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"The Keys"
Seinfeld episode
Episode no.Season 3
Episode 23
Directed byTom Cherones
Written byLarry Charles
Production code321
Original air dateMay 6, 1992 (1992-05-06)
Guest appearances
Episode chronology
← Previous
"The Parking Space"
Next →
"The Trip Part 1"
Seinfeld season 3
List of episodes

"The Keys" is the 40th episode of the sitcom Seinfeld. It is the 23rd, and final, episode of the third season and the first of a three-episode story arc.[1] It first aired on NBC on May 6, 1992.[1] In this episode, Jerry takes back his spare keys from Kramer, straining their friendship. Candice Bergen guest stars as herself, playing the title character from Murphy Brown (as she did in real life) in a TV episode within a TV episode. This episode ended on a cliffhanger that would later be resolved in "The Trip", the two-part premiere episode of the show's fourth season.

Plot

[edit]

Jerry finds Kramer in his apartment borrowing things in the middle of the night; taking a bath unannounced; and with a woman just as Jerry returns with his flirtatious date. Fed up, Jerry confiscates his spare keys from Kramer on the spot. Kramer resists, but has no recourse but to rail against Jerry.

Jerry gives his keys to Elaine instead, but they both take pity on Kramer and offer the keys back. Kramer refuses their pity, blaming himself for breaking the "covenant of the keys". He takes back his own ring of numerous spare keys to trade with George. Declaring that he denied his own squalor by living out of Jerry's apartment, Kramer observes how George is likewise wasting his life—as he does not "yearn", and has nothing whatsoever to live for. Inspired by his own dalliance with Woody Allen, Kramer leaves for California to pursue an acting career.

George and Elaine agree to give back each other's keys so that George can trade with Kramer, and Elaine can trade with Jerry. Jerry and George find Kramer gone, and browbeat Newman into admitting that Kramer left out of resentment over Jerry's keys.

Jerry gets locked out of his own apartment, and cannot reach Elaine. Though George still has her keys, he is reluctant to let Jerry search her apartment, and they nearly come to blows. Still, they search together, finding Elaine's spec script for an episode of Murphy Brown. Elaine catches them, and everyone blames each other and demands their keys back. They find that they have all lost track of which keys are whose.

Kramer's car breaks down en route to Los Angeles. He hitchhikes with a biker, who jovially reminisces over a gruesome, near-fatal crash that left him comatose for a year. He then travels in a hippie van, impressing them by insinuating that he has strangled a man, but the emotionally needy hippies will not let him leave. Then, he rides with a woman trucker, but causes a malfunction when she lets him drive. In the end, he arrives, and rollerblades down Venice Beach.

Jerry patronizingly advises Elaine on breaking into show business. On TV, they see Kramer on Murphy Brown as Murphy's new secretary, "Steven Snell".

Production

[edit]

Larry David and Jerry Seinfeld later appeared on Diane English's (creator of Murphy Brown) new show, Love & War, as a thank you for the Murphy Brown scene. Due to Julia Louis-Dreyfus's off-screen pregnancy, her character had to spend the latter half of this season hiding her belly behind furniture and laundry baskets. "The Keys" was the final episode filmed before the birth of her son and her leave at the start of Season 4.[2]

Music

[edit]

When Jerry calls Kramer's mother, the music heard in the background is from Pagliacci, which was later featured in the episode "The Opera". The scene that shows Kramer rollerskating in L.A. is accompanied by an instrumental version of The Beach Boys' song "California Girls".

