The Guardian (USA)

The secret history of Sesame Street: ‘It was utopian – it’s part of who we all are’

- Steve Rose

“I’m still pinching myself that my dad, my own flesh and blood, had Ernie on one hand and Bert on the other,” Eli Attie says. “It is like he got to sit at Abbey Road studios and watch the Beatles record I Want to Hold Your Hand.” Attie’s father was the photograph­er David Attie who, in 1970, visited the set of Sesame Street in New York Cityduring its first season. His images lay forgotten in a wardrobe for the next 50 years, until Eli recently discovered them. They are a glimpse behind the curtain of a cultural phenomenon waiting to happen. Here are not only Bert and Ernie but Kermit, Big Bird, Oscar the Grouch with his original orange fur (he was green by season two). And here are the people who brought these characters to life, chiefly Jim Henson and Frank Oz, the Lennon and McCartney of Muppetdom. What also stands out in Attie’s images are the children visiting the set. As in the show itself, they are clearly so beguiled by the puppets, they completely ignore the humans controllin­g them.

Eli himself was one of those visitors, although he has no memory of it. “I was in diapers, and as the story goes, I was loud and not to be quieted down, and was yanked off the set,” he says. His parents and older brother Oliver at least made it into the photos. Oliver was even in an episode of the show, in the background in Hooper’s Store, Eli explains, with just a hint of jealousy.

Above: Bert and Ernie with puppeteers Daniel Seagren, Jim Henson and Frank Oz

Left: Cast member Bob McGrath, an actor and musician, in a segment called The People in Your Neighborho­od.

Right: Henson (left) and Oz – the Lennon and McCartney of Muppetdom – operate puppets for a sketch titled Hunt for Happiness

Fifty-two years and more than 4,500 episodes later, Sesame Street remains the premier address in children’s entertainm­ent. It is still watched by hundreds of millions around the world, and broadcast in more than 140 countries. One attempt to statistica­lly measure the show’s impact on American society failed because nobody could find a large enough sample group who hadn’t watched it. Sesame Street’s place in US culture was bizarrely underlined last month when Big Bird announced on Twitter: “I got the Covid-19 vaccine today! My wing is feeling a little sore, but it’ll give my body an extra protective boost that keeps me and others healthy.” He was promoting the rollout of vaccinatio­ns to five- to 11year-olds, but Big Bird’s tweet, combined with Sesame Street’s recent introducti­on of a new Korean American muppet, has prompted a conservati­ve backlash. Texas senator Ted Cruz responded: “Government propaganda … for your 5 year old!” Cruz later doubled down, tweeting a cartoon of the Sesame Street characters sitting around the Thanksgivi­ng dinner table, with a dead, cooked Big Bird in place of a turkey.

Others piled in. The influentia­l Conservati­ve Political Action Conference (CPAC) expressly banned Big Bird and other Sesame Street characters from its next conference, and CPAC organiser Matt Schlapp called for PBS, which broadcasts the show (although new episodes now air on HBO Max), to be defunded. “They just won’t stop in their push for woke politics,” he complained. Arizona state senator Wendy Rogers went even further, declaring: “Big Bird is a communist.”

* * *

Beyond the optics of beating up on universall­y beloved children’s characters, in the context of David Attie’s images, these takes could hardly be more wrong. Attie had been commission­ed to photograph Sesame Street by Amerika, a Russian-language magazine funded by the US state department and distribute­d in the Soviet Union. Essentiall­y, it was a cold war propaganda project. Soviet officials would regularly return copies of Amerika to the US embassy unsold, saying their citizens were not interested. In truth, the magazine was so sought after, it became a blackmarke­t commodity, explains Eli Attie. “One embassy official said to me they had traded two copies of Amerika for these impossible-to-find ballet tickets in Moscow at the time,” he says. So Sesame Street was used as government propaganda, just not in the way Cruz and Rogers might imagine.

The choice of a New York street scene was a radical move in children’s TV in the 60s.

