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"The Prisoner of Benda" is the tenth episode in the sixth season of the American animated television series Futurama, and the 98th episode of the series overall. It aired on Comedy Central on August 19, 2010.
The American animated science fiction sitcom Futurama, created and developed by Matt Groening and David X. Cohen for the Fox Broadcasting Company, originally aired from March 28, 1999, to August 10, 2003 before being effectively cancelled.
"The Prisoner of Benda" table read; Hidden Concept Drawings Of "Delivery-Boy Man" Easter egg (media) Hidden Bender audio outtake Easter egg (media) Release dates: Region 1: Region 2: Region 4: December 21, 2010 [6] December 26, 2011 [49] November 2, 2011 [50] Blu-ray Disc release dates: Region A: Region B Europe: Region B Australia: December 21 ...
"The Late Philip J. Fry" was written by Lewis Morton and directed by Peter Avanzino.The table reading for this episode took place on October 21, 2009. [2] From June 16 to June 23, as part of its "Countdown to Futurama" event, Comedy Central Insider, Comedy Central's news outlet, released various preview materials for the episode, including a storyboard of the time machine and character designs ...
The Season 6 episode "The Prisoner of Benda" reveals that he is in love with his robotic wash bucket, but avoids entering into a relationship with it. He is murdered by Robot Santa in the non-canonical anthology episode " The Futurama Holiday Spectacular ".
Futurama received critical acclaim throughout its run and was nominated for 17 Annie Awards, winning nine of them, and 12 Emmy Awards, winning six. It was nominated four times for a Writers Guild of America Award, winning for the episodes "Godfellas" and "The Prisoner of Benda".
At the end of the film Futurama: Into the Wild Green Yonder, Leela openly admits to loving Fry, and they commence an openly romantic relationship from the episode "Rebirth" onwards. In "The Prisoner of Benda" they have "sex", albeit in differing bodies.
Hal Le Roy played Rudolph, King of Sulvania, who outlaws swing music on pain of death, as well as his distant relative, a swing-loving saxophone player. June Allyson played the Princess. The entire Potsdorf sequence in Blake Edwards' The Great Race (1965) is an homage to (or parody of) The Prisoner Of Zenda. Jack Lemmon plays the roles of the ...