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
"The Keys" is the twenty-third and final episode of the third season of the American sitcom television series Seinfeld.[1] Originally aired on NBC on May 6, 1992, the episode was written by Larry Charles and directed by Tom Cherones.[2] It features the main cast including Jerry Seinfeld as Jerry, Julia Louis-Dreyfus as Elaine Benes, Michael Richards as Cosmo Kramer, and Jason Alexander as George Costanza, with guest appearances by Wayne Knight as Newman, Nina Tremblay as Jerry's girlfriend, and Candice Bergen as herself.[2] The plot revolves around Jerry revoking Kramer's spare keys to his apartment after repeated invasions of privacy, such as using Jerry's bathroom for a bubble bath and entertaining his girlfriend there, which prompts a chain of key exchanges among the friends and Kramer's dramatic decision to relocate to California to pursue acting.[3] In the episode, the key revocation leads to comedic complications: Kramer, feeling liberated yet hurt, hands his own apartment keys to George, who is facing eviction from his sublet in Queens after his parents return unexpectedly from Florida, while Jerry entrusts his spare keys to Elaine for safekeeping.[3] Meanwhile, Elaine is secretly writing a spec script for the TV show Murphy Brown, which Jerry and George accidentally discover in her apartment.[3] The storyline highlights the group's interdependent relationships and petty conflicts, culminating in Kramer hitchhiking to Los Angeles, where he unexpectedly lands a role on Murphy Brown as the character Steven Snell, allowing him to stay in California after all. Elaine demands her keys back after discovering Jerry and George read her spec script without permission, emphasizing the episode's themes of privacy.[3] Notable for its montage-style opening depicting Kramer's overfamiliarity with Jerry's space and the episode's exploration of trust and boundaries among friends, "The Keys" received positive reception for Michael Richards' physical comedy, particularly in the key-struggle scene, and holds an 8.2/10 rating on IMDb based on over 4,400 user votes (as of 2025).[1] As the season finale, it sets up Kramer's brief absence in the subsequent episodes, emphasizing the show's signature absurd humor derived from everyday annoyances.

Synopsis

Plot

Jerry grows increasingly frustrated with Kramer's frequent and intrusive use of his spare apartment keys. In one instance, Jerry wakes up in the middle of the night to find the door ajar and Kramer in the living room making popcorn while watching television.[3] On another occasion, Jerry returns home to discover Kramer taking a leisurely bubble bath in his bathtub.[3] The situation escalates when Kramer brings a woman back to Jerry's apartment for an intimate encounter without permission.[3] Determined to regain control, Jerry confronts Kramer and demands the return of his keys, citing the violation of trust.[3] A physical struggle ensues over the keys, during which Kramer loses his balance, falls, and accidentally pulls his girlfriend down with him.[3] Kramer storms out angrily, leaving Jerry relieved but the friendship strained.[3] To safeguard his own spare keys, Jerry entrusts them to Elaine for temporary safekeeping.[3] Meanwhile, Elaine's professional life at Pendant Publishing takes a turbulent turn. Exhausted from staying up late to write a spec script for the television show Murphy Brown, she arrives tardy to work and is promptly fired by her boss, Mr. Lippman, who emphasizes the importance of punctuality.[3] In a desperate bid for reinstatement, Elaine has a one-night stand with Lippman, after which he rehires her as a personal favor, allowing her to resume her position.[3] Kramer returns to Jerry's apartment the next day, remorseful but defiant, declaring that by abusing the keys, he has "broken the covenant of the keys" and is now liberated from their constraints.[3] Energized by this realization, Kramer announces his decision to move to Los Angeles to pursue a career in acting, expressing excitement about the opportunities in Hollywood and referencing a past bit part that fuels his ambition.[3] Before departing, Kramer hands his own apartment keys to George, establishing a "key brother" arrangement.[3] George, who has spare keys to Elaine's apartment, later accompanies Jerry there to retrieve Jerry's keys from Elaine (who also holds George's), initiating a chain of key-related confusion and arguments among the group.[3] For example, George later visits Elaine to retrieve keys he believes she holds, only for her to demand hers back so she can return them to Jerry, sparking a heated debate over the logistics.[3] As Kramer embarks on his cross-country journey to California, he hitchhikes and encounters a series of eccentric travelers, including a biker, a group of stoned hippies in a van, and a truck driver.[3] Upon arriving in Los Angeles, Kramer auditions for a role and secures a job as the secretary to Candice Bergen's character on Murphy Brown, adopting the name "Steven Snell."[3] Back in New York, Jerry and George break into Elaine's apartment using the swapped keys to reclaim Jerry's set, where they discover her Murphy Brown script and begin reading it aloud, mocking its content.[3] Elaine returns unexpectedly, catches them, and erupts in fury over the invasion of privacy, leading to a chaotic confrontation.[3] Amid the key confusion, Jerry calls Kramer's mother to check on him and hears opera music playing in the background, adding to the comedic bewilderment.[3] Ultimately, Jerry reclaims his keys from the group, solidifying the end of the unrestricted access and further straining his friendship with Kramer, who has already departed for California.[3] The episode concludes with Jerry and Elaine watching Murphy Brown on television, stunned to see Kramer in his new role, marking the beginning of a three-episode arc centered on his move to Los Angeles.[3]

