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Sesame Street is an educational television program for young children, which led the way for many of the modern edutainment style shows. It is known for the inclusion of Muppet characters created by the legendary puppeteer Jim Henson.
It has produced over 4000 episodes, making it one of the longest-running shows in television history.
Overview
Produced in the United States, Sesame Street has millions of
viewers worldwide. It premiered on November 10, 1969 on the National
Educational Television network, and later that year moved to NET's successor, the Public Broadcasting System. Sesame Street has received more Emmy Awards than any other program.
The program uses a mixture of puppets, animation and live action to teach young children basic reading and arithmetic, for
example, colors, letters, numbers, days of the week. It also has segments focusing on basic life-skills, e.g., how to cross the
road safely, the importance of basic hygiene, and so on. Many of the skits and other
segments are parodies or copies of standard television formats.
There is also a sly, subtle sense of humor in the show that has appealed to older viewers since it first premiered. A number
of spoofs and parodies of popular culture appear on the show, especially ones aimed at PBS, the network that airs the show. For example, during a segment entitled "Me Claudius",
the children viewing the show might enjoy watching Cookie Monster and
the Muppets, while adults watching the same sequence may enjoy the spoof of the
Masterpiece Theatre production of I, Claudius; this series of segments is Monsterpiece Theater. Several of the characters on the program are aimed at an older audience,
such as the character Flo Bear (Flaubert); Sherlock Hemlock; and H. Ross Parrot (based on Reform Party
founder Ross Perot). Also to attract adult viewers, hundreds of actual
celebrities have made guest appearances on the show over the years. (See Celebrity guest stars on Sesame Street.)
The purpose of such elements of adult humour are to encourage parents to watch with their children. By making the show not
only something that educates and entertains kids, but keeps adults entertained, the producers hope that more discussion about the
concepts on the show will occur.
Sesame Street has a strong multi-cultural element and tries to be inclusive in its casting, incorporating roles for disabled people,
young people, senior citizens, Hispanic actors, African-American actors, and others. While some of the puppets look like people,
others are animal or "monster" puppets of arbitrary sizes and colors. It encourages children to realise that people come in all
different shapes, sizes, and colours, and that no one physical 'type' is any better than another.
Each of the puppet characters have been designed to represent a specific stage or element of early childhood, and the scripts
are written so that these characters reflect the developmental age level of a child that age. This helps the show address not
only the learning objectives of different age levels, but also the concerns, fears, and interests of children of different age
levels.
Broadcast History
The show is broadcast worldwide; in addition to the USA version, many countries have locally-produced versions adapted to
local needs, some with their own characters, and in a variety of different languages. Broadcasts in Australia commenced in 1971. In Canada, 15-minute segments called Canada's Sesame Street were broadcast starting in 1970 and eventually grew to a full program called Sesame
Park in 1995. A Spanish-language version called Plaza Sesamo is produced jointly by
CTW and Mexican TV station Televisa,
and is estimated to reach 84% of Spanish-speaking households in the US. Separate programs exist in countries including Germany, Greece, (on ERT, later to a private
network), the Netherlands, Poland
and Mexico, and there are plans for a joint Israeli-Palestinian-Jordanian project.
A list of major characters in international versions.
Controversy faced by the show
Occasionally, the international version of the show airs segments that might not be considered acceptable by USA audiences. In
2002, Sesame Workshop announced that an HIV-positive
character, would be introduced to Takalani Sesame, the South African version of
the show. This idea was considered crucial for an area where AIDS is an epidemic. The matter was not presented clearly by the media, whose reports gave many the impression that this character was proposed for their version of the program.
This caused US program affiliates and certain Internet sites to spark somewhat of an uproar. Several politicians also became
concerned, and fueled argument over public funding for such a controversial topic. The character named Kami was introduced in
late September 2002; the name is derived
from the Tswana word for "acceptance".
Characters
List of Sesame Street
characters
Primary Puppet Characters
Many of the puppet characters were designed by Jim Henson himself.
Secondary Puppet Characters
- Benny Rabbit
- Natasha, Humphrey and Ingrid
- Twiddlebugs
- Two Headed Monster
Primary Human Characters
(alphabetically)
- Alan
- Bob and his Uncle Wally
- Carlo
- Celina
- David
and his grandmother Clarice
- Dr. Gina
Jefferson
- Linda
- Mr. Handford
- Mr. Hooper
- Mr. Noodle and Mr. Noodle's Brother, Mr. Noodle
- Ruthie
- The Robinsons: Susan, Gordon, and son Miles; also Gordon's sister Olivia, and father Mr. Robinson
- The Rodriguezes: Maria,
Luis, and daughter Gabby
- Wanda the Word
Fairy
Secondary Human Characters
- ABC Rapper
- Buffy,
her husband Sheldon and child Koty
- Jamal and Angela, and their children Kayla and Tarah
- Keshia
- Larry
- Larry and
Phyllis
- Maya
- Molly, the Mail Lady
- The Number Painter and his victim
- Wally and Ralph
- Willy
- Mr. Macintosh
- Hiroshi
- Lillian
- Various lesser used, 1970s characters: Antonio,
Miguel,
Tom, Judy, Rafael, Kim Raver, Billy
- Real Life Kids: John-John, Fanny
Famous guest stars and various children from New York schools and day care centers are a constantly changing part of the cast.
Minor puppets also have come and gone over the years.
Sesame Street is known for its merchandising, including many books, magazines, video and audio media, toys, and the
"Tickle-me Elmo" craze. There are also a live touring show, Sesame Street LIVE! and a theme park in Langhorne, Pennsylvania near Philadelphia (USA), Sesame Place.
Sesame Street is produced by Sesame Workshop, formerly
known as the Children's Television Workshop or CTW.
History of the Show
The original format of the show called for the humans to be shown in plots on the street, intermixed with the segments of
animation, live action shorts and Muppets. These segments were created to be like
commercials: quick, catchy and memorable. This format would make the learning seem fun, and were the stepping stones in creating
the now common edutainment-based program.
To make sure that this revolutionary new format was going to work, CTW called in test groups to air the program to. The test
watchers were entranced when the ad-like segments, especially those with the jovial puppets, but were then seriously
disinterested by the street scenes. It was a quick and easy choice for the producers to add the Muppets onto the street. This
dose of cartoony characters now let the humans deliver messages to watchers without such viewer dismay.
Sesame Street, along with several other Sesame Workshop
produced shows (including The Electric Company) are all
taped in New York City. Originally, they were taped at the
Teletape Studios at 81st and Broadway in Manhattan until Teletape's parent company Reeves Entertainment went bankrupt. The show
was then moved to and remains to this day at the Kaufman Astoria Studios in neighboring Queens.
History of Sesame Street
List of lists
animators, bibliography of fictional works based on
the show, discography, puppeteers
Relating to characters
characters, characters,
exclusively in books, movies, characters ordered by date of debut, characters ordered by last known appearance, characters from international versions, grouch characters, guest
celebrities, monster characters, Muppet characters
See also
A Special Sesame Street
Christmas, The Annual Sesame Street Cookie Baking Contest, Bert is Evil parody website, Big Bird's Birthday Celebration,
Christmas Eve on Sesame
Street, Elmo in Grouchland, Sesame Street presents Follow That Bird, Three Bears and a Baby
Sesame Street, Season 35
External Link
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