Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
In scenes where Oscar and Big Bird (both performed by Spinney) interact in a scene together, the situation has varied depending on the number of lines one or the other is given. When Spinney performed Big Bird, a second puppeteer operated Oscar to Spinney's vocals; occasionally, Matt Vogel instead operated the Big Bird puppet to a vocal track ...
In the main story, Oscar the Grouch plants the seeds of doubt in Big Bird's mind whether Santa Claus can actually get down chimneys to deliver Christmas presents. Big Bird enlists the help of Kermit the Frog and Grover to interview children about how he manages it; their responses vary.
VIQ Sesame Street lead art of Bert, Oscar the Grouch and Grover Los Angeles has been going through a tough time, but in the words of a few friends from "Sesame Street," we can get through this ...
TV Guide ranked the special at number six on its '10 Best Family Holiday Specials' list. [8] In his coverage of the special for The A.V. Club, Myles McNutt stated that A Muppet Family Christmas is "a love letter to the Muppets as a wide-ranging, meaningful part of viewers’ childhoods." He further praised the special's emphasis on family and ...
Caroll Spinney as Big Bird, Oscar the Grouch and Bruno the Trashman; Jim Henson as Kermit the Frog and Ernie; Frank Oz as Cookie Monster, Bert and Grover; Jerry Nelson as Count von Count, Herry Monster, Simon Soundman, Sherlock Hemlock, The Amazing Mumford and Biff; Richard Hunt as Gladys, Bird Member #2, Sully and Elmo
"Broken and Beautiful" [12] — sung by Oscar when he sees art pieces that are broken, or beautiful (Caroll Spinney) "I Want To Be Your Friend" [13] — sung by Grover's alter ego, "Super Grover" while making friends at the museum "Don't Eat the Pictures" [14] — sung by Cookie Monster. In the end, he loves to devour something else if possible ...
Oscar the Grouch develops a crush on the Wicked Witch, who disguises herself as an elderly human woman and returns to Hooper's Store. She again attempts to retrieve the broom, but David sees through the disguise and says he will only set the broom down if she asks for it nicely.
“This campaign provided a special opportunity to showcase an iconic Sesame Street character, Oscar the Grouch, celebrating what he loves best – trash," Sesame Workshop's vice president of ...