Muppet

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    Lisa Simpson: Dad, what's a Muppet?
    Homer Simpson: Well, it's not quite a mop, and it's not quite a puppet, but maaaan! (laughs) So to answer your question, I don't know.

    Roxie: What's a Muppet?
    Barry Ween: Socks with attitude. God bless Jim Henson.

    A character in a live-action series rendered by puppetry or animatronics. Usually used to create an Alien or other non-human character.

    Technically, "Muppet" is The Walt Disney Company's trademark name (a coined name, not a portmanteau of "marionette" and "puppet" as is commonly believed) for the unique brand of puppets created by Jim Henson. This usage generally occurs in such things as television shows and movies. Other production shops have adapted Henson's techniques, which have revolutionized puppetry. For many people now, Muppet and puppet are practically synonymous.

    Henson created a merging of puppetry (using the hands for the mouth movements) and marionettes (in their use of wires and how animated their movements are). Before television, puppetry was a fairly static art. Henson made the Muppets almost hyper-kinetic, putting a lot of energy into the performance. Furthermore, the way the puppets were operated, for example making them look directly at something (typically with a puppeteer's hand directly manipulating the head), gives them a remarkably lifelike appearance. In addition, while puppeteers in previous productions hid behind a structure on screen in keeping with tradition, Henson realized he could just stage his show using the TV screen frame itself in order to hide the operators and focus all attention on the puppets.

    Animatronics was also improved by the Jim Henson shop. Animatronics employs a complex series of mechanics to create a creature with much more subtle movements and expressions than a standard puppet, such as blinking eyes or opening gills. A puppeteer may often wear a full body suit and an animatronic head.

    Now common in children's shows, Muppets became widespread due to their surprising popularity in Sesame Street, a Henson co-production.

    A common sub-type is the Hand Puppet. For CGI characters, see Serkis Folk.

    In British slang, the word can be an insult, indicating someone who is clueless and incompetent.

    Muppets have their own Wiki, which can be found here.

    If you're looking for the Muppets series, you can find it here.

    Examples of Muppet include:

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    Comic Books

    • In the mid-80's Marvel Comics made a 3-issue Comic Book Adaptation of The Muppets Take Manhattan, as well 20 issues of Muppet Babies. Harvey Comics got the Muppet babies license, and reprinted some of the Marvel stories.
    • Boom Studios all-ages imprint, Boom Kids, acquired the license in 2009, and have been publishing an ongoing since 2010, as well as various miniseries which put the Muppets in the roles of various stars of literature and mythology.

    Film

    • The Muppets' feature films:
    • Parodied in the very adult film Meet the Feebles.
    • In the movie The Dark Crystal, the entire world consisted of such aliens.
    • Nearly all characters in Labyrinth, such as Hoggle, Sir Didymus, Ludo, and those really strange creatures who dismember themselves at will (and think Sarah can, too). Inside the labyrinth, the only characters that aren't Muppets or actors in some sort of Muppet-enhanced suit are are Sarah, Jareth and Toby.
    • Yoda, of Star Wars fame.
      • Yoda is portrayed and voiced by veteran Muppeteer Frank Oz in the original trilogy and first film of the prequel trilogy, but due to the need for Yoda to be in elaborate fight sequences in Episodes 2 and 3, Yoda became CGI but was still voiced by Frank Oz.
        • Its more the other way around, according to the special features, they had Yoda CGI in a couple scene in Ep. 1 and by Episode 2 realized they had the technology to do Yoda convincingly as CGI so gave him the elaborate fight with Dooku, if it hadn't worked the fight would have been Mace Windu vs. Dooku.
      • The Rancor of episode VI was scary as hell and very realistic, but a muppet nontheless. Also other aliens form the Star Wars verse, including the Wampa, Max Rebo and Salacious Crumb.
    • Most of the creatures in Hellboy II (bar the Elemental, the Stone Giant and titular Golden Army).
    • The first three Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles films and the television show Ninja Turtles: The Next Mutation.
    • Audrey II in the 1986 version of Little Shop of Horrors. Please note it was directed by the aforementioned Frank Oz.
    • The Vogons in The Hitchhikers Guide to The Galaxy. All puppets in the film were designed and constructed by the Jim Henson Creature Shop.

    Live-Action TV

    • Most of Jim Henson's live works include The Muppets.
    • Not to mention such programs as The Jimmy Dean Show and The Ed Sullivan Show.
    • And earliest of all, Sam and Friends, a locally-produced late '50s children's show on a Washington D.C. station, which featured Henson performing several Muppet characters, including an embryonic Kermit the Frog.
      • On the other end of the spectrum, the earliest episodes of Saturday Night Live had sketches with muppets (not The Muppets per se, but original characters). Sadly, the Animation Age Ghetto came into play and the Muppet sketches were withdrawn.
    • A third of the cast of Farscape. (Pilot, Rygel)
      • That's just the main cast. A good number of alien extras and guest characters are Muppets as well.
      • Note well that these muppets were provided by the Jim Henson Workshop.
    • Almost every actual alien species (not counting displaced human cultures) on Stargate SG-1, most notably the Goa'uld/Tok'Ra symbiotes and the Asgard. (The Re'tu and the Replicators are Serkis Folk.)
    • N'Grath, the mantis-like crime lord from the first season of Babylon 5.
    • Joel Hodgson's Puppet Bots from Mystery Science Theater 3000.
    • During one Angel episode, the stars of the quality edutainment show Smile Time. And Angel himself.
      • Which adds double meaning to Spike's "You're a bloody puppet!" line.
    • ALF.
    • Most of the cast of LazyTown. Why, we may never know, because they're all Muppets of supposedly human characters (although it is a good way to make exceptionally silly characters without asking people to give up their dignity).
    • Marcus of Mega 64. This is frequently lampshaded.
    • Spitting Image.
    • Pinch, Red Eye w/ Greg Gutfeld's New York Times Correspondent. A copy of the NYT with cardboard eyes and a string attached. A regular "panelist" along with Bill Schulz, who are the token liberal butt monkeys.
    • Mongrels, which tries to do "to puppetry what The Simpsons did to animation." Your Mileage May Vary on this statement
    • Treinta Y Un Minutos

    Theatre

    • Parodied, subverted, lampshaded and everything else in The Musical Avenue Q, which is not by Jim Henson.
      • Although even earlier than this was their appearance in the "Land of Gorch" sketches on NBC's Saturday Night (Saturday Night Live), which parodied and subverted a few things as well.

    Web Original

    Western Animation

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