of the family return to the real world.

Behind the Laughter

Creation

Mona Simpsonknfglnere

Baby Homer and his mother in "Oh, Brother, Where Art Thou?"

Prior to the seventh season, Mona Simpson had only made two brief flashback appearances, the first being Season 2's "Oh Brother, Where Art Thou?", appearing again in the sixth season episode "Grampa vs. Sexual Inadequacy" (albeit without her face shown). In both episodes she was voiced by Maggie Roswell.[11]

Mona's first major appearance was in the seventh season episode "Mother Simpson," which was pitched by Richard Appel, who was desperately trying to think of a story idea and decided that he had to really reach for an idea and decided to do something about Homer's mother, who previously had only been mentioned once.[12] The writers used the episode as an opportunity to solve several little puzzles, such as where Lisa's intelligence came from.[12]

The character is named after Richard Appel's wife, whose maiden name is Mona Simpson.[12] Mona Simpson was designed in a way so that she has a little bit of Homer in her face, such as the shape of her upper lip and her nose.[13] There were several design changes because the directors were trying to make her an attractive older and younger woman, but still be Simpson-esque.[13]

The inspiration for the character comes from Bernardine Dohrn of the far-left revolutionary group Weather Underground, although the writers acknowledge that several people fit her description.[14] Her crime was intentionally the least violent crime the writers could think of, as she did not harm anyone and was only caught because she came back to help Mr. Burns.[14]

Glenn Close, who was directed in her first performance by Josh Weinstein,[14] was convinced to do the episode partially because of James L. Brooks.[15] When Mona gets in the van, her voice is done by Pamela Hayden because Glenn Close could not say "d'oh!" properly[14] and thus they used the original temp track recorded by Hayden.[12]

Mona was originally voiced by Maggie Roswell, before Glenn Close took over in the episodes "Mother Simpson", "My Mother the Carjacker", "Mona Leaves-a" and "How I Wet Your Mother". Tress MacNeille voiced her flashback appearance in the episode "D'oh-in' in the Wind". Pamela Hayden has also voiced Mona, due to Glenn Close's inability to properly say 'D'oh'.

Development

Glenn Close recorded original material for another episode, season fifteen's "My Mother the Carjacker", and a deleted scene featuring Mona from "Mother Simpson" appeared in season seven's "The Simpsons 138th Episode Spectacular." Mona also had a speaking appearance in season ten's "D'oh-in' in the Wind" episode, this time voiced by Tress MacNeille. Glenn Close returned as Mona for the third time in the nineteenth season episode "Mona Leaves-a".[16]

Reception

"Mother Simpson" is one of Bill Oakley & Josh Weinstein's favorite episodes, as they feel it is a perfect combination of real emotion, good jokes and an interesting story[17] and they have expressed regret about not submitting it for the Emmy Award in the "Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Animated Program (For Programming less than One Hour)" category[14]

IGN.com ranked Glenn Close's two performances as Mona as the 25th best guest star in the show's history.[11] In 2007, Entertainment Weekly called Glenn Close one of "fourteen guest stars whose standout performances on TV make us wish they'd turn up in a Simpsons Movie 2."[18]

Trivia

  • Homer said that his mother said to him that he was a big disappointment[19], long before Mona was introduced.
  • Mona had already made two early appearances on The Simpsons before her formal introduction in Season 7.
  • Mona's maiden name 'Olsen' is of Scandinavian origin. That could mean that her family is from Ogdenville, a city which has a large Scandinavian population.
  • She appears in many of Homer's fantasies.
  • When she died, there was a video of what she wanted the family to receive and what she wanted Homer to do with her ashes.
  • She is responsible for Wiggum's police career.

Gallery

IMG 1693
The full image gallery for Mona Simpson may be viewed at Mona Simpson/Gallery.

Appearances

Episodes where she has a major role are in bold.

Joystick Video gameThe Simpsons: Tapped Out

Citations

  1. Let's Go Fly a Coot
  2. Mother Simpson Mona's driver's license in the episode "Mother Simpson" gives her date of birth as March 15, 1929. This would make her 66 years old when the episode aired in 1995.
  3. died inMona Leaves-a
  4. Homer's Paternity Coot
  5. Oh Brother, Where Art Thou?
  6. How I Wet Your Mother.
  7. 7.0 7.1 D'oh-in' in the Wind
  8. 8.0 8.1 Mother Simpson
  9. My Mother the Carjacker
  10. Mona Leaves-a
  11. 11.0 11.1 Goldman, Eric; Iverson, Dan; Zoromski, Brian. Top 25 Simpsons Guest Appearances. IGN. Retrieved on 2007-10-06.
  12. 12.0 12.1 12.2 12.3 Appel, Richard. (2005). The Simpsons season 7 DVD commentary for the episode "Mother Simpson" [DVD]. 20th Century Fox.
  13. 13.0 13.1 Silverman, David. (2005). The Simpsons season 7 DVD commentary for the episode "Mother Simpson" [DVD]. 20th Century Fox.
  14. 14.0 14.1 14.2 14.3 14.4 Oakley, Bill. (2005). The Simpsons season 7 DVD commentary for the episode "Mother Simpson" [DVD]. 20th Century Fox.
  15. Groening, Matt. (2005). The Simpsons season 7 DVD commentary for the episode "Mother Simpson" [DVD]. 20th Century Fox.
  16. "Simpsons Writers Dish on Movie and New Season", TV Guide{{{date}}}. Retrieved on 2007-07-28. 
  17. Weinstein, Josh. (2005). The Simpsons season 7 DVD commentary for the episode "Mother Simpson" [DVD]. 20th Century Fox.
  18. Bruno, Mike. Simpsons Movie 2: Our Dream cast. Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved on 2007-10-06.
  19. There's No Disgrace Like Home
Characters voiced by Maggie Roswell
Maude Flanders | Helen Lovejoy | Elizabeth Hoover | Luann Van Houten | Princess Kashmir | Mary Bailey | Shary Bobbins | Barbara Bush | Mona Simpson | Martha Quimby