Kermit puppeteer hits out at firing
Blog post details shock at losing role but Henson family blast his version of famous frog as ‘angry’ and ‘bitter’
With his enormous mouth, cheerful eyes and frantic way of talking, Kermit always seemed like a cheerful frog. But Kermit’s personality appeared to change in recent years. At least that’s how Cheryl Henson, the daughter of Kermit’s creator Jim Henson, saw it.
So last October, Kermit’s longtime puppeteer, Steve Whitmire, was fired from Muppets Studio. After months of silence, last week he posted a blog item critical of the decision, calling it a “drastic action” that left him devastated.
In response, Cheryl Henson reportedly took to Facebook to criticise Whitmire’s version of the beloved frog. Whitmire, who took over the role when Jim Henson died in 1990, “performed Kermit as a bitter, angry, depressed victim,” she said.
“Steve’s performance of Kermit has strayed far away from my father’s good-hearted, compassionate leader of the Muppets,” Henson wrote. “Worst of all,” she added, in the past few years “he has not been funny or fun”. Perhaps Kermit did seem a little dour lately, albeit played for laughs.
On a 2011 appearance on Ellen, for example, Whitmire’s Kermit complained that he “is often mistaken for a green fire hydrant” and bemoaned his relationship with Miss Piggy. With his misery seeking company, he appealed to the studio audience, “Maybe some of your audience has actually dated a pig”. Finally, when Ellen kissed the little green Muppet on the lips, he excitedly asked if he had turned into a prince. Upon realising he remained a frog, he sighed. “Oh, well.” But it all simply seemed like part of the Kermit bit. The audience ate it up.
The 2015 ABC reboot of the The Muppets, meant to be a more “adult” portrayal of the fuzzy gang, was a different story. The show received a middling 62 out of 100 on Metacritic, a website that aggregates television reviews. Many of the reviews pointed to an angry or depressed tone to the characters, specifically in Kermit and Miss Piggy, who break up in the pilot.
Slate’s Willa Paskin wrote, “The Muppet who comes off worst is Kermit, who spends his days sneakily managing Piggy’s moods, working up the nerve to disobey her, a mildmannered middle manager. His voice, previously so adorable, began to sound to me mealy and weak, like the vocal equivalent of pleated khakis.”
The show was cancelled after one season. While it’s unclear what creative role Whitmire played in the show — he was not credited as a writer — it is clear is that critics didn’t like this new Kermit.
Even with the failure of a fairly high-profile network television programme, the termination of Whitmire had gone relatively unnoticed by the general public until last week when he published the blog post about his firing. It came a few days after his replacement, Matt Vogel, was announced as the new voice of Kermit.
“I would never [abandon] Kermit . . . because to do so would be to forsake the assignment entrusted to me by Jim Henson, my friend and mentor, but even more, my hero,” Whitmire wrote. He said he suggested “multiple remedies to the company’s two stated issues, which had never been mentioned to me prior to that phone call”. But days later, Disney executives gave the New York Times a more detailed account behind the decision.
Debbie McClellan, head of the Muppets Studio, a division of Disney, told the Times that Whitmire displayed “repeated unacceptable business conduct over a period of many years”. Some of Henson’s family members told the Times they agreed with the decision to replace Whitmire.
“He played brinkmanship very aggressively in contract negotiations,” Lisa Henson, president of the Jim Henson Company, and Jim Henson’s daughter, told the Times, adding that Whitmire staunchly opposed casting an understudy for Kermit.