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{{Short description|Fictional characters from The Simpsons franchise}}
{{Simpsons character|
{{Use mdy dates|date=September 2017}}
image= [[Image:C-patty.gif|100px]]|
{{Infobox character
name=Patricia "Patty" Bouvier|
| multiple = yes
gender=[[Female]]|
| name = Patty and Selma Bouvier
hair=Lilac|
| series = [[The Simpsons]]
age=41|
| image = {{nowrap|[[File:Patty Bouvier.png|130px]][[File:Selma Bouvier.png|132px]]}}
job=Works at Springfield DMV|
| caption = Patty (left) and Selma Bouvier
relatives=Sister to Selma (sororital twin) and [[Marge Simpson|Marge]], nephew [[Bart Simpson|Bart]], nieces [[Lisa Simpson|Lisa]], [[Maggie Simpson|Maggie]] and [[Ling Bouvier|Ling]], mother [[Jackie (The Simpsons)|Jackie]], aunt [[Gladys Bouvier|Gladys]] and brother-in-law [[Homer Simpson|Homer]].|
appearance=[[Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire]]|
| first_major = [[The Simpsons]]
| first_minor = [[Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire]]
voiceactor=[[Julie Kavner]]|
| first_date = December 17, 1989
| creator = [[Matt Groening]]<br>
[[Mimi Pond]]
| designer = Matt Groening
| voice = [[Julie Kavner]]
| full_name = Patricia Maleficent Bouvier<hr/>Selma Bouvier-Terwilliger-Hutz-McClure-Discotheque-Simpson
| gender = Female
| occupation = [[Civil servant]]s, [[Department of Motor Vehicles|DMV]]
| relatives = '''Parents:''' [[Simpson family#Jacqueline Bouvier|Jacqueline]], [[Simpson family#Clancy Bouvier|Clancy]] <br /> '''Sisters:''' [[Marge Simpson|Marge]] and each other<br /> '''Nephews:''' [[Hugo Simpson|Hugo]] (non-canon), [[Bart Simpson|Bart]]<br /> '''Nieces:''' [[Lisa Simpson|Lisa]], [[Maggie Simpson|Maggie]]<br> '''Selma's Adopted Daughter (Patty's Adopted Niece):''' [[Simpson family#Ling Bouvier|Ling]]<br /> '''Brother-in-Law:''' [[Homer Simpson|Homer]] <br /> '''Cousins:''' [[Simpson family#Extended Bouvier family|Dot]] <br /> '''Aunts:''' [[Simpson family#Extended Bouvier family|Gladys Gurney]] (maternal aunt) and Charlene Bouvier (paternal aunt) <br />'''Grandmothers''': Alvarine Gurney (maternal grandmother) and Bambi Bouvier (paternal grandmother) <br /> '''Uncles:''' Lou Gurney (maternal uncle) <br /><small>(See also [[Simpson family#Extended Bouvier family|Bouvier family]])</small> <br />'''Patty's former boyfriend:''' [[Principal Skinner]] <br /> '''Patty's former lesbian girlfriends:''' Veronica, the professional golfer (who was actually a man disguised as a woman)<br /> Evelyn
<br /> '''Selma's Ex-Husbands:''' ('''Patty's Ex-Brothers-in-law:''') [[Sideshow Bob]] <br /> [[Lionel Hutz]] <br /> [[Grampa Simpson]] <br /> [[Troy McClure]] <br /> [[List of recurring The Simpsons characters#Disco Stu|Disco Stu]] <br /> [[Fat Tony (The Simpsons)|Fat Tony D'Amico]] (Not legal ex-husband, their catholic wedding was just symbolic)
}}
}}

{{Simpsons character|
'''Patricia Maleficent''' "'''Patty'''" '''Bouvier'''<ref>{{Cite episode |title=Livin La Pura Vida |episode-link=Livin La Pura Vida |series=The Simpsons |series-link=The Simpsons |first1=Timothy |last1=Bailey |first2=Brian |last2=Kelley |author-link2=Brian Kelley (writer) |network=[[Fox Broadcasting Company|Fox]] |date=November 17, 2019 |season=31 |number=7 |minutes= |time= |quote=Patricia Maleficent Bouvier, I've put up with you criticizing my husband for years, and I've had it.}}</ref> and '''Selma Bouvier-Terwilliger-Hutz-McClure-Discotheque-Simpson''' ({{née|'''Bouvier'''}} {{IPAc-en|ˈ|b|uː|v|i|eɪ}} {{respell|BOO|vee|ay}}) are fictional characters in the American [[animated sitcom]] ''[[The Simpsons]]''. They are identical<ref>{{Cite web|title=Patty Bouvier|url=https://simpsonswiki.com/wiki/Patty_Bouvier|access-date=2021-11-25|website=Wikisimpsons|language=en}}</ref> [[twin]]s and are voiced by [[Julie Kavner]], who also voices their sister, [[Marge Simpson|Marge]].{{Sfn|Groening|2010|p=1099}} Patty and Selma, both gravel-voiced chain-smokers, work at the [[Springfield (The Simpsons)|Springfield]] [[Department of Motor Vehicles]]. They have a strong dislike for their brother-in-law, [[Homer Simpson]], who likewise loathes them. Selma, the elder by two minutes, longs for male companionship and has had multiple brief, doomed marriages, and has herself offered help in some fashion to Marge and Homer as she envies their loving relationship; she receives occasional compassionate support from Homer who even poses as her husband to help her adopt a child. Patty is an initially closeted lesbian who embraces celibacy until she begins dating women. Kavner voices them as characters who "suck the life out of everything".<ref name=joy>[http://www.snpp.com/other/articles/flash.html Rhodes, Joe. "Flash! 24 ''Simpsons'' Stars Reveal Themselves"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140812090512/http://www.snpp.com/other/articles/flash.html |date=August 12, 2014 }}, ''TV Guide'' October 21, 2000, via The Simpsons Archive: "[Matt] Groening says: 'My original idea about Marge's family was they were utterly joyless. The original note I gave to Julie was that they suck the life out of everything they see'".</ref> Patty and Selma debuted on the first ''Simpsons'' episode "[[Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire]]", which aired on December 17, 1989.{{Sfn|Groening|2010|p=25}}
image= [[Image:C-selma.png|100px]]|
name=Selma Bouvier|
gender=[[Female]]|
hair=Lilac|
age=41|
job=Works at Springfield DMV|
relatives=Sister to Patty (sororital twin) and [[Marge Simpson|Marge]], adoptive mother to Ling, aunt to [[Bart Simpson|Bart]], [[Lisa Simpson|Lisa]] & [[Maggie Simpson|Maggie]], daughter of [[Jackie (The Simpsons)|Jackie]], niece to [[Gladys Bouvier|Gladys]], ex-wife to [[Sideshow Bob]], [[Troy McClure]], [[Lionel Hutz]], and [[Disco Stu]] and sister-in-law to [[Homer Simpson|Homer]].|
appearance=[[Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire]]|
voiceactor=[[Julie Kavner]]|
}}
The '''Bouvier Sisters''' (Patricia "Patty" and Selma, voiced by [[Julie Kavner]]) are fictional characters on ''[[The Simpsons]].'' They are [[Marge Simpson|Marge]]'s two cynical chain-smoking older [[twin|twin sisters]], who work at the [[Department of Motor Vehicles]] (DMV) and have a strong dislike for [[Homer Simpson|Homer]]. Selma is the older of two as she was born two minutes before Patty. Creator [[Matt Groening]] has said that he named the Simpsons after his own parents and two younger sisters, he has an older sister named Patty who is an art dealer. [[Julie Kavner]] has said that she had difficulty coming up with the voices for Marge's sisters, when producer [[James L. Brooks]] suggested that she voice Patty and Selma as characters "that suck the joy out of everything."<ref>http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0001413/bio</ref>


==Distinguishing features==
==Distinguishing features==
Being twins, the two have a similar look, but there are several easy ways to distinguish them, including:


*''Hairstyle'': Patty has an [[afro]], while Selma's hair is parted in the middle.
It is not easy to distinguish the twins from each other. According to Marge, Selma is "the one who likes ''[[Police Academy]]'' movies and Hummel figurines, and walking through the park on clear autumn days." The following physical descriptions may help.
<!-- Deleted image removed: [[File:Patty and Selma in their real hair color.jpg|thumb|right|Patty and Selma showing their ''real'' hair color to their younger sister Marge (episode "[[The Blue and the Gray (The Simpsons)|The Blue and the Gray]]").{{ffdc|Patty and Selma in their real hair color.jpg|log=2024 September 4|date=September 2024}}]] -->
*''Attire'': Patty wears a short-sleeved pink dress and pink shoes while Selma wears a hemmed sleeveless blue dress and blue shoes.
*''Jewelry'': Patty wears blue or orange triangular earrings and spherical beads connected by a visible string, while Selma wears orange or purple circular earrings (occasionally earrings shaped in an "S" in early episodes) and elliptical beads attached to each other.