Arc and continuity

"The Keys" serves as the 23rd and final episode of Seinfeld's third season, functioning as the opener to a three-episode arc that extends into the fourth season's two-part premiere, "The Trip." In this storyline, Kramer relocates to Los Angeles to pursue acting opportunities, prompting Jerry and George to follow him there for Jerry's appearance on The Tonight Show, only to become entangled in a murder investigation where Kramer is briefly suspected.[1][4] Kramer's decision to move to Los Angeles marks a significant pivot in his character development, shifting his eccentric, New York-based schemes to a brief exploration of Hollywood aspirations and temporarily disrupting the core group's dynamic centered around Jerry's apartment. This relocation highlights Kramer's impulsive nature while foreshadowing his recurring interest in performance, as seen in his later on-screen roles, such as during the show's pilot episode production.[5][6] The episode builds on prior season 3 narratives, particularly Elaine's ongoing job instability at Pendant Publishing, where she serves as a copy editor amid professional frustrations echoed from events in "The Fix-Up," such as her efforts to balance work and personal life. George's obsessive handling of the apartment keys reflects his longstanding neurotic tendencies toward organization and control, consistent with his behaviors in earlier episodes like "The Parking Space." Additionally, the episode features the recast appearance of Mr. Lippman as Elaine's supervisory boss at Pendant Publishing, following his initial introduction earlier in the season, and includes a meta-cameo by Candice Bergen as Murphy Brown, with Kramer appearing as her on-screen secretary, nodding to contemporaneous television culture.[7][2]

Production

Development and writing

"The Keys" was written by Larry Charles, a key contributor to Seinfeld's early seasons who infused the script with absurd humor drawn from everyday New York City living, including the irritations of sharing apartment keys among close friends.[8][9] Charles crafted the episode as the season 3 finale to serve as a bridge into season 4, initiating a three-part arc that temporarily removes Kramer from the New York setting and builds suspense around an off-screen murder investigation featured in "The Trip" parts 1 and 2.[8] The script's core revolves around escalating the absurdity of key exchanges among the group, turning a simple breach of trust into chaotic comedic tension that underscores the characters' petty interdependencies.[9] Development began in the midpoint of season 3 production, with Charles outlining the story to balance standalone laughs with setup for the larger arc, undergoing revisions to refine the humor without overshadowing the transition.[9] The episode aired as the 40th overall on May 6, 1992, marking a pivotal shift in the series' narrative ambition.[1] Distinct writing choices include meta-humor through Kramer's cameo on the real sitcom Murphy Brown, satirizing television crossovers and industry self-awareness, while the dialogue amplifies Seinfeld's "show about nothing" philosophy by deriving conflict from trivial, mundane disputes over access and privacy.[8][9]

Filming and casting

The episode "The Keys" was directed by Tom Cherones, who employed tight pacing throughout its approximately 22-minute runtime to heighten the comedic tension, particularly through quick cuts during the chaotic key-swapping sequences involving the main characters.[1][10] Principal filming occurred on soundstages at CBS Studio Center in Studio City, Los Angeles, where the interior of Jerry's apartment was constructed and reused across episodes; exterior New York City scenes were simulated using Los Angeles backlots and locations such as Griffith Park for transitional shots.[11][12] The offices of Pendant Publishing, central to Elaine's subplot, utilized sets previously built for earlier episodes in the series.[13] In casting the core ensemble, Michael Richards' role as Kramer highlighted his signature physical comedy, with over-the-top reactions and improvised physicality in scenes depicting Kramer's distress over losing his apartment key, including his hitchhiking departure to California.[2][14] Julia Louis-Dreyfus portrayed Elaine with nuanced emotional depth, capturing the frustration in her character's discovery of Jerry and George mocking her spec script for Murphy Brown.[2] A notable guest appearance was by Candice Bergen, playing a version of her Murphy Brown character in a cameo that satirized celebrity crossovers and bolstered Elaine's writing storyline.[2] Kramer's mother was depicted off-screen through voice work during a telephone scene, adding to the episode's quirky family dynamics without on-camera presence.[15] Production took place in late 1991 to meet NBC's third-season schedule, culminating in a rushed post-production phase to air as the season finale on May 6, 1992; the shoot avoided major reshoots, though some ad-libbed dialogue enhanced the heated arguments over key exchanges.[1][16]

