'Simpson: the origin of the famous "D'oh
Sky world news/ coming the famous cry that Homer were is makes every time he's upset? While season 31 of "The Simpsons" a look back at the origin of the famous "D'oh!" Besides his famous “Ouh pinaise!”, It is probably the most famous speech tic of Homer Simpson in the cult animated series created by Matt Groening (available on Disney ).
Indeed, each time he is angry, upset, annoyed or simply surprised (that is to say very often), the dad of the Simpson family lets out an "D'oh!" more or less sound. But where did this little expression come from? It is to his original vocal interpreter Dan Castellaneta (who has lent him his voice for more than 30 years now), that we owe the invention of this mythical onomatopoeia. As he related in an interview, he drew his inspiration from another monument of comedy that enchanted his childhood: the cinema of Laurel and Hardy. "The 'D'oh!' Came in because at that precise moment, I was supposed to make an angry growl," he told the Archive of American Television microphone.
"I asked Matt [Groening] what it meant. He said it could be whatever I wanted. And I remembered the Laurel and Hardy movies I watched on TV as a kid. . There was this Scottish comedian, Jim Finlayson, who was kind of a stooge for Laurel and Hardy, and always did that “Doooooh.” Then, thinking about it, I found out he was trying by saying "Damn", but he couldn't. So it turned into "D-oooooh