muppetmayhem said:
That is a wierd thing to ask. I don't really pay that much attention to who is wet. But I do wonder if Henson goes through the trouble of drying his puppets once they have gotten wet. Do you think he dries them? Or do you think he just uses another puppet in the wet ones place?
Actually, you're kinda right. Someone explained this to me once - The puppet is basically part of the bottom of the water - So, for instance, you have a bowl, a hole in the bottom, with the puppet body (a waterproof version) sealed to the bottom of the hole, so that you can reach up and manipulate the puppet in the water. The water has to be colored or shot on edge so that you don't see that the puppet is basically attached to the bottom of the lake, bathtub, toilet, or whatever the character is swimming in.
As far as jumping into the water, a simpler waterproof body would be used - since it's being thrown into the water, it can travel through the scene so fast that you dont have time to examine the puppet closely and you don't notice that its less detailed than the puppets you see every day. It's all camera tricks.
That's how it was explained to me. Whether or not thats how it was done I'm not sure of, but it seems to be a good theory.....
-Rick "Wembely" Miller
...You can NOT leave the magic!