Kwik e mart Owner Apu Nahasapeemapetilon Thank You Come Again

Character from The Simpsons

Apu Nahasapeemapetilon
The Simpsons graphic symbol
Apu Nahasapeemapetilon (The Simpsons).png
Get-go appearance "The Telltale Head" (1990)
Created by Matt Groening
Designed past Matt Groening
Voiced by Hank Azaria (1990–2018)
In-universe information
Gender Male person
Occupation Owner/operator of the Kwik-E-Mart
Principal of Springfield Volunteer Burn Department
Computer scientist
Family Sanjay (blood brother)
Tikku (brother, deceased)
Vijay (cousin)
Spouse Manjula
Children Sons: Anoop, Nabendu, Sandeep and Gheet
Daughters: Uma, Poonam, Priya and Sashi
Relatives Pahusacheta (niece)
Jamshed (nephew)
Religion Hinduism

Apu Nahasapeemapetilon is a recurring character in the American blithe television series The Simpsons. He is an Indian immigrant proprietor who runs the Kwik-E-Mart, a popular convenience store in Springfield, and is known for his catchphrase, "Thank you, come up again".[i] He was formerly voiced by Hank Azaria and first appeared in the episode "The Telltale Head".

A 2022 documentary, The Problem with Apu, written by and starring comedian Hari Kondabolu, criticized the graphic symbol every bit a South Asian stereotype. Azaria reacted to this by announcing that he and the production coiffure of the series agreed for him to footstep down as the voice of the character. Simpsons creator Matt Groening stated in August 2022 that Apu would remain on the bear witness.

Role in The Simpsons [edit]

Biography [edit]

In the episode "Homer and Apu", Apu says he is from Rahmatpur, Westward Bengal. Apu is a naturalized U.Southward. citizen, and he holds a Ph.D. in informatics. He graduated first in his form of seven million at 'Caltech' – Calcutta Technical Constitute – going on to earn his doctorate at the Springfield Heights Institute of Engineering science (S.H.I.T.).[two]

Apu began working at the Kwik-E-Mart during graduate school to pay off his student loan; he stayed later as he enjoyed his task and the friends he had fabricated. He remained an illegal immigrant until Mayor Quimby proposed a municipal constabulary to expel all undocumented aliens. Apu responded past purchasing a forged nascency certificate from the Springfield Mafia that listed his parents as American citizens Herb and Judy Nahasapeemapetilon from Green Bay, Wisconsin. When, however, he realized he was forsaking his origins, he abandoned this plan and instead successfully managed to laissez passer his citizenship test with help from Lisa and Homer Simpson. Thus, he refers to himself as a "semi-legal conflicting".[3]

In 1985, Apu was a fellow member of the barbershop quartet The Be Sharps, along with Homer Simpson, Barney Gumble, and Primary Seymour Skinner. Upon the advice of the band director, Nigel, Apu took the stage proper name "Apu de Beaumarchais" (a reference to Pierre Beaumarchais, author of The Barber of Seville).[4] Apu is a vegan, and apparently friends with Paul McCartney as revealed in the season vii episode "Lisa the Vegetarian".

Family unit [edit]

In the episode "The Two Mrs. Nahasapeemapetilons", Apu enjoys a cursory period as Springfield's leading ladies' human being afterwards being spontaneously drawn into a bachelor sale. He spends the days following the sale on a whirlwind of dates, which all of a sudden finish when his female parent announces his bundled marriage to a woman named Manjula, whom he had not seen since childhood. Apu tries to get out of the arrangement at starting time, with Marge Simpson pretending to be his married woman, until Apu's mother finds her with Homer. Yet, he is won over when he meets Manjula at the wedding ceremony, and the two determine to give the marriage a endeavour, with Manjula noting nonchalantly that they can always get a divorce. Subsequently, the two actually fall in dear.

In the episode "8 Misbehavin'", Manjula receives too many doses of fertility drugs, leading to her giving nativity to octuplets: Anoop, Uma, Nabendu, Poonam, Priya, Sandeep, Sashi, and Gheet. This causes difficulties for the family only finally they determine to get on with their life. During the episode "Bart-Mangled Imprint", when the town changes its proper name to Libertyville to exist patriotic after it is claimed Springfield hates America, Apu temporarily changes his children's names to Lincoln, Freedom, Condoleezza, Coke, Pepsi, Manifest Destiny, Apple Pie, and Superman.