They both resemble their chain-smoking father Clancy Bouvier who appeared in a flashback of the episode "The Way We Was". In the episode "[[The Blue and the Gray (The Simpsons)|The Blue and the Gray]]", it is revealed that Selma is actually a blonde, while Patty is a redhead. Their hair has turned blue-gray from long-term exposure to cigarette smoke and ash.
*Patty's [[hair]] is united while Selma's hair is divided (Selma's hair is divided into an M shape).
*Patty wears a short-sleeved [[pink]] dress and pink shoes while Selma wears a sleeveless [[blue]] dress and blue shoes
*Patty wears [[Orange (colour)|orange]] triangular earrings while Selma wears [[purple]] circular earrings.
*Patty wears orange circular necklace pearls while Selma wears purple oval necklace pearls.
*In the early years of the series, Selma also wore "S" shaped earrings.


== Personalities ==
==Biography ==
Rarely seen apart, Patty and Selma are known for their distinctive gravelly voices, cynical outlook on life, bitter and unpleasant personalities, and love of cigarettes. They share an apartment at the [[Spinster]] City apartment complex and both work at the [[Department of Motor Vehicles|DMV]]. The two are avid, sometimes maniacal fans of the TV series, ''[[MacGyver (1985 TV series)|MacGyver]]''. The two seem to be aroused by the character and smoke a cigarette after every viewing of the show.
When [[Jay Sherman]], on advice from Homer, told Patty and Selma that MacGyver is gay, they stripped him to his boxers and hung him from the gutters.<ref>''[[The Simpsons]]'' – "[[A Star is Burns]]"</ref> On the eve of Selma's marriage to [[Sideshow Bob]], he insulted MacGyver and the wedding was almost cancelled as a result.<ref>''[[The Simpsons]]''. "[[Black Widower]]"</ref> Selma and Patty once met the actor who portrayed MacGyver, [[Richard Dean Anderson]], and kidnapped him.<ref name="kiss kiss bangalore">''[[The Simpsons]]'' – "[[Kiss Kiss, Bang Bangalore]]"</ref> Patty and Selma have taken many vacations together to various places including
Selma [[Black Widower|reportedly]] lacks the [[sense]]s of [[taste]] and [[olfaction|smell]] due to a childhood [[bottle rocket]] accident. Both twin sisters tend to be [[cynicism|cynic]]al and are noted for their [[addiction]] to [[tobacco smoking]]. They have a strong, mutual (and reciprocated) dislike for their [[Homer Simpson|brother-in-law]].
[[Czechoslovakia]] and the [[Dead Sea]], where Selma sunk to the bottom when she attempted to float on her back.<ref>''[[The Simpsons]]''. "[[Flaming Moe's]]"</ref> Patty and Selma have also brought home "souvenirs" from their vacations, including a pillowcase full of seashells from their trip to Sulfur Bay that they forced the family to help them clean and organize.<ref>''[[The Simpsons]]''. "[[Treehouse of Horror VI]]"</ref> They drove away Richard Dean Anderson by showing him slides of their trip to the [[Remington Carriage Museum]] in [[Cardston, Alberta]].<ref name="kiss kiss bangalore"/>


Patty and Selma have a strong, mutually reciprocated dislike for their brother-in-law [[Homer Simpson|Homer]]. They regret that Marge chose Homer over her former boyfriend [[Artie Ziff]],<ref>''[[The Simpsons]]'' – "[[The Way We Was]]"</ref> and have unsuccessfully tried to help Artie win her back.<ref>''[[The Simpsons]]'' – "[[Half-Decent Proposal]]"</ref><ref>''[[The Simpsons]]'' – "[[The Ziff Who Came to Dinner]]"</ref> However, Marge made it clear to her sisters that she loves Homer and there is nothing they can do to change her mind. Homer usually tries to be polite to them out of respect for Marge, but Patty and Selma do not hide their contempt for him. They showed little concern when Homer suffered a heart attack. While he was undergoing bypass surgery, they tried to set Marge up with a sleazy man named Andre.<ref name="TripleBypass">''[[The Simpsons]]''. "[[Homer's Triple Bypass]]"</ref> They own a tombstone inscribed with the epitaph "Homer J. Simpson. We are richer for having lost him" and use it as a coffee table,<ref>''[[The Simpsons]]'' – "[[Mother Simpson]]"</ref> stick pins in a voodoo doll which looks like Homer<ref>''[[The Simpsons]]'' – "[[Homer and Apu]]"</ref> and even commissioned a billboard urging voters to evict Homer from Springfield.<ref>''[[The Simpsons]]'' – "[[Three Gays of the Condo]]"</ref> When Homer contemplated suicide, they encouraged him to go through with it and then pushed him off the bridge, though this was actually part of a plot by the townspeople to bring Homer to his surprise party on a cruise ship.<ref>''[[The Simpsons]]'' – "[[Eternal Moonshine of the Simpson Mind]]"</ref> Patty has also given stoner [[Otto Mann]] a driver's license due to their mutual dislike for Homer,<ref>''[[The Simpsons]]''. "[[The Otto Show]]"</ref> and both she and Selma deliberately failed Homer on his limousine driver's test, but their victory smoking nearly cost them their jobs until Homer intervened.<ref name="vsPattyAndSelma">''[[The Simpsons]]''. "[[Homer vs. Patty and Selma]]"</ref> They once kidnapped Homer before his and Marge's third wedding and imprisoned him in a cellar in the hope that Marge would find someone else. Moved to tears by his obvious devotion to Marge, they let him go and paid for their wedding ceremony to avoid being exposed by Bart and Lisa.<ref>''[[The Simpsons]]'' – "[[Wedding for Disaster]]"</ref> For his part, Homer regards them as the "Gruesome Twosome"<ref>''[[The Simpsons]]'' – "[[Krusty Gets Busted]]"</ref> or "Fatty and Smellma"<ref>''[[The Simpsons]]''. "[[The Fat and the Furriest]]</ref> and was delighted when he (mistakenly) heard they had died.<ref>''[[The Simpsons]]'' – "[[American History X-cellent]]"</ref>
Unlike Homer, however - who usually makes a perfunctionary effort to be polite to his sisters-in-law out of respect for his [[Marge Simpson|wife]] (if not a particularly sincere or committed one) - Patty and Selma have no hesitation in treating Homer with open rudeness and contempt. There were several instances where they did not seem to care when Homer faced a life-threatening situation. For instance, in "[[Homer's Triple Bypass]]," where Marge rushes to the hospital after receiving a telephone call that Homer had suffered a heart attack at work. Patty and Selma — instead of going to the hospital and comforting Marge in her time of need — remain seated at the kitchen table, continuing their activity of cutting coupons, gasping in amazement at the discounts and behaving as though nothing was wrong. They later attempt to set up Marge with a (rather sleazy) friend as a replacement for Homer, regardless of the fact that Homer was still very much alive. In "[[Mother Simpson]]", Homer fakes his death, and Patty and Selma show up holding a tombstone inscribed with "Homer Simpson. We are richer for having lost him"


As children, Patty and Selma were apparently domineering towards Marge and ridiculed her ambition of becoming an astronaut. In return for their allowance, Marge used to do chores for them. The free time they now had led to them taking up smoking.<ref>''[[The Simpsons]]'' – "[[Three Men and a Comic Book]]"</ref> As adults, the Bouvier twins have a friendly relationship with their sister and seem very protective of her thus frequently visit the Simpsons. They seem relatively fond of their nieces and nephew, but seem to like them more when they are young, as one of them remarks "The older they get, the cuter they ain't."<ref>''[[The Simpsons]]'' – "[[Lisa's First Word]]"</ref> On occasions, they babysit Bart, Lisa and Maggie, something not relished by the kids. Bart and Lisa were left traumatized when they had to stay with their aunts for a week while a stressed out Marge left for Rancho Relaxo. Maggie managed to take evasive action and got to stay with Homer instead.<ref>''[[The Simpsons]]'' – "[[Homer Alone]]"</ref>
Selma's favorite brand of [[cigarette]]s is identified as "Laramie Hi-Tars" while Patty's favorite brand of cigarettes is "Lady Laramie 100s". They share an apartment and work at the [[Department of Motor Vehicles]] (DMV). On several occasions they have acted unprofessionally in their jobs. For example, they allowed [[Otto Mann|Otto]] to get a driver's license during Otto's brief tenancy with the Simpson family due to their mutual dislike for Homer.
Like her twin sister Patty, Selma is an avid (and sometimes maniacal) fan of the [[1980s]] TV series ''[[MacGyver]]'', and they both seem to think MacGyver is a ''real'' man as opposed to a character played by [[Richard Dean Anderson]]. When Selma is married to [[Sideshow Bob]], he insults Macgyver and she takes it very seriously and starts crying. Regardless of their orientation, they also seem to be erotically aroused by the show and the character, euphemistically needing a cigarette after each viewing of the show. Selma's favorite film actor was reportedly [[Troy McClure]], to whom she was briefly married.
In a ground-breaking [[2005]] [[There's Something About Marrying|episode]], Patty comes out of [[the closet]] as a [[lesbian]], although hints of her sexual preference have been dropped many times, such as in "[[Bart After Dark]]", when she is seen coming out of a burlesque house.


