Elaine Benes
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| Elaine Marie Benes | |
|---|---|
| First appearance | "The Stakeout", ("Male Unbonding" in production order) |
| Last appearance | "The Finale, Part II" |
| Cause/reason | End of show |
| Created by | Jerry Seinfeld and Larry David. Based on comedian Carol Leifer and Monica Yates; Jerry and Larry's ex-girlfriends, respectively. |
| Portrayed by | Julia Louis-Dreyfus |
| Information | |
| Gender | Female |
| Age | 30s |
| Occupation | Editor |
| Family | Alton (father) Gail (sister) Grandma Mimma (grandmother) |
| Relatives | Holly (cousin), Pete (uncle) |
Elaine Marie Benes is a fictional character on the American television sitcom Seinfeld (1989–1998), played by Julia Louis-Dreyfus. Elaine's best friend is her ex-boyfriend Jerry Seinfeld, and she is also good friends with George Costanza and Cosmo Kramer, although she does not have much respect for either of them (having called them a "loser" and a "doofus", respectively).
Unlike her three close friends, Elaine was missing from the pilot episode (episode one). She first appeared in the second episode, "The Stakeout". NBC executives felt the show was too male-centric, and demanded that creators Jerry Seinfeld and Larry David add a woman to the cast as a condition for commissioning the show, as revealed in the commentary on the Season 1 and 2 DVD. In addition to the first episode, Elaine did not appear in two other episodes ("The Trip, Part 1" and "The Trip, Part 2"), meaning she has made fewer appearances than the other main characters.
Elaine is supposedly a composite based on comedian Carol Leifer, Seinfeld's real-life ex-girlfriend, and Monica Yates, Larry David's real-life ex-girlfriend.
Julia Louis-Dreyfus has received critical acclaim for her performance as Elaine, winning one Emmy, one Golden Globe and two SAGs.
Contents |
[edit] Characteristics
Elaine is the only woman among the main characters. She has strong political perceptions, such as being pro-choice (refusing to date men who were anti-abortion) and an advocate of animal rights (starting fights with those who wore fur and not letting Jerry order tuna because dolphins get caught in the nets). As the series progressed she became more of a misanthrope, edgy and neurotic.
She is noticeably small and apparently somewhat light as well. In "The Betrayal" Jerry is able to carry her without losing normal walking speed and is even capable of not flinching or dropping her as she haphazardly swings her from his back to his front side while hanging from his neck. Her hairstyle went through some changes over the years, though for the majority of the series it was long, with curls or waves. Notable deviations from this were mentioned in the season 8 episode "The Soul Mate", in which Elaine refers to the straightened hairstyle she suddenly had in the final two episodes of season 7, and then decides to go to an extremely short hairstyle by the end of the episode, only to regret the decision when it is met with apprehension by Jerry. Her hair returned to longer than shoulder length by season 9 in "The Strike", in which her hair is affected by steam. In "The Movie", George describes Elaine as "pretty," but having a "big wall of hair" and a "face like a frying pan".
Her clothing is normally quite conservative; however, her breasts are a major part of three episodes. In "The Pick" she sends many people a Christmas card that has a picture of her baring a nipple (accidentally). George, irate that he didn't receive one, confronts her and she responds by angrily rubbing his head in between her breasts. In "The Shoes", she wears a low cut dress, in an attempt to get Jerry and George a deal with Russell (the head of NBC) after George blew the initial deal by staring at his daughter's chest. In "The Gum" her breasts are almost completely exposed to several people, while she is oblivious to the exposure. The only time she is out of her usual attire is in "The Betrayal" which she wears an indian outfit (with hairstyle done in an indian way).