Music

Score

The original score for the Seinfeld episode "The Keys" was composed by Jonathan Wolff, who created all incidental music for the series across its nine seasons.[17] Wolff's approach involved watching and rewatching scenes on video, improvising cues on keyboard in real time to match the action and dialogue pacing, often completing an entire episode's music in a single day.[18] Central to the score is the signature Seinfeld bassline, a quirky slap bass sound engineered from sampled bass guitars, blended with mouth pops, finger snaps, and shaker rhythms for a modular, "Lego-like" structure that could be manipulated to fit transitions and punchlines.[18][19] This bassline underscores awkward social moments throughout the episode, such as Jerry's confrontations with Kramer over apartment intrusions, providing comedic emphasis without clashing with the spoken humor.[18] The overall style draws on jazz influences, with zany, minimalist cues designed to heighten tension or excitement in key scenes—like the group's key-swapping confusion or Kramer's enthusiasm for Los Angeles—while maintaining a light, non-intrusive tone that amplifies the show's "nothing" humor.[17] These elements sync closely with plot beats, using horns or bass fills as vaudeville-style accents for comedic timing at 110 beats per minute to align with the actors' delivery.[18] Wolff recorded the score in early 1992 at his Burbank studio in Los Angeles, utilizing top session musicians and sampling technology before mixing to meet NBC broadcast specifications for the episode's May airdate.[20] In the episode "The Keys," two notable non-original songs are featured to enhance comedic moments tied to character interactions and fantasies. The aria "Vesti la giubba" from Ruggero Leoncavallo's opera Pagliacci plays in the background during Jerry's phone call to Kramer's mother, Babs, as he inquires about Kramer's whereabouts in Los Angeles; this choice infuses the mundane complaint with exaggerated operatic pathos, heightening the irony of Jerry's frustration.[21] Additionally, an instrumental cover of "California Girls," originally written by Brian Wilson with lyrics by Wilson and Mike Love and performed by the Beach Boys, underscores Kramer's daydream sequence of roller-skating through Los Angeles, capturing a sense of breezy 1960s West Coast idealism that satirizes his escapist ambitions in the context of his subplot about fleeing to Hollywood.[21][22] These tracks were licensed for use in the 1992 episode through NBC's music clearance processes, with the selections integrated briefly to emphasize emotional or thematic shifts without interrupting dialogue.[21]

Reception

Viewership

"The Keys" originally aired on May 6, 1992, serving as the season 3 finale of Seinfeld on NBC. The episode's broadcast performance contributed to the season's overall metrics, with season 3 averaging a 12.5 Nielsen rating and ranking #42 among all primetime series, drawing under 18 million viewers on average.[23][24] This marked a seasonal high for the series.[24] In its Wednesday 9:30 p.m. ET/PT time slot, the episode was part of NBC's lineup. Since entering syndication in fall 1995, "The Keys" has aired frequently in reruns across local stations, enhancing cultural awareness of the season's storyline arc.[25][26]

Critical response

Upon its original airing in 1992, "The Keys" received positive attention as part of Seinfeld's third season, which marked the show's growing critical acclaim for its observational humor on urban life.[27] The episode's key-swapping premise was noted for capturing the petty anxieties of friendship, aligning with the series' reputation for riffing on everyday foibles.[28] In modern reassessments, the episode holds an 8.2 out of 10 rating on IMDb, based on over 4,000 user votes, reflecting enduring appreciation for its character-driven comedy.[1] Critics have praised Michael Richards' portrayal of Kramer, particularly his epiphany scene declaring, "I broke the covenant of the keys," as a highlight of physical and emotional comedy.[29] The A.V. Club described it as a "very funny" season finale with a caper-like structure, though the central key joke "loses its edge by the end."[29] In a comprehensive ranking of all 176 episodes, ScreenCrush placed "The Keys" at number 43, commending its setup for the subsequent arc while noting it as a transitional entry.[30] The episode's cultural legacy centers on its exploration of friendship boundaries through the key motif, which has been referenced in analyses of relational trust in sitcoms.[29] Kramer's departure to Hollywood, including his cameo on Murphy Brown, exemplifies early meta-commentary on television stardom, influencing later self-referential storytelling.[29] Criticisms have focused on the episode's tonal shift toward a multi-part arc, which some view as an outlier in the show's typically standalone format, potentially disrupting its "show about nothing" ethos.[29] Elaine's subplot has been critiqued in retrospective discussions for leaning into gender stereotypes that feel dated today.[31] "The Keys" received no specific Emmy nominations, but it contributed to season 3's overall recognition, including eight Emmy nods for the series and a Directors Guild of America Award.

References

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