===Patty Bouvier===
== Relationships ==
'''Patricia Maleficent Bouvier''' is the younger of the two.<ref name="SomethingAbout"/> Despite the similarities between her and Selma, Patty is more jaded than her sister, particularly towards relationships. It was once said by Marge that Patty chose a life of [[celibacy]], and that Selma had it thrust upon her.<ref name="PrincipalCharming">''[[The Simpsons]]''. "[[Principal Charming]]"</ref> Her decision to not have relationships has been implied to be due to her then closeted sexuality. Earlier hints of her closeted sexuality were also shown in some of the show's earlier episodes, when she was reluctant to date Principal Skinner in [[Principal Charming]]; in [[Treehouse of Horror III]], on seeing Homer naked, she claimed the experience destroyed "the last lingering thread of my heterosexuality." Generally, Patty is more hostile to Homer than Selma. However, when Patty came out as a [[lesbian]], she found a surprising supporter in Homer (in contrast to Marge who was at first surprised and angry about it), and she swallowed her pride and asked him to perform her marriage ceremony.<ref name="SomethingAbout"/> They also teamed up to try to scupper the burgeoning relationship between Selma and Homer's father [[Abe Simpson|Abe]].<ref name="RomeJuli" /> Patty also joined Homer's group to ghost-write an original fantasy fiction novel, and also to stop their novel from being replaced with a drastically revamped version by the book publishing company.<ref>''[[The Simpsons]]'' – "[[The Book Job]]"</ref> In one episode, where Patty stayed at the Simpson house during a fight with Selma despite Homer's reluctance, Patty privately admitted to Homer that she only mocks him because she is jealous of him having a successful marriage and family with Marge, while all she has is Selma, leaving Homer feeling grateful for her having opened, albeit briefly, a window of kindness.<ref>''[[The Simpsons]]'' – "[[Puffless]]"</ref>
Patty and Selma are very close, working together and sharing an apartment.


====Relationships====
Selma cares for her deceased aunt's [[iguana]] [[Jub-Jub]] (a name invented by [[Conan O'Brien]] according to a Simpsons [[DVD commentary]] and by Conan himself on his show), although this is (oddly enough) exactly the name given by author [[Lewis Carroll]] to a fictional creature of his own devising, the [[Jub-Jub Bird]] from the famous poem [[Jabberwocky]].
Patty's only known relationship with a man involved [[Principal Skinner]].<ref name="PrincipalCharming"/> On a blind date arranged by Homer, Skinner was supposed to fall for Selma, but he noticed Patty first and fell in love with her instead. They dated for a while, though Patty often showed signs of reluctance through things like unjoyful facial expressions and turned down his marriage proposal, claiming him she was too devoted to Selma to abandon her. However, she did consider Skinner a gentleman and ended their relationship with the words "Good night, sweet principal."<ref name="PrincipalCharming"/> Like Selma, Patty also has a long-running fixation on ''[[MacGyver (1985 TV series)|MacGyver]]'', although this aspect of her personality has been played down in later episodes.


Patty was revealed to be lesbian in the [[The Simpsons season 16|season 16]] episode "[[There's Something About Marrying]]", which follows [[Homer Simpson]] as he is ordained to perform [[same-sex marriage]]s. Producer [[Al Jean]] had announced that a character would [[Coming out|come out]] prior to the episode's airing, prompting widespread speculation.<ref name=":0">{{Cite news |date=2004-07-28 |title=Simpsons to reveal gay character |language=en-GB |work=BBC News |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/3932369.stm |access-date=2023-04-14 |archive-date=2022-05-12 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220512161955/http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/3932369.stm |url-status=live }}</ref><ref name=":1">{{Cite news |date=2005-02-21 |title=Simpsons' gay character is Patty |language=en-GB |work=BBC News |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/4285287.stm |access-date=2023-04-14 |archive-date=2022-07-03 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220703222458/http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/4285287.stm |url-status=live }}</ref> Patty was the character that fans most suspected would come out.<ref name=":2">{{Cite news |last=Waxman |first=Sharon |date=2005-02-21 |title='Simpsons' Animates Gay Nuptials, and a Debate |language=en-US |work=The New York Times |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2005/02/21/arts/television/simpsons-animates-gay-nuptials-and-a-debate.html |access-date=2023-04-14 |issn=0362-4331 |archive-date=2022-05-12 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220512161958/https://www.nytimes.com/2005/02/21/arts/television/simpsons-animates-gay-nuptials-and-a-debate.html |url-status=live }}</ref><ref name=":0" /> The episode aired in 2005, when same-sex marriage was a major political issue in the United States.<ref name=":1" /> The move was controversial, provoking outrage from opponents to same-sex marriage.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Keslowitz |first=Steven |url=https://archive.org/details/worldaccordingto0000kesl |title=The World According to the Simpsons: What Our Favorite TV Family Says about Life, Love, and the Pursuit of the Perfect Donut |publisher=Sourcebooks |year=2006 |isbn=978-1-4022-0655-9 |pages=25 |language=en}}</ref> Entertainment columnist [[Ray Richmond]] credited Patty's coming out as a significant milestone for the [[gay rights movement]], as it proved that the movement was prominent enough to feature in an episode of a mainstream sitcom.<ref name=":2" />
Most [[Goo Goo Gai Pan|recently]], a [[menopause|menopausal]] Selma adopted a [[China|Chinese]] baby, Ling. During the adoption process, Selma had to pretend to be married to Homer, since the Chinese government only allows children to be adopted to successful couples.<ref>http://www.wnyc.org/shows/tnbt/episodes/2003/10/10 [[Julia Sweeney]] tells about the messages she received from Chinese adoption agencies trying to confirm her heterosexuality due to government opposition to gay adoption</ref> When the jig was up, Selma manages to keep the baby, as a Chinese dignitary becomes sympathetic, as she too was raised by a single mother.


After coming out as a lesbian,<ref name="SomethingAbout"/> Patty exclaims "you could see it from space!". There had been many previous hints of her sexuality: she was seen visiting a burlesque house;<ref>''[[The Simpsons]]'' – "[[Bart After Dark]]"</ref> she exclaimed (upon seeing Homer naked) "There goes the last lingering thread of my heterosexuality";<ref>''[[The Simpsons]]'' – "[[Treehouse of Horror III]]"</ref> she was seen hiding in a closet with [[Waylon Smithers|Smithers]] on a parade float during a gay pride parade.<ref>''[[The Simpsons]]'' – "[[Jaws Wired Shut]]"</ref> In another nod to Patty's sexuality being obvious, Homer [[sarcasm|sarcastically]] quipped, "Here's another bomb for ya, Marge: I like beer!" when Marge was shocked at the revelation.
=== The Bouviers and the Simpsons ===


Patty wooed a tenured professor from [[Yale University]] away from her husband<ref>''[[The Simpsons]]''. "[[Homer Simpson, This is Your Wife]]"</ref> and has also been attracted to [[Edna Krabappel]].<ref name="RomeJuli"/> When Selma claimed she couldn't face prison, Patty replied that she could, implying she would welcome a female-only environment.<ref name="kiss kiss bangalore"/> Patty's first serious relationship with a woman was with Veronica, a pro golfer. It was later discovered by Marge and revealed during Patty's wedding that Veronica was actually a man in disguise.<ref name="SomethingAbout" /> Patty's next serious relationship with a woman was with Evelyn, who quickly bonded with Homer over similar traits during a trip to Costa Rica. When Marge pointed out that Evelyn was ruining the trip and was a female version of Homer, a horrified Patty broke up with her. However, when a remorseful Marge apologized to Patty and reassured her that the difference between Homer and Evelyn was that Evelyn truly loved her, Patty decided to reconcile with Evelyn.<ref>{{Cite episode |title=Livin La Pura Vida |episode-link=Livin La Pura Vida |series=The Simpsons |series-link=The Simpsons |first1=Timothy |last1=Bailey |first2=Brian |last2=Kelley |author-link2=Brian Kelley (writer) |network=[[Fox Broadcasting Company|Fox]] |date=November 17, 2019 |season=31 |number=7 |minutes= |time=}}</ref>
As children, Patty and Selma were apparently domineering towards Marge and ridiculed her ambition of becoming an [[astronaut]]. However, their relationship seems to have improved over the years. As adults, the Bouvier twins appear to have a friendly relationship with their sister and frequently visit the Simpsons. They seem relatively fond of their nieces and nephew. They have, on occasion, watched the kids when their parents were out of town. However, Bart and Lisa would rather not be around when their aunts ask for a [[foot]] [[massage]]. Their idea of bonding with Lisa includes tutoring her in the belief that [[Misandry|men are pigs]], using Homer as the prime example.


