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Stacy Conradt
The Quick 10: Muppets Part Deux
by Stacy Conradt - July 10, 2008 - 3:51 PM

The Muppet Quick 10 from last week went over so well, lots of you _flossers requested a follow-up. Ask and ye shall receive! Here are a few more tidbits I dug up on some of your favorite friendly monsters.

1. Gonzo. What exactly is Gonzo? Nobody knows. Even Jim Henson had no particular species in mind. Over the course of The Muppet Show, Muppet Babies and various Muppet movies, Gonzo has been referred to as a “Whatever”, a “Weirdo” and an alien. Whatever he is, he first appeared on the scene in 1970’s The Great Santa Claus Switch. His name was Snarl the Cigar Box Frackle. In 1974, he showed up on a T.V. special for Herb Alpert & the Tijuana Brass. He became Gonzo the Great by the first season of The Muppet Show and developed his thing for Camilla the Chicken almost accidentally: during one episode where chickens were auditioning for the show, puppeteer Dave Goelz ad-libbed, “Don’t call us, we’ll call you… nice legs, though!” It was decided then and there that Gonzo would have a bizarre romantic interest in chickens.

2. Statler and Waldorf.
Statler-Waldorf.jpgYou have to love Statler and Waldorf. I couldn’t find much on their particular inspiration, but I can tell you that they’ve been around since the 1975 Muppet Show pilot. They are named after popular New York City hotels – the Statler Hotel was renamed the Hotel Pennsylvania in 1992. Guess what Waldorf’s wife name is? Yep… Astoria (she looks startlingly like Statler). FYI, Waldorf is the one with the mustache and white hair. Statler has the grey hair. Apparently Waldorf has had a pacemaker for more than 30 years.

3. Beaker. I always thought of Beaker and his buddy Bunsen Honeydew as characters that came along later in the Muppet timeline, but they have been around since the second season of The Muppet Show. Although Beaker usually says things along the lines of, “Mee-mee-mee-mee!”, he has had a few actual lines: “Sadly temporary,” “Bye-Bye” and “Make-up ready!” Despite being word-challenged, he manages to do a pretty convincing Little Richard impression and, surprisingly, had mad beatbox skills. Beaker is one of the only Muppets that was never recycled from some other purpose – he was created solely for The Muppet Show.

4. Fozzie Bear. Poor Fozzie. He’s the perpetual target of Statler and Waldorf because of his horrible jokes and puns. It actually created a bit of a problem during the first season of The Muppet Show, because when Fozzie got heckled, he got very upset and sometimes cried. Viewers didn’t feel sympathy; they felt embarrassed. The problem was solved by making Fozzie an optimist so that even when he got heckled he was good-natured about it. It’s often thought that he was named after Frank Oz, who was his puppeteer, but Frank said it’s just a variant of “fuzzy bear”. Yet another story says he was named for his builder, Faz Fazakas. Wocka wocka!!

5. Bert and Ernie are the Muppet version of Felix and Oscar (the Odd Couple, for you young’uns). Lots of people think Bert and Ernie were named for some minor characters in It’s A bert-ernie.jpgWonderful Life, but according to the Henson company, that’s just a rumor. Jim Henson always maintained that it was just a coincidence and that the names just went well together and seemed to fit the characters. Jerry Juhl, one of the head writers, corroborated this and said that Jim Henson had no memory for details like that and would have never remembered the name of the cop and the taxi cab driver in the old Jimmy Stewart movie.

Other rumors to clear up: Bert and Ernie aren’t gay and neither one of them are dead. Now that we’ve got that straightened out, here are a few more tidbits: the original Ernie used to have a gravelly voice similar to Rowlf the Dog’s. Frank Oz was Bert’s puppeteer and rather hated him at the beginning. He thought Bert was ridiculously boring, but then realized that he could have a lot of fun with being boring. Jim Henson once said, “I remember trying Bert and Frank tried Ernie for a while. I can’t imagine doing Bert now, because Bert has become so much of a part of Frank.”

6. Grover. Everyone’s favorite “cute, furry little monster” made his T.V. debut on the Ed Sullivan Show in 1967. At the time, he was known as “Gleep” and was a monster in Santa’s Workshop. He then appeared on the first season of Sesame Street, but sported green fur and a reddish-orange nose. He didn’t have a name then, but by the second season he transformed into the Grover we know today, more or less – electric blue fur and a pink nose. The original green Grover was reincarnated as Grover’s Mommy for a few episodes. In Latin America and Puerto Rico Grover is known as Archibaldo, in Spain he is Coco, in Portugal he is Gualter and in Norway he is Gunnar.

7. Sweetums is one of a handful of full-body Muppets. He showed up in 1971 on the T.V. special The Frog Prince. This is where he got his name – when Sir Robin the Brave is about to defeat the ogre, a witch shows up and changes him into a frog (who later becomes Robin, Kermit’s nephew). Apparently smitten with the ogre, the witch tells her darling “Sweetums” that he can have the frog for breakfast.

