travellingpat
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Thats awesome! Thanks!
Who's to say that somebody else was originally planned to be there? I think the screening room scenes featured a good mix of main, secondary, and minor characters. These scenes also have every major Muppet from the movie, with the obvious exception (untill the end) of Sweetums (I keep thinking that he should have caught up with the cast before the story ended, instead of jumping through the screen... either that, or he should have made more random cameos, like when he ran out of the tent).PhsychoChimp said:In the screening room, Baskerville, with legs, is next to Gonzo. Rowlf and Lew choose to stand. And Rowlf even throws a paper airplane, that lands infront of the Lunche On Counter Monster.
Muppets that gained legs could only sit I think... Link, Luncheoncounter, Baskerville, Boppity, Nigel, Marvin, Zoot, Statler, Waldorf, Fozzie, Bunsen, Beaker, Robin, Kermit, Floyd, Janice, Animal, Camilla, Dr.Teeth, Crazy Harry, Sam, Piggy.
And, they have an extra chicken in those scenes. Who was supposed to be there? Beauregard? Gloat? Droop? Deadly?
That sounds cool. I wonder how often that kind of stuff is done for crowd scenes like that. I guess it was probably done for The Muppet Show opening and the wedding finale of The Muppets Take Manhattan, and I suppose there probably wasn't much planning like this for The Muppet Movie finale (maybe there were arrangements regarding what types of characters went where, but probably not any specific order of where each character was supposed to be).Tim said:I don't know what the thinking was behind that scene, or how much pre-planning went into "casting" that shot, but I can tell you this. I got a look at Jim's personal production notebook, (a 3-ring binder with that full-color close-up photo of Gonzo and the balloons we've all seen on the cover) and there was a layout for that scene. In one of the sheet protector pages was a photo-copied sketch of the screening room set looking down at the floor layout, puppeteer pits and all. The little chairs were represented by what looked like capital letter "D"s and the names of which characters that were supposed to be sitting where hand-written inside each. The sketch matched the scene as it was set up, so nothing was left to last minute chance or on-set change.
That sounds cool. It's too bad that neither of the Muppet Movie DVDs have concept sketches or promotional art for the movie. Those would make great special features.Tim said:The day of the shot Jim Frawley expalined the scene to us, he showed some beautiful full-color drawings of what the final shot was to look like (never saw that again), but all we had to work with was a large whiteboard with a huge oval drawn on it with black marker representing the hole in the stage for the puppeteers to stand. Inside of that were circles indicating which group of puppets went where ("Sesame Street", "Emmett Otter", etc.), and an oval practice grid painted on the floor of the stage next to the screening room set. Once puppets wer assigned, and groups assembled on the grid we were to remember which number (or rather what part of the squared-off numbers) we were standing on.
With our puppet characters on our hands and the "Big Guys" following us(quite a sight for anyone on lot that day) we trooped along in broad daylight to the other stage where the Rainbow set was up. All we had to do was crawl under the false floor to the open area, find our spot on the grid pained here, and remember who we stood next to.
I remeber trying Herry and figuring out how his eyebrows worked (just like Bert's but surprisignly tricky to do), but I don't remeber getting to know Grover (darn it!)Erine81981 said:I love it. Great story Tim. I'm enjoying all the questions and answers to your questions. Did you get to try on Grover and Herry Monster anytime you were there?
Yeah, I was SO dissappointed with the so-called "50th" Edition of TMM since it had less extras than the regular one. In 2004 the film turned 25 years old, and it would have been so cool had they done a big 2-disk set with conceptual art, new and vintage interviews and "The Muppets Go Hollywood" special (the director of which, Stan Harris also directed me in my televison pilot a few year later). Thanks, Brian.minor muppetz said:That sounds cool. It's too bad that neither of the Muppet Movie DVDs have concept sketches or promotional art for the movie. Those would make great special features.
I think it's interesting that the performers had to remember who they were standing next to. The whole scene was one long take. There weren't any alternate shots of different angles during the scene. It makes sense that certain characters were grouped together, and it makes sense that character duos were next to each other, but odd that the puppets had to be in a consistent order in the scene.