BlakeConor14
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- Feb 13, 2015
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don't forget bobo and carl have stayed
I mentioned this elsewhere recently, but I feel like Sam the Eagle got a slight boost in prominence during the 1990s. Sure, he was missing from the albums and Muppet Classic Theater, but in The Muppet Christmas Carol he got his biggest role (at the time) in a Muppet movie (in all previous movies he only got one line per scene), and then in Muppet Treasure Island was given a main role. He also had a recurring sketch on Muppets Tonight. The show started a few months before I got the internet, and at the time I didn't know that Frank Oz's directing schedule limited his time with the Muppets (and I still wouldn't really know that for three years), but even then I was surprised to see Sam on the show, having seen him as a minor character plus the fact that so many established characters just walked out of the office at the beginning of the first episode, making me wonder if that meant known characters would be limited* and the fact that Fozzie wasn't even in the first episode (the fact that Oz performed Fozzie and Sam is a coincidence to that part,though).Rizzo and Pepe were used quite a bit, but so were Kermit, Gonzo, Clifford, Bunsen, Beaker, Statler and Waldorf, Bobo, Johnny and Sal, and to a lesser extent even Frank's Characters (Piggy, Fozzie, Animal, Sam).
Part of me wonders if there should also be an era for the years between The Muppet Show and Jim Henson's death. It can still be considered Prime Years (maybe Prime Years Part II), but during that time the Muppets usually weren't on TV on a regular basis and the various performers were split among productions (Jim was busy with everything, Frank was directing Jerry, Dave, and Steve were busy with Fraggle Rock, Richard spent a lot of his time on Sesame Street and other New York-produced productions). They did movies and specials, and a lot of direct-to-video projects, but during this time Jim Henson started to allow them to be used in more productions for younger kids, with Muppet Babies getting the most exposure for the Muppets, in addition to various home videos and computer games being educational (the short-lived Little Muppet Monsters, on the other hand, doesn't seem educational). The Muppets did return to prime time with The Jim Henson Hour, but according to Jim Henson: The Biography, it was the Muppet segments (as well as Jim Henson's intros) that the critics were most harsh to (the book mentioned that critics loved The StoryTeller, but I wonder if more episodes were reviewed; I'd like to know critics opinions on episodes without The StoryTeller, particularly their opinion on Lighthouse Island, as well as critic opinions on the few full-hour episodes).Dwayne I agree, that'd be cool. As I look at it, I just see various "Eras" in Muppet History, such as "Early Years" "Prime Time" "Post Henson" "Re-Emerging" (just based on my opinion).
While there are those who poopoo the idea of recasting characters even now, the fact that many characters were yet to be recast lead to the necessity of creating new characters to fill in those spots. The important thing is that characters were invented to fill those gaps while MCC relied on human cast members. Scooter would have/should have been a natural to play nephew Fred, but without anyone playing Scooter, they couldn't use him, especially in that capacity. Then came MTI, where they filled the pirate roles with new characters like Clueless Morgan and Polly Lobster, leading to significantly less humans in important roles. Just Tim Curry and the kid that played Hawkins. As for a show, that's kinda why it took so long to get one off the ground. New characters were brought in to fill up the series. That was decidedly more hit or miss. The one note parody characters just didn't work, and while MT is far more pop culture-y than any other Muppet project before it, one shot skits worked far better than recurring parodies. Especially ones named after Muppet Show skits that were far better (cough cough Deep Dish Nine).1990-2000: Post Henson/Hunt: This is the most easily defined era with changes that are unavoidable (The untimely deaths of Jim Henson and Richard Hunt) leading to a drastic change in which characters are portrayed. Rowlf, Scooter, and the Electric Mayhem took a back-seat, making way for characters such as Clifford, Johnny Fiamma, Sal, Pepe, and Bobo to Shine. The Biggest examples of this era are Muppets Tonight, The Muppet Christmas Carol, Muppet Treasure Island, and Muppets From Space.
I really wish the Muppets could branch out into other holidays. I think they have quite enough Christmas projects as it is. I really would like to see them try that Halloween special they keep putting on hold.i am just hoping if they make a new christmas movie/special it's heart warming and sweet. I really liked muppet family christmas.