Although she is friends with George, Elaine tends to get into numerous arguments with him throughout the series. In "The Wife", he argues with Elaine over her boyfriend who is threatening to kick him out of the health club. In "The Dinner Party", George admits to Kramer that he is afraid of Elaine when she gets angry. The dichotomy of Elaine as the smarter, more successful friend of Jerry when compared to George was occasionally challenged. In "The Opposite", while George does the opposite of what his instincts tell him to do, he encounters great success while Elaine loses her job and Jake Jarmel, her boyfriend on separate occasions due to her habit of eating Jujyfruits and also gets kicked out of her apartment by Tina whom she has been friends with from "The Deal" and "The Truth". In "The Abstinence", George starts getting smarter while not having sex with Louise. Elaine, in an effort to help her boyfriend, Ben, pass his medical licensing exam, decides to withhold sex, however while he gets smarter, Elaine gets dumber. There are also a few times which Elaine and George works together most notably "The Cadillac".
Elaine found herself teaming up with Kramer in order to solve her problems. She recruited him to act as her boyfriend in an effort to break up with her psychiatrist Dr Reston in "The Watch". In "The Engagement" she enlists Kramer and Newman's help to kidnap a barking dog. She also uses Kramer's help in "The Slicer" when a crying cat was causing her problems. Her only conflict is in "The Seven" in which Elaine and Kramer are competing with Newman as the judge over the girls bike.
Elaine's openness often leads her or her friends into trouble. In "The Betrayal", she revealed to Jerry that she slept with Pinter but when Sue Ellen Mischke finds out from George's outburst she calls off her wedding. In "The Outing", her joke about Jerry and George being gay became a source of misunderstanding.
Elaine also ends up in awkward situations, often unwittingly ending in horrible conclusions. In "The Pen", she sleeps in an uncomfortable sofa bed, hurting her back, resulting in her taking muscle relaxants and doing a Marlon Brando act from A Streetcar Named Desire, screaming "Stella!" In "The Airport", she has a terrible time flying in coach while Jerry enjoys first class.
Elaine's signature move is expressing incredulity by frontally shoving people while yelling "Get out!" after hearing unbelievable news. It sometimes causes the person to fall down or trip. However, in "The Bizarro Jerry" she is flawed when she hangs out with the polar opposites, when she shoves bizarro Jerry, his friends backs him up and ends her friendship with the bizarro group.
Elaine is the only main character who does not own a car. In season 7 "The Wait Out" she borrows Jerry's car and is revealed to be a terrible driver. In season 9 "The Burning" she borrows Puddy's car and it reveals that he is religious. For the rest of the series, she usually uses Jerry or some other driver to take her to a location or takes a cab as an alternate transport.
She is also a poor dancer, as evidenced in the episode "The Little Kicks", in which she dances at a J. Peterman company party. George described her dancing as "a full-bodied dry heave set to music." She repeats her performance in her bedroom in a scene of the episode "The Slicer." Both clips appear in "The Clip Show, Pt. 1" [1]
[edit] Family
Unlike the families of Jerry and George, Elaine's relatives never had large parts on the show. Her father, gruff author Alton Benes (a character based on the novelist Richard Yates and played by Lawrence Tierney), was featured in the episode "The Jacket". Elaine says her father has booze as a religion in "The Yada Yada".
She also has a cousin, Holly, who was featured in "The Wink". In "The Wink", reference is made to Elaine's Grandma Mimma, from whom Holly inherited a fancy set of napkins. In "The Stock Tip", an episode from the first season, Elaine mentions she has an uncle: "My uncle Pete showers four times a day and he can't count to ten, so don't give me hygiene".
"The Jacket" also revealed that Elaine has a sister in St. Louis (later called Gail in "The Pick"). In the same episode, Elaine's father asks how her mother is; later, in "The Wait Out", she reveals to David Lookner that her father left her and the rest of her family when she was nine years old. In "The Secret Code", she reveals that she has an uncle who worked in the Texas School Book Depository with Lee Harvey Oswald. In "The Pick", Elaine mentions she has a nephew. She also makes reference to a brother-in-law in "The Phone Message".
[edit] Background and education
Unlike the other characters, she was not a native of New York, having grown up in the upscale Baltimore suburb of Towson, Maryland. In "The Letter", she revealed herself to be a Baltimore Orioles fan, causing a disruption when she wore an Orioles cap while seated in the owner's box at a New York Yankees game. In "The Dog", she tells George she moved to New York in 1986.
