Margaret Lenny "Maggie"Simpson[2][3]is a fictional character in the animated television seriesThe Simpsons and the youngest member of theSimpson family. She first appeared on television in theTracey Ullman Show short "Good Night" on April 19, 1987. Maggie was created and designed by cartoonistMatt Groening while he was waiting in the lobby ofJames L. Brooks' office. She received her first name from Groening's youngest sister. After appearing onThe Tracey Ullman Show for three years, the Simpson family was given their own series on theFox Broadcasting Company, which debuted on December 17, 1989.
Maggie is the youngest child ofHomer andMarge, and the younger sister toBart andLisa. She is often seen sucking on her redpacifier and, when she walks, she trips over her clothing and falls on her face (thisrunning gag is used much more in earlier seasons). Being an infant, she has not yet learned how to talk. However, she did appear to talk in the firstTracey Ullman Show short.
The Simpsons uses afloating timeline in which the characters do not physically age (or if they do, then very slowly), and as such the show is assumed to be set in the current year. In several episodes, events have been linked to specific times, though sometimes this timeline has been contradicted in subsequent episodes.[4] Maggie is the youngest child ofMarge andHomer, and younger sister toBart andLisa. When Marge became pregnant with Bart, she and Homer got married at a chapel in Las Vegas. To support his impending family, Homer all but demanded a job at theSpringfield Nuclear Power Plant, impressing its owner,Mr. Burns with his aggressive submissiveness.[5] When Marge became pregnant with Lisa, two years later, she and Homer boughttheir first house. Another six years later, Homer felt financially secure enough to finally quit his job at the Power Plant and take his dream job at Barney's Bowlarama. However, Marge became pregnant with Maggie, so Homer, once again unable to support his family, was forced to reapply for his old job. By the time Maggie was born, Homer had shown great signs of distress, but he managed to find motivation in the form of his newborn baby girl.[6]
During the earlier seasons of the show, Maggie's equivalent of a hallmark was to trip over her clothing and fall on her face while trying to walk, causing a loud thud on the floor,[7] but this was toned down in the later seasons. She has a penchant for her pacifier, on which she is always seen sucking.[7]
Maggie has performed a number of feats that for her age suggest she is highly intelligent, akin to her sister, and possibly a genius. She has spelled outE=MC² with her baby blocks, driven Homer's car, escaped from the Springfield daycare center,[8] written her name on anEtch A Sketch,[7] played Internet poker,[9] spelled words with her baby blocks,shot Mr. Burns, played Lisa's saxophone, and treated her pacifier like a cigarette. However, the rest of the Simpsons family are unaware of Maggie's maturity and Marge carries Maggie wherever they go rather than letting her walk by herself. Maggie is keenly aware of her surroundings, and can usually be seen imitating the flow of action around her. She shows a high degree of dexterity, and she once hit Homer on the head with a mallet and shot a dart at a photograph of him in imitation ofItchy and Scratchy.[10] Despite her age, Maggie is a formidablemarksman, as seen in "Who Shot Mr. Burns?" where she shootsMr. Burns with a handgun that falls into her hands,[11] though whether or not it was intentional is not clear, and in a deliberate manner during "Poppa's Got a Brand New Badge" where she is able to non-fatally shoot a group of mobsters in rapid succession with a rifle that she apparently hides in her crib.[12]
Maggie is usually frightened and exasperated by Homer's attempts to bond with her, but has on several occasions stepped in to save Homer's life: once from drowning,[13] once from being shot by mobsters,[8] once from being kidnapped by a tow truck driver,[14] and once from being shot byRuss Cargill, head of theUnited States Environmental Protection Agency.[15]
Maggie in her first appearance in the Ullman short "Good Night".
Matt Groening conceived Maggie and the rest of the Simpson family in 1986 in the lobby ofJames L. Brooks's office. Groening had been called in to pitch a series of animated shorts forThe Tracey Ullman Show, and had intended to present an adaptation of hisLife in Hell comic strip. When he realized that animatingLife in Hell would require him to rescind publication rights for his life's work, Groening decided to go in another direction,[16] and hurriedly sketched out his version of adysfunctional family and named the characters after members of his own family. The baby of the family was named Maggie after Groening's youngest sister.[17][18] Maggie then made her debut with the rest of the Simpsons family on April 19, 1987, in theshort "Good Night".[19] In 1989, the shorts were adapted intoThe Simpsons, a half-hour series that would air on theFox Broadcasting Company. Maggie and the rest of the family remained the main characters on this new show.[20]
The entire Simpson family was designed so that they would be recognizable in silhouette.[21] The family was crudely drawn, because Groening had submitted basic sketches to the animators, assuming they would clean them up; instead, they just traced over his drawings.[16] Maggie's physical features are generally not used in other characters; for example, in the later seasons, no character other than Lisa shares her hairline.[22] While designing Maggie and Lisa, Groening "couldn't be bothered to even think about girls' hair styles".[23] At the time, Groening was primarily drawing in black and white and when designing Lisa and Maggie, he "just gave them this kind of spiky starfish hair style, not thinking that they would eventually be drawn in color".[24]
