Professor Farnsworth

Professor Farnsworth
Futurama character
First appearance "Space Pilot 3000"
Voiced by Billy West
David Herman[1]
Information
Species Human
Gender Male
Occupation Scientist
CEO and owner of Planet Express delivery company
Professor at Mars University
Relatives Distant uncle: Philip J. Fry
Distant grandfather: Yancy Fry, Jr.
Clone: Cubert Farnsworth

Professor Hubert J. Farnsworth, or simply Professor, is a fictional character in the American animated television series Futurama. He is voiced by Billy West using a combination of impressions of Burgess Meredith and Frank Morgan.[2] Farnsworth is the proprietor of the Planet Express delivery service, for whom the main characters work. He is the great (×30) nephew of Philip J. Fry, one of the series' protagonists.

Contents

Character history

The Professor is a self-described mad scientist. The creator of the show named him after electronic television pioneer Philo Farnsworth,[3] giving him the same first name as University of California Philosophy professor Hubert Dreyfus, of whom writer and producer Eric Kaplan was a former student. The Professor is a senile, amoral, deranged, and unpredictable old man with a gift for creating doomsday devices and atomic supermen. He has put at least one parallel universe in peril with his inventions and visited dozens more (see The Farnsworth Parabox).

The Professor teaches at Mars University and has worked for Momcorp on several occasions, but spends most of his time inventing ridiculous devices and sending the Planet Express delivery crew on suicide missions. While at Momcorp, he fell in love with the CEO, Mom, only to leave her and Momcorp when she decided to weaponize his "Q.T. McWhiskers" toy. What he is a professor of is never explicitly stated. He demonstrates mastery of whatever field of science is convenient for a given episode's plot; however, in the episode Mars University when asked what he is teaching, he responds: "The same thing I teach every semester, the mathematics of quantum neutrino fields. I made up the title so no student would dare take it." Approximately 100 years ago he taught a young Professor Wernstrom, whom Farnsworth regarded as a prized student. After returning a pop quiz to Wernstrom with a grade of A-minus, the two became bitter rivals (established in "A Big Piece of Garbage").

Being Philip J. Fry's great (x30) nephew, it is likely that he is the great (x29) grandson of Yancy Fry, Philip J. Fry's brother from the 20th century. This would also make him the great (x28) grandson of Philip J. Fry, Yancy's son (named after the series' protagonist), though his exact shared family members with Fry have not been stated. However, since Fry was revealed to be his own grandfather (established in Roswell that Ends Well and confirmed in The Why of Fry) he is also Fry's direct descendant, specifically his great (x31) grandson.

In "All the Presidents' Heads," he reveals that he is descended from Philo Farnsworth (see above); Dean Farnsworth, who created the Farnsworth Lantern Test to check for color vision problems in military aviators and sailors; and David Farnsworth, a colonial-era counterfeiter who was eventually hanged for his crimes.

The Professor's eyes have never been seen, but in Mother's Day it is suggested he has cataracts covering both eyes.

Characterizations

The Professor is characterized by the catch-phrase "Good news, everyone!", frequently followed by very bad news or the announcement of a suicide mission; he acknowledges this in The Beast with a Billion Backs. On the very few occasions he has actual good news, he opens with "Bad news, everyone!" After firing Fry in "Law & Oracle", he states that he only says these phrases to make Fry "feel better about his pointless job." Another is his exclamation, "Sweet zombie Jesus!" He often says "Wha?" when unaware of the situation, or when someone questions a statement he has just made. The Professor often makes mutually contradictory statements just moments apart; this happens especially often when briefing his employees, with the prevailing second statement canceling a much more reassuring first sentence. For example, in "The Sting", he tells the crew their mission is to collect "ordinary honey." When told that it doesn't sound so dangerous, the Professor responds angrily, "This is no ordinary honey!"

In early episodes, Farnsworth would often see the crew in peril, but do nothing as he was "already in his pajamas". This was an early attempt at a catchprase that was scrapped after a few episodes.