In "The Pick" Elaine mentions having sent a Christmas card to "Sister Mary Katherine" and "Father Chelios", implying that Elaine was brought up Catholic. She repeatedly asserts herself to be either agnostic or atheist, however, such as when she agreed with Jerry's assessment of what she wanted out of life as "a barren, sterile existence that ends when you die" and when she expressed shock and revulsion when her longstanding boyfriend, David Puddy, was a devout Christian. However, she is seen making the sign of the cross before entering Jerry's apartment to retrieve a manuscript while it is being fumigated in "The Doodle". The possibility of Elaine being Jewish was officially ruled out in "The Serenity Now" after numerous Jewish men pursued Elaine, with her continuously claiming it was only because she was a shiksa (after George brought up the subject).
Elaine claims to have an IQ of 145 (although her scores range from 85 to 151) and completed her undergraduate education at Tufts University. For comparison, Jerry and George attended Queens College, and Kramer's highest level of education was revealed to be a "high school equivalency" in "The Barber".
[edit] Employment
Elaine was one of the few characters who worked steady jobs throughout the show's entire run, mostly as a writer or editor.
- During season two to season five, she worked at Pendant Publishing with her boss Mr. Lippman, where she served as a copy editor before losing her job at the end of the fifth season when the company went bankrupt, and a merger that would have saved the company was thwarted by a misunderstanding because she chewed so many Jujyfruits she couldn't talk ("The Opposite").
- She then became a personal assistant to the eccentric and demanding Justin Pitt, starting in "The Chaperone", but later got fired when Mr. Pitt thought she and Jerry were conspiring to kill him in "The Diplomat's Club". Her duties for Mr. Pitt included mundane tasks such as buying socks for him, or, as featured in "The Mom & Pop Store", taking all of the salt off of his pretzels.
- She then met J. Peterman on the street ("The Understudy") and became an editor at his J. Peterman Catalog, where she would remain employed for the rest of the show's run. Starting in "The Foundation", she took charge of the catalog when Peterman suffered a nervous breakdown in Burma. But after a spending spree on the company account (she bought George an $8000 sable hat in "The Chicken Roaster"), she was demoted back to her former position upon Peterman's return. She was also fired twice by Peterman: first when her penchant for poppy seed muffins led her to fail a drug test in "The Shower Head" and then in "The English Patient" when she expressed her hatred for the movie The English Patient (although by agreeing to live temporarily in a remote cave in the desert she was able to recover her job).
[edit] Romantic relationships
Elaine had a string of boyfriends, most appearing for only an episode or two. In spite of this, she does appear to be the most sexually active of the main characters.
[edit] Jerry
- Elaine and Jerry had dated for a while before the show began, but things didn't work out. However, in two later episodes they consider making their relationship intimate again. In season 2's "The Deal", they create a set of rules whereby they can sleep together but remain only friends. However, their theory is ruined when they started squabbling too much (Elaine is furious when Jerry gives her $182 as a birthday gift). In season 5's "The Mango", Jerry is so upset at learning that Elaine had faked her orgasms while they were together, that she agrees to give him another chance "to save the friendship", but Jerry cannot perform and so Elaine just lies in bed reading a magazine, although this is cast into doubt by Elaine's suggestion to eat a fresh mango, previously established in the episode to have sexual power.
- The idea that Elaine and Jerry still have feelings for each other occasionally comes up in the series. In season 3's "The Tape", Elaine leaves a dirty message on Jerry's check tape which reignites Jerry's passion for Elaine (along with George and Kramer). In season 7's "The Cadillac, Part 1", after Elaine realizes that Jerry has a lot of money, she begins to flirt with him relentlessly. In season 8's "The Abstinence", Elaine was abstaining from sex until her boyfriend became a doctor. During this time, she became stupid and discovered it was because she needed to have sex to clear her head. She then begged Jerry to have sex with her, but he turned her down, saying that the situation was "too weird.". (Her immediate response was to ask if Kramer was home.) In season 9's "The Serenity Now", Jerry is in an uncontrolled and exaggerated emotional state and asks Elaine to marry him. Shocked, she makes an excuse and leaves. She returns later to accept his proposal but Jerry is "back to normal" and says "I don't see it happening." In "The Finale", when they think their plane is about to crash, Elaine says "Jerry, I've always ...", but the pilot manages to steady the plane, so Elaine awkwardly finishes her comment by later saying "I've always loved United Airlines." In the episode "The Fix-Up", Kramer stops an argument between Jerry and Elaine and tells them, "Can't you two see that you're in love with each other?" and continues with a short speech. The two of them, however, dismiss it.