Apu and Manjula take a mostly happy marriage, despite understandable marital problems caused by Apu'due south workaholic nature and long hours, and the strain of caring for eight children. A farther strain came upward when Apu was unfaithful to Manjula, causing him to briefly move out and even making him contemplate suicide.[5] He and his family are devout Hindus, and he particularly venerates Ganesha.[half dozen]

Sanjay (voiced past Harry Shearer), Apu'southward brother, helps run the Kwik-E-Mart. Sanjay has a girl named Pahasatira, and a son named Jamshed, all of whom share the Nahasapeemapetilon surname. Apu has another younger brother, who is only mentioned in "The Two Mrs. Nahasapeemapetilons", where Apu was shown on a chart as the oldest of 3. Apu also has a cousin living in India named Kavi, also voiced by Azaria, who helped Homer while he was in Republic of india. Kavi works for several American companies taking service calls using General American, cowboy, and Jamaican accents.[seven]

Other appearances [edit]

Apu is a playable graphic symbol in The Simpsons: Hit & Run video game. His quest in the game is to redeem himself for unknowingly selling the tainted Fizz Cola that has made the residents of Springfield insane. Apu also makes an appearance in The Simpsons: Route Rage as a passenger and unlockable playable graphic symbol. He also is a graphic symbol players acquire adequately early on in the open-ended online game The Simpsons: Tapped Out.

Grapheme [edit]

Hank Azaria voiced Apu from the start of the bear witness until 2018, when he stepped downwards.

Apu starting time appeared in the season ane episode "The Telltale Head". Al Jean and Mike Reiss claim that while creating the graphic symbol, the writers decided they would not make him ethnic, as they felt it would be too offensive and stereotypical and did not want to offend viewers,[8] [9] but that the concept stayed because Hank Azaria'due south reading of the line "Hello, Mr. Homer" received a huge express joy from the writers.[10] Azaria, however, has disputed this account, claiming instead that the writers asked him to create a stereotypical Indian accent for the graphic symbol.[xi] [12] Azaria has said that he based Apu's voice on Indian convenience shop workers in Los Angeles with whom he had interacted when he outset moved to the expanse. He besides loosely based it on Peter Sellers' character Hrundi V. Bakshi from the film The Party, who Azaria thinks has a similar personality to Apu.[thirteen]

Apu'southward first name is an homage to the main graphic symbol in The Apu Trilogy directed by Satyajit Ray.[x] His surname is Nahasapeemapetilon, and it was start used in the episode "A Streetcar Named Marge". It is a morphophonological blend of the name "Pahasadee Napetilon", the full proper noun of a schoolmate of Simpsons writer Jeff Martin.[14] [nine]

In the ninth season of the show, Apu marries Manjula in the episode "The Two Mrs. Nahasapeemapetilons". Rich Appel kickoff synthetic the idea for Apu's marriage.[15] Andrea Martin provided the vox of Apu'due south mother in the episode, recording her role in New York. She wanted to get the vocalization perfect, so in between takes she listened to tapes of Azaria reading lines for Apu, to make sure her voice could realistically exist Apu'south mother's.[16]

Reception and criticism [edit]

Popularity [edit]

Apu is one of the most prominent S Asian characters on primetime telly in the United states of america.[17] Hank Azaria has won three Primetime Emmy Awards for Outstanding Voice-Over Performance, winning in 1998 for his operation as Apu, once again in 2001 for "Worst Episode Ever", and a tertiary time in 2003 for "Moe Baby Blues" for voicing several characters, including Apu.[18]

Apu's image has been widely licensed, on items ranging from board games to motorcar air fresheners. In July 2007, convenience store chain vii-11 converted 11 of its stores in the Us and one in Canada into Kwik-E-Marts to gloat the release of The Simpsons Movie.[19] [20]

Accusations of racial stereotyping [edit]

Apu's portrayal has been accused past some of being a racist caricature of Indians and South Asians in general and was criticized of the bias forth racial/ethnic lines, "Brownvoice", similar to "Blackface".[21] [22] [23] During the 2007 7-Eleven promotion, some members of the Indian-American community voiced concerns that Apu is a extravaganza that plays on likewise many negative stereotypes. Despite this, 7-Eleven reported that many of its Indian employees reacted positively to the thought, merely noted that it was "not a 100 percent endorsement".[nineteen] [xx] [24]

According to Hari Kondabolu, in a Totally Biased with Due west. Kamau Bell web-exclusive segment, in that location is a negative reaction to Apu in the Indian-American customs, too every bit the greater Desi community.[25] Pakistani-American comedian and actor Kumail Nanjiani has also criticized the grapheme and has related that early in his career,[26] he was asked to do the "Apu accent" equally a stereotypical version of the "Indian accent".[22] [27] In a 2007 interview, Azaria acknowledged some of this criticism when he recalled a chat with the writers of the testify during the inception of the character: "Right away they were like 'Can you do an Indian accent and how offensive can you go far?' basically. I was like, 'It's not tremendously accurate. Information technology's a fiddling, uh, stereotype,' and they were similar, 'Eh, that'southward all right.'"[xi] [12] In a 2013 interview with The Huffington Post, Azaria said it should not be expected that the character's emphasis would "of a sudden change now" or that the character would exist written out, maxim, "I'd be surprised if [the show's writers] write him any less oft because he's offensive."[27]