Age and "death"

The Professor is one of the oldest human beings on Earth (excluding those who have been cryogenically frozen or are kept alive as heads in jars), a title that he acquired after the events of the episode "A Clone of My Own", in which it was revealed that upon turning 160 (which he claimed was his 150th birthday), all humans are collected by the Sunset Robot Squad and sent to live out the rest of their days in isolation aboard the gigantic Near-Death Star (a play on the Death Star). He mentions to his crew that he is actually 160 years old, and has been lying to protect himself. In episode 7 of the first season, "A Big Piece of Garbage," Farnsworth states, "Perhaps 149 is just too old to be a scientist."

In "Teenage Mutant Leela's Hurdles" his age is stated to be 161, and after he swam in the Fountain of Aging, he reported that he was "Even older! Huzzah!" His clone Cubert Farnsworth takes control of Planet Express, claiming the Professor had himself declared legally dead for tax evasion reasons. The Professor denies this allegation, claiming "you take one nap in a ditch at the park and they start declaring you this and that!" In Bender's Game, he stated that he is 165 years old.

In the episode "The Prisoner of Benda", Professor Farnsworth mentions in a conversation with Amy that he is entering into his 18th decade, indicating that he is over 170 years old. This age suggests that the world of Futurama progresses in years with the real world.

Relationships

The Professor rarely worries about the safety of the crew, viewing them as a means to an end, as evidenced in the first episode. After remarking that he was looking for a new crew for his intergalactic space ship, he was asked "What happened to your old crew?" His response was "Oh, those poor sons of a... — but that's not important! What is important is that I need a new crew!" Farnsworth's employees later discover that their predecessors died while gathering not-ordinary honey from Space Bees ("The Sting"). The Professor issues his new crew the previous crew's career chips from a manila envelope labeled "Contents Of Space Wasp's Stomach" ("Space Pilot 3000").

He frequently sends his crew on dangerous missions even when he has the foreknowledge that they will probably not make it back alive. His missions are typically those other delivery companies will not take, such as serving subpoenas to Mafia-controlled worlds or casual deliveries to virus-infested planets. Even the commercial that he had produced for his company makes several remarks to this effect, including "When other companies aren't crazy or foolhardy enough…" and "Our crew is replaceable, your package isn't."

In one episode when the crew and his ship are sent off to war, he immediately tries to hire another crew, going so far as to assign them similar character roles ('...and you'll be the foul mouthed, alcoholic robot'); he is clearly surprised to be interrupted by his old crew returning, exclaiming "Oh God, you're alive! I mean, thank God you're alive," before telling the would-be new crew to check back in a week. Even his familial relationship to Fry does not do much (if anything) to dampen the glee with which he assigns deadly delivery missions. When asked about the nature of his delivery "business", Farnsworth once clarified that he viewed his company more as "a source of cheap labor, like a family." He also frequently covets his employees' organs and blood; he once mentioned that he keeps Amy Wong around because they share a blood type. In another episode, he tries to get Hermes Conrad to kill himself in a way that would not damage his liver because "other people need it".

It is established in the episode "Mother's Day" that the Professor was once Mom's lover and employee. However, they could not maintain their relationship due to Mom's lust for power, prompting them to break up (this reportedly happened three times). When Mom takes control of all the world's robots to cause an uprising, her sons Walt, Larry, and Igner attempt to get the Professor to seduce Mom and retrieve the remote for the robots. They get back together briefly, but break up once more when Mom learns the Professor had been initially using her. It is revealed in Bender's Game that the Professor is the biological father of Mom's youngest son Igner — ironically (or not), the one that the Professor despises the most.

It was revealed in "Proposition Infinity" that he had a relationship with a 'fem-bot', though she later left him for a robot causing him to hate all robosexuals.

A creepy utilization of his body occurred in "The Prisoner of Benda", when he trades bodies with Amy. Amy then proceeds to trade bodies with Leela, causing Fry to himself trade bodies with Dr. Zoidberg. Leela used Farnsworth's body to prove that her relationship with Fry is partially physical. At dinner, Leela (in Farnsworth's Body) is disgusted by Fry (in Zoidberg's body), and vice-versa. When Leela-Farnsworth tells Fry-Zoidberg to prove his love, Fry-Zoidberg passionately kisses Leela-Farnsworth. This eventually leads to Leela-Farnsworth having Intercourse with Fry-Zoidberg. This marks the first known time Fry physically slept with a male. Mentally, however, Leela was the one who slept with Fry-Zoidberg.

