The Ex-Girlfriend

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"The Ex-Girlfriend"
Seinfeld episode
Episode no.Season 2
Episode 1
Directed byTom Cherones
Written byLarry David
Jerry Seinfeld
Production code201
Original air dateJanuary 23, 1991 (1991-01-23)
Guest appearances
  • Tracy Kolis as Marlene
  • Karen Barcus as Receptionist
Episode chronology
← Previous
"The Stock Tip"
Next →
"The Pony Remark"
Seinfeld season 2
List of episodes

"The Ex-Girlfriend" is the first episode of the sitcom Seinfeld's second season and the show's sixth episode overall.[1] The episode was first broadcast on NBC in the United States on January 23, 1991, after being postponed for one week due to the start of the First Gulf War. During the course of the show, George Costanza breaks up with his girlfriend Marlene and leaves some books in her apartment. He persuades his friend Jerry to retrieve them. Jerry starts dating Marlene, who annoys him as much as she did George, but he finds himself unable to break up with her because she has a "psycho-sexual" hold on him.

Co-written by the series' co-creators

Nielsen rating
of 10.9/17 and was positively received by critics.

Plot

George wants to break up with his girlfriend Marlene, whose tendency to drag out conversations and phone messages irritates him. After an emotional split, he realizes he has left some books in her apartment. Jerry tries to convince George that he does not need the books, as he has already read them, but George nevertheless persuades Jerry to get them for him. Jerry meets with Marlene so he can retrieve the books. She tells him that she and Jerry can still be friends, despite her recent break-up. Jerry and Marlene start dating; though Jerry finds her just as annoying as George did, and fears that George will be enraged when he finds out they are dating, he finds she has a "psycho-sexual" hold on him.

Elaine is upset that a man she was once friendly acquaintances with now no longer even gives her a nod of acknowledgment when she sees him. She eventually builds up the courage to aggressively confront him about this. Inspired by her example, Jerry tells George about Marlene. George tells Jerry he has no problem with him dating Marlene. The following night, Jerry asks Marlene to come up to his apartment, but she breaks up with him. She says she did not think his stand-up comedy act was funny, and she could not date someone if she did not respect what they did.

Cultural references

The episode contains a number of

chiropractor, he states "75 bucks? What, am I seeing Sinatra
in there?"

Production

A bald man with white hair around his ears. He is wearing a black suit, blue shirt, glasses and a red tie.
Seinfeld co-creator Larry David co-wrote the episode.

The episode was written by series co-creators Larry David and Jerry Seinfeld and directed by Tom Cherones.[3][4] David based the story on a personal experience of his, when he gave a ride home to a woman who had recently dated a friend of his.[2] He would frequently come up with the idea for an episode and make it into a teleplay with Seinfeld's help; in a 1991 interview with the Los Angeles Times, Seinfeld stated: "Most of the stories are from [David's] life. He just has a tremendous wellspring of ideas. I mean, he just fills notebooks with ideas and I try to help him, but Larry is really the designer of the show."[2][5] David Sims of The A.V. Club commented, "Seinfeld started its second season, its first real season after a four-episode test run, very strongly with "The Ex-Girlfriend", and it is the first time we really see George as the character we know and love, that weird dark shadow of Larry David's mind who behaves as no functioning human being honestly could."[6]

Among the actresses who auditioned for the part of Marlene were

extra during the second scene, walking by twice in different clothing.[2]

The first

Desilu Cahuenga, in Hollywood, where The Dick Van Dyke Show had also been filmed.[9] Tom Azzari designed the sets for the second season of the show, and was able to re-use various sets from the first season, thanks to Castle Rock Entertainment's decision to store them in a large storage facility. The chiropractor's waiting room, in which George believes he was charged too much for a visit, was the only new set which appeared in the episode.[2]

Monk's Cafe
.

Although the scenes in

p.m. One or two members of the crew shook the car to give the impression that it was moving, though it never actually was. Other crew members would move lights around the set to simulate street lights or headlights of other cars. Behind the car, two lights on a wheeled stand were placed to give the impression that there was a car behind it. This technique is called "poor man's process", because it is cheaper than other ways of achieving the effect.[2] The show had previously experimented with this technique in the season one episode "The Stake Out".[11]

Some scenes in the episode were cut prior to broadcast. The opening scene in Jerry's car, in which George discusses breaking up with Marlene, originally had George proposing that he would stage his own kidnapping while walking down the street with Marlene, then hide out until she had given up on him. Although it was cut before the episode's broadcast, this scene was included on the Seinfeld Volume 1 DVD set. Another scene which was cut featured Jerry's neighbor Kramer entering Jerry's apartment carrying a plate with cantaloupe on toothpicks.[2][12] Originally, the scene in which Jerry tells George that he is dating Marlene took place in a library, with a librarian repeatedly shushing George and Jerry and kicking them out of the library at the end of the scene. The location was changed to Monk's Cafe because the dialogue had nothing to do with a library.[2]

Reception

"The Ex-Girlfriend" was first broadcast on NBC on January 23, 1991, after being postponed for one week due to the start of the First Gulf War. The episode gained a Nielsen rating of 10.9 and an audience share of 17, meaning that 10.9% of American households watched the episode and 17% of all televisions in use at the time were tuned into it. Although Seinfeld would be considered a hit show by today's standards, NBC was disappointed with its ratings, and, after three weeks, put the show on a two-month break.[2]

Critics reacted positively to the episode.

