Season 7 · Episode 4 · 1999
Everyone's A Critic
13 cultural references across 6 categories.
Film
1Literature
2Tom Stoppard
Czech-born British playwright known for intellectually rigorous works like Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead. Niles suggests they catch his new play.
“Oh, oh, and then catch the new Stoppard play.”— Niles
Tennessee Williams
American playwright, author of A Streetcar Named Desire and Cat on a Hot Tin Roof. Niles asks to borrow Frasier's Tennessee Williams biography to prepare his re…
“I was hoping you'd lend me your Tennessee Williams biography.”— Niles
Music
4Cecilia Bartoli
Italian coloratura mezzo-soprano, one of the most celebrated opera singers of her generation. Niles scores front-row tickets to her sold-out concert.
“My God, it's for the Cecilia Bartoli concert! My God, they've been sold out for months.”— Frasier
Leonard Bernstein
American composer, conductor, and pianist who led the New York Philharmonic. Niles defended Bernstein's conducting at a party, winning the arts critic job at Th…
“The pretentious fop who had the job before me was there too, spouting sheer drivel about Leonard Bernstein...he referred to Bernstein's conducting as 'overrated.'”— Niles
Beethoven
Ludwig van Beethoven, the towering German composer. Frasier plays his music to impress Poppy, who helpfully points out that Beethoven was deaf.
“Divine Beethoven. Extraordinary, isn't it?”— Frasier
Lute
A plucked string instrument popular in the Renaissance and Baroque periods. Frasier played a lute as a child, though Martin dismissively calls it 'that funny li…
“Dad, it was called a lute!”— Frasier
Other
2The Monocle
fictionalA fictional upscale arts magazine distributed to wealthy apartment buildings and hotels. Niles lands the position of arts critic for The Monocle.
“I simply phoned the box office and said this is Niles Crane, the new arts critic for 'The Monocle.'”— Niles
Opera glasses
Small, low-power binoculars used for viewing performances at the opera or theatre. Niles proudly shows off his opera glasses for the Bartoli concert.
“I'll have to take a damp cloth to these opera glasses, although I don't know what will we use them for, sitting in the front row?”— Niles
Theatre/Opera
3A Streetcar Named Desire
Tennessee Williams's 1947 Pulitzer Prize-winning play about the fragile Blanche DuBois. Frasier and Niles both attend a revival to write competing reviews.
“That revival of 'A Streetcar Named Desire' opens tonight.”— Poppy
Royal Shakespeare Company
One of the world's best-known theatre companies, based in Stratford-upon-Avon, England. Niles brags about attending a party for the RSC.
“Olga and I were up till all hours at a party for the 'Royal Shakespeare Company.'”— Niles
St. Joan
George Bernard Shaw's 1923 play about Joan of Arc. Niles's review of St. Joan earns him a quote in the newspaper.
“It's in an ad for 'St. Joan': 'Incandescent,' Niles Crane, 'The Monocle.'”— Niles