[edit] David Puddy
- Elaine's longest relationship, beside Jerry, was with David Puddy (Patrick Warburton), an auto mechanic turned car salesman whom she dated starting in two episodes in season six and later for the majority of season nine. Among Puddy's favorite things were eating at Arby's, giving "high fives", listening to Christian rock in his car, and supporting the New Jersey Devils. Elaine and Puddy were known to break-up and make-up repeatedly during their relationship and sometimes even during the course of one episode. For example in "The Butter Shave", they repeatedly split up and make up during the course of their plane trip back from Norway.
[edit] Men entranced by Elaine
- Newman has a long-running crush on Elaine over the course of the series.
- In "The Tape", George, Jerry, and Kramer become attracted to Elaine after hearing a joke erotic message that she recorded on a tape on which Jerry was recording one of his live shows.
- In "The Serenity Now", Elaine attracts the romantic attentions of both Mr. Lippman and his 13-year old son, Adam. George tells her she has shiksappeal, the attraction Gentile women have over Jewish men ("Jewish men love the idea of meeting a woman that's not like their mother"). Jerry also proposes to Elaine in this episode.
- In "The Cigar Store Indian", Elaine becomes the obsession of a nerd named Ricky whom she meets on the subway; he shows up at the Costanzas' home with a paper bouquet for her which he made out of Frank Costanza's copy of TV Guide (which Elaine had accidentally left with him). In "The Pie", it is revealed that Ricky designed a mannequin in Elaine's likeness.
- In "The Big Salad", an office supply store clerk, Barry, who has become obsessed with Elaine constantly calls Jerry about a pencil order she placed for Mr. Pitt.
- In "The Contest", John F. Kennedy Jr., who works out at the same gym as Elaine, lets her know through the countergirl that he would like to meet her.
- In "The Jimmy", Elaine thinks she is being set up on date with a handsome man from the gym that she fancies, but instead she has unwittingly agreed to a date with a strange man named Jimmy who refers to himself in the third person.
- In "The Shoes", Elaine catches the eye of NBC president Russell Dalrymple by wearing a cleavage-revealing dress. Elaine breaks off the relationship after one date, sending Russell into an emotional spiral that causes him to quit his job and join Greenpeace to impress her. Russell's departure from NBC causes Jerry and George's pilot to be rejected, and it is implied at the end of "The Pilot, Part 2" that Russell dies at sea during a Greenpeace mission.
[edit] Other notable boyfriends
- She dates baseball player (and Kramer and Newman's nemesis) Keith Hernandez in "The Boyfriend, Part 1" and "The Boyfriend, Part 2".
- She also dates Tim Whatley, a dentist who appears in several episodes. Most notably "The Label Maker".
- Over several episodes in season 4, she dates "Crazy" Joe Davola, who is simultaneously stalking Jerry, unbeknownst to her until "The Opera".
- In "The Masseuse", she dates a man named Joel Rifkin, who shares the same name as a notorious serial killer.
- In "The Opposite" she dates Jake Jarmel, an up and coming writer and star client of Pendent Publishing... who breaks up with her for buying jujy fruits after hearing he was in a car accident. The actor who plays Jake Jarmel also appears as an LAPD police officer in the episode "The Trip, Part 2".
- In "The Bizarro Jerry", she dates Kevin, the nice, kind antithesis of Jerry whose friends Gene, Feldman and Vargas are polar opposites of George, Kramer and Newman, respectively, each described as coming from the backwards Bizarro World of Superman comics.
- In "The Stall", her boyfriend Tony, dubbed a male bimbo or "mimbo" by Jerry, becomes George's new idol.
