Mister X and Mister Y: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
m (categories and general cleanup)
Line 53: Line 53:
[[Category:Duo Tropes]]
[[Category:Duo Tropes]]
[[Category:Ensembles]]
[[Category:Ensembles]]
[[Category:Mister X And Mister Y]]
[[Category:Mister X and Mister Y]]

Revision as of 11:42, 4 April 2014

A couple of gentlemen, whose last names are X and Y, exchange polite banter, in which they frequently call each other "Mister X" and "Mister Y."

Often done by Those Two Guys or Those Two Bad Guys. (Our self-demonstrating description for Those Two Bad Guys does this.)

Examples of Mister X and Mister Y include:


Comic Books


Fan Works


Films -- Live-Action


Literature


Live-Action TV


Music

  • The song "Mister Gallagher and Mister Shean" by Ed Gallagher and Al Shean. Probably the Trope Maker; certainly the exchange "Absolutely, Mr. Gallagher?" -- "Positively, Mr. Shean" became a popular meme.


Theater

  • In The Golden Apple, shifty stockbrokers Mister Scylla (played by the same actor as Menelaus) and Mister Charybdis (alias Hector) do a pastiche of the Gallagher and Shean number.
  • In Seventeen Seventy Six, when John Adams and Thomas Jefferson are arguing over who will write the Declaration of Independence they refer to each other as Mr. A and Mr. J.
  • Classic Vaudeville Schtick: e.g. Mr. Bones and Mr. Jones, done by such as... Mr. Gallagher and Mr. Shean.


Web Original


Western Animation