===Selma Bouvier===
Their relationship with Homer remains one of mutual dislike (although Selma seems to dislike Homer '''''slightly''''' less), which involves a continuous exchange of insults from day one. They compare their brother-in-law to a [[Neanderthal|caveman]], suggesting him capable of trading Maggie for [[beer]] and a [[Pornography in the United States|nudie magazine]]. Selma and Patty have occasionally expressed their common hope that Marge will eventually [[divorce]] Homer. They are often quick in pointing out his attempts at [[sincerity and/or [[infidelity]], and have offered to help Marge find a replacement for Homer (although Selma did help Marge find Homer). Despite this, the couple is still together after a decade of marriage.
'''Selma Bouvier''' is two minutes older than Patty. Due to a childhood bottle rocket accident, she has no sense of taste or smell.<ref name="BlackWidower">''[[The Simpsons]]''- "[[Black Widower]]"</ref> According to Marge, Selma "likes ''[[Police Academy (franchise)|Police Academy]]'' movies and [[Hummel figurines]], and walking through the park on clear autumn days." In contrast to her twin, Selma yearns for male companionship and children. She is also slightly more sympathetic towards Homer than Patty. Selma helped reunite Homer and Marge after seeing how upset Marge was without him, despite an agreement with Patty not to say anything.<ref>''[[The Simpsons]]'' – "[[I Married Marge]]"</ref> Homer was sympathetic to her when she broke down after a disastrous trip to Duff Gardens with Bart and Lisa, remarking "I just couldn't cut it today", referring to raising kids.<ref name="SelmasChoice"/> Homer also agreed to pose as Selma's husband to help her adopt a baby from China.<ref>''[[The Simpsons]]'' – "[[Goo Goo Gai Pan]]"</ref> During Homer and Marge's trial separation, when Marge went out on a date with someone else, Selma called Homer and offered to help him save their marriage, but was left frustrated when Homer mistook her for Patty over the phone.<ref>''[[The Simpsons]]'' – "[[Every Man's Dream]]"</ref>


Unable to find companionship in a man, Selma has also sought to have children. At one point she considered using a [[sperm donor]] which Homer mistakenly thought meant Selma would have sex with a robot.<ref name="SelmasChoice"/> After babysitting [[Bart Simpson|Bart]] and [[Lisa Simpson|Lisa]] for a day, she realized she was not ready to have children and wound up adopting [[List of recurring The Simpsons characters#Jub-Jub|Jub-Jub]], her late Aunt Gladys's pet iguana.<ref name="SelmasChoice">''[[The Simpsons]]''. "[[Selma's Choice]]"</ref><ref>According to a ''The Simpsons'' [[DVD commentary]] and by episode writer O'Brien on ''[[Late Night with Conan O'Brien]]''</ref> Much later, she adopted a Chinese baby girl, [[Simpson family#Ling Bouvier|Ling]]. During the adoption process, Selma pretended to be married to Homer, since the Chinese government only allows children to be adopted by married couples.<ref>[http://www.wnyc.org/shows/tnbt/episodes/2003/10/10 "In the Family Way"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061028042157/http://www.wnyc.org/shows/tnbt/episodes/2003/10/10 |date=October 28, 2006 }}, ''[[The Next Big Thing (radio series)|The Next Big Thing]]'', October 10, 2003. [[Julia Sweeney]] tells about the messages she received from Chinese adoption agencies trying to confirm her heterosexuality due to government opposition to gay adoption</ref> After the fraud was exposed, Selma managed to keep the baby as a Chinese dignitary (voiced by [[Lucy Liu]]), who had also been raised by a single parent, became sympathetic.
Selma once took the Simpson children on a disastrous trip to the Duff Gardens theme park, where Bart manhandled several [[animatronic]] characters and Lisa went on a [[psychedelic]] trip after drinking "water" from an ''[[It's a Small World]]''-like boat ride (later swimming naked in the Fermentarium and exclaiming "I am the lizard queen!"). After that however, Selma returned home with the children and asked Homer how he does it, referring to raising children. He misunderstood being as he had a toga on, and started to explain how to wrap a toga. She mentioned children and they exchanged a hug, implifying that Patty dislikes Homer more than Selma does. She told Homer she just couldn't cut it today, and he comforted her.


=== Romantic Liaisons ===
====Relationships====
Despite being identical twins, Patty and Selma have very different track records when it comes to finding dates. According to Marge, Patty chose a life of [[celibacy]], while Selma had celibacy thrust upon her. Her standards are extremely low, as evidenced by her comments on [[Mr. Burns]]: "Single, eh? Well, he passes the Selma Test."


Selma has actively sought out a husband, and has been married to six different men. Her current name has evolved into '''Selma Bouvier-Terwilliger-Hutz-McClure-Stu-Simpson-D'Amico'''. Her first marriage, to [[Sideshow Bob|Robert "Sideshow Bob" Terwilliger]], ended when his plan to kill her was foiled by Bart.<ref name="BlackWidower"/> After an off-screen marriage to [[Lionel Hutz]],<ref>''[[The Simpsons]]'' "[[Much Apu About Nothing]]"</ref> she began dating [[Troy McClure]]. They married, but she soon discovered it was just a sham to boost his flagging career. She told him she was unwilling to bring a baby into a loveless marriage and broke it off.<ref name="FishCalledSelma">''[[The Simpsons]]''. "[[A Fish Called Selma]]"</ref> Another unseen marriage was to [[Disco Stu]],<ref name="SomethingAbout">''[[The Simpsons]]''. "[[There's Something About Marrying]]"</ref> which was annulled by the [[John Paul II|Pope]]. For a time she dated [[Abraham Simpson|Abe Simpson]], to the horror of Homer and Patty. Despite their objections, the two got married, but came to realize it would not work due to his age and her job, so they called it quits.<ref name="RomeJuli">''[[The Simpsons]]''"[[Rome-old and Juli-eh]]"</ref> Her most recent husband is [[Fat Tony (The Simpsons)|Fat Tony D'Amico]], though he was already married and regarded Selma as his "[[comare|gumare]]".<ref name="FatTony">''[[The Simpsons]]''. "[[The Real Housewives of Fat Tony]]"</ref> It has been implied that Selma had a second failed marriage to Sideshow Bob, giving her a total of seven marriages.<ref name="RomeJuli"/>
Despite being identical twins, Patty and Selma Bouvier have had very different track records when it comes to finding dates. According to Marge, Patty chose a life of [[celibacy]], while Selma had celibacy thrust upon her (a sly reference to Malvolio in [[William Shakespeare|Shakespeare]]'s ''[[Twelfth Night (play)|Twelfth Night]]''). This presumably explains her occasional attempts at [[romantic love|romance]]. Her standards tend to be rather low, as evidenced by her comments on [[Mr. Burns|Charles Montgomery Burns]]: "Single, eh? Well, he passes the Selma-test."


One person Selma refused to marry was [[Apu Nahasapeemapetilon]], because she said her collection of last names was long enough. However, there is evidence that she slept with Apu after Homer and Marge's second wedding. Selma has also dated various other men around Springfield, among them [[Hans Moleman]],<ref name="FishCalledSelma"/> [[Moe Szyslak]],<ref>''[[The Simpsons]]''. "[['Scuse Me While I Miss The Sky]]"</ref> and pitifully, [[Barney Gumble]].<ref name="PrincipalCharming"/> She was rejected by [[Groundskeeper Willie]], who upon seeing her dating video remarked "Back to the [[Loch Ness Monster|Loch with you Nessie]]".<ref name="SelmasChoice"/>
In the [[February 20]], [[2005]] episode, "[[There's Something About Marrying]]", Patty [[coming out|came out]] as a [[lesbian]] after Springfield legalized [[same-sex marriage]]. Marge was initially hurt that Patty had hidden her sexuality for years (though as Patty put it when Marge stated she "hadn't seen it coming"), "You could see it from Space!". However, before Patty's lesbian wedding, her partner Veronica is revealed to be a man who disguised his [[gender]] to get into the [[LPGA]] tour. Patty's sexuality was previously implied in an earlier episode when her voice emanated from an "in the closet" float at the Springfield [[Gay Pride Parade]]. Another hint occurred in "[[Treehouse of Horror III]]" where Patty sees Homer naked and remarks, "There goes the last lingering thread of my [[heterosexuality]]." In yet another episode, a snapshot of Patty exiting the infamous [[Bart After Dark|Springfield burlesque house]] (with only a small fraction of her face blacked out) was displayed during a town hall meeting. Selma does indeed indignantly exclaim, "Patty!" when the picture is shown. In the episode "[[Homer Simpson, This is Your Wife]]", which aired on [[March 26]], [[2006]], Patty wooed a [[tenure]]d [[professor]] of [[Yale University]] away from her husband.


==Character==
However, Patty did date [[Principal Skinner]] in the season 2 episode, [[Principal Charming]]. She refused to marry him, supposedly because she was too devoted to Selma as a sister to leave her alone. (Homer, in that episode, had been looking for a man for Selma and after Patty found one, Selma was depressed enough to go out on a date with [[Barney Gumble]]).
Selma has actively sought out a husband, having been married four times. Her full name has evolved into '''Selma Bouvier-Terwilliger-Hutz-McClure''' and possibly '''-Stu,''' after failed marriages to [[Sideshow Bob|Robert "Sideshow Bob" Terwilliger]], [[Lionel Hutz]], [[Troy McClure]], and [[Disco Stu]]. One person Selma refused to marry was [[Apu]], because she said her collection of last names was long enough without Nahasapeemapetilon added to it. "From now on I'm only getting married for love...and maybe ''once'' more for money."


