When I was in New York I went to the museum twice. You can buy a ticket for $10 ($8 if you're a student - if you're young-looking like me they just believe you're a student when you say so), for which you can watch up to four shows during two hours in a private booth.
I got to watch the following:
- Jim Henson's Early Years compilation. This is a one hour block of Sam and Friends episodes, commercials, and guest appearances. I believe transcripts of the commercials are over at TP. The rest of it had:
SAM AND FRIENDS
- That Old Black Magic (what was Sam's wardrobe sponsored by again?) - ends with an Eskay commercial!
- Two cowboys try and get off their horses (Kermit and Theodore - lipsynch)
- Visual Thinking (Kermit & Harry)
- Poison to Poison (lipsynch - Harry and Theodore)
- Punsmoke (cowboy sketch with Theodore, Kermit, Harry (Harriette!) and Yorick)
- Hungry At Night (Yorick eating - lipsynch)
- Under My Skin (Kermit and choir - lipsynch)
- Kermit talks to Huntley and Brinkley
(in one of the commercials compilations, there was another one with Harry showing Kermit the weather he sold)
GUEST APPEARANCES
Jimmy Dean: Rowlf as a violinist / Rowlf and Lassie / Rowlf for President / Rowlf caught a cold
Jack Paar: "Inchworm" sketch
Fanfare with Al Hirt: "Java" sketch / Two Headed Creature sings "You're Just In Love" with Al
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Commercials Compilations - they have like three of them, and I really wonder why they're not making ONE compilation of those. They're so short and yet they fill up your whole watching schedule.
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Steve Allen guest appearances. "I've Grown Accustomed To Your Face" and "Yellow Rose Of Texas" (Kermit is a country singer and a little glove puppet drummer upstages him)
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Tales of the Tinkerdee (it's on TP!)
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Fraggle Rock: Mokey and the Minstrels. Any Minstrels fan should have seen this episode.
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Julie on Sesame Street. This is a highly unusual special from the early 70's, and clearly made for adults - like a Muppet Show starring the Sesame characters.
It opens with Julie performing a dancing number with trashcans with grouch's legs, while trying to find her way to Sesame Street. There she meets Oscar ("May I give you one piece of advice? NEVER TALK TO PEOPLE IN TRASHCANS!!") Big Bird, Bert and Ernie (who have no idea who she is), and Kermit, who is asked to sing Being Green to Julie. He doesn't make it through the first verse because he has laryngitis, and Julie has to sing it for him.
When the song's over Kermit gives Julie some flowers, which Cookie Monster eats. For the diehards: see the parallel with the Flowereating Monster?
Then the second guest, Perry Como, arrives to sing a love song. Julie does some dance with counting dancers, and then they both sing a "Sing A Song" medley, which is technically 15 minutes of trying to come up with songs that have the word SING in it. Can you imagine? FIF TEEN minutes?! I was like: "I bet the song's over now - no wait, another song - no, another song - and another one... where are the Muppets? Another one..." This is like, the big boring part of the special, even though the singers are great.
Then things get incredibly good when Bert, Ernie and Biff suggest that Julie should perform on Broadway with them. After a sweet a capella "Give My Regards To Broadway", the Sesame Muppets and Julie appear in a medley of great Muppet Show-like renditions of Broadway musicals. My fave is the opening "Doin' What Comes Naturally" from "Annie Get Your Gun", which Julie sings with the cast as cowboys. Here we also see the first version of the Muppet Show sketch "I Feel Pretty" - and in "Shall We Dance" from "The King And I", a very scary Bert with no hair...
The special ends with Julie and Perry singing "Picture A World" with Ernie, Bert, Grover, Cookie, Kermit, Biff and Big Bird. They all say goodbye (Biff: "Perry, come on. Tell me once and for all: was I outta line?!"), Cookie gives Julie a flower which Julie eats immediately, then she sings "What Do I Do When I'm Alone?" and that's the special.
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Woulda loved to see more, but that's for next time...