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Jim Henson

Hundreds of millions of kids — and adults — have been entranced
by the Muppetmaster
By JAMES COLLINS for Time Magazine
Jim
Henson can be credited with many accomplishments: he had the
most profound influence on children of any entertainer of his
time; he adapted the ancient art of puppetry to the most modern
of mediums, television, transforming both; he created a TV show
that was one of the most popular on earth. But Henson's greatest
achievement was broader than any of these. Through his work, he
helped sustain the qualities of fancifulness, warmth and
consideration that have been so threatened by our coarse,
cynical age.
Born in 1936, Henson grew up in the small town of Leland, Miss.,
where his father worked as an agronomist for the Federal
Government. When Henson was in fifth grade, his father took a
job in Washington, and the family moved to a suburb in Maryland.
There, in high school, Henson became fascinated by television.
"I loved the idea," he once said, "that what you saw was taking
place somewhere else at the same time." In the summer of 1954,
just before he entered the University of Maryland, he learned
that a local station needed someone to perform with puppets on a
children's show. Henson wasn't particularly interested in
puppets, but he did want to get into TV, so he and a friend made
a couple — one was called Pierre the French Rat — and they were
hired.
The job didn't last long, but within a few months, Henson was
back on TV, puppeteering for another station, the local NBC
affiliate. Soon he had his own five-minute program, called Sam
and Friends. It aired live twice a day, once before the network
news with Chet Huntley and David Brinkley and later preceding
the Tonight show, which at that time starred Steve Allen.
Remaining in college, where he studied art and theater design,
Henson produced Sam and Friends for six years. Assisting him was
a fellow student named Jane Nebel, whom he married in 1959.
Puppets have been around for thousands of years, but the
proto-Muppets that began to appear on Sam and Friends were
different. Kermit was there, looking and sounding much as he
would later (until his death Henson always animated Kermit and
provided his voice). Typical hand puppets have solid heads, but
Kermit's face was soft and mobile, and he could move his mouth
in synchronization with his speech; he could also gesticulate
more facilely than a marionette, with rods moving his arms. For
television, Henson realized, it was necessary to invent puppets
that had "life and sensitivity." (Henson sometimes said Muppet
was a combination of puppet and marionette, but it seems the
word came to him and he liked it, and later thought up a
derivation.)
Throughout the early 1960s, the Muppets made appearances on the
Today show and a range of variety programs. Then, in 1969, came
Sesame Street. Henson was always careful not to take the credit
for Sesame Street's achievements. It was not his program, after
all — the Children's Television Workshop hired him. In fact,
Henson hesitated to join the show, since he did not want to
become stuck as a children's entertainer. Nonetheless, few would
disagree that it was primarily Bert and Ernie, Big Bird, Grover
and the rest who made Sesame Street so captivating. Joan Ganz
Cooney, who created the show, once remarked that the group
involved with it had a collective genius but that Henson was the
only individual genius. "He was our era's Charlie Chaplin, Mae
West, W.C. Fields and Marx Brothers," Cooney said, "and indeed
he drew from all of them to create a new art form that
influenced popular culture around the world."
Since Sesame Street has been on the air for 30 years and has
been shown in scores of countries, Henson's Muppets have
entranced hundreds of millions of children. And the audience for
the Muppets has not only been huge; it has also been passionate.
In fact, given the number of his fans and the intensity of their
devotion, Kermit may possibly be the leading children's
character of the century, more significant than even Peter Pan
or Winnie-the-Pooh.
But despite the Muppets' success on Sesame Street and their
demonstrated appeal to adults as well as children, no U.S.
network would give Henson a show of his own. It was a British
producer, Lew Grade, who finally offered Henson the financing
that enabled him to mount The Muppet Show. The program ran in
syndication from 1976 until 1981, when Henson decided to end it
lest its quality begin to decline. At its peak it was watched
each week by 235 million viewers around the world. Stars from
Steve Martin to Rudolf Nureyev appeared as guest hosts, and the
show launched the career of Miss Piggy, the vain, tres
sophistiquee female who was besotted with Kermit.
The beauty of the Muppets, on both Sesame Street and their own
show, was that they were cuddly but not too cuddly, and not only
cuddly. There are satire and sly wit; Bert and Ernie quarrel;
Miss Piggy behaves unbecomingly; Kermit is sometimes
exasperated. By adding just enough tartness to a sweet overall
spirit, Henson purveyed a kind of innocence that was plausible
for the modern imagination. His knowingness allowed us to accept
his real gifts: wonder, delight, optimism.
Henson was a kind, infinitely patient man. Those who worked for
him say he literally never raised his voice. Frank Oz, the
puppeteer behind Bert, Miss Piggy and many others, was Henson's
partner for 27 years. "Jim was not perfect," he says. "But I'll
tell you something — he was as close to how you're supposed to
behave toward other people as anyone I've ever known."
The only complaint of his five children seems to be that because
Henson was so busy, he was unable to spend enough time with
them. They often accompanied him while he worked, and he once
even took his eldest daughter along when he held a meeting with
the head of a movie studio. That child, Lisa, is now a powerful
producer in Hollywood; Henson's elder son Brian runs the Jim
Henson Co.; and another daughter, Cheryl, also works there.
However gentle, Henson was not a complete naif. He liked
expensive cars — Rolls-Royces, Porsches — and after he and Jane
separated in 1986 (they remained close and never divorced), he
dated a succession of women.
In the '70s and '80s, Henson produced innumerable films and TV
shows with and without the Muppets. Some were dark, like his
adaptations of folktales and myths in the ingenious TV series
Jim Henson's The Storyteller. Then in 1990, at age 53, Henson
suddenly died after contracting an extremely aggressive form of
pneumonia. He remains a powerful presence, though, on account of
Sesame Street and the Henson Co., whose next venture will be a
global family-entertainment network called the Kermit Channel.
Because the works we encounter as children are so potent, Henson
may influence the next century as much as this one, as his
viewers grow up carrying his vision within them.
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This web page was last updated on:
10 December, 2008
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