- In "The Wallet" she dates her psychiatrist, Dr. Reston, who has such control over her she calls him her Svengali (but mispronounces it "Svenjolly").
- In "The Checks", her boyfriend Brett is so obsessed with the song "Desperado" that she feels ignored whenever the song comes on. She tries to find a song that they can share and comes up with "Witchy Woman", but it doesn't work.
- During a restaurant dinner with a married couple, Michael and Robin, in "The Good Samaritan", Elaine makes up an elaborate story that she once dated a romantic matador from Spain named "Eduardo Corrochio", which is actually the name of a famous Spanish tap dancer in the late 19th century.
- In "The Wizard", Elaine isn't sure if her new boyfriend Darryl is African-American or not and gets mixed signals when she tries to find out. Turns out he is white and thought Elaine was Hispanic.
- In "The Gum", Elaine talks about having once dated Lloyd Braun, a mentally unstable politician and protégé of Kramer, and she wonders if he had a psychological break-down because she broke up with him.
- In "The Little Jerry", Elaine is dating Kurt, who proposes to her right after he realizes he's going bald.
- In "The Maestro", Elaine began dating Bob Cobb a conductor who insisted on being calling "The Maestro". They eventually went to Tuscany together.
- In "The Junk Mail", Elaine dates Jack who is the television pitchman for The Wiz.
[edit] Enemies
Elaine's quick temper has made her several enemies and gotten her into several confrontations over the years:
- She has a long-running hatred and inferiority complex for former schoolmate and candy-bar heiress Sue Ellen Mischke. Elaine's nickname for Sue Ellen was "The Braless Wonder" because she never wore a bra in high school, which enticed Elaine's boyfriend to dump her for Sue Ellen. Sue Ellen appears in four episodes: in "The Caddy", she struts down the street wearing a bra as a top, causing Kramer to crash George's car; in "The Bottle Deposit", Elaine spends $20,000 on a set of golf clubs (owned by John F. Kennedy) for Mr. Peterman when she is caught in a vicious bidding war with Sue Ellen at an auction; in "The Abstinence", Elaine boasts to Sue Ellen about dating a doctor but then is made to look foolish when her boyfriend is completely useless during an emergency at the coffee shop; finally, in "The Betrayal", Elaine is so angry at receiving an "Unvitation" (a super-last-minute invitation) to Sue Ellen's wedding, that she travels all the way to India just to show up.
- Elaine has come into conflict with Frank Costanza on several occasions. Frank refers to her as "supercilious" in "The Chinese Woman" and when she says "Hello Frank" to him in the H&H Bagel Shop, he responds with a grumpy "Hello woman". In The Cigar Store Indian, she angers him first by taking his TV Guide without asking and then by spilling her gyro on it. Then, in The Little Kicks, she and Frank come to blows after George is arrested along with Elaine's co-worker Anna. Elaine says to Frank "I could drop you like a bag of dirt!" to which he replies "You wanna piece of me? You got it!". Later when Jerry chides her for fighting with an old man, she says "Hey, he wrote the check, I cashed it", suggesting that she won the fight.
- Her abortion argument with restaurateur Poppie gets him so angry that he loses control of his bladder in "The Couch" and again in "The Doorman".
- In "The Summer of George", Elaine makes enemies out of her co-worker Sam (Molly Shannon). First, when Elaine criticizes Sam's way of walking ("It's like she's carrying invisible suitcases"), Sam gets furious and threatens revenge. Then, Raquel Welch (who was recently fired from a musical for dancing without swinging her arms), sees Elaine describing the walk to the police and thinks that Elaine is making fun of her and attacks her. Both events end up arousing Jerry, Kramer, George and even the police, because as Jerry tells Elaine, men love "catfights".
- In "The Understudy", after she thinks her Korean manicurists are making fun of her, she angers them by bringing in Frank Costanza, who is fluent in Korean, to eavesdrop on them.