Bigger fame awaited Sweetums, though – in 1975, he appeared on Cher’s variety show to do a duet with her to “That Old Black Magic”. He officially joined The Muppet Show cast in 1976.

8. Rizzo the Rat might sound familiar to you, especially if you’ve seen Midnight Cowboy – he is named for Dustin Hoffman’s character, Ratso Rizzo. He was created after puppeteer Steve Whitmire was inspired by rat puppets made from bottles. He first showed up on The Muppet Show as one of a group of rates following Christopher Reeve around – he’s easily to sport because he hams it up more than any of the other rats. He occasionally performs with Dr. Teeth and the Electric Mayhem.

Pepephone.jpg9. Pepe the King Prawn’s full name is Pepino Rodrigo Serrano Gonzales. I heart Pepe. He was a chef in Madrid before going Hollywood on Muppets Tonight in 1996. He was paired with Seymour the Elephant (Pepe was originally going to be a mouse) on the show, but Seymour never developed quite the same following and was only in two episodes. He rarely gets names right – some of his mispronunciations include “muffins” instead of Muppets, “Kermin” instead of Kermit and “Scooper” instead of Scooter. He’s quite full of himself – in addition to thinking that he’s quite the ladies’ man, he also fully expects to win several Oscars.

10. Herry Monster from Sesame Street was the Big Bad Wolf in his original incarnation, which you can kind of tell by looking at his fur. It’s pretty wolf-like (if wolves were blue, I mean). He became a Sesame monster in 1970 to replace the Beautiful Day Monster, who looked kind of like Sam the Eagle and existed to cause destruction wherever he went, thus ruining the beautiful day people had been having before he showed up. Herry used to have a furry nose but got upgraded to his non-furry, purple nose in 1971.

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Shhh…super secret special for blog readers.

Comments (18)
  1. Okay, as an avid Sesame Street watcher as a kid, I’m sad to admit, I can’t tell Bert and Ernie apart. Which one is which?

  2. when did they start pairing Gonzo and Rizzo together? I know they were paired together in Muppet Treasure Island and Muppet Christmas Carol, but was there any previous pairing? I am sadly lacking in my knowledge of the original series. I’ve always liked the two of them together.

  3. Ernie is the orange one, and Bert is the yellow one.

  4. Bunsen Honeydew actually appeared in the first season of the Muppet Show by himself. If I recall correctly, the sketches he was in were more like commercials for products from Muppet Labs than the later experiments. Beaker came along in season 2.

    (And as an aside, my wife and I have cats named Bunsen and Beaker after the Muppet characters.)

  5. An old friend of the family could never tell Bert and Ernie apart, either. He finally got it after we came up with the explanation of Banana head Bert and Orange head Ernie.

  6. I’ve never seen Pepe before, but is it me or is he stealing Gobo Fraggle’s look? Nearly the same jacket, same shirt, even similar hair …

  7. …Hm, scratch that … guess it’s not Gobo I was thinking of … but I swear, he looks famiiar…

  8. .. Okay, I was right the first time (I knew I remembered it right!). Look here:

    images DOT wikia DOT com SLASH muppet SLASH images/2/29/Gobo_Fraggle_Early_Season_1.JPG

  9. Nobody has mentioned Baby Natasha from Sesame Street yet. I don’t know who does her voice because all she says is “Pthththththt.”

    (or should that be spelled “Pth-th-th-th-tht”?)

  10. Statler and Waldorf are for the grown-ups. I never understood why they were so mean as a tyke, but man I love them now. Hilarious.

  11. Rizzo is a favorite.
    Pepe is a favorite.
    Sweetums is a favorite.

    They are all favorite.

  12. I’d be interested in hearing about the Honkers and those weird aliens that go “yip yip yip yip yip yip… aw haw”

  13. HOW COULD YOU LEAVE OUT SNUFFY (snufalupagus)?

    The best way to tell Ernie and Bert apart is that Bert has a Unibrow. Or, as my daughter calls him: UniBert!

  14. I can’t believe Rowlf, my favorite, is only mentioned in passing!

  15. I never knew Sweetums’ name until now! I remember him especially from the Muppet Movie.

    Love the honkers and those weird aliens(looked it up - they’re called Yip Yips)!

    Will there be a Muppets Part Trois? :)

  16. i’m glad you included a picture of Pepe. i was thinking that a prawn was some kind of shrimp, but couldn’t quite believe that there is a Muppet shrimp. i recognize him now though…i’ve seen him somewhere before.

  17. Love the muppets! For any other oldsters out there - you can watch The Muppet Frog Prince , with Sweetums in all his glory, on youtube.

    Bake the Hall in the Candle of her Brain!

    37 (Holy Cow!) years later, it’s still a GREAT SHOW, and my 5 year old loves it too.

  18. Does anyone else remember Mr. Bimbo, the guy who lives in Fozzie’s finger in the movie Muppet Treasure Island? I kind of wish they had brought him in a few episodes.

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