Dayton Daily News

Bert and Ernie gay? The rainbow disconnect­ion

‘Sesame Street’ puppeteer questions the question.

- By Nardine Saad

Veteran puppeteer Frank Oz was pulled into the brewing Bert and Ernie debate this week. And though he declared on Tuesday that the “Sesame Street” characters are not gay, he softened his stance on the perception of the puppets and what they mean to LGBTQ individual­s.

The 74-year-old Oz, one of “Muppets” creator Jim Henson’s early collaborat­ors and the voice of many of the characters (as well as Yoda from “Star Wars”), also said Tuesday that the roommates are not a gay couple, even though they have long been perceived as such.

Nor does it matter. Addressing former “Sesame Street” writer Mark Saltzman’s recent remarks about the pair — and Sesame Workshop’s subsequent denial — Oz said that “it’s fine” that Saltzman feels they are gay.

“But why that question? Does it really matter? Why the need to define people as only gay? There’s much more to a human being than just straightne­ss or gayness,” Oz tweeted, replying to fans that, “I created Bert. I know what and who he is.”

He later clarified the latter part of that comment, tweeting that while he didn’t create the tangible Bert puppet, he said that “with input from the writers, I created the character of Bert.”

Prior to that, the commentary swept the voice actor up into a heated discourse that lasted into the wee hours of Wednesday morning, during which Oz shared his takeaways.

“Although it doesn’t matter to me if someone is gay or viewed as gay, I learned it does matter to a great many people who feel they are not represente­d enough,” he wrote. “The Tweet discussion was worth it for me to just learn that.”

He’s also pleased people see in Bert “something that gives them comfort and recognitio­n. But that does not change the fact that he is not gay.”

One Twitter user, citing the long-running issue of representa­tion, told him that it’s “important for characters to be explicitly declared queer, because the mainstream will code them straight by default,” and Oz agreed.

Oz said that he and Henson “never created them to be gay,” but that doesn’t mean they created them to be “straight like everyone else,” either.

He was clear that he wasn’t targeting Saltzman with his remarks, but rather the question of whether Bert and Ernie are gay.

“He sounds like a caring person. He never said B & E were gay. But when others took that leap from his interview I felt I had to question the need for the question,” Oz added.

Saltzman revealed to Queerty, an online magazine and newspaper, that even though Bert and Ernie were never officially gay, he was often inspired by his longtime relationsh­ip with film editor Arnold Glassman when writing the roommates’ dynamic.

“And I always felt that without a huge agenda, when I was writing Bert and Ernie, they were (lovers),” said Saltzman, who wrote for “Sesame Street” from 1985 to 1998.

 ?? KRISTA SCHLUETER/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A former “Sesame Street” writer said in an interview that he wrote the characters as gay, modeled after his own relationsh­ip. “Sesame Street” has maintained that the puppets are best friends and have no sexual orientatio­n.
KRISTA SCHLUETER/THE NEW YORK TIMES A former “Sesame Street” writer said in an interview that he wrote the characters as gay, modeled after his own relationsh­ip. “Sesame Street” has maintained that the puppets are best friends and have no sexual orientatio­n.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States