You could say that Sesame Street had a political mission from the outset, as the new documentar­y, Street Gang: How We Got to Sesame Street (to which Attie’s book is a companion piece), lays out. One of the show’s co-founders, the broadcaste­r Joan Ganz Cooney, was involved “intellectu­ally and spirituall­y” with the civil rights movement. The other, psychologi­st Lloyd Morrisett, was concerned about a widening education gap in the 1960s US, which was leaving behind socioecono­mically deprived children, particular­ly African Americans. These children were often spending long hours at home watching television while their parents were busy working. Instead of jingles for beer commercial­s, Cooney and Morrisett reasoned, why not use television to teach them literacy and numeracy?

Above: Big Bird with actors Loretta Long and Matt Robinson, AKA husband and wife duo Susan and Gordon.

Below: According to Big Bird’s operator Caroll Spinney, his ‘sometimes sad, very complex character’ gave the show its depth.

* * *

With an $8m federal grant, the newly formed Children’s Television Workshop spent two years researchin­g how to make content that would not only be educationa­l but entertaini­ng. That’s where The Muppet Workshop came in (even if the hippy-ish Henson was initially distrusted by his more academic colleagues). Not to mention the songs, the anarchic comedy sketches, the surreal animations, and the improvised child-with-muppet segments. The whole thing was an experiment. Nothing like it had been done before and there was no guarantee it would be a success, but everyone seemed to be on the same page.

As Cooney puts it in the documentar­y: “We weren’t so worried about reaching middle-class children but we really, really wanted to reach inner-city kids badly. It was hardly worth doing if it didn’t reach them.” This explains why the show was set on an ordinary New York street – a radical move for children’s TV, a familiar place for the target audience. Equally radically, the show was multicultu­ral and inclusive from the start, with white, Black and Latino actors alongside non-human characters of all colours. Even the title sequence and the guests reflected the US’s diversity (the first season featured James Earl Jones, BB King, Mahalia Jackson and Jackie Robinson). As the longrunnin­g writer and director Jon Stone said of the show’s inclusive approach: “We’ve never beaten that horse to death by talking about it; we simply show it.”

Muppet designer and performer Caroly Wilcox goes to work with Henson.

Sesame Street has taught kids about all manner of life topics. Not only racism (most recently with the introducti­on of two new African American characters, post-Black Lives Matter) but also poverty, addiction, autism, HIV and Aids, public health (Covid was not Big Bird’s first jab, he also got a measles vaccinatio­n in 1972), and gentrifica­tion (in 1994, the street was under threat of demolition from a loud-mouthed property tycoon named “Ronald Grump”, played by Joe Pesci). Sesame Street has even tackled the concept of death: when Will Lee, who played storekeepe­r Mr Hooper, died in 1982, the show featured a wrenching segment in which neighbours, clearly tearfully, explain to Big Bird that Mr Hooper is dead and is never coming back.

Spinney, who played Big Bird for almost 50 years until his death in 2019, jokes with children on set.

It wasn’t just “inner-city kids” Sesame Street was popular with. While his father was working, Eli Attie’s artist mother would also put him and his brother in front of the TV to watch it so she could paint. “There was a block of hours that it was on public broadcasti­ng stations in the New York region. So she just thought: ‘Hallelujah. I can place them here, they’re entertaine­d,’” he says. “We were learning to count, we were learning to spell and we were learning a kind of comedy: we both became fans of Monty Python and standup comedy and I’m sure this was the gateway.” Attie went on to become a TV writer and producer, working on shows such as The West Wing, House and Billions.

Above: Filming on set of Sesame Street.

Below: Henson with the Dentist and

 ?? All photograph­s: David Attie ?? Main photo: Jim Henson (left) and Frank Oz (right) introduce some lucky visitors to Bert and Ernie.
All photograph­s: David Attie Main photo: Jim Henson (left) and Frank Oz (right) introduce some lucky visitors to Bert and Ernie.
 ?? Attie/Courtesy Macrocosm Entertainm­ent ?? Bert and Ernie with puppeteers Daniel Seagren, Henson and Oz. Photograph: David
Attie/Courtesy Macrocosm Entertainm­ent Bert and Ernie with puppeteers Daniel Seagren, Henson and Oz. Photograph: David

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States