- In "The Fire", Elaine reveals her hatred for her overly energetic and always-happy colleague Toby. Then, when Toby loses her pinky toe in an accident (caused by Jerry), an outpouring of office sympathy leads Toby to a major promotion instead of Elaine, who is more qualified.
- In "The Visa" she and Jerry anger Pakistani immigrant Babu after she fails to notice Babu's visa application among Jerry's mail that she is picking up for him.
- In "The Engagement", she is so incensed by a neighbour's barking dog that she hires Newman and Kramer to kidnap it.
- In "The Merv Griffin Show", Elaine is annoyed by her co-worker Lou who constantly "sidles" up behind her. But when she gives him a pack of Tic-Tacs so that she can always hear him coming, the sound drives Peterman crazy ("It reminds me of the Haitian Voodoo Rattle Torture!").
- In "The Friars Club", Elaine is positive that her co-worker Bob (Rob Schneider) is faking being deaf to get out of doing any work. But when she tries to test out his deafness by pretending to flirt with him, Peterman overhears, thinks it is real and sets them up on a date.
- Elaine has had run-ins with her co-worker Peggy on a few occasions. In "The Susie", Peggy tells Elaine, who she thinks is a woman named Susie, that Elaine Benes is a "dolt" and a "disaster." Later, in "The Apology", Peggy thinks Elaine has germs, and in retaliation Elaine deliberately coughs on Peggy's doorknob, rubs her stapler in her armpit and rubs her keyboard on her rear end.
- Oddly, Elaine has made a particular enemy of Chinese restaurants on no fewer than three different occasions. In "The Chinese Restaurant", she makes a fool of herself when she tries to bribe the waiter to get her a table faster. Then in "The Race", she gets "blacklisted" from a Chinese delivery restaurant for refusing food delivery, and then gets her Communist boyfriend blacklisted as well. Finally in "The Pothole", she pretends to live in a janitor's closet in a different apartment so that she can live inside the delivery zone of a certain Chinese restaurant. She was also once sued by a Chinese deliveryman named Ping for causing him to get in a bicycle accident in "The Virgin" although "Notes about Nothing" says that Elaine doesn't have a storyline. This storyline falls out in "The Visa" and it's left unresolved "The Pilot".
[edit] Insecurities
- In "The Andrea Doria", Elaine dates Alan, a "bad-breaker-upper", who makes her feel insecure about having a big head.
- In "The Burning", Elaine's boyfriend David Puddy makes her panic and feel guilty about going to hell because she's not as religious as he is. Elaine isn't actually upset about going to hell, but she is upset that Puddy doesn't try to save her.
- In "The Smelly Car", Elaine's boyfriend Carl, is repulsed by her when her hair stinks of B.O. from riding in Jerry's car. She goes to extreme lengths to get the smell out but nothing works, and he continues to be grossed out.
- In "The Postponement" Elaine confides in a Rabbi that she is jealous of George's engagement to Susan Ross because George would be getting married before she did and she considers George to be a loser. The Rabbi proceeds to tell everyone in Elaine's apartment complex and later on his public access TV show about Elaine's insecurity.
[edit] Influence/effect on others
- In "The Chinese Woman", Jerry describes how Elaine has had a destructive effect on her relationship with her friend Noreen. It is revealed that over the course of their friendship, Elaine has convinced Noreen to join the army, go AWOL from the army, dump her "high talker" boyfriend, and dump her "long talker" boyfriend. Eventually, Kramer steps in and forbids Elaine to have any more contact with Noreen.
- In "The Muffin Tops", Elaine convinces her former boss Mr. Lippman to start his own business selling just "muffin tops". However, they soon run into problems when nobody will take the leftover stumps, and only by calling in "The Cleaner" (who turns out to be Newman) can they get rid of them.
- In "The Non-Fat Yogurt", Elaine suggests to Lloyd Braun, an advisor to Mayor Dinkins, that everyone in the city should wear name tags. Lloyd Braun suggests this idea to Dinkins and he likes it so much that he adds it to his campaign, subsequently leading to his loss in the mayoral elections. In "The Gum", it is revealed that Lloyd Braun also loses his job and later suffered a nervous breakdown.
