GelflingWaldo
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jun 24, 2004
- Messages
- 1,553
- Reaction score
- 9
Let me say that I'm not anti-recasts. This is not a "I don't want anyone else ever touching Kermit" situation or protest. Also I don't think the performance of Kermit on 'America's Got Talent' was necessarily bad - it was not dead-on perfect, but it was pretty darn good. But I don't care if it was 100% flawless and pitch perfect, it still does not make it right. Sure recasts are necessary to keep characters alive. And I embrace and support recasting of characters (Steve as Kermit. Eric as Piggy and Fozzie. Dave as Waldorf. Bill as Rowlf. ect.) I am not against someone else (even Artie) taking on the role of Kermit someday when Steve is no longer able to continue. I am not against recasts. What I am against is performer flip-flopping.
Unless Steve has hung-up the frog for good and Artie (or whoever) is the new full-time performer of Kermit, I don't want to hear anyone but Steve talking for the frog.
I don't want an appearance of Kermit to be announced and then people wonder if it will be "Kermit A" or "Kermit B". I don't want multiple Kermits co-existing in the public eye. Everyone will have their favorite, or one they like more then the other -- and then fandom will begin to divide even more. I also think the characters need continuity and consistently - that's what allows the characters to grow and be rich 3-dimentional characters and not just flat impressions.
Disney does this with their other characters. For over 90 years Mickey Mouse has had only 1 official voice at a given time -- Walt Disney (from 1928 to 1947), Jimmy MacDonald (1947–1977), and Wayne Allwine (1977-2009). These 3 men did the voice of Mickey for everything - cartoons, TV shows, movies, toys, commercials, albums, audio books, stage shows, video games, theme park attractions, and anything else. If a Mickey as much as cleared his throat in the past 30 years, you could bet it was Wayne Allwine that recorded it. I think Kermit should be the same -- one performer at a time. No flip-flopping between first and second string. No flip-flopping between Steve and Artie and anyone else based on availability, convenience, cost, or importance of appearance.
Again, this is nothing against Artie (if that's who performed the Frog on AGT). This is nothing against the performance on the show. This is not about how good/bad the puppeteering or the vocals were. This is not a "I like so-and-so's Kermit more" moment. This is not anti-recasting. What I have a problem with is performer flip-flopping.
1 Muppet, 1 Voice.
Unless Steve has hung-up the frog for good and Artie (or whoever) is the new full-time performer of Kermit, I don't want to hear anyone but Steve talking for the frog.
I don't want an appearance of Kermit to be announced and then people wonder if it will be "Kermit A" or "Kermit B". I don't want multiple Kermits co-existing in the public eye. Everyone will have their favorite, or one they like more then the other -- and then fandom will begin to divide even more. I also think the characters need continuity and consistently - that's what allows the characters to grow and be rich 3-dimentional characters and not just flat impressions.
Disney does this with their other characters. For over 90 years Mickey Mouse has had only 1 official voice at a given time -- Walt Disney (from 1928 to 1947), Jimmy MacDonald (1947–1977), and Wayne Allwine (1977-2009). These 3 men did the voice of Mickey for everything - cartoons, TV shows, movies, toys, commercials, albums, audio books, stage shows, video games, theme park attractions, and anything else. If a Mickey as much as cleared his throat in the past 30 years, you could bet it was Wayne Allwine that recorded it. I think Kermit should be the same -- one performer at a time. No flip-flopping between first and second string. No flip-flopping between Steve and Artie and anyone else based on availability, convenience, cost, or importance of appearance.
Again, this is nothing against Artie (if that's who performed the Frog on AGT). This is nothing against the performance on the show. This is not about how good/bad the puppeteering or the vocals were. This is not a "I like so-and-so's Kermit more" moment. This is not anti-recasting. What I have a problem with is performer flip-flopping.
1 Muppet, 1 Voice.