===Creation===
Unable to find companionship in a husband, Selma has also sought to have children. At one point she was considering using a [[sperm donor]] but after babysitting Bart and Lisa for a day, she realized that although she wanted something to love, she was not ready to have children and wound up adopting a pet [[iguana]] named Jub-Jub. After beginning [[menopause]], however, she says that Jub-Jub could not tend to her when she was sick (saying that he would "only eat me when I'm dead"), and later decided she was ready for children; she wound up adopting her child, Ling (see below).
Series creator [[Matt Groening]] said he suggested that Kavner voice Patty and Selma as characters who "suck the life out of everything...."<ref name=joy /><ref name="Groening">{{cite video |people=Groening, Matt |year=2001 |title=The Simpsons season 1 DVD commentary for the episode 'Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire' |medium=DVD |publisher=20th Century Fox}}</ref> [[Al Jean]] said Kavner makes Patty's voice more masculine and a lower register, while Selma's voice is a little sweeter.<ref name=Selma>{{cite video |people=Jean, Al |year=2004 |title=The Simpsons The Complete Fourth Season DVD commentary for the episode "Selma's Choice" |medium=DVD |publisher=20th Century Fox}}</ref>


===Ling Bouvier===
===Development===
{{see also|There's Something About Marrying}}
<!-- please do not separate Ling from this article, per WikiProject The Simpsons standards, she does not need her own page. -->
In the 2005 episode "[[There's Something About Marrying]]" of the sixteenth season, Patty was revealed to be a lesbian and became the first openly gay recurring character in the series.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.eonline.com/news//article/index.jsp?uuid=fd0da574-316b-4300-80a7-8662f9a096b2&entry=index |title="Simpsons'" Smithers Part of Shrinking Minority? |author=Finn, Natalie |access-date=August 22, 2006 |date=November 7, 2007 |publisher=[[E! News]] |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070518233200/http://www.eonline.com/news/article/index.jsp?uuid=fd0da574-316b-4300-80a7-8662f9a096b2&entry=index |archive-date=May 18, 2007 |df=mdy-all }}</ref> Groening has stated that the staff wanted to out Patty as gay because portraying her as a "love-starved spinster [...] seemed old" on the show.<ref>{{cite book |title=The Advocate: Issues 985–991 |year=2007 |publisher=Liberation Publications |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qDIEAQAAIAAJ}}</ref> There had previously been hints about Patty's orientation. For example, in the [[The Simpsons season 13|season thirteen]] episode "[[Jaws Wired Shut]]" she is part of the Springfield [[Pride parade|Gay Pride Parade]]'s "stayin' in the closet" float, though only her voice was heard and she was not seen.<ref>{{cite book |last=McCann |first=Jesse L. |author-link=Jesse McCann |author2=Matt Groening |author2-link=Matt Groening |title=The Simpsons One Step Beyond Forever!: A Complete Guide to Our Favorite Family ...Continued Yet Again |publisher=[[HarperCollins]] |year=2005 |isbn=978-0-06-081754-1 |pages=[https://archive.org/details/simpsonsonestepb00matt/page/28 28–29] |title-link=The Simpsons One Step Beyond Forever!: A Complete Guide to Our Favorite Family ...Continued Yet Again }}</ref>
{{Simpsons character|
image= [[Image:LingBouvier.gif|200px]]|
name=Ling Bouvier|
gender=[[Female]]|
hair=Black|
age=possibly 1|
job=None|
relatives=See Above|
appearance=[[Goo Goo Gai Pan]]|
voiceactor=None|}}
'''Ling Bouvier''' was adopted by Selma Bouvier in China after discovering that she had reached menopause, in the 2005 episode "[[Goo Goo Gai Pan]]". She bought Ling after posing as Homer Simpson's wife in order to fool the Chinese authorities into thinking that Ling would be part of a traditional family as opposed to a single mother.


According to the publications ''Zeek: A Jewish Journal of Thought and Culture'' and ''Value War: Public Opinion and the Politics of Gay Rights'', it was the controversial lesbian outing of the main character (played by [[Ellen DeGeneres]]) in the sitcom ''[[Ellen (TV series)|Ellen]]'' in 1997 that paved the way for Patty's coming-out in "There's Something About Marrying", as well as for many other gay characters on other television shows.<ref>{{cite book |title=Zeek: A Jewish Journal of Thought and Culture |year=2005 |publisher=Metatronics, Inc. |page=78 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=LKA7AQAAIAAJ&q=patty+gay+ellen+%22the+simpsons%22}}</ref><ref name=Brewer>{{cite book |last=Brewer |first=Paul Ryan |title=Value War: Public Opinion and the Politics of Gay Rights |year=2008 |publisher=Rowman & Littlefield |isbn=978-0-7425-6211-0 |page=49 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=U34pJTdF-VcC&q=patty+gay+%22the+simpsons%22&pg=PA49}}</ref> In his book ''Queers in American Popular Culture'', Jim Elledge noted that it is possible the ''Simpsons'' staff chose Patty to come out as gay instead of a male character because lesbians were "traditionally considered more acceptable" on television. She did, however, not "adhere to the eroticized male lesbian fantasy or fit into the loveable, asexual guise of the comedy lesbian" that had previously been seen on shows such as ''Ellen''. Instead, Patty is "rude, crude, and not ashamed of declaring her sexual preferences", and this could make her unpalatable to some viewers according to Elledge.<ref name=Elledge>{{cite book |last=Elledge |first=Jim |title=Queers in American Popular Culture (Volume 2) |year=2010 |publisher=ABC-CLIO |isbn=978-0-313-35457-1 |pages=266–269 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qp52mROzDMYC&q=%22There%27s+Something+About+Marrying%22}}</ref>
Ling has only appeared in two episodes so far. First, she appeared in her adoption episode, and had a brief appearance in "[[Kiss Kiss, Bang Bangalore]]" when the twins open the door to discover "hostage" MacGyver (Richard Dean Anderson) missing. (Selma was holding Ling during the scene).


It was reported a long time in advance of the episode's airing in 2005 that a major character would come out as gay during the episode.<ref name="bbc">{{Cite news |title=Simpsons to reveal gay character |work=[[BBC News]] |date=July 28, 2004 |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/tv_and_radio/3932369.stm |access-date=June 19, 2011 }}</ref> There was a widespread debate among fans of the series as to who the character would be.<ref name=AVclubInventory>{{cite web |title=Inventory: 15 Simpsons Moments That Perfectly Captured Their Eras |url=https://www.avclub.com/15-simpsons-moments-that-perfectly-captured-their-eras-1798211882 |website=[[The A.V. Club]] |date=July 23, 2007 |publisher=July 23, 2007 |access-date=June 19, 2011}}</ref> Patty was suspected by many fans and the press because she had not often been seen dating men on the show.<ref name=Kiehl/><ref name=Maurstad>{{cite news |last=Maurstad |first=Tom (''[[The Dallas Morning News]]'') |title=Gay character revealed on 'Simpsons' |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=w9JYAAAAIBAJ&pg=6952,6039260&dq=patty+gay+the-simpsons&hl=en |access-date=June 20, 2011 |newspaper=[[The Spokesman-Review]] |date=February 19, 2005}}</ref> The tabloid newspaper ''[[The Sun (United Kingdom)|The Sun]]'' revealed already in September 2004 that character who would come out was Patty,<ref name=Wilkes>{{cite news |last=Wilkes |first=Neil |title=Gay 'Simpsons' character revealed |url=http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/tv/news/a16039/gay-simpsons-character-revealed.html |access-date=June 20, 2011 |newspaper=[[Digital Spy]] |date=September 30, 2004}}</ref> though this was regarded as a rumor and ''[[The Simpsons]]'' executive producer [[Al Jean]] would not confirm it.<ref name=Kiehl/><ref name=Hiatt>{{cite news |last=Hiatt |first=Brian |title=Springfield Fever |url=https://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,735559,00.html |access-date=June 20, 2011 |newspaper=[[Entertainment Weekly]] |date=November 5, 2004 |archive-date=February 9, 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070209140720/https://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,735559,00.html |url-status=dead }}</ref> Bookmakers in the United States and the United Kingdom took bets on which character would be uncovered as homosexual—[[BetUS]] laid odds at four to five that it was Patty, while Smithers had four to one odds and [[Ned Flanders]] fifteen to one odds.<ref name="Waxman">{{Citation |last=Waxman |first=Sharon |title='Simpsons' Animates Gay Nuptials, and a Debate |newspaper=[[The New York Times]] |date=February 21, 2005 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2005/02/21/arts/television/21simpsons.html |access-date=June 19, 2011 }}</ref><ref name=sandiego/> BetUS said gamblers made more than 900 bets on the coming-out on their website.<ref name=sandiego>{{cite news |title=Public Eye |url=http://www.signonsandiego.com/uniontrib/20050121/news_lz1c21pubeye.html |access-date=June 20, 2011 |newspaper=[[U-T San Diego]] |date=January 21, 2005}}</ref> According to ''[[The Baltimore Sun]]'', another bookmaker [[Paddy Power]] "stopped taking wagers because so much money was being placed on [Patty]."<ref name=Kiehl>{{cite news |last=Kiehl |first=Stephen (''[[The Baltimore Sun]]'') |title='The Simpsons' to 'out' a character |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=TlJWAAAAIBAJ&pg=5159,279267&dq=patty+gay+the-simpsons&hl=en |access-date=June 20, 2011 |newspaper=[[The Gainesville Sun]] |date=February 2, 2005}}</ref>
==Notes==
<references/>


<nowiki>*</nowiki>The first reference to Patty being gay, however, happened long before this 2005 episode, going all the way back to 1993, in season 4, episode 5: Treehouse of Horror III. in this Episode, Homer runs through the kitchen naked where Marge, Patty and Selma are all eating. Patty and Selma each put down their forks, and Patty remarks "There goes the last lingering thread of my heterosexuality". Since this is a Halloween episode, however, fans might not have presumed this to be canon.
==Quotes==
*''[A [[parole]] hearing is held for [[Sideshow Bob]].]''<br>'''Selma:''' Sideshow Bob tried to kill me on our [[honeymoon]].<br>'''Defense lawyer:''' How many people in this court are thinking of killing her right now?<br>''[Several people raise their hands]''<br>'''Defense lawyer:''' Be honest.<br>''[Everyone in the room raises their hands, including Patty. A man sitting next to her gasps]''<br>'''Patty:''' ''[to him]'' Ehh, she's always leaving the toilet seat up.
* ''Patty:'' (to Homer) Hey, Hairyass Tubman!
* ''Selma:'' (to Homer) Hey, Saturated Fats!
* ''Selma:'' "How could anyone as big as him (Homer) just disappear?" <br> ''Patty:'' "He disappeared into fat air"
* ''Patty:'' (to Bart) Some days we don't let the line move at all, we call those weekdays.


