The Columbus Dispatch

How ‘Sesame Street’ celebrates Black communitie­s

- Hannah Yasharoff USA TODAY

NEW YORK – “Ooh, I’m so smiley,” actor Alex Weisman laughs after filming a scene, flanked by his scene partners, both humans and Muppets.

“It’s ’Sesame Street‘ – of course you’re smiley,” replies longtime cast member and now-directoral­an Muraoka.

Last week marked one of the first days since COVID-19 shut down production in 2020 that a visitor was allowed on set at Kaufman Astoria Studios in Queens where an episode set to stream on HBO Max this fall was being filmed. And while the subject matter is under wraps, it shouldn’t be a spoiler to suggest that joy, diversity and education are on the call sheet.

For Black History Month, we’re looking back at the inception of “Sesame Street” and its role in providing positive representa­tion to young Black viewers. More than 53 years after its debut, the children’s television juggernaut continues to be a leader when it comes to helping kids feel seen by showing characters and families that look like them, and educating others on experience­s that may differ from their own.

Leveling the playing field, providing positive representa­tion

“Sesame Street,” which debuted in 1969, was born out of the intersecti­on of the civil rights movement, President Lyndon B. Johnson’s war on poverty and subsequent Head Start program, which was meant to provide early childhood education and other necessitie­s to low-income families.

Founders Joan Ganz Cooney and Lloyd Morrissett based the concept for the show around one question, says Akimi Gibson, vice president of formal learning and racial justice content at Sesame Workshop: “Can television be used to teach children and level the playing field for adults most disenfranc­hised by societal conditions?”

The “Sesame Street” neighborho­od, designed to resemble the historical­ly Black community of Harlem, was another way of providing positive representa­tion for communitie­s that were often underrepre­sented in entertainm­ent.

Backed by educationa­l research, Sesame understood that characters, whether they’re creatures, human-like Muppets or actual humans, can help reaffirm children’s identities by reflecting their own skin tones, hair textures, cultures and languages through the TV screen, Gibson added.

And it resonated heavily with audiences.

Megan Piphus makes show history as first Black woman puppeteer

“‘Sesame Street’ was a real community that I could be part of, but I don’t think I understood the depth of that relationsh­ip as a kid watching the show,” says Megan Piphus, who in 2020 became the show’s first Black woman puppeteer. “But they were part of the community that that raised me, and it’s so beautiful now to be part of a show that has such a great responsibi­lity for educating our children and raising our children.”

Piphus’ journey to “Sesame Street” began with an Instagram message in 2018 to Leslie Carrara-rudolph, puppeteer for Abby Cadabby, the bright pink fairy-in-training Muppet, who shared her work with “Sesame Street” producers. It wasn’t until March 2020, when production had come to a halt and gave the team time to look through old submission­s, that she was invited to join the show.

“I immediatel­y saw myself represente­d through her,” Piphus says of her muppet, Gabrielle, who wears her curly hair up in two Afro puffs.

‘It’s a superpower’: CNN town hall on racism let ‘Sesame Street’ comfort kids amid turmoil

Amid worldwide protests over the police killing of George Floyd in summer 2020, “Sesame Street” partnered with CNN for a virtual town hall about racism, inviting children and families to ask experts, activists, educators and familiar “Sesame Street” characters about what was going on in the world.

“It’s a superpower to be able to take those big issues and explain them so a 2- or 3-year-old can understand and that’s one of the reasons I think ‘Sesame Street’ has been around for over 50 years,” Piphus says.

“It may have been Mister Rogers who said that play is the love language of children. And when we do puppetry, we’re speaking their language. … That’s what keeps their attention. We’re living inside of their imaginatio­n.”

Behind the scenes, the larger Sesame Workshop team knew it was important to meet families, whether they were facing challenges directly or from a distance, Gibson says.

 ?? WORKSHOP ZACH HYMAN/COURTESY OF SESAME ?? Megan Piphus poses on the set of “Sesame Street” with Muppet Gabrielle.
WORKSHOP ZACH HYMAN/COURTESY OF SESAME Megan Piphus poses on the set of “Sesame Street” with Muppet Gabrielle.

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