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The Muppet Show

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The Muppet Show is a television program featuring a cast of Muppets (diverse hand operated puppets, typically with huge eyes and large moving mouths) produced by Jim Henson and his team from 1976 to 1981. In the United States, it aired in syndication; in Britain it aired on ITV.

The television show depicted a vaudeville-style song-and-dance variety show, as well as the backstage antics involved in putting the show on. Most of the shows revolved around the timid and gentle Kermit the Frog (performed by Henson) trying to keep control of the varied, outrageous, kinetic Muppet characters, as well as keep the human guest stars happy and secure. The show was well known for outrageous, highly physical (slapstick), sometimes absurdist comedy, and particularly for using its puppet characters to create uniquely humorous parodies. Many major celebrities were eager to perform with the Muppets on television and in film. Each show featured a human guest star, as diverse as Twiggy, Julie Andrews, Steve Martin, and Alice Cooper. [http://www.tvtome.com/tvtome/servlet/EpisodeGuideServlet/showid-1866/The_Muppet_Show/ (Episode Guide)]

Though they appear in various earlier forms (see Jim Henson), The Muppets gained widespread popularity on the landmark PBS series Sesame Street. The Muppet Show became the cornerstone of Jim Henson's enormously popular ongoing productions.

Other "Jim Henson's Muppets" creations featured in the films The Dark Crystal, Labyrinth, and the Sesame Street based Follow That Bird, as well as in a large variety of films, made-for-TV movies, direct-to-video children's releases, and television specials.

Major show writers included Jerry Juhl and Jack Burns.

Long term Muppet performers include Jim Henson, Frank Oz, Jerry Nelson, Richard Hunt, Dave Goelz, Steve Whitmire, Karen Prell, Brian Henson, and Brian Muehl.

Select episodes can be found on videotape and DVD.

The rights to the episodes and characters used in The Muppet Show, and subsequent film outings, were bought in February 2004 by The Walt Disney Company.

Spin-offs

The Muppet Show characters went on to star in The Muppet Movie, which was the first film to feature puppets interacting with humans in real-world locations. Later films included The Great Muppet Caper, The Muppets Take Manhattan, The Muppet Christmas Carol, Muppet Treasure Island, and Muppets From Space.

The Jim Henson Hour and Muppets Tonight are considered by some as spin-offs of The Muppet Show.

List of Muppet characters

See also Kermitage: Character Guide

Recurring skits

  • At the Dance - Laugh-In style one liners from the characters as they ballroom dance
  • Muppet Labs - the latest invention from Dr. Bunsen Honeydew with his assistant, Beaker, getting the worst of its inevitable malfunction.
  • Muppet News Flash - a news announcer gives a newsbrief only to typically have something fall on his head
  • Pigs In Space - parody of science fiction shows like Star Trek, but also old 40's sci-fi serials
  • Swedish Chef - Cooking show parody
  • Vend-a-face - A vending machine that offers unique services that usually mean agonizing contortions of the muppets dumb enough to feed the machine.
  • Veterinarian's Hospital - parody of soap opera General Hospital and other medical dramas which consists of Dr. Bob (Rowlf) cracking jokes in the operating room with Nurses Piggy and Janice and always looking for the announcer when he gives the closing announcements.
  • Wayne and Wanda - Every song this duo attempted ends in disaster
  • Bear on Patrol - Fozzie is a unlucky police officer and Link Hogthrob is his stupid superior who always get into the silliest situations with the criminals brought in.