==See also==
==References==
{{Reflist|3}}
*[[List of characters from The Simpsons]]
;Bibliography
*[[List of twins in fiction|Other twins in fiction]]
{{refbegin}}
* {{cite book |last=Groening |first=Matt |author-link=Matt Groening |title=Simpsons World: The Ultimate Episode Guide: Seasons 1–20 |title-link=Simpsons World: The Ultimate Episode Guide: Seasons 1–20 |date=2010-10-28 |publisher=[[HarperCollins]] |year= |isbn=9780061711282 |editor1-last=Richmond |editor1-first=Ray |editor1-link=Ray Richmond |edition=1st |editor2-last=Gimple |editor2-first=Scott M. |editor2-link=Scott M. Gimple |editor-last3=McCann |editor-first3=Jessie L. |editor-last4=Seghers |editor-first4=Christine |editor-last5=Bates |editor-first5=James W.}}
{{refend}}


==External links==
{{Simpsons characters}}
* [https://www.simpsonsarchive.com/guides/patty_n_selma.html The Simpsons Archive: The Patty and Selma File]
{{The Simpsons}}


[[Category:The Simpsons characters|Bouvier, Patty & Selma]]
[[Category:The Simpsons characters]]
[[Category:Fictional twins|Bouvier, Patty & Selma]]
[[Category:Television characters introduced in 1989]]
[[Category:Animated duos]]
[[Category:Television duos]]
[[Category:Fictional civil servants]]
[[Category:Fictional identical twins]]
[[Category:Animated human characters]]
[[Category:Female characters in animated television series]]
[[Category:Female characters in film]]
[[Category:Characters created by Matt Groening]]
[[Category:Animated characters introduced in 1989]]
[[Category:Fictional tobacco addicts]]


[[da:Patty Bouvier]]
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[[da:Selma Bouvier]]
[[es:Patty Bouvier]]
[[es:Selma Bouvier]]
[[fr:Patty et Selma Bouvier]]
[[it:Patty & Selma Bouvier]]
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Latest revision as of 21:34, 13 November 2024

Patty and Selma Bouvier
The Simpsons characters
Patty (left) and Selma Bouvier
First appearance
Created byMatt Groening
Mimi Pond
Designed byMatt Groening
Voiced byJulie Kavner
In-universe information
Full namePatricia Maleficent Bouvier
Selma Bouvier-Terwilliger-Hutz-McClure-Discotheque-Simpson
GenderFemale
OccupationCivil servants, DMV
RelativesParents: Jacqueline, Clancy
Sisters: Marge and each other
Nephews: Hugo (non-canon), Bart
Nieces: Lisa, Maggie
Selma's Adopted Daughter (Patty's Adopted Niece): Ling
Brother-in-Law: Homer
Cousins: Dot
Aunts: Gladys Gurney (maternal aunt) and Charlene Bouvier (paternal aunt)
Grandmothers: Alvarine Gurney (maternal grandmother) and Bambi Bouvier (paternal grandmother)
Uncles: Lou Gurney (maternal uncle)
(See also Bouvier family)
Patty's former boyfriend: Principal Skinner
Patty's former lesbian girlfriends: Veronica, the professional golfer (who was actually a man disguised as a woman)
Evelyn
Selma's Ex-Husbands: (Patty's Ex-Brothers-in-law:) Sideshow Bob
Lionel Hutz
Grampa Simpson
Troy McClure
Disco Stu
Fat Tony D'Amico (Not legal ex-husband, their catholic wedding was just symbolic)

Patricia Maleficent "Patty" Bouvier[1] and Selma Bouvier-Terwilliger-Hutz-McClure-Discotheque-Simpson (née Bouvier /ˈbvi/ BOO-vee-ay) are fictional characters in the American animated sitcom The Simpsons. They are identical[2] twins and are voiced by Julie Kavner, who also voices their sister, Marge.[3] Patty and Selma, both gravel-voiced chain-smokers, work at the Springfield Department of Motor Vehicles. They have a strong dislike for their brother-in-law, Homer Simpson, who likewise loathes them. Selma, the elder by two minutes, longs for male companionship and has had multiple brief, doomed marriages, and has herself offered help in some fashion to Marge and Homer as she envies their loving relationship; she receives occasional compassionate support from Homer who even poses as her husband to help her adopt a child. Patty is an initially closeted lesbian who embraces celibacy until she begins dating women. Kavner voices them as characters who "suck the life out of everything".[4] Patty and Selma debuted on the first Simpsons episode "Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire", which aired on December 17, 1989.[5]

Distinguishing features

[edit]

Being twins, the two have a similar look, but there are several easy ways to distinguish them, including:

  • Hairstyle: Patty has an afro, while Selma's hair is parted in the middle.
  • Attire: Patty wears a short-sleeved pink dress and pink shoes while Selma wears a hemmed sleeveless blue dress and blue shoes.
  • Jewelry: Patty wears blue or orange triangular earrings and spherical beads connected by a visible string, while Selma wears orange or purple circular earrings (occasionally earrings shaped in an "S" in early episodes) and elliptical beads attached to each other.

They both resemble their chain-smoking father Clancy Bouvier who appeared in a flashback of the episode "The Way We Was". In the episode "The Blue and the Gray", it is revealed that Selma is actually a blonde, while Patty is a redhead. Their hair has turned blue-gray from long-term exposure to cigarette smoke and ash.

Biography

[edit]

Rarely seen apart, Patty and Selma are known for their distinctive gravelly voices, cynical outlook on life, bitter and unpleasant personalities, and love of cigarettes. They share an apartment at the Spinster City apartment complex and both work at the DMV. The two are avid, sometimes maniacal fans of the TV series, MacGyver. The two seem to be aroused by the character and smoke a cigarette after every viewing of the show. When Jay Sherman, on advice from Homer, told Patty and Selma that MacGyver is gay, they stripped him to his boxers and hung him from the gutters.[6] On the eve of Selma's marriage to Sideshow Bob, he insulted MacGyver and the wedding was almost cancelled as a result.[7] Selma and Patty once met the actor who portrayed MacGyver, Richard Dean Anderson, and kidnapped him.[8] Patty and Selma have taken many vacations together to various places including Czechoslovakia and the Dead Sea, where Selma sunk to the bottom when she attempted to float on her back.[9] Patty and Selma have also brought home "souvenirs" from their vacations, including a pillowcase full of seashells from their trip to Sulfur Bay that they forced the family to help them clean and organize.[10] They drove away Richard Dean Anderson by showing him slides of their trip to the Remington Carriage Museum in Cardston, Alberta.[8]

Patty and Selma have a strong, mutually reciprocated dislike for their brother-in-law Homer. They regret that Marge chose Homer over her former boyfriend Artie Ziff,[11] and have unsuccessfully tried to help Artie win her back.[12][13] However, Marge made it clear to her sisters that she loves Homer and there is nothing they can do to change her mind. Homer usually tries to be polite to them out of respect for Marge, but Patty and Selma do not hide their contempt for him. They showed little concern when Homer suffered a heart attack. While he was undergoing bypass surgery, they tried to set Marge up with a sleazy man named Andre.[14] They own a tombstone inscribed with the epitaph "Homer J. Simpson. We are richer for having lost him" and use it as a coffee table,[15] stick pins in a voodoo doll which looks like Homer[16] and even commissioned a billboard urging voters to evict Homer from Springfield.[17] When Homer contemplated suicide, they encouraged him to go through with it and then pushed him off the bridge, though this was actually part of a plot by the townspeople to bring Homer to his surprise party on a cruise ship.[18] Patty has also given stoner Otto Mann a driver's license due to their mutual dislike for Homer,[19] and both she and Selma deliberately failed Homer on his limousine driver's test, but their victory smoking nearly cost them their jobs until Homer intervened.[20] They once kidnapped Homer before his and Marge's third wedding and imprisoned him in a cellar in the hope that Marge would find someone else. Moved to tears by his obvious devotion to Marge, they let him go and paid for their wedding ceremony to avoid being exposed by Bart and Lisa.[21] For his part, Homer regards them as the "Gruesome Twosome"[22] or "Fatty and Smellma"[23] and was delighted when he (mistakenly) heard they had died.[24]

