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Elmo Saves Christmas is a Sesame Street Christmas musical fantasy comedy drama television special which was released on PBS on December 2, 1996. [1] It was released to VHS that same year. Inspired by the 1892 short story " Christmas Every Day " by William Dean Howells , Elmo wishes for Christmas to occur every day, only to be taken to the ...
In various re-airings on PBS in the late 1980s the closing scene with Susan and Gordon finding that Cookie Monster ate the needles and discovered off their Christmas tree was cut, likely due to a combination of the PBS closing credits at the end of the original and for Cookie Monster's excessive belching. [citation needed]
The film was first released on VHS and LaserDisc in 1986. It received three successive home video re-releases by Warner Bros. Family Entertainment in 1993, 1999 and 2002, and also on DVD (which was presented in a full-screen presentation). Another DVD release followed in 2004, which was re-issued as a special "25th Anniversary Edition" in 2009 ...
Elmo's Christmas Countdown: 2008 One World, One Sky: Big Bird's Adventure: United States China 2009 Coming Home: United States Families Stand Together: 2010 When Families Grieve: 2011 Being Elmo: A Puppeteer's Journey: Growing Hope Against Hunger: 2014 I Am Big Bird: The Caroll Spinney Story: 2015 The Cookie Thief: 2016 Once Upon a Sesame ...
A Muppet Family Christmas is a Christmas musical television special starring Jim Henson's Muppets. It first aired on December 16, 1987, on the ABC television network in the United States. Its teleplay was conceived by longtime Muppet writer Jerry Juhl , and directed by Peter Harris and Eric Till (the latter of whom was uncredited).
The Adventures of Elmo in Grouchland (or simply Elmo in Grouchland) is a 1999 American musical adventure comedy film directed by Gary Halvorson (in his feature directorial debut) from a screenplay written by Mitchell Kriegman and Joey Mazzarino, based on a story conceived by Kriegman.
It was released on VHS and DVD in North America on February 29, 2000. The special was sponsored by Kmart department stores, during the holiday season, "where, no doubt, much Elmo merchandise is on display." [1] This was the last major primetime special for Sesame Street until Elmo's Christmas Countdown in 2007. [2]
Starting in season 24 and through season 37, an instrumental version of the calypso rendition was used, and the closing credits were separated from the closing scenes of the show. The sequence shows Big Bird, Elmo, and a lot of kids dancing in an animated city, with the animation designed by Joey Ahlbum. Unlike the 1992 opening sequence, this ...