Baby Gonzo
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Dec 7, 2007
- Messages
- 615
- Reaction score
- 14
Upon revisiting the Muppets in general (The Muppet Show, Muppet Babies, the Muppet movies, ect...) in the past year, I have noticed something I wasn't really aware of as a child. While the spirit and personality of the characters is often there, most of the Muppets went through some sort of change in character in the Muppet Babies. With most cartoons that feature children, characters can be broken down into different types: the leader, the cute one, the smart one, the troublemaker/bully, the active/sporty one, the naive one, and so on. I never realized how some of the characters were changed to fit into that formula.
For example, as opposed to his position as gofer, Baby Scooter is a computer whiz. Understandable, if the logic is to make a child character a gofer would really just make everyone else seem like a bully.
Baby Fozzie was made to be considerably more naive than his adult counterpart.
Baby Bean almost seemed to be older than he really is for some reason. Steve Whitmire's voice was already high pitched, young, and cute when he performed Bean. I don't think Dave Coulier captured that naivety in his portrayal of Bean. I have yet to decide if that's just a character thing or a voice thing.
Baby Gonzo seems like he's more aware of his actions and weirdness than his adult counterpart. And between taking the other babies toys on occasion and getting into reckless situations, he often seemed to fall into the troublemaker category as well. Well, it's not unlike Gonzo to be reckless, but I don't think he was as big of a troublemaker.
(I'm not sure if anything I just posted made since, but it did in my head.)
For example, as opposed to his position as gofer, Baby Scooter is a computer whiz. Understandable, if the logic is to make a child character a gofer would really just make everyone else seem like a bully.
Baby Fozzie was made to be considerably more naive than his adult counterpart.
Baby Bean almost seemed to be older than he really is for some reason. Steve Whitmire's voice was already high pitched, young, and cute when he performed Bean. I don't think Dave Coulier captured that naivety in his portrayal of Bean. I have yet to decide if that's just a character thing or a voice thing.
Baby Gonzo seems like he's more aware of his actions and weirdness than his adult counterpart. And between taking the other babies toys on occasion and getting into reckless situations, he often seemed to fall into the troublemaker category as well. Well, it's not unlike Gonzo to be reckless, but I don't think he was as big of a troublemaker.
(I'm not sure if anything I just posted made since, but it did in my head.)