Tag: sesame place

  • Sesame Place Prepares for it’s 36th Season

    Sesame Place® opens for its 36th season on April 30th. The park has added new experiences to its already impressive lineup.

    The Magic of Art announcement on YouTube ©Sesame Place
    The Magic of Art announcement on YouTube ©Sesame Place

    The popular show Elmo Rocks took its final bows at the end of the last summer and is being replaced by a brand new show called The Magic of Art.

     

    The new show stars Sesame Place’s resident magical fairy, Abby Cadabby, alongside Cookie Monster, Elmo, Telly and Grover.  The stage show features music, audience participation and lots of fun.

    The show will be presented in the newly named Sesame Place Neighborhood Theater. The outdoor theater has been renamed a couple times in the past since opening as the Big Bird Theatre back in the 1980s. The new name is perfect since the theater is located at the end of the Sesame Street Neighborhood replica and the name should work for all future productions that are performed there.

    Magician Sam Sandler is America's only full-time Deaf illusionist. He will appear at Sesame Place on May 21-22.
    Magician Sam Sandler is America’s only full-time Deaf illusionist. He will appear at Sesame Place on May 21-22.

    Magic is also theme for Abby’s Magic Weekend May 21 & 22 which features special guests, Morley the Magician and Sam Sandler. Morley the Magician is a popular NJ based illusionist who teaches magic at his shop in Butler, NJ.

    Magician Sam Sandler is America’s only full-time Deaf illusionist. He has performed around the country and is known for his hysterical and impressive tricks.

    Both Sam Sandler and Morley the Magician will be performing on stage at the Sesame Place Neighborhood Theater as well as performing street magic during the day throughout the park on May 21st and 22nd.

    Abby’s Magical Magician Ball is a dining experience that is taking place at 12pm and 5pm on May 21st and 22nd. This character meal will feature magic performances and costumed characters.

    Sesame Place will host a passholder preview night on Friday April 29th from 3:30pm to 8pm. The preview night will give guests the first look at the giant inflatable Sesame Street Neighborhood that will greet all guests as they enter the park this year during the regular season.

    ELMO SING’S “HOT HOT HOT”.
    The inflatable birthday cake from the 2015 season is being replaced by a similarly sized inflatable Sesame Street Neighborhood.

    Sesame Place has used inflatables at the entrance of the park in the past. At Halloween time a giant Count Von Count stands near the entrance to the park and for the 2015 season a giant birthday cake was there as the park celebrated it’s 30th birthday.

     

    Sesame Place is hosting several special concerts and shows this season including Disney Jr.’s Choo-Choo Soul, The Imagination Movers and KIDZ BOP LIVE.

    About the author: Guy Hutchinson is an avid theme park fan and the co-author of the book “Sesame Place” which chronicles the history of the park in text and photos. You can purchase your copy of “Sesame Place” at www.SesamePlaceBook.com

     

  • Build Your Own Cookie Monster Cup at Sesame Place

    20150913_151424There is a unique, new way to enjoy a cold beverage at the Sesame Place.

    The Sesame Street theme park in Langhorne, Pennsylvania has added a station where you can create your own ‘Cup That Cares.’

    The ‘Cup That Cares’ helps kids learn to reuse materials and reduce their carbon footprint.
    Plus, Sesame Place will donate $1 from each ‘Cup That Cares’ purchase to ‘Sesame Place Cares’ which “supports initiatives committed to conservation, education and community service.”

    What this mean is that you are saving the planet by making a crazy Cookie Monster cup. 20150913_151448

    The cup is sorta like a Mr. Potato Head. You pick out a Cookie Monster head, two arms, a body and a pair of feet. Then you accessorize him and put a straw in his back to enjoy an ice cold cola.

    The cup costs $19.95, which as far as theme park pricing goes is not too bad. Then you can get 99 cent refills for the whole year, which is great as long as you remember to bring Cookie Monster back with you for each visit.

    Even if your child just ends up reusing Cookie Monster at home (or let’s be honest, YOU reuse Cookie Monster at work) it’s a nice cup and is better for the planet than single use plastic or paper cups.

    The materials seem sturdy and it’s fun to assemble and dissemble Cookie Monster. Cookie’s round belly is the section of the cup that holds the drink and it’s emblazoned on the back, with the Sesame Place logo. Cookie Monster also has a variety of funny hats, funny shoes and several neat accessories that he can hold.

    The cookie jar accessory is the same design as Cookie Monster’s parade float and Halloween costume at Sesame Place.

    Sesame Place is part of the Sea World family of parks, and the ‘Cup That Cares’ originated at Sea World Orlando a few years back with some penguin characters. The Cookie Monster cup is more detailed and is hopefully the first in a line of build-able Sesame Street character cups.

     

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  • The History of Costumed Characters at Sesame Place Part 2: 1987-1991

    This is part two in a multiple part series. Make sure and read Part 1.

    A red and pink Honker on stage with Big Bird (LEFT) and three Honkers in the 1993 park map (RIGHT)
    Purple Honker and Pink Honker on stage with Big Bird (LEFT) and three Honkers in the 1993 park map (RIGHT)


    When the 1986 season came to a close Sesame Place had a small variety of walk around characters. Bert & Ernie, and Big Bird had arrived and would stick around forever. Green Honker and Pink Honker also had showed up at the park, and stayed at the park until 1992.

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    A youngster greets Cookie Monster at during a Christmas event in 2012

     

    For the 1987 season Sesame Place brought in Cookie Monster. The early Cookie Monster walk around character appeared to have darker fur than the current costume, but otherwise looked very similar. Cookie Monster had an animatronic likeness at the park early on and had his own ‘play element’ at the park, a climbing attraction called Cookie Mountain.