- In "The Pilot" Russel Dalrymple's love for Elaine drives him to the point near the end of the show that he'd be joining Greenpeace just to impress her.
[edit] Pet peeves
- In an early episode, Elaine expresses disdain with the world's interest in the Kennedy family, but in Season Four's "The Contest", Elaine crosses paths with John F. Kennedy, Jr. at her gym and becomes so infatuated with him (and the fantasy of becoming "Elaine Benes Kennedy Jr.") that she loses her self-control as well as the contest. Elaine is crushed to learn that "John John" is dating Jerry's ex, Marla "the virgin" (Jane Leeves).
- Elaine does not hesitate voicing her strong positions on certain political issues. For example, in "The Couch", she broke up with her boyfriend, Carl, after finding out that he was anti-abortion.
- In "The Stranded", she engages George's girlfriend, Ava, in a heated argument regarding a fur coat. Although she presented a similar stand in other episodes, she also said "Who has the energy anymore?" in "The Reverse Peephole" when Puddy begins wearing fur and she is asked by Jerry why she isn't up-in-arms. She would also go on to throw David Puddy's aforementioned fur coat out the window in a similar fashion, saying to the coat, "Goodbye, Dr. Zaius."
- In "The Puerto Rican Day", several things made her angry: the sight of a dog with its ears flipped inside out; her slow-moving taxicab; the thought of missing her "Sunday weekend wind down"; and finally, being trapped under a set of bleachers while desperately trying to find her way out of streets blocked off for the parade.
- In "The Boyfriend, Part 1" and "2", Elaine reveals her disgust for smokers, which helped lead to a break up with Keith Hernandez.
- In "The Beard", Elaine so hated George's toupee (and the effect it was having on his personality) that she ripped it off his head and threw it out the window, screaming "I don't like this thing and here's what I'm going to do with it!"
- In "The Pledge Drive", Elaine gets increasingly annoyed when people start eating their chocolate bars with a knife and fork, a habit started by Mr. Pitt which spreads across the city. Finally, at the end, she stands up and screams to the people at Monk's, "What is wrong with all you people? Have you all gone mad?!"
- In "The Gymnast", Elaine becomes furious at Mr.Pitt's obsession with his 3D art poster, and smashes it in half.
[edit] Nicknames
- Jerry sometimes calls her "Lanie."
- In "The Susie", she develops an alter-ego named Susie after being called that by Peggy.
- In "The Pick", Elaine is nicknamed "Nip" by her colleagues after her Christmas card picture, taken by Kramer, accidentally reveals one of her nipples.
- In "The Ex-Girlfriend", Jerry dubs Elaine "The Queen of Confrontation."
- In "The Contest", Elaine is also called "The Queen of the Castle."
- In "The Nose Job", Elaine is Wanda Pepper in order to pick up Kramer's jacket.
- In "The Wink", Kramer calls her Veronica, a reference to Archie Comics.
- After sustaining a head injury, Kramer referred to her as "Carol" (potentially a Growing Pains or Brady Bunch reference as he referred to George as "Mike" in the same episode as well)
- In "The Package", Elaine is "Paloma", Uncle Leo's caretaker, in an effort to check on her medical history charts in a doctor's office.
- In "The Strong Box" George refers to Elaine's poor boyfriend fiance as "Lois Loan". Elaine refer's to herself near the end of the episode.
- In "The Strike" due to Elaine's steamy appearance, she is called "Yama hama".
[edit] Reception
The Seinfeld cast was placed sixth on Bravo's 100 Greatest TV Characters.[2]
[edit] Notes
- Elaine was missing from "The Pilot", "The Trip, Part 1" and "The Trip, Part 2", and had minimal roles in "The Pitch", "The Ticket" and "The Butter Shave" because of maternity leave, making her the most absent of the four main characters.
[edit] Reference
- ^ Seinfeld - Cast and Characters
- ^ The 100 Greatest TV Characters. Bravo. Retrieved on 2008-05-13.
[edit] External links
- Seinfeld at the Internet Movie Database
- Elaine on Seinfeldonline.com- Unofficial fan website.
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