I think you are getting a little down on the new performers too soon. It is pertinant to have new performers honing and perfecting thier skill and it is even more important to do it now so you have someone to step in and take over if something tragic should happen. And I cant think of a better place to have them perfecting thier craft then in little segments such as this or the ESPN ones. No it is not perfect and no they are never going to be as good as they once were in many of our eyes but I would rather have them continuously get better than watch them disappear.MuppetfraggleEX said:He just wasn't the same. In many small, but important ways. The wings, the eyes. It is sad really. The end of an era.
I can: Their parents' bedrooms. The way the Muppets work is, performers spend years learning their craft, and then, when they're ready, they start performing in front of an audience. They aren't just handed major characters, "Here's Piggy, see how you go."unclematt said:I can't think of a better place to have them perfecting their craft than in little segments such as this or the ESPN ones.
unclematt said:I cant think of a better place to have them perfecting thier craft then in little segments such as this or the ESPN ones.
Kynan, It's not necessary to be disrespectful to Yerrid and Massey. They are trying to live the Muppet dream. Your disapproval should stick to management.Kynan Barker said:I can: Their parents' bedrooms.
Kynan Barker said:I can: Their parents' bedrooms. The way the Muppets work is, performers spend years learning their craft, and then, when they're ready, they start performing in front of an audience. They aren't just handed major characters, "Here's Piggy, see how you go."
Consider this: Eric Jacobson's first-ever public performance of Miss Piggy was at MuppetFest, in front of several hundred Muppet fans, and every single one of us thought it was Frank. That sets the bar pretty high for understudies, but that's how high it should be. If Eric's Piggy was anything less than flawless, I think there would have been a riot. Literally. And that's the standard we should be able to expect from every performer on every project.
Training understudies to step in when they're needed makes sense. But training them in front of an audience doesn't. Neither does releasing substandard work under the Muppet banner. It hurts the characters, it hurts the brand, and it hurts the fans.
Kynan
savethemuppets.com