Os Muppets / The Muppets, Estados Unidos - Jim Henson
Fotografia
In the 65
years since they made their debut on a local Washington DC broadcaster's Sam & Friends way back in
1955, the Muppets have grown to inhabit a surprisingly resilient corner of
popular culture – the word 'Muppet' itself has even entered everyday language
(admittedly as an unflattering term). And now they're coming back for
a new series on Disney+.
It hasn't been
an easy journey for the merry band, with rights issues flinging their ownership
this way and that way over the years, the death of Jim Henson in 1990, feuds
over casting and the variable quality of some of the projects starring the
troupe. In fact, the story of the Muppets is an epic saga in its own right.
Though they
were created in 1955, the Muppets really hit the spotlight in 1969 when they
appeared as a regular fixture in the evergreen PBS kids show Sesame Street with
beloved characters Big Bird, Bert and Ernie and Oscar the Grouch.
Surprisingly,
they really first came into their own via the UK, with Elstree-filmed ATV
series The Muppet Show,
which ran from 1976-1981 on ITV, at its height attracting audiences of 14m+ in
its Sunday early-evening slot.
The show was
syndicated to great success in the US and attracted a host of guest stars
willing to be ribbed by the puppets, including Roger Moore, Rudolf Nureyev,
Liza Minnelli, Julie Andrews, Elton John, Liberace, Bob Hope, John Cleese, Gene
Kelly, Diana Ross and Debbie Harry.
The popularity
of the gang was such that they even generated two hit singles, the atypically
plaintive 'Halfway Down The Stairs' (sung
by Kermit's young nephew Robin) reaching No.7 in the UK in 1977, while the
oft-covered 'Rainbow Connection' gained the No.25 spot in the US two years later.
Aside from the
catchy Muppet Show theme
tune, our puppet friends are possibly best known for their cover of Piero
Umilani's 'Mah Nà Mah Nà', a song guaranteed to amuse or drive one to
distraction in equal measure.
The success of
the ATV show led to a slew of cinema spin-offs, which went through three
distinct stages. There was the early trio of The
Muppet Movie (1979), The
Great Muppet Caper (1981) and The Muppets Take Manhattan (1984), followed by
mid-period releases such as seasonal favourite Muppet Christmas Carol (1992) and the
derided Muppets in Space (1999)
– about which Kermit commented in 2012: "With all due respect to Muppets
from Space, um, you don't want that to be the last movie you ever do."
Rights to the
Muppets transferred to German company EM.TV &
Merchandising AG, which promptly collapsed, leading the Henson family to
reacquire the rights in 2003.
With Disney's
full acquisition of the Muppets in 2004 – for a mere $75million – things picked
up, albeit slowly, and plans were laid to reboot the movies. A handful of
forgotten TV specials peppered the '00s, but Disney's stewardship eventually
resulted in box-office hit The
Muppets in 2011 and its less popular follow-up Muppets
Most Wanted in 2014.
Meanwhile, the
Muppets maintained a fitful presence on TV, with two short-lived series, The Jim Henson Hour (NBC,
1989) and The Muppets Tonight (ABC,
1996). In the UK, the latter was pulled from BBC One's Friday-night schedule,
leaving nine episodes (of 22) still as yet unseen here.
Guests of the
show were possibly a step down from the original series, but still included big
names such as Billy Crystal, Pierce Brosnan, Cindy Crawford, Prince, Tony
Bennett and…Coolio.
The last
peak-time Muppets show was ABC's fly-on-the-wall Office-style sitcom The Muppets (2015-16), which
was poorly received, being seen as mean-spirited and untrue to the upbeat vibe
of previous incarnations.
Co-showrunner
Bob Kushell (also responsible for BBC Three's assisted-suicide sitcom Way to Go) has some form
with troubled sets, so maybe the failure of the show shouldn't come
as a great surprise.
None of the
original main voice actors now remain. Even Steve Whitmire, who played Kermit
after Jim Henson's death, was booted in 2017 after
a 27-year run in the role.
"Steve
would use 'I am now Kermit and if you want the Muppets, you better make me
happy because the Muppets are Kermit.' And that is really not OK," Muppet
boss Brian Henson told The
Hollywood Reporter.
Whitmire
himself said: "I didn't yell, or call anyone names, or refuse to do my
job. I just gave lots of definitive notes via emails to this small group about
character integrity and always tried to offer alternative solutions."
Whatever the
machinations behind the scenes, the changing voice of Kermit (it's now Matt
Vogel under the green felt) gives the later versions of the Muppets a vaguely
ersatz feel when compared to the original TV series and first few movies,
although the newer cast members do a decent job of replicating the voices of
the iconic characters.
While still
with us, actor/director Frank Oz hasn't voiced Fozzie, Animal or Miss Piggy
since 1999's duo of Muppets
in Space and The
Adventures of Elmo in Grouchland.
Not that he's
no longer haunted by his Muppet past. When directing 2001's heist thriller The Score, Oz was
subjected to star Marlon Brando's Muppet-related abuse. The
Guardian reported that "Brando took to calling
former Muppet Show puppeteer
Oz 'Miss Piggy' and apparently said: 'I bet you wish I was a puppet so you
could stick your hand up my ass and make me do what you want'."
The thing
about the Muppets is their ability to re-invent themselves for new generations
of viewers (and older fans), as long as their essential sweet nature and yes,
'humanity' is retained.
With that in
mind, we'll be looking forward with our fingers crossed to The Muppets Now, Disney+'s
short-form 'unscripted' variety show featuring celebrity interviews that apparently harks
back to the original ATV series.
Also rumoured
to be in development for Disney+ is Josh Gad's Muppets Live Another Day, set after the
Broadway-related events of 1984's Muppets
Take Manhattan, presumably hewing closer to the original Muppets
vibe.
For fans keen
to get their fix, a veritable Muppets smorgasbord could well be in the offing.

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