Wilmington Morning Star, called the episode's writing and acting "anything but hackneyed" and stated, "One safe prediction, Seinfeld will be here for a good long run this time around (referring to how its first season only had five episodes)."[14] Joyce Millman of Salon.com stated that she disliked Seinfeld's pilot episode, but after seeing a scene from "The Ex-Girlfriend" in which Jerry and Kramer discuss returning fruit, she was "awed by Seinfeld and co-creator/writer Larry David's brilliant grasp of, A) working-class Jewish craziness, and, B) the absurd humor of the deeply mundane."[15]

In a review of the episode, Jon Burlingame of The Spokesman-Review stated, "Seinfeld is an offbeat take on the standard sitcom concept. While rarely hilarious, it's often smart and amusing."[16] In his review of the episode, Chicago Tribune critic Rick Kogan stated, "Hip without posing, it delivers its comedy in sharp and spectacular style".[17]

Mike Flaherty and Mary Kaye Schilling of Entertainment Weekly called "The Ex-Girlfriend" "The series' most multifaceted (if not most engaging) narrative so far", and graded it with a B.[4] David Sims gave the episode an A, writing, "George is really the most revolutionary character: he's often repulsive and pathetic, but here these are traits we heartily enjoy and sympathize with and want more of... The best thing about this episode is that Jerry almost immediately getting with George's ex-girlfriend creates no drama in the group, though it would on almost any other sitcom."[6]

A relatively negative review came from Chicago Sun-Times critic Lon Grahnke, who criticized Seinfeld's part in the episode: "[..]this comedy series must ride on the shoulders of its star. And Seinfeld spends too much time shrugging".[18] He also noted Dreyfus was not granted screentime, as opposed to Richards, whose acting performances he described as "get[ting] tiresome".[18] Overall, Grahnke commented "At his best, Seinfeld draws a chuckle or two from his middle-brow remarks on modern life and its perplexing contradictions. At his worst, the comedian shows the smugness of a detached star who can mechanically control the level of laughter that greets whatever quip he may utter."[18]

References

  1. ^ "Seinfeld Season 2 Episodes". TV Guide. Archived from the original on 2 December 2021. Retrieved 2 December 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Seinfeld Seasons 1 & 2: Notes about Nothing - "The Ex-Girlfriend" (DVD). Sony Pictures Home Entertainment. November 3, 2004.
  3. .
  4. ^ a b Schilling, Mary Kaye; Flaherty, Mike (April 7, 2008). "The Seinfeld Chronicles: Season Two". Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on October 13, 2012. Retrieved August 26, 2009.
  5. ^ Weinstein, Steve (September 4, 1991). "Tiny Issues, Big Laughs Seinfeld Earns Right to Weekly Berth to Toy With Life's Little Dilemmas". Los Angeles Times. p. F1.
  6. ^ a b Sims, David (June 17, 2010). "The Ex-Girlfriend"/"The Pony Remark"/"The Busboy". The A.V. Club. Archived from the original on December 29, 2011. Retrieved September 26, 2012.
  7. ^ Roeper, Richard (November 21, 2004). "It's about nothing, but I've learned a lot". Chicago Sun-Times. p. 1.
  8. ^ Seinfeld Seasons 1 & 2: Notes about Nothing - "The Stake Out" (DVD). Sony Pictures Home Entertainment.
  9. ^ Reiner, Rob; Ludwin, Rick; Seinfeld, Jerry; David, Larry; Alexander, Jason (November 3, 2004). Seinfeld Seasons 1 & 2: Inside Looks - "The Seinfeld Chronicles" (DVD). Sony Pictures Home Entertainment.
  10. ^ Stansbury, Robin (October 4, 1998). "Monk's Cafe Part of Museum's Seinfeld Exhibit". Hartford Courant. p. F3.
  11. ^ Seinfeld, Jerry; David, Larry. Seinfeld Seasons 1 & 2: Audio Commentary for "The Stake Out" (DVD). Sony Pictures Home Entertainment.
  12. ^ Seinfeld Seasons 1 & 2: Deleted Scenes - "The Ex-Girlfriend" (DVD). Sony Pictures Home Entertainment. November 3, 2004.
  13. The Atlanta Journal
    . p. E11.
  14. Wilmington Morning Star
    . p. 5B.
  15. ^ Millman, Joyce (May 4, 1998). "Cheerio, "Seinfeld"". Salon.com. Archived from the original on July 26, 2009. Retrieved August 16, 2009.
  16. ^ Burlingame, Jon (January 16, 1991). "Seinfeld steps smartly back on to schedule". The Spokesman-Review. p. C3. Retrieved August 16, 2009.
  17. ^ Kogan, Rick (January 16, 1991). "Good, clean fun Jerry Seinfeld's summer series gets a chance where it counts". Chicago Tribune. p. 5.
  18. ^ a b c Grahnke, Lon (January 16, 1991). "Jerry Seinfeld returns as his comic alter ego". Chicago Sun-Times. p. 43.

External links