Exactly. They could have got a veteran animator instead of a veteran puppeteer. And if it originally was a cartoon, it clearly wouldn't have lasted that long. Educational cartoons of the 60's were a mixed bag... we either got something memorable like "Tennessee Tuxedo" or something unentertaining and forgetable like the wrongly named "Funny Company"If SS was originally animated, I doubt Jim Henson would've been involved.
Yeah, but created the adult characters. If he didn't, there wouldn't have been Muppet Babies.Why? His characters were for Muppet Babies, need one forget.
I like that idea for the vocies. I know it wouldn't have gone over with it being a eduactional animated series but i think it might would work this now. I would think more of a animated adventure or just another day on Sesame Street type of series more then having it be a numbers and letters. But that's me. I just would love a SS cartoon series just to have something us Classic Fans would enjoy watching.I like SS for what it is-- just classic puppetry.
As far as who'd do an animated SS along with Sesame Workshop and the Jim Henson Company, I would've gone with Marvel (hey, Marvel worked with Jim Henson on Muppet Babies, after all!) rather than DiC. And if they went with different voice actors instead of just using the Muppeteers for voices (whom I would prefer to use for an SS cartoon), here's who I would've picked:
(note: trying not to be a Little Muppet Monsters fan-boy )
Frank Welker for Kermit, Ernie, and the Count
Greg Berg for Bert and Big Bird
Dan Castellaneta for Oscar
Bob Bergen for Guy Smiley, Herry, and Telly
Hal Rayle for Cookie Monster and Grover
Tom Kenny for Snuffy, Mumford, and Mr. Johnson
Russi Taylor for Prairie Dawn and Grundgetta
Just some examples. I'm sure you've got slightly better choices, though.