'Round Springfield

"'Round Springfield" is the twenty-second episode of the sixth season of the American animated television series The Simpsons. It originally aired on the Fox network in the United States on April 30, 1995. In the episode, Bart is hospitalized after eating a piece of jagged metal in his Krusty-O's cereal and sues Krusty the Clown. While visiting Bart, Lisa discovers her old mentor, jazz musician Bleeding Gums Murphy, is also in the hospital. When he dies suddenly, she resolves to honor his memory. Steve Allen (as himself) and Ron Taylor (as Bleeding Gums Murphy) guest star, each in his second appearance on the show. Dan Higgins also returns as the writer and performer of all of Lisa and Bleeding Gums' saxophone solos.

"'Round Springfield"
The Simpsons episode
Episode no.Season 6
Episode 22
Directed bySteven Dean Moore
Story byAl Jean
Mike Reiss
Teleplay byJoshua Sternin
Jennifer Ventimilia
Production code2F32
Original air dateApril 30, 1995 (1995-04-30)
Guest appearances
  • Ron Taylor as Bleeding Gums Murphy
  • Steve Allen as himself
  • Phil Hartman as Lionel Hutz
  • Marcia Wallace as Edna Krabappel
Episode features
Chalkboard gag"Nerve gas is not a toy"
Couch gagThe family's heights are reversed; Maggie is now the largest while Homer is the smallest.
CommentaryAl Jean
Mike Reiss
Joshua Sternin
Jennifer Ventimilia
Steven Dean Moore

The episode was written by Joshua Sternin and Jennifer Ventimilia – based on a story idea by Al Jean and Mike Reiss – and was the first episode directed by Steven Dean Moore. Jean and Reiss, who were previously the series' showrunners, returned to produce this episode (as well as "A Star Is Burns") to ease the workload of the show's regular staff. They worked on it alongside the staff of The Critic, the series they had left The Simpsons to create. The episode marks the series' first time that a recurring character was killed off, something the staff had considered for a while. The episode features numerous cultural references, including Carole King's song "Jazzman", the actor James Earl Jones and the Kimba the White Lion/The Lion King controversy.

The episode also features the phrase "cheese-eating surrender monkeys", used by Groundskeeper Willie to describe the French. The phrase has since entered the public lexicon. It has been used and referenced by journalists and academics, and it appears in two Oxford quotation dictionaries.

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