1 The Muppet Mindset: Dave Goelz Interview
Showing posts with label Dave Goelz Interview. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dave Goelz Interview. Show all posts

Oct 1, 2013

Interview with Legendary Muppet Performer DAVE GOELZ, Part 4

I'm both sad and thrilled to present the fourth and final installment of our interview with my hero Dave Goelz. Dave has been kind, enlightening, hysterical, and magnificent to me for almost three years now and I can never thank him enough for his friendship and generosity. There are very few people who have affected me as constantly, consistently, and deeply as Dave Goelz and it has been a thrill to interview him and showcase his answers on The Muppet Mindset. Enjoy the final part of our interview below...
Interview with Dave Goelz
By Ryan Dosier
Dave Goelz’s Answers © Dave Goelz 2013

PART 4

RYAN:   Once again, we’re here with the magnificent Dave Goelz in the third and final part of our interview. Dave, how’ve you liked everything so far? I swear that monkey doesn’t always live here.

DAVE:   There you go again. I’m just sitting at my computer answering your questions. Going into my second winter on this interview.

RYAN:   There were so many, many wonderful projects that you worked on with Jim. Are there any specific moments or memories that you would like to recount that we haven’t gotten to already?

DAVE:   We did a project called “Dial-A-Muppet,” which consisted of many one-minute bits. The idea was you dialed in and heard a Muppet bit. One evening Frank, Jim and I were recording these at CTS Studio in Wembley. Our scripts were on music stands arranged in a circle around a timer that faced up, so we could glance past the script to see the timer and speed up or slow down as necessary to make the bit end on time. We had just spent a 12-hour day shooting a film, and by ten o’clock we were pretty tired. I fluffed a line and Jim started laughing uncontrollably, which started me laughing. I asked him to leave the studio, since I was the only character in that bit. He said “I’ll just crouch down behind my music stand.” That was ludicrous, as I could see the edges of his jacket shaking. Meanwhile, Frank had started to laugh, and moved to the drum room behind me. It didn’t help; I could hear his high-pitched laugh squeaking through the glass.

It took twenty minutes for the three of us to recover. This used to happen fairly often.

RYAN:   Who were some of Jim’s favorite characters to work with? Did he and Gonzo get along well?

DAVE:   Jim seemed to get along with every character, but he and Frank usually had the most fun working together. Whether it was Kermit and Fozzie or Ernie and Bert, they often wound up in hysterics. Their timing was perfect, and each seemed to sense where the other was going. They took such pleasure in making each other laugh. Frank and Jim were one of the greatest comedy teams ever.

RYAN:   What was the best thing Jim Henson ever taught you?

DAVE:   I can’t think of a time when Jim intentionally “taught,” but there were many things he demonstrated by being Jim.

He felt that life was to be enjoyed. He treated people with respect, believed there was enough for everyone, and celebrated diversity. He did not seek to “win” in a business deal––instead he wanted both parties to profit. While he was a functioning adult, he lived with the same sense of wonder and possibility that we all started out with as children.

RYAN:   If it’s alright now, Dave, I’d love to ask some of your characters a few questions if they’re around. Is Gonzo home from bog-snorkeling yet?

DAVE:   Okay, that’s one too many internal reality questions. Taxi!

RYAN:   Gonzo, which of the artistic feats and under-appreciated performances that your brilliant and unparalleled mind has graced us with over the years are you most proud of?

GONZO:   I thought you’d never ask. I’m most proud of the next one.

RYAN:   Dr. Honeydew, how do you feel your contributions to science will be remembered years and years from now? Is it premature to call you the next Sir Isaac Newton, Benjamin Franklin, or John W. Hammes (inventor of the garbage disposal)?

DR. BUNSEN HONEYDEW:   Oh… well uh, I don’t know. Say, is there a nearby place where I can buy dynamite squibs?

RYAN:   Boober, how do you recommend I increase my laundry proficiency? I constantly feel that my routine is missing something. Any tips you can share?

BOOBER:   Get a good fabric softener, fold neatly and don’t turn your back on the window.

RYAN:   Zoot, are you awake?

ZOOT:   Huh?

RYAN:   Any gigs comin’ up, man?

ZOOT:   Uhhhh… Floyd?

RYAN:   Traveling Matt, in your many travels in our world, what is the most important thing about Silly Creature life that you’ve learned?

TRAVELING MATT:   That you are a WONNNNNDERFULLL species that has found a meaningful way to survive in Outer Space!

RYAN:   And, finally, one last question for Gonzo… What would you like to be remembered for? If you could shape your legacy, what would it be?

GONZO:   I managed to have a career without even knowing what I am. Plus I only got about twelve thousand traffic tickets.

RYAN:   Dave, same question.

DAVE:   I’ll be fulfilled if I was a good dad.

RYAN:   One last question for you, Dave. If you had to pick one moment that defined your friendship and career with Jim Henson, what would it be?

DAVE:   I can’t pick one. Let me go now.

RYAN:   Dave, thank you so very much for doing this interview with me. You and your characters are truly inspirations to me, so this has been a real honor. Thank you for your work with Jim Henson and all your continued work at carrying on his legacy.

DAVE:   Thank you for your kindness.

