Fitzherbert P.I. is the third episode of the first season of Tangled: The Series and it is the third overall. It premiered on April 7, 2017 to 1.02 million viewers.[1]
Synopsis[]
Eugene sets out to find a role for himself in the castle and decides to be a royal guard.
Plot[]
It is time for Rapunzel to get her official royal portrait done! A famous artist, The Giovanni, is coming to paint her portrait and she needs to choose a pose and subject matter that defines her and shows how she is unique. Apparently, she is having some trouble choosing, and Eugene and Cassandra are not being much help while they bicker about Eugene's lack of purpose or role in the kingdom, now that he is no longer Flynn Rider. But when he complains to the thugs at The Snuggly Duckling and fails to get them on his side, he decides it is time to find a job. Applying to different ads, Eugene tries being a baker's assistant, a carriage driver, and a cobbler. None of them work out. Just when he is about to give up, he manages to head off and capture a fleeing thief before the royal guardsmen can catch him, thanks to some personal experience in thievery. His success in capturing the thief inspires Eugene to join the Royal Guard.
He begins his training with an unimpressed Captain, and to everyone's surprise, especially Cassandra's, he does really well, even with the Captain and the other guards trying to sabotage him at every opportunity. Meanwhile, Rapunzel is still having problems choosing what she wants in her royal portrait, but she gets some help from her mother, who admits that she herself went a little too far with her royal portrait. She tells her daughter to show who she is, not what she can do. It is time for the final exam obstacle course for the Royal Guard training, and Eugene is feeling down about his chances. However, with a little pep talk from Cassandra, he regains his confidence. Even though the Captain tries his hardest to make him fail, Eugene passes the course with flying colors and is granted a probationary spot as a Royal Guard.
Meanwhile, The Giovanni arrives just as Rapunzel has finally decided on a simple portrait. Eugene, on his first day of duty as a guard, comes to visit her during her sitting but leaves the dungeon unlocked. A prisoner escapes, and Eugene was promptly kicked off the Royal Guard. However, something is fishy about Giovanni. Suspicions of him being a fraud are later confirmed when Eugene realizes that one of the castle's portraits have been stolen from the gallery and replaced with a fake. Although the Captain does not believe him, Cassandra does. They go to the docks to head off the thief, while the Captain finds out that Eugene was right when the real The Giovanni arrives. With some help from Cassandra, Fidella, Shorty, and Maximus, Eugene captures the fake Giovanni and the Captain apologizes for doubting him. While Eugene is clearly not meant for the Royal Guard, he does get a shot at being an instructor to help the guardsmen "think like a thief". As for Rapunzel's portrait, she decided to paint her own which represents the bond between her and her mother.
Transcript[]
For a full transcript of "Fitzherbert P.I.", click here. |
Cast[]
- Zachary Levi as Eugene, Feldspar
- Mandy Moore as Rapunzel
- Eden Espinosa as Cassandra
- Julie Bowen as Queen Arianna
- Jeffrey Tambor as Big Nose
- Paul F. Tompkins as Shorty
- M. C. Gainey as Captain of the Guard
- Diedrich Bader as Stan the Guard
- Sean Hayes as Pete the Guard
- Fabio Tassone as The Real The Giovanni
- Artt Butler as Dale
Trivia[]
- The title probably references the popular 1980-1988 detective series Magnum, P.I. starring Tom Selleck. A "P.I." is a "private investigator" or detective, as opposed to a member of an official law enforcement group.
- This is one of the three episodes that aired on March seventh which is followed by Rapunzeltopia and Lost and Found respectively.
- "Get the boot" can be used as a metaphor for getting kicked out or losing a job.Drop.
- Walls.
- Contrary to the implication made by this episode, most monarchies do not have a single official "royal portrait." The idea was probably suggested by the fact that the United States does have a tradition of having an official portrait painted of each President; however, most monarchs have had more than one portrait done ever since portraiture of any kind has been produced — there are, for instance, well over a hundred portraits of Queen Elizabeth I in the National Portrait Gallery in London alone.
Gallery[]
Gallery
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