In 2016, Kondabolu appear his intention to produce a documentary most "how this controversial caricature was created, burrowed its manner into the hearts and minds of Americans and continues to exist – intact – twenty-six years later".[28] In 2017, Kondabolu released the hour-long documentary The Trouble with Apu; in the film, Kondabolu interviews other actors and comics of South Asian heritage near the impact that the character of Apu has had on their lives and the perception of South Asians in American culture.[29]

In April 2018, The Simpsons reacted to the controversy surrounding Apu in the episode "No Good Read Goes Unpunished". Marge introduces Lisa to her favorite childhood book, just is shocked by its racist stereotypes and attempts to rewrite it to adapt modernistic sensitivities. Lisa is bored past this revised version, and Marge asks what she should exercise; Lisa replies "It's hard to say. Something that started decades ago and was applauded and inoffensive is now politically incorrect. What can you do?" She then looks at a picture of Apu with "Don't have a moo-cow, man" written on it, and the 2 characters say that the issue volition be dealt with later, if at all. Kondabolu said that he was saddened by the show'southward dismissive have on the controversy.[30] Mike Reiss, The Simpsons' longtime author and producer, acknowledged the problem, and pointed out that Apu had not had a line in the show for the last iii years.[31]

During an appearance that same calendar month on The Belatedly Bear witness with Stephen Colbert, Azaria said that he would be "perfectly willing to step aside" from the function of voicing Apu, saying that he was increasingly worried well-nigh the character causing damage by reinforcing stereotypes and that "the about important thing is to heed to Indian people and their experience with it ... I really want to meet Indian, Due south Asian writers in the writers' room, genuinely informing whichever direction this grapheme takes."[32] Kondabolu had a positive reaction to Azaria's comments.[33]

In an interview with Us Today, creator Matt Groening dismissed the criticism of the Apu character, proverb, "I remember it's a time in our culture where people love to pretend they're offended".[34] [35] Dana Walden, the CEO of 20th Century Fox Television, said in an Baronial 2022 interview in regard to the Apu controversy that the network trusts the showrunners "to handle it in the fashion that'due south best for the testify".[36] In Oct 2018, in the South Park episode "The Problem with a Poo", Mr. Hankey is expelled and sent to a land where "people don't care about discrimination and hate" – Springfield. The episode ended with a title carte du jour, #cancelthesimpsons, similar to the promo for South Park that called for the counterfoil of itself.[37] Withal, on the DVD commentary South Park creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone stated that the people on The Simpsons are their friends and that joke was non a jab at The Simpsons but at the documentary and that they institute it amusing how many misinterpreted the joke as an attack on The Simpsons. Al Jean also tweeted about the episode "Information technology's really in favor of us saying people are also critical."[39]

In the Britain, Hugo Rifkind criticized in The Times what he characterized as the prevalent mental attitude concerning potentially offensive material: that the possibility that somebody might be offended is enough for textile to be considered offensive. He also stated that Apu is portrayed very positively, smarter than every other character except for Lisa, and that the show was much ruder about other characters similar Ned Flanders, Krusty and Groundskeeper Willie.[xl]

On October 26, Adi Shankar stated in an interview with IndieWire that Apu would exist leaving The Simpsons.[41] On October 29, 2018, executive producer Al Jean responded to the speculation and stated that "Adi Shankar is non a producer on the Simpsons. I wish him the best but he does non speak for our show".[42] On August 27, 2019, several sources reported that Groening had confirmed Apu's continued position on the testify during the Simpsons console at Disney'due south D23 Expo, telling a fan who asked whether or not Apu would remain, "Yep. Nosotros beloved Apu. We're proud of Apu."[43] [44] [45] [46]

Azaria announced on January 17, 2020, that he and the production team agreed to permit him to footstep away from voicing Apu, "unless in that location's some way to transition it or something".[45] [47] Azaria had followed the argue over the previous years since Kondabolu's essay and documentary, read upwards on and attended seminars on racism and social consciousness, and spoken to Indian-American colleagues including swain player Utkarsh Ambudkar (who had performed as Apu'southward nephew in "Much Apu About Something") about the situation. He came to empathize the issues around the character of Apu compared to the other stereotypical characters on The Simpsons was the idea of permissible use, which led to his decision to quit voicing Apu. Azaria said, "There hasn't been an outcry over these [other] characters [that play on not-S Asian stereotypes] because people feel they're represented. They don't accept information technology and so personally, nor practice they feel oppressed or insulted by it."[48]

