Muppets Make Me Happy
One of the reasons for my impatience with the extended bus ride through long gone Hollywood was that the Jim Henson Company was at the end of this road and traffic was busy and I didnt want to miss a minute of muppet time.
We finally pulled up in front of a long low row of vaguely Elizabethan half-timbered style and started piling out of the bus. Our guides had to remind us not to run out in the street to take pictures of the Kermit the Frog statue in his Charlie Chaplin outfit that presides over the gate. We milled around, trying to get the best shot without getting run over. When I do this trip again (next February!) I will know to suck it up and carry more than my walk around telephoto lens with me. My wide angle lens should have been part of my every day equipment.
Charlie Chaplin was here before Jim Henson!
While Michael passed out our lunch tickets, Jaime went inside and soon the gates rolled open and we walked into a sunny, quiet courtyard. The physical place is beautiful - clusters of many small low buildings, each with an individual style and name, with garden plantings and props decorating the courtyards and walkways. It was gorgeously tranquil and it was immediately easy to forget the traffic and bustle of Hollywood just outside the gate.
The studios were built by Charlie Chaplin and then later were owned by A&M Records. Soul Train, anyone? I didnt know this historical piece, and was thrilled to be walking where an amazing genius creative person brought to life some of the most special characters and movies there have ever been.
We were called to a group photo, and the giant pile o cameras again appeared on the ground in front of our guides and the group of uniformly incredibly cute and buff puppeteers/Henson employees who had come out to start our tour. The puppeteers pitched in and it was a very funny scene with our big crowd being photographed by a smaller crowd.
We were divided up into two groups, then went into the soundstage building for an introductory talk and movie about the history of the studios and Jim Henson Company. Our guide was Grant Baciocco (
http://www.mrgrant.com/) who produces the Jim Henson Company Podcasts (
http://www.henson.com/podcast.php) and he was delightful, charming and very funny.
Charlie Chaplin and his brother built the studios, and I was bowled over by being where so many unforgettable movies had been made. There was great footage of a footman locking up the little tramps shoes behind a big vault door, later to be where A&M kept their masters. We were in the room where Soul Train was filmed, basically a big black box with stacks of equipment around the edges. Above us there was a second level with windowed control rooms looking over the scene.
We saw cool footage about Jim Henson, and then got a peek at the present. A new wave of puppetry and technology for the Henson Company is Sid the Science Kid, a show made with digital puppetry. Their creature workshop, once filled with puppets, is now dedicated to the mapping suit work for the digital show. The fuzzy appeal of the characters is applied by computers programmed by digital animators, while puppeteers create the templates for the action while wearing electronic suits.
We then were taken to a part of the room where two puppets and a video camera and monitor were waiting. Grant showed us puppeteering, Henson-style, using a Blue Footed Bubi puppet. (Note: This is not the spelling most of us are used to for this bird, but the lurking internet censors took out the name that is more familiar.) Then he asked for a volunteer to try it. I looked around for a bare second, seeing if there was anyone who wanted to do it even more than me, but when nobody responded, my arm shot in the air and I started acting like an obnoxious fifth grader with the answer, Me, me, oh me!! I was completely terrible at it, and Grant made it hilarious. My puppet was a purple and yellow bear, while Grant piloted the Bubi. I forgot to move the puppets mouth when I talked, leading Grants puppet to say, Youre talking without moving your mouth! Youre freakin me out! to my puppet. It was some of the most fun Id ever had, and a highlight of the trip even with all the great things still to come. It also gave me even more respect than I already held for the skill and creativity of the puppeteers - its freakin complicated and hard physically, and then you have to be creative and funny, too!!! When someone told Grant that he wished he had Grants job, my response was that I wished I had Grants talent.
After moving back out to the courtyard area, we ritually locked our cameras away in a big box in the courtyard for our tour of the Creature Workshop. They had a couple of demonstration stations for their digital puppetry glove (the Waldo glove) which allows a puppeteer to control a digital puppet on a screen. There were also many puppets and props from previous productions.
There was a final movie in a tiny little theater. Even our half group filled all the seats, then overflowed onto the floor, into surprisingly comfortable bean bag chairs. I resisted leaving when the movie was over, since it meant giving up my comfy bed of a chair.
We retrieved our cameras and took another group photo, this time for our portion of the tour group. One of my favorite funny things of the whole tour was when Kevin shouted out just before this photo was taken, Heathers hand smells like puppet!
Then it was time for lunch. My shrimp pasta came with a whole ocean of big, fresh shrimp. The salad was fine, but the main course was terrific. Other people reported not very good results from the other choices - burgers, salads and veggie burgers. Apparently the food sat out from our arrival through the tour. Ew.
My excellent lunch:
While we finished eating, Grant and the bear puppet put in another appearance and kindly posed for photos with all of us. Here are a very few of my favorite pictures:
"You look so familiar!"
We worked very well together.