CinderElmo

CinderElmo is a 65-minute television film that aired on FOX in the United States on December 6, 1999. It was released on VHS and DVD in the United States/Canada on February 29, 2000, and the Netherlands.

CinderElmo DVD cover.

The special was sponsored by Kmart department stores, during the Christmas 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]

Plot

In the Kingdom of Sesame there is a little red monster named CinderElmo who lives with his wicked Stepmother, his Stepbrothers Telly Monster and Baby Bear, Zoe and the household dog and mice. His stepfamily has received invitations to the Princess' Ball, which leaves CinderElmo to do all the house chores.

Meanwhile, the King's town crier, Grover, reminds King Fred that Princess Charming has until midnight to find someone to marry or lose the kingdom altogether. The King decides to invite every man and monster in the kingdom. Shortly the word is sent out around the kingdom.

The Stepmother teaches her sons a new dance in preparation for the ball. Baker Cookie Monster arrives as a General Invitation Deliverer and gives CinderElmo an invitation to the ball, but the Stepmother won't permit him. When the horse and carriage arrive, she locks CinderElmo and his friends up in the house. When CinderElmo wishes upon a falling star, his Fairy God person comes and encourages CinderElmo to come up with some plan and "so something" to make his dreams come true. After CinderElmo has a wash, Fairy God person provides him and Zoe with smart clothes, turns the dog into a handsome prince, turns the dog bowl into a carriage, and the mice into horses. CinderElmo has limited time till midnight to make the best of what Fairy God person granted him.

CinderElmo, Zoe, and Prince make it to the ball. The Stepbrothers perform the dance their mother taught them and the Princess Charming joins them. Everyone else joins in the dance except CinderElmo who gets caught in the Herald's cloak. Princess Charming finds Prince and asks him to find CinderElmo, the only one who took her fancy. While Princess Charming turns down the marriage proposals of the Stepbrothers, CinderElmo and Zoe sneak past the Stepmother in a suit of armor to attend the last dance before midnight. The suit of armor tumbles and crashes, but Princess Charming gives CinderElmo the dance of his dreams. Before he can introduce himself, CinderElmo has seconds before the midnight deadline and runs off with his friends back home as the magic wears off, changing Elmo, Zoe, and Prince back to normal and leaving only a shoe behind, but Princess Charming manages to make her choice of man to marry. Now all the royal family has to do is find the one whose foot fits the shoe in order to find the princess's beloved.

After many unsuccessful tries, the royal family head to the Stepmother's house. The shoe will not fit either of the Stepbrothers. Princess Charming recognizes CinderElmo when he comes, but CinderElmo thinks he is too young to marry. Now the King has the option to change the law that legalizes marriage between the princess and CinderElmo. The Fairy God person changes Prince back to a human. Prince and the Princess take a liking to each other. The royal family invites everyone to come to the palace leaving the Stepmother and mice behind.

Cast

Muppet performers

Additional Muppets performed by Pam Arciero, Eric Jacobson, John Kennedy, Michael Lisa, Rick Lyon, Jim Martin, James Andrew Stone, John Tartaglia, and Matt Vogel.

Critical reception

"The New York Times" panned the program. The review reads: " CinderElmo" has one quality that's glaringly unexpected in production with the Children's Television Workshop imprimatur. It's condescending." Of French Stewart's acting: "It looks like an exercise from acting class." Additionally, "The colorful show does display a few flashes of wit. But you'll find the magic sold out."[3]

gollark: Besides, the computer can't parse "English".
gollark: That's inefficient, lyricly.
gollark: It does not.
gollark: Try repression and denial.
gollark: I still hit "too much recursion" reordering it.

References

  1. Ron Wertheimer, "Cinderella Meets the Muppets: A Tale of the Market", The New York Times, December 6, 1999.
  2. Gary Strauss, "'Countdown' to Christmas with Elmo", USA Today, December 21, 2007.
  3. "IMDB: Cinderella". Retrieved 15 July 2010.
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