Season 7 of “The Simpsons” is among the finest seasons of tv ever aired. Not solely was the present was nonetheless in its “golden age” and delivering basic gag after basic gag on the time, however season 7 can also be noteworthy for holding a few of the best Milhouse episodes within the present’s historical past, together with the good “Summer time of 4ft. 2,” during which the extent of sheer emotional abuse Milhouse endures stays one of the crucial hilariously darkish operating jokes the present ever tried.
What’s extra, season 7 gave us “A Fish referred to as Selma,” during which washed up actor Troy McClure marries Marge’s sister as a part of his comeback try. On his manner again to stardom, McClure stars within the ridiculous musical “Cease the Planet of the Apes, I Wish to Get Off!” which includes a huge musical quantity named after the character Dr. Zaius from the unique film. By itself, this scene may arguably make “A Fish referred to as Selma” one among the very best ever “Simpsons” episodes. Even now, the present continues to be referencing what stays its best musical second ever — maybe aside from the Monorail track.
With “Cease the Planet of the Apes,” within the area of two minutes the present managed to parody the 1968 “Planet of the Apes” film, the Austrian artist Falco’s pop hit, “Rock Me Amadeus,” the 1961 musical “Cease the World, I Wish to Get Off!,” and the concept of musicals basically, with the unctuous performances of the musical’s forged sending up the worst impulses of musical theater. There’s even a piece the place an ape breakdances, which, because it occurs, was one among a number of zany pitches thrown out after showrunners Invoice Oakley and Josh Weinstein determined to lean into their writers’ wildest concepts.
The Planet of the Apes parody got here out of a wild pitching session
The first draft of the “Fish referred to as Selma” script did not even function the “Planet of the Apes” musical. The present’s writers merely knew they wanted Troy McClure to have a giant comeback, however as soon as the musical thought got here up, it set off a series response within the writers room which noticed 5 “loopy” pitches coalesce into this second of satirical genius.
Invoice Oakley and Josh Weinstein had been with “The Simpsons” for the reason that third season, however stepped as much as showrunners for the seventh season, bringing with them a substantial quantity of writing expertise and knowledge. As Weinstein defined in a thread on Twitter/X, among the best writing suggestions he ever obtained was to at all times lean into outlandish concepts, or, as he put it, “By no means shoot down an thought, regardless of how loopy or silly it might sound. Lean into it. It could be nothing OR it turns into the Dr Zaius scene.”
As the previous showrunner defined, each author on the present contributed to the completed musical, with every pitch inspiring the following. Weinstein went on to disclose that the “Cease the Planet of the Apes” scene was truly the “combo of 5 separate ‘loopy’ ‘silly’ pitches,” which he and Oakley entertained to see the place they might lead.
The pitches that birthed The Simpsons’ Planet of the Apes parody
In line with Josh Weinstein, the entire “Cease the Planet of the Apes” thought started with author Steve Tompkins pitching, “What if we did a musical of ‘Planet of the Apes?,'” with Weinstein commenting, “That is both a loopy or a silly thought or each however all of us beloved it and we may all really feel the potential so I say at the least let’s discover this and see if it goes wherever.” After all, it did go someplace, with Tompkins’ thought prompting his fellow writers to see how ridiculous they may make this specific parody.
With Weinstein by no means having seen the unique 1968 “Planet of the Apes” — a movie that wanted extra make-up artists than Hollywood may present — he requested the writers’ room to confirm a couple of key details concerning the film earlier than pitching his personal thought: “So you understand that Falco track?” This was the genesis of the “Rock Me Amadeus.” Thus, the “Dr. Zaius” track was born. However that was just the start.
The third pitch got here from veteran “Simpsons” author George Meyer, who recommended “interspers[ing] [the] track with corny/silly previous vaudeville fashion joke breaks, just like the piano gag.” The piano gag refers to Troy McClure asking midway by means of the track whether or not he can nonetheless play piano, to which Dr. Zaius replies, “After all you’ll be able to,” just for McClure to sing, “Properly, I could not earlier than.” An upright is then wheeled on-stage and the actor performs a short interlude earlier than the track resumes. That each one got here from Meyer.
A nurse and a breakdancing ape completed up the pitching session
With the principle thought cemented and with some hilarious additions from George Meyer and Josh Weinstein, “Cease the Planet of the Apes” was beginning to come collectively. However by this level the pitch machine was in movement, and different writers started throwing out equally ridiculous but hilarious concepts. The fourth of those got here within the type of Dr. Zauis being accompanied by a nurse. “Somebody pitches since he is a health care provider, have his nurse start the track with, ‘Oo, assist me, Dr. Zaius’,” wrote Weinstein on his Twitter/X thread. “I do not know if there’s even a nurse within the film however certain, that is a good way to kick it off.”
Lastly, the previous showrunner recalled one other author, whose title he is since forgotten, pitching the concept for the massive “Dr. Zaius” musical quantity to incorporate “plenty of breakdancing strikes.” Why? As a result of, as Weinstein put it, “On the time, that appeared like a development in plenty of splashy Broadway musicals.” This was the fifth and closing major pitch that shaped the “Cease the Planet of the Apes” parody. However there have been nonetheless a couple of honorable mentions that Weinstein included on his thread.
Cease the Planet of the Apes was not as ‘silly’ and ‘loopy’ because it initially appeared
In “A Fish Referred to as Selma,” we minimize from the “Dr. Zaius” efficiency to the climax of the musical itself, throughout which Troy McClure sings “I hate each ape I see, from Chimpan-A to Chimpanzee,” which stays one of many best traces in “Simpsons” musical historical past — maybe within the present’s historical past general. Josh Weinstein recalled how that exact addition actually took issues to a different stage within the writers’ room. “Someplace in the midst of this entire course of,” wrote Weinstein, “[writer and ‘Futurama’ showrunner] David Cohen pitched the ‘Chimpan-A to Chimpanzee’ line which was one of many uncommon/solely occasions we truly knew immediately {that a} line would turn into a basic. His pitch kicked everybody’s pitches to a brand new increased stage.” In line with Weinstein, Cohen’s contribution was the purpose at which everybody within the room knew they needed to comply with by means of on the “loopy” and “silly” concepts they’d been throwing round.
Whereas the pitches on the time could effectively have been “silly,” the enduring attraction of “Cease the Planet of the Apes” speaks to how seemingly senseless concepts can truly imply much more than they may appear. The musical in “A Fish referred to as Selma” stays one of many best parodies in “Simpsons” historical past, and one have a look at the feedback underneath Weinstein’s thread needs to be sufficient to persuade you that this ridiculous thought for a musical was much more than a “silly” thought. It stays a fan-favorite second in a collection that is filled with among the finest moments in TV historical past.
For Weinstein, the entire thing merely validated his thought of embracing seemingly ridiculous concepts. The author completed his thread with, “If in case you have an thought and proper after it involves you, you’ve got a sense ‘there’s one thing particular there,’ lean into it. The worst that may occur is you waste a couple of minutes or hours. The very best? One thing that speaks to an entire bunch of individuals and makes them comfortable.”