No, he's this animated kid.GonzoLeaper said:Solomon Grundy? You mean the DC Comics villian?
(Sorry for the weird polka-dot effect; my scanner sometimes does that at low resolutions).
No, he's this animated kid.GonzoLeaper said:Solomon Grundy? You mean the DC Comics villian?
I was lucky enough to find that book, soo good!Ilikemuppets said:My grandparents used to have the book with Grover, were grover was scared about the monster at the end of the book, I used to love that book when I was little.
Good luck on your search Krazedmuppet, I hope you find everything you are looking for. I would love to read the "How to be a Grouch" book beacause I am a fan of Caroll Spinnys art work.Krazedmuppet said:I was lucky enough to find that book, soo good!
I collect SS and Muppet kids books, I have quite the collection. Im slowly trying to get the full set of the SS library and SS treasury (very similer books) also I have alot of the book club ones. One of my favs is "how to be a grouch, by oscar the grouch" it was written and illistrated by Spinny himself!!!! I always wanted that one autographed....
I have actually read that book on the trypod website and It is probably one of the most imformative books on SesameStreet there is.BEAR said:I have a very old book that was published after Sesame's first season. It is all about the history of the show and how things work and the statistics of their research and everything you would want to know about the inner workings of how the show was developed. I think it is simply called All About Sesame Street. It is out of print now and very hard to find. I am so lucky I got a copy when I wrote my Sesame Street research paper a few years back.
I borrowed that book from the library years ago and some of what you mentioned I recall. Unfortunatly i was too young to have considered things like copyright date but obviously it was an early publication.Andrew T said:In the Book of People and Things:
*Ernie takes a bath in his bathtub Rosie. (I believe this segment was from the very first episode)
*Solomon Grundy washes part of his body every day of the week. (ditto)
*Kermit talks about the different ways people can feel, with happy and sad faced circles Cookie Monster eats. (The faces look drawn on to the circles; I wouldn't be surprised if the original skit had a different theme)
*Susan demonstrates emotions.
*Ernie expects an important call, but Cookie Monster hogs and eventually eats the phone.
*Bert and Ernie talk about emotions everyone has.
*Gordon asks Oscar if he ever feels happy.
*Bob sings "People in your neighborhood" with grocer and doctor anything muppets. (The Grocer looks like Fat Blue, albeit with green nose and black hair)
*Mr. Hooper talks about his job and asks the kids what it would be like to be somebody else.
*Gordon and a boy pretend sit on the steps and pretend to be astronauts, train engineers, and bus drivers.
*Big Bird asks Susan if she ever thought about living someplace else.
And in the Book of Shapes:
*Bert tells Cookie Monster that some cookies are shaped like circles.
*Bob talks demonstrates squares.
*A street cleaner (I guess) shows Gordon a cardboard triangle they find; they give it to Oscar.
*Bob holds up a square and triangle standing alongside a drawing of a park scene.
The Book of Numbers has frames (presumably from an animated sketch) with large numbers along the left-hand pages and out-of-context drawings from presumable animations on the other. The Book of Letters also contains drawings presumably taken from animated segments, but these two books are altogether pretty boring.
Andrew T said:Here's a photo I scanned in from The Sesame Street Book of People and Things containing the original Gordon, a blue & red mailbox, and an orange Oscar!