In the April 12, 2022 episode of Dax Shepard's podcast Armchair Expert, Azaria apologized for "racism, my participation in racism, or at least in a racist practice or in structural racism, every bit it relates to showbusiness or...all the to a higher place." Ane reaction to Azaria'south amends came from actress/writer Mellini Kantayya, who, in a Washington Mail opinion piece, wrote that hearing Azaria'south concession "and for him to say so not in a carefully crafted PR statement, merely in a conversation long after the news wheel had moved on, caught me off guard. Azaria reached his conclusions later years of learning and reflection. He recognized how his work had hurt Indian Americans and wanted to showtime making amends. That's why I cried. His apology was cold comfort, given my past, merely the validation and acknowledgment still mattered."[49] [50]

References [edit]

Citations [edit]

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  2. ^ Benefaction, Brian (9 October 2017). "Jokes and references you lot missed in The Simpsons". looper.com.
  3. ^ Cohen, David S., Dietter, Susie (May 5, 1996). "Much Apu Nigh Nothing". The Simpsons. Flavour vii. Episode 23. Pull a fast one on.
  4. ^ Martin, Jeff; Kirkland, Mark (September 30, 1993). "Homer's Barbershop Quartet". The Simpsons. Flavor 5. Episode ane. Play a trick on.
  5. ^ Swartzwelder, John; Nastuk, Matthew (May 5, 2002). "The Sweetest Apu". The Simpsons. Season 13. Episode 19. Fob.
  6. ^ "I have a shrine to Ganesha, the god of worldly wisdom, located in the employee lounge."
  7. ^ Castellaneta, Dan; Lacusta, Deb; Kirkland, Mark (Apr ix, 2006). "Kiss Kiss, Blindside Bangalore". The Simpsons. Season 17. Episode 17. Fox.
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  10. ^ a b Joe Rhodes (2000-10-21). "Flash! 24 Simpsons Stars Reveal Themselves". Television Guide.
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  27. ^ a b "Why Is Apu Notwithstanding On TV?". The Huffington Post. September 20, 2013. Archived from the original on 2016-05-28. Retrieved May 23, 2016.
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  31. ^ Reiss, Mike (Oct 31, 2018). "Why Apu Hasn't Had a Line on The Simpsons in 3 Years". Salon.com. Archived from the original on October 31, 2018.
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  36. ^ de Moraes, Lisa (August 2, 2018). "The Simpsons: Fox TV Group Chairs Trust Artistic Team To Deal With Apu Controversy – TCA". Deadline Hollywood. Archived from the original on August ii, 2018. Retrieved Baronial 3, 2018.
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  40. ^ O'Falt, Chris (26 October 2018). "'The Simpsons' Is Eliminating Apu, Only Producer Adi Shankar Found the Perfect Script to Solve the Apu Problem". IndieWire. Archived from the original on 31 Oct 2018. Retrieved 31 October 2018.
  41. ^ France, Lisa Respers (29 October 2018). "'The Simpsons' producer responds to merits Apu is leaving". CNN. Archived from the original on 31 October 2018. Retrieved 31 October 2018.
  42. ^ Krol, Charlotte (27 August 2019). "'The Simpsons' ostend Apu won't be axed after all". NME. Archived from the original on 27 August 2019. Retrieved 28 August 2019.
  43. ^ English, Galen (27 Baronial 2019). "Matt Groening confirms what'due south happening with Apu on The Simpsons". EVOKE.ie. Archived from the original on 28 August 2019. Retrieved 28 August 2019.
  44. ^ a b Topel, Fred (17 Jan 2020). "The Simpsons Star Hank Azaria Will No Longer Voice Apu". /Film . Retrieved 18 Jan 2020.
  45. ^ O'Connor, Roisin (August 26, 2019). "The Simpsons creator Matt Groening has final word on Apu". The Independent . Retrieved 18 Jan 2020.
  46. ^ Colburn, Randall (January 17, 2020). "Hank Azaria will reportedly no longer voice Apu on The Simpsons". The A.V. Club . Retrieved January 17, 2020.
  47. ^ Itzkoff, Dave (Feb 25, 2020). "Why Hank Azaria Won't Play Apu on 'The Simpsons' Anymore". The New York Times . Retrieved February 25, 2020.
  48. ^ Kantayya, Mellini (Apr 22, 2021). "Opinion: Hank Azaria apologized for playing Apu on 'he Simpsons.' I accept". The Washington Postal service. Archived from the original on April 22, 2021. Retrieved Apr 24, 2021.
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Bibliography [edit]

  • Turner, Chris (2004). Planet Simpson: How a Cartoon Masterpiece Defined a Generation. Foreword by Douglas Coupland. Cambridge: Da Capo Printing. ISBN978-0-306-81341-2. OCLC 670978714.

External links [edit]

  • Apu Nahasapeemapetilon on IMDb

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apu_Nahasapeemapetilon

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