The Statue

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The Statue
Seinfeld episode

George and Kramer fight over the statue.
Episode no. Season 2
Episode 11
Written by Larry Charles
Directed by Tom Cherones
Original airdate April 11, 1991
Season 2 episodes
Seinfeld - Season 2
January - June 1991
  1. "The Ex-Girlfriend"
  2. "The Pony Remark"
  3. "The Jacket"
  4. "The Phone Message"
  5. "The Apartment"
  6. "The Statue"
  7. "The Revenge"
  8. "The Heart Attack"
  9. "The Deal"
  10. "The Baby Shower"
  11. "The Chinese Restaurant"
  12. "The Busboy"
List of Seinfeld episodes

"The Statue" is the eleventh episode of Seinfeld. The episode was the sixth episode for the show's second season. It aired on April 11, 1991.

[edit] Plot

Jerry receives some old possessions of his grandfather. Among them are a hat that reminds Kramer of Joe Friday of Dragnet, so he takes it. The next object Kramer takes out of the box is a statue that looks just like one George's family had, until George broke it. Jerry promises that George can have it, but leaves it in his apartment for a few days. Jerry later has his apartment cleaned by the boyfriend ("Ray") of Elaine's client ("Rava") and is very impressed by the quality of the cleaning.

Jerry and Elaine go to Ray's apartment, where Jerry sees the statue. He calls Kramer to see whether or not it is missing from his apartment. It is, and the group believes that Ray stole it. Kramer urges Jerry to do something about it, but Elaine argues against this, afraid that Rava will no longer let her edit her book. Elaine and Rava do get into an argument, which results in her being removed from editing Rava's book.

Kramer chooses to go to Ray's apartment, dressed as Joe Friday, and pretends to be, as he said, "a cop, a good cop, a DAMN GOOD COP!!" Ray falls for it, and Kramer retrieves the statue from the apartment. Kramer returns the statue to a grateful George, but George winds up dropping it when Kramer gives him a friendly slap on the back.

In an interview used for the Season 1&2 DVD set, Michael Richards stated that episode was the one that truly defined the Kramer character.

[edit] Production

Up until this point (production order), Kramer has been depicted as dumb and behind the group. This is the episode which changes Kramer completely by bringing the more bizarre side and also playing in disguise so Michael Richards go up to Larry David, Larry Charles and Jerry Seinfeld and say "We should keep going that way. It's bringing me out. Also after this episode, he now plays more smart and over the top wacky neighbour which works well along the rest of the cast.

Julia mentions "There's Ray. Late as usual." as one of the early catch phrases.

[edit] External links