The Boston Globe

Bob McGrath, 90, longtime star of ‘Sesame Street’

- By Anita Gates

Bob McGrath, who played the sweater-clad neighborho­od music teacher and general advice-giver on “Sesame Street” for almost half a century, died at his home in New Jersey on Sunday morning. He was 90.

Mr. McGrath’s daughter Cathlin McGrath confirmed his death by e-mail. She said he died from complicati­ons after a stroke.

Mr. McGrath wasn’t particular­ly interested when an old Phi Gamma Delta fraternity brother stopped him one night to tell him about his new project, a children’s show on public television. But then he had never heard of Jim Henson, the puppeteer, and he had never seen a Muppet. After his first meeting and a look at some of the animation, he knew this show would be different.

“Sesame Street” had its premiere in November 1969, with Mr. McGrath and other cast members gathered around an urban brownstone stoop, in front of the building’s dark green doors, beside its omnipresen­t collection of metal garbage cans. His character, convenient­ly and coincident­ally named Bob, was reliably smiling, easygoing, and polite, whether he was singing about “People in Your Neighborho­od” (the butcher, the baker, the lifeguard), discussing everyday concerns with young humans and Muppets, or taking a day trip to Grouchytow­n with Oscar the Grouch.

Viewers were outraged when Mr. McGrath and two other longtime cast members — Emilio Delgado, who played Luis, and Roscoe Orman, who played Gordon — were fired in 2016. When HBO took over the broadcasti­ng rights to “Sesame Street,” their contracts were not renewed.

But Mr. McGrath took the news graciously, expressing gratitude for 47 years of “working with phenomenal people” and for a whole career beyond “Sesame Street” of doing family concerts with major symphony orchestras.

“I’m really very happy to stay home with my wife and children a little bit more,” he said at Florida Supercon, an annual comic book and pop culture convention, later in 2016. “I’d be so greedy if I wanted five minutes more.”

Robert Emmett McGrath was born on June 13, 1932, in Ottawa, Ill., about 80 miles southwest of Chicago. He was the youngest of five children of Edmund Thomas McGrath, a farmer, and Flora Agnes (Halligan) McGrath.

Robert’s mother, who sang and played the piano, recognized his talent by the time he was 5. He was soon entering and winning competitio­ns in Chicago and appearing on radio. He did musical plays and studied privately but, as a practical matter, intended to study engineerin­g.

But he was invited to attend a music camp outside Chicago the summer after his high school graduation. Teachers there encouraged him to change his plans, and he “did an aboutface,” he remembered in a 2004 video interview for the Television Academy Foundation.

He majored in voice at the University of Michigan, graduating in 1954. He spent the next two years in the Army, mostly in Stuttgart, West Germany, where he worked with the Seventh Army Symphony. Then he went to New York, where he received a master’s degree from the Manhattan School of Music.

He took a job with St. David’s, a private boys school in Manhattan. Freelance singing assignment­s, obtained through a vocal contractor, paid the bills until 1961, when “Sing Along With Mitch” came along. He was one of 25 male singers who appeared every week on that show, on NBC, performing traditiona­l favorites including “Home on the Range,” “The Yellow Rose of Texas,” “It’s a Long Way to Tipperary,” and “I’ll Take You Home Again, Kathleen.”

As St. Patrick’s Day approached, the program’s host and producer, Mitch Miller, asked Mr. McGrath if he knew the song “Mother Machree.” He was so impressed with Mr. McGrath’s rendition and his light lyric tenor — he had been singing the sentimenta­l Irish American number since he was a little boy — that he doubled his salary and made him the show’s featured male soloist.

After “Sing Along With Mitch” ended in 1964, the cast played Las Vegas and did a 30stop tour in Japan. That led to an unusual chapter in Mr. McGrath’s career: teenage idol.

Schoolgirl­s chanted his name at concerts and organized fan clubs. Their demand brought him back to Japan nine times over the next three years, and he recorded nine albums there, singing in both English and Japanese. His repertoire included Japanese folk ballads on which he was accompanie­d by a shakuhachi, or bamboo flute. Back home, he amused American television viewers by singing “Danny Boy” in Japanese.

When “Sesame Street” began, it led to a very different collection of albums for Mr. McGrath, with names like “Sing Along With Bob” and “Songs and Games for Toddlers.”

He also learned American Sign Language, which he used regularly on camera with Linda Bove, a cast member who was born deaf.

Asked about important memories of his years on the series, Mr. McGrath often named the 1983 episode devoted to children’s, adults’, and Muppets’ reactions to the death of Will Lee, who had played Mr. Hooper on the show for 13 years. Another favorite was the holiday special “Christmas Eve on Sesame Street” (1978), particular­ly the Bert and Ernie segment inspired by the O. Henry story “The Gift of the Magi.”

In addition to his daughter Cathlin, he leaves his wife, Ann; four children, Liam, Robert, Alison McGrath Osder, and Lily; a sister, Eileen Strobel; and eight grandchild­ren.

“It’s a very different kind of fame,” Mr. McGrath reflected in the Television Academy interview about his associatio­n with “Sesame Street.”

He recalled a little boy in a store who came up to him and took his hand. At first he thought he had been mistaken for the child’s father. When he realized that the boy seemed to think they knew each other, Mr. McGrath asked, “Do you know my name?” “Bob.” “Do you know where I live?” “Sesame Street.”

 ?? GLOBE PHOTO ARCHIVE ?? From left, Matt Robinson, Will Lee, Loretta Long, and Mr. McGrath with Caroll Spinney as Big Bird in 1970.
GLOBE PHOTO ARCHIVE From left, Matt Robinson, Will Lee, Loretta Long, and Mr. McGrath with Caroll Spinney as Big Bird in 1970.

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