Finances

The Professor claims to have created Planet Express to fund his experiments, though the company is frequently on the verge of bankruptcy. This is highlighted during "Future Stock," in which Hermes shows a pie chart of their income, the larger portion of it (approximately 65%) showing a bank error in their favor; and in "Neutopia," in which the company faces foreclosure due to missed mortgage payments. In Futurama: The Game, which may not be considered canon, the Professor laments that the crew never remembers to charge anyone for the deliveries. The Professor is still capable of funding his experiments and paying for the inevitable repairs after the experiments go awry. The Professor states and/or implies in both "A Clone of My Own" and "Anthology of Interest I" that he has a vast fortune saved up.

Achievements

Professor Farnsworth has pioneered many important inventions throughout the series, including the design of all modern robots and the meta-particles capable of converting dark matter into useful energy. Farnsworth has also received many honors. For stopping global warming and Richard Nixon's evil plans ("Crimes of the Hot"), Nixon awarded him the Polluting Medal of Pollution. He also received the Academy of Inventors award for stopping a giant trash meteor from destroying New New York City ("A Big Piece of Garbage"). He also invented the first robot capable of qualifying for a boat loan ("A Clone of My Own") and the Planet Express Ship's dark matter engines. His "Smell-O-Scope", which detects scents throughout the universe, has been used in many important situations. In the film Futurama: The Beast with a Billion Backs, Wernstrom mentions that Farnsworth is a recipient of the Fields Medal, which is awarded only to scientists under 40 years of age. He is also known to have created several doomsday devices, one of which was used to stop time skips.

Production

Professor Farnsworth is voiced by Billy West, who also voices Fry, Dr. Zoidberg, and Captain Zapp Brannigan. Farnsworth's design is considered to be somewhat similar to a combination of Mr. Burns, Grandpa Simpson, and Professor Frink from Matt Groening's other series, The Simpsons.[4] West has stated that the voice for Farnsworth is meant to be a bit shaky and that when developing the voice he came up with "a combination of all the wizard-type characters you heard when you were a kid, Burgess Meredith and Frank Morgan in The Wizard of Oz." [5] There is a direct nod to this in the episode Anthology of Interest II, in which the Professor portrays the Wizard of Oz.

See also

Futurama portal
Fictional characters portal

References

  1. ^ Verrone, Patric. "Futurama Writer/Co-Executive Producer Patric Verrone". theStream.tv. http://thestream.tv/futurama-writerco-executive-producer-patric-veronne/. Retrieved 29 December 2011. "Patric Verrone: Normally the voice of Professor Farnsworth, the leader of the Action Defense Team there, is played by Billy West. This was actually David Herman- who did the voice." 
  2. ^ "Billy West: The Many (Cartoon) Voices In His Head". Fresh Air (National Public Radio). July 15, 2010. http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=128490848. Retrieved 2010-09-05. "'He sort of fades in and out. ... He's doddering, and he's a combination of lots of different wizards and Burgess Meredith and [The Wizard of Oz's] Frank Morgan and all those kinds of things all rolled up into one.'" 
  3. ^ M. Keith Booker. Drawn to Television: Prime-Time Animation from the Flintstones to Family Guy. pp. 115–124. ISBN 0275990192. 
  4. ^ Gates, Anita (1999-01-24). "Groening's New World, 1,000 Years From Springfield". The New York Times. http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9800EFD61530F937A15752C0A96F958260&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=2. Retrieved 2008-06-13. 
  5. ^ Itzkoff, Dave (2010-06-24). "‘Futurama’-Rama: Welcome Back to the World of Tomorrow". The New York Times. http://artsbeat.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/06/24/futurama-rama-welcome-back-to-the-world-of-tomorrow/. Retrieved 2010-07-08.