Groening thought that it would be funny to have a baby character that did not talk and never grew up, but was scripted to show any emotions that the scene required.[25] Maggie's comedic hallmarks include her tendency to stumble and land on her face while attempting to walk, and a penchant for sucking on her pacifier, the sound of which has become the equivalent of her catchphrase and was originally created by Groening during theTracey Ullman period. In the early seasons of the show, Maggie would suck her pacifier over other characters' dialogue, but this was discontinued because the producers found it too distracting.[26]
With few exceptions, Maggie never speaks but participates in the events around her, emoting with subtle gestures and facial expressions. Maggie's first lines were spoken in "Good Night", the first short to air onThe Tracey Ullman Show, after the family falls asleep. On this occasion, Liz Georges provided the voice of Maggie.[27]
Rather than talking, Maggie is well known for producing a characteristic "sucking" sound from her pacifier. This sound effect was originally provided by the show's creatorMatt Groening,[28] for early episodes ofThe Tracey Ullman Show, and also byGabor Csupo[29] (who was also the animation executive producer, for the first 60 episodes). The sucking noise is heard in all of Maggie's appearances to date, and is usually archive audio from either of Groening or Csupo's initial recordings (from the show's early episodes). Other than her sucking noise, Maggie has been known to make other noises, such as occasional squeals andbabbling. In most instances, these vocalisations are provided by eitherNancy Cartwright orYeardley Smith.[30]
In 2000, Maggie, along with the rest of the Simpson family, was awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
Maggie has received both popular and critical acclaim. Nancy Basile atAbout.com said her favorite Maggie scenes onThe Simpsons are the ones that show her acting more like an adult than a one-year-old. Some of her favorite Maggie scenes include scenes from "Sweet Seymour Skinner's Baadasssss Song" and "Lady Bouvier's Lover" where Maggie meets her unibrowed archenemy,Baby Gerald, and the one scene from "Itchy & Scratchy: The Movie" in which Bart is supposed to babysit Maggie, but she escapes and takes Homer's car for a ride.[42] Basile also added that "whether watching 'The Happy Elves' or falling down, Maggie is the cutest baby in the Simpson family".[42] ComedianRicky Gervais named "And Maggie Makes Three" his second favorite episode of the show and said that the scene in the end where Homer puts up pictures of Maggie over his desk gave him "a lump in the throat thinking about it".[43] Todd Everett atVariety called the scene in "Lisa's First Word" where Maggie speaks her first word "quite a heart-melter".[44]
In 2006, Elizabeth Taylor was named thirteenth onIGN's "Top 25 Simpsons Guest Appearances" list for her performance as Maggie in "Lisa's First Word".[45] James Earl Jones, voice of Maggie in "Treehouse of Horror V", was named the seventh greatest guest star on the show in the same list.[45] In 2000, Maggie and the rest of the Simpson family were awarded a star on theHollywood Walk of Fame located at 7021Hollywood Boulevard.[46]
Fourchildren's books, written by Maggie Groening (after whom Maggie was named) and illustrated by Matt Groening, entitledMaggie Simpson's Book of Animals,Maggie Simpson's Counting Book,Maggie Simpson's Book of Colors and Shapes andMaggie Simpson's Alphabet Book were released on September 12, 1991.[47][additional citation(s) needed] Other merchandise includes dolls, posters, figurines, jigsaw puzzles, and T-shirts.[48] Maggie was made into an action figure as part of theWorld of Springfield toy line, and was released in the wave one playset "Living Room", featuring her and Marge in the living room of theSimpsons house.[49] Maggie has appeared in commercials forBurger King,Butterfinger,C.C. Lemon,Domino's Pizza,Ramada Inn andSubway.[50]
Maggie has appeared in other media relating toThe Simpsons. She is a character in every one ofThe Simpsons video games, including the most recent,The Simpsons Game.[51] Alongside the television series, Maggie regularly appeared in issues ofSimpsons comics, which were published from 1993 until 2018.[52][53] Maggie also plays a role inThe Simpsons Ride, launched in 2008 atUniversal Studios Florida andHollywood.[54] On April 9, 2009, theUnited States Postal Service unveiled a series of five 44-cent stamps featuring Maggie and the four other members of the Simpson family. They are the first characters from a television series to receive this recognition while the show is still in production.[55] The stamps, designed by Matt Groening, were made available for purchase on May 7, 2009.[56][57] In a USPS poll, Maggie's stamp was voted the most popular of the five.[58]
Maggie Simpson in… is a series of animated short-films. It currently consists of four films. The movies put Maggie at the center of the story, unlike most episodes of the show itself. All the films retain the theme of the first film – Maggie's journey to day care (or in the case ofPlaydate with Destiny, the playground).
^Groening, Matt. (2005). Commentary for "Fear of Flying", inThe Simpsons: The Complete Sixth Season [DVD]. 20th Century Fox.
^Groening, Matt; Reiss, Mike; Kirkland, Mark. (2002). Commentary for "Principal Charming", inThe Simpsons: The Complete Second Season [DVD]. 20th Century Fox.
^Silverman, David; Reardon, Jim; Groening, Matt. (2005). Illustrated commentary for "Treehouse of Horror V", inThe Simpsons: The Complete Sixth Season [DVD]. 20th Century Fox.
^Groening, Matt. (2006). "A Bit From the Animators", illustrated commentary for "All Singing, All Dancing", inThe Simpsons: The Complete Ninth Season [DVD]. 20th Century Fox.
^Groening, Matt; Scully, Mike; Jean, Al; Brooks, James L.; Silverman, David (2007).The Simpsons Movie: A Look Behind the Scenes.The Sun (DVD).
^Groening, Matt. (2001). Commentary for "Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire", inThe Simpsons: The Complete First Season [DVD]. 20th Century Fox.
^Smith, Yeardley. (2007). Commentary forThe Simpsons Movie [DVD]. 20th Century Fox.
^Brooks, James L.; Cartwright, Nancy; Groening, Matt; Jean, Al; Moore, Rich. (2003). Commentary for "Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire", inThe Simpsons: The Complete Third Season [DVD]. 20th Century Fox.