As children, Patty and Selma were apparently domineering towards Marge and ridiculed her ambition of becoming an astronaut. In return for their allowance, Marge used to do chores for them. The free time they now had led to them taking up smoking.[25] As adults, the Bouvier twins have a friendly relationship with their sister and seem very protective of her thus frequently visit the Simpsons. They seem relatively fond of their nieces and nephew, but seem to like them more when they are young, as one of them remarks "The older they get, the cuter they ain't."[26] On occasions, they babysit Bart, Lisa and Maggie, something not relished by the kids. Bart and Lisa were left traumatized when they had to stay with their aunts for a week while a stressed out Marge left for Rancho Relaxo. Maggie managed to take evasive action and got to stay with Homer instead.[27]

Patty Bouvier

[edit]

Patricia Maleficent Bouvier is the younger of the two.[28] Despite the similarities between her and Selma, Patty is more jaded than her sister, particularly towards relationships. It was once said by Marge that Patty chose a life of celibacy, and that Selma had it thrust upon her.[29] Her decision to not have relationships has been implied to be due to her then closeted sexuality. Earlier hints of her closeted sexuality were also shown in some of the show's earlier episodes, when she was reluctant to date Principal Skinner in Principal Charming; in Treehouse of Horror III, on seeing Homer naked, she claimed the experience destroyed "the last lingering thread of my heterosexuality." Generally, Patty is more hostile to Homer than Selma. However, when Patty came out as a lesbian, she found a surprising supporter in Homer (in contrast to Marge who was at first surprised and angry about it), and she swallowed her pride and asked him to perform her marriage ceremony.[28] They also teamed up to try to scupper the burgeoning relationship between Selma and Homer's father Abe.[30] Patty also joined Homer's group to ghost-write an original fantasy fiction novel, and also to stop their novel from being replaced with a drastically revamped version by the book publishing company.[31] In one episode, where Patty stayed at the Simpson house during a fight with Selma despite Homer's reluctance, Patty privately admitted to Homer that she only mocks him because she is jealous of him having a successful marriage and family with Marge, while all she has is Selma, leaving Homer feeling grateful for her having opened, albeit briefly, a window of kindness.[32]

Relationships

[edit]

Patty's only known relationship with a man involved Principal Skinner.[29] On a blind date arranged by Homer, Skinner was supposed to fall for Selma, but he noticed Patty first and fell in love with her instead. They dated for a while, though Patty often showed signs of reluctance through things like unjoyful facial expressions and turned down his marriage proposal, claiming him she was too devoted to Selma to abandon her. However, she did consider Skinner a gentleman and ended their relationship with the words "Good night, sweet principal."[29] Like Selma, Patty also has a long-running fixation on MacGyver, although this aspect of her personality has been played down in later episodes.

Patty was revealed to be lesbian in the season 16 episode "There's Something About Marrying", which follows Homer Simpson as he is ordained to perform same-sex marriages. Producer Al Jean had announced that a character would come out prior to the episode's airing, prompting widespread speculation.[33][34] Patty was the character that fans most suspected would come out.[35][33] The episode aired in 2005, when same-sex marriage was a major political issue in the United States.[34] The move was controversial, provoking outrage from opponents to same-sex marriage.[36] Entertainment columnist Ray Richmond credited Patty's coming out as a significant milestone for the gay rights movement, as it proved that the movement was prominent enough to feature in an episode of a mainstream sitcom.[35]

After coming out as a lesbian,[28] Patty exclaims "you could see it from space!". There had been many previous hints of her sexuality: she was seen visiting a burlesque house;[37] she exclaimed (upon seeing Homer naked) "There goes the last lingering thread of my heterosexuality";[38] she was seen hiding in a closet with Smithers on a parade float during a gay pride parade.[39] In another nod to Patty's sexuality being obvious, Homer sarcastically quipped, "Here's another bomb for ya, Marge: I like beer!" when Marge was shocked at the revelation.

Patty wooed a tenured professor from Yale University away from her husband[40] and has also been attracted to Edna Krabappel.[30] When Selma claimed she couldn't face prison, Patty replied that she could, implying she would welcome a female-only environment.[8] Patty's first serious relationship with a woman was with Veronica, a pro golfer. It was later discovered by Marge and revealed during Patty's wedding that Veronica was actually a man in disguise.[28] Patty's next serious relationship with a woman was with Evelyn, who quickly bonded with Homer over similar traits during a trip to Costa Rica. When Marge pointed out that Evelyn was ruining the trip and was a female version of Homer, a horrified Patty broke up with her. However, when a remorseful Marge apologized to Patty and reassured her that the difference between Homer and Evelyn was that Evelyn truly loved her, Patty decided to reconcile with Evelyn.[41]

Selma Bouvier

[edit]

Selma Bouvier is two minutes older than Patty. Due to a childhood bottle rocket accident, she has no sense of taste or smell.[42] According to Marge, Selma "likes Police Academy movies and Hummel figurines, and walking through the park on clear autumn days." In contrast to her twin, Selma yearns for male companionship and children. She is also slightly more sympathetic towards Homer than Patty. Selma helped reunite Homer and Marge after seeing how upset Marge was without him, despite an agreement with Patty not to say anything.[43] Homer was sympathetic to her when she broke down after a disastrous trip to Duff Gardens with Bart and Lisa, remarking "I just couldn't cut it today", referring to raising kids.[44] Homer also agreed to pose as Selma's husband to help her adopt a baby from China.[45] During Homer and Marge's trial separation, when Marge went out on a date with someone else, Selma called Homer and offered to help him save their marriage, but was left frustrated when Homer mistook her for Patty over the phone.[46]

Unable to find companionship in a man, Selma has also sought to have children. At one point she considered using a sperm donor which Homer mistakenly thought meant Selma would have sex with a robot.[44] After babysitting Bart and Lisa for a day, she realized she was not ready to have children and wound up adopting Jub-Jub, her late Aunt Gladys's pet iguana.[44][47] Much later, she adopted a Chinese baby girl, Ling. During the adoption process, Selma pretended to be married to Homer, since the Chinese government only allows children to be adopted by married couples.[48] After the fraud was exposed, Selma managed to keep the baby as a Chinese dignitary (voiced by Lucy Liu), who had also been raised by a single parent, became sympathetic.

Relationships

[edit]

Despite being identical twins, Patty and Selma have very different track records when it comes to finding dates. According to Marge, Patty chose a life of celibacy, while Selma had celibacy thrust upon her. Her standards are extremely low, as evidenced by her comments on Mr. Burns: "Single, eh? Well, he passes the Selma Test."

Selma has actively sought out a husband, and has been married to six different men. Her current name has evolved into Selma Bouvier-Terwilliger-Hutz-McClure-Stu-Simpson-D'Amico. Her first marriage, to Robert "Sideshow Bob" Terwilliger, ended when his plan to kill her was foiled by Bart.[42] After an off-screen marriage to Lionel Hutz,[49] she began dating Troy McClure. They married, but she soon discovered it was just a sham to boost his flagging career. She told him she was unwilling to bring a baby into a loveless marriage and broke it off.[50] Another unseen marriage was to Disco Stu,[28] which was annulled by the Pope. For a time she dated Abe Simpson, to the horror of Homer and Patty. Despite their objections, the two got married, but came to realize it would not work due to his age and her job, so they called it quits.[30] Her most recent husband is Fat Tony D'Amico, though he was already married and regarded Selma as his "gumare".[51] It has been implied that Selma had a second failed marriage to Sideshow Bob, giving her a total of seven marriages.[30]

One person Selma refused to marry was Apu Nahasapeemapetilon, because she said her collection of last names was long enough. However, there is evidence that she slept with Apu after Homer and Marge's second wedding. Selma has also dated various other men around Springfield, among them Hans Moleman,[50] Moe Szyslak,[52] and pitifully, Barney Gumble.[29] She was rejected by Groundskeeper Willie, who upon seeing her dating video remarked "Back to the Loch with you Nessie".[44]

Character

[edit]

Creation

[edit]

Series creator Matt Groening said he suggested that Kavner voice Patty and Selma as characters who "suck the life out of everything...."[4][53] Al Jean said Kavner makes Patty's voice more masculine and a lower register, while Selma's voice is a little sweeter.[54]

Development

[edit]

In the 2005 episode "There's Something About Marrying" of the sixteenth season, Patty was revealed to be a lesbian and became the first openly gay recurring character in the series.[55] Groening has stated that the staff wanted to out Patty as gay because portraying her as a "love-starved spinster [...] seemed old" on the show.[56] There had previously been hints about Patty's orientation. For example, in the season thirteen episode "Jaws Wired Shut" she is part of the Springfield Gay Pride Parade's "stayin' in the closet" float, though only her voice was heard and she was not seen.[57]