So, are we finally finished? My son has grown up and left for college.
Huge thanks to Dave Goelz for agreeing to the interview--and yes, I promise I finally let him go.






The Muppet Mindset by Ryan Dosier, muppetmindset@gmail.com

Sep 26, 2013

Interview with Legendary Muppet Performer DAVE GOELZ, Part 3

Interview with Dave Goelz
By Ryan Dosier
Dave Goelz’s Answers © Dave Goelz 2013

PART 3

RYAN:   We’re back with the one and only Dave Goelz, who just cracked up over my joke about a goat and a dwarf and a jar of peanut butter. Any jokes you’d like to share, Dave?

DAVE:   Now Ryan, tell the truth. We didn’t go anywhere, and you didn’t tell me a joke. This is a written interview. And I can’t remember jokes.

RYAN:   Then came Fraggle Rock, a series that I know is very special to everyone involved in it. How did this show’s differences from The Muppet Show challenge and liberate the performers working on it?

DAVE:   At first I felt limited by the show’s agenda, with its focus on modeling good behavior for kids. Eventually I found that it became kind of therapeutic. It was a chance to develop as a person, and that triggered a lot of growth and change for me.

RYAN:   What was it like on the occasions when Jim came to perform in an episode of Fraggle Rock?

DAVE:   It was great fun. He did Convincin’ John and Cantus the Minstrel, both of whom were wonderful characters. Jocelyn Stevenson wrote the latter for Jim, and it captured his wisdom and whimsy perfectly.

RYAN:   How much of Boober exists within you? Do you admire socks, tedium, and drudgery as much as he does?

DAVE:   Each of my characters comes from a part of myself. In Boober’s case, it’s the part that fears interviewers and would rather retreat to laundry. Which reminds me I need dryer sheets.

RYAN:   Boober formed tight bonds with many other characters on the show. Which of his friends do you think is the most important to Boober?

DAVE:   That would be Wembley, for sure.

RYAN:   One of Boober’s most hilarious relationships is with Sidebottom, his fun-loving alter-ego. Can you talk about the episodes where you played both Boober and Sidebottom and the difficulties and rewards that came with this?

DAVE:   Jocelyn Stevenson thought it would be interesting to see what would happen if Boober could overcome his fear. She hit upon the device of Boober meeting his alter ego in a dream, with an ensuing power struggle.

My favorite of the three episodes is Boober’s Quiet Day, which is structured as a farce, and results in a compromise––hence, a little growth for Boober. It helped me find more fun in him thereafter.

The shoot was a challenge, as I performed both sides of Boober and Sidebottom’s dialogue. Someone read off-lines while I performed each character, using blue-screen for the second character. I worked closely with our director, Eric Till, and our video switcher, Harley Walker.

RYAN:   What was it like performing Philo while filming the Trash Heap scenes with Jerry Nelson as Marjory and Richard Hunt as Gunge?

DAVE:   I loved it. Jerry was incredible with Marjory. His character and manipulation are just so alive. Richard created Gunge, who was such a great character that I just did the same thing with Philo. The “yeeeaaahhhh” was Richard’s. My favorite part of them was doing background vocals when Marjory sang. Search youtube for “Fraggle Rock I’ve Seen Trouble.”

RYAN:   The World’s Oldest Fraggle is one of my favorite characters on the show. How did this character come about?

DAVE:   They wrote the character and our producer Larry Mirkin asked me to perform him. My contribution was to make him kind of senile, and that he compensated for his lapses by blaming his flunky, who was played by John Pattison.

RYAN:   What were filming the Traveling Matt segments like? Were people receptive to a Fraggle on their roller coasters, in their farms, and throwing their money into fountains?

DAVE:   I don’t remember too much about attention from the public while we were shooting, but we seemed to have access to every place we wanted to go.

RYAN:   What are your favorite Traveling Matt segments?

DAVE:   I love the episodes when the legendary Traveling Matt comes home to Fraggle Rock and is exposed as a fool. Gobo wants to be proud, but Matt is utterly incompetent, and Red makes fun of him. Great dynamic! I also adore the episode that shows Matt as a little boy who wants to be an explorer just like his Uncle Gobo, who was a very accomplished explorer. Matt, of course, was incompetent even as a child.

RYAN:   What about your favorite Boober moments?

DAVE:   Boober’s Quiet Day. See above. Also the episode Marooned.

RYAN:   One of the most important aspects of Fraggle Rock was the music. What were some of your favorite songs on the show?

DAVE:   I loved everything that Dennis Lee and Phil Balsam wrote. Those two were just fantastic together. I saw them recently at the Fraggle 31st Year Reunion. They are lovely people, and so talented.

RYAN:   What does Fraggle Rock mean to you?

DAVE:   Harmony.

Jeez, are you ever going to stop with the questions?

RYAN:   What do you think is the lasting legacy of Fraggle Rock?

DAVE:   I’m thrilled that people in their thirties and forties are passing it along to their children. What a great feeling.






The Muppet Mindset by Ryan Dosier, muppetmindset@gmail.com

Sep 20, 2013

Interview with Legendary Muppet Performer DAVE GOELZ, Part 2

I'm so excited to present Part 2 of our interview with the legend that is