    Prior to the opening of Sesame Place, costumed Sesame Street characters had appeared on traveling ice shows, Ice Follies and Holiday on Ice, and shortly after Sesame Place opened they began appearing in the traveling stage show Sesame Street Live, which still tours today. This meant that the work deciphering the full bodied character had often been done prior to the inclusion of the character at the Langhorne, Pennsylvania park.

    This is a bigger deal that it sounds. After all, before this no one knew what Cookie Monster’s feet looked like.

    1988 Sesame Place decided to add another monster, this time lovable furry Grover. The 1988 season also introduced Prairie Dawn. It was a very big year at Sesame Place. The park had really started expanding and had added Sesame Neighborhood, a giant outdoor main street. It is a wonderful replica of Sesame Street, right down to Oscar’s trashcan and Big Bird’s mailbox.

    Grover had existed as a Muppet prior to the debut of Sesame Street. Like many Muppets he started with a different name and voice and eventually they found the character we know and love. By season two of Sesame Street he was the lovable character we are all familiar with on television and when he was introduced at Sesame Place he was one of the most popular (and merchandised) characters on Sesame Street.

    Grover and Prairie both debuted in 1988.
    Grover and Prairie both debuted in 1988.

    Prairie Dawn debuted on television in 1971 and started appearing in Sesame Street Live productions in 1981. Her addition at Sesame Place was a very welcome one, as she was the first undeniably female character at the park. Prairie’s role on the Sesame Street television show has diminished over the past decade or so, but she remains an integral part of the line up of characters at Sesame Place. Prairie is known on Sesame Street for her talents at putting on shows, and it isn’t any different at Sesame Place. Right now, if you see the Sesame Place ‘Neighborhood Birthday Party Parade’ you will not only see Prairie, but you will hear her in between songs saying things like “places everyone!” and “cue the next number” which tends to bring a small bit of nostalgia back to many of the moms and dads as they remember her elaborate pageants where Herry Monster would play the sun and Cookie Monster would play a cloud.

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    1988 ad announcing Grover and Prairie Dawn

    In 1994 she had her own stage show at Sesame Place, The Perils of Miss Prairie.

    1989 brought Sesame Place a third Honker, Purple Honker. Since the Honkers had the same head and body, this was just a matter of trying out a new color.

    Purple Honker appeared alongside his Honker friends for meet and greets as well as the performances of the Big Bird and Company stage show which would feature 2 Honkers.

    As 1991 came to a close, Sesame Place had 9 characters at the park. Ernie, Bert, Big Bird, Grover, Prairie Dawn, Cookie Monster, Purple Honker, Pink Honker and Green Honker all called Langhorne home, but there are more to come. Count on it.

     

    Thanks to Jenn Martin, Greg Hartley, Jeff Davis, and Donna Viola Beck for providing information for this article.

     

     

     

  • The History of Costumed Characters at Sesame Place Part 1: 1980-1986

    This is part one in a multiple part series.

    Oscar the GrouchSesame Place opened in Langhorne, Pennsylvania in 1980. At the time there were no costumed characters in the park. I have heard several reasons for this, and perhaps all of them are true. Or it’s a combination of some of them.

    I have heard that there was contractual language specifying that the television puppeteers had to provide the voices in the park, there was a desire to have the characters be able to move their mouths, and there were questions revolving around if only puppets should be used at the parks.

    Regardless, before the costumed characters made their debut at the park, there were “Automated Muppets.” Animatronic versions of Cookie Monster and Oscar the Grouch appeared in the park starting in the 1981 season. These characters were voiced by Frank Oz and Caroll Spinney, respectively.

    Oscar was located in his trash can, which was situated inside of a cart that was covered in fabulous junk, including an old tire. The cart looked similar to a theme park beverage cart and could be set up in multiple locations.

    Cookie Monster was also inside of a cart which was usually situated in The Food Factory restaurant. He appeared inside of a cookie jar.

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    These characters would talk, sing, laugh, and tell jokes. Micheal Firth, creative vice president of Henson, said in 1982 that these were “a perfect reproduction of each character.”

    Bert, Ernie, Honker, and DingerThe first batch of costumed characters debuted the following year and included Ernie, Bert and Green Honker and Pink Honker.

    These characters would perform in a show entitled “The Bert and Ernie Show.” A special stage was built for them in front of Mr. Hooper’s Emporium and the show lasted at that location for two years.

    An aside: these character costumes were equipped with controls to move their mouths and lip sync. Sesame Place had characters with movable mouths from the very first day they added character interaction! It has taken a few decades for the Disney parks to add that to the stage shows they run. There is something great about having a character move his or her mouth, rather than pantomime a show.

    In 1986, the next character was added to Sesame Place. It was the most obvious choice: Big Bird. The cast of “The Bert and Ernie Show” now joined him in The Big Bird Theater for a show called “Big Bird & Company.”

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    The Big Bird of Sesame Place operates differently than the one on television. As most Sesame Street fans know, Caroll Spinney holds the 5 lbs Big Bird head up with his hand and looks at a small monitor inside the costume. The Big Bird costume at Sesame Place has a solid cone neck and the performer can see through eye holes in Big Bird’s tie.

    Now the park needed some monsters. But we’ll get to them next time.

  • Show #108 – May 3, 2009

    The summer 2009 travel season is fast approaching! Joining me to help you find Sesame Street characters and attractions is Ann Kearns, Vice President of Licensing at Sesame Workshop. Ann has several options for families, including Sesame Place, Busch Gardens, Sea World, and Beaches Jamaica! (more…)