According to the publications Zeek: A Jewish Journal of Thought and Culture and Value War: Public Opinion and the Politics of Gay Rights, it was the controversial lesbian outing of the main character (played by Ellen DeGeneres) in the sitcom Ellen in 1997 that paved the way for Patty's coming-out in "There's Something About Marrying", as well as for many other gay characters on other television shows.[58][59] In his book Queers in American Popular Culture, Jim Elledge noted that it is possible the Simpsons staff chose Patty to come out as gay instead of a male character because lesbians were "traditionally considered more acceptable" on television. She did, however, not "adhere to the eroticized male lesbian fantasy or fit into the loveable, asexual guise of the comedy lesbian" that had previously been seen on shows such as Ellen. Instead, Patty is "rude, crude, and not ashamed of declaring her sexual preferences", and this could make her unpalatable to some viewers according to Elledge.[60]

It was reported a long time in advance of the episode's airing in 2005 that a major character would come out as gay during the episode.[61] There was a widespread debate among fans of the series as to who the character would be.[62] Patty was suspected by many fans and the press because she had not often been seen dating men on the show.[63][64] The tabloid newspaper The Sun revealed already in September 2004 that character who would come out was Patty,[65] though this was regarded as a rumor and The Simpsons executive producer Al Jean would not confirm it.[63][66] Bookmakers in the United States and the United Kingdom took bets on which character would be uncovered as homosexual—BetUS laid odds at four to five that it was Patty, while Smithers had four to one odds and Ned Flanders fifteen to one odds.[67][68] BetUS said gamblers made more than 900 bets on the coming-out on their website.[68] According to The Baltimore Sun, another bookmaker Paddy Power "stopped taking wagers because so much money was being placed on [Patty]."[63]

*The first reference to Patty being gay, however, happened long before this 2005 episode, going all the way back to 1993, in season 4, episode 5: Treehouse of Horror III. in this Episode, Homer runs through the kitchen naked where Marge, Patty and Selma are all eating. Patty and Selma each put down their forks, and Patty remarks "There goes the last lingering thread of my heterosexuality". Since this is a Halloween episode, however, fans might not have presumed this to be canon.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Bailey, Timothy; Kelley, Brian (November 17, 2019). "Livin La Pura Vida". The Simpsons. Season 31. Episode 7. Fox. Patricia Maleficent Bouvier, I've put up with you criticizing my husband for years, and I've had it.
  2. ^ "Patty Bouvier". Wikisimpsons. Retrieved November 25, 2021.
  3. ^ Groening 2010, p. 1099.
  4. ^ a b Rhodes, Joe. "Flash! 24 Simpsons Stars Reveal Themselves" Archived August 12, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, TV Guide October 21, 2000, via The Simpsons Archive: "[Matt] Groening says: 'My original idea about Marge's family was they were utterly joyless. The original note I gave to Julie was that they suck the life out of everything they see'".
  5. ^ Groening 2010, p. 25.
  6. ^ The Simpsons – "A Star is Burns"
  7. ^ The Simpsons. "Black Widower"
  8. ^ a b c The Simpsons – "Kiss Kiss, Bang Bangalore"
  9. ^ The Simpsons. "Flaming Moe's"
  10. ^ The Simpsons. "Treehouse of Horror VI"
  11. ^ The Simpsons – "The Way We Was"
  12. ^ The Simpsons – "Half-Decent Proposal"
  13. ^ The Simpsons – "The Ziff Who Came to Dinner"
  14. ^ The Simpsons. "Homer's Triple Bypass"
  15. ^ The Simpsons – "Mother Simpson"
  16. ^ The Simpsons – "Homer and Apu"
  17. ^ The Simpsons – "Three Gays of the Condo"
  18. ^ The Simpsons – "Eternal Moonshine of the Simpson Mind"
  19. ^ The Simpsons. "The Otto Show"
  20. ^ The Simpsons. "Homer vs. Patty and Selma"
  21. ^ The Simpsons – "Wedding for Disaster"
  22. ^ The Simpsons – "Krusty Gets Busted"
  23. ^ The Simpsons. "The Fat and the Furriest
  24. ^ The Simpsons – "American History X-cellent"
  25. ^ The Simpsons – "Three Men and a Comic Book"
  26. ^ The Simpsons – "Lisa's First Word"
  27. ^ The Simpsons – "Homer Alone"
  28. ^ a b c d e The Simpsons. "There's Something About Marrying"
  29. ^ a b c d The Simpsons. "Principal Charming"
  30. ^ a b c d The Simpsons"Rome-old and Juli-eh"
  31. ^ The Simpsons – "The Book Job"
  32. ^ The Simpsons – "Puffless"
  33. ^ a b "Simpsons to reveal gay character". BBC News. July 28, 2004. Archived from the original on May 12, 2022. Retrieved April 14, 2023.
  34. ^ a b "Simpsons' gay character is Patty". BBC News. February 21, 2005. Archived from the original on July 3, 2022. Retrieved April 14, 2023.
  35. ^ a b Waxman, Sharon (February 21, 2005). "'Simpsons' Animates Gay Nuptials, and a Debate". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived from the original on May 12, 2022. Retrieved April 14, 2023.
  36. ^ Keslowitz, Steven (2006). The World According to the Simpsons: What Our Favorite TV Family Says about Life, Love, and the Pursuit of the Perfect Donut. Sourcebooks. p. 25. ISBN 978-1-4022-0655-9.
  37. ^ The Simpsons – "Bart After Dark"
  38. ^ The Simpsons – "Treehouse of Horror III"
  39. ^ The Simpsons – "Jaws Wired Shut"
  40. ^ The Simpsons. "Homer Simpson, This is Your Wife"
  41. ^ Bailey, Timothy; Kelley, Brian (November 17, 2019). "Livin La Pura Vida". The Simpsons. Season 31. Episode 7. Fox.
  42. ^ a b The Simpsons- "Black Widower"
  43. ^ The Simpsons – "I Married Marge"
  44. ^ a b c d The Simpsons. "Selma's Choice"
  45. ^ The Simpsons – "Goo Goo Gai Pan"
  46. ^ The Simpsons – "Every Man's Dream"
  47. ^ According to a The Simpsons DVD commentary and by episode writer O'Brien on Late Night with Conan O'Brien
  48. ^ "In the Family Way" Archived October 28, 2006, at the Wayback Machine, The Next Big Thing, October 10, 2003. Julia Sweeney tells about the messages she received from Chinese adoption agencies trying to confirm her heterosexuality due to government opposition to gay adoption
  49. ^ The Simpsons "Much Apu About Nothing"
  50. ^ a b The Simpsons. "A Fish Called Selma"
  51. ^ The Simpsons. "The Real Housewives of Fat Tony"
  52. ^ The Simpsons. "'Scuse Me While I Miss The Sky"
  53. ^ Groening, Matt (2001). The Simpsons season 1 DVD commentary for the episode 'Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire' (DVD). 20th Century Fox.
  54. ^ Jean, Al (2004). The Simpsons The Complete Fourth Season DVD commentary for the episode "Selma's Choice" (DVD). 20th Century Fox.
  55. ^ Finn, Natalie (November 7, 2007). ""Simpsons'" Smithers Part of Shrinking Minority?". E! News. Archived from the original on May 18, 2007. Retrieved August 22, 2006.
  56. ^ The Advocate: Issues 985–991. Liberation Publications. 2007.
  57. ^ McCann, Jesse L.; Matt Groening (2005). The Simpsons One Step Beyond Forever!: A Complete Guide to Our Favorite Family ...Continued Yet Again. HarperCollins. pp. 28–29. ISBN 978-0-06-081754-1.
  58. ^ Zeek: A Jewish Journal of Thought and Culture. Metatronics, Inc. 2005. p. 78.
  59. ^ Brewer, Paul Ryan (2008). Value War: Public Opinion and the Politics of Gay Rights. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 49. ISBN 978-0-7425-6211-0.
  60. ^ Elledge, Jim (2010). Queers in American Popular Culture (Volume 2). ABC-CLIO. pp. 266–269. ISBN 978-0-313-35457-1.
  61. ^ "Simpsons to reveal gay character". BBC News. July 28, 2004. Retrieved June 19, 2011.
  62. ^ "Inventory: 15 Simpsons Moments That Perfectly Captured Their Eras". The A.V. Club. July 23, 2007. July 23, 2007. Retrieved June 19, 2011.
  63. ^ a b c Kiehl, Stephen (The Baltimore Sun) (February 2, 2005). "'The Simpsons' to 'out' a character". The Gainesville Sun. Retrieved June 20, 2011.
  64. ^ Maurstad, Tom (The Dallas Morning News) (February 19, 2005). "Gay character revealed on 'Simpsons'". The Spokesman-Review. Retrieved June 20, 2011.
  65. ^ Wilkes, Neil (September 30, 2004). "Gay 'Simpsons' character revealed". Digital Spy. Retrieved June 20, 2011.
  66. ^ Hiatt, Brian (November 5, 2004). "Springfield Fever". Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on February 9, 2007. Retrieved June 20, 2011.
  67. ^ Waxman, Sharon (February 21, 2005), "'Simpsons' Animates Gay Nuptials, and a Debate", The New York Times, retrieved June 19, 2011
  68. ^ a b "Public Eye". U-T San Diego. January 21, 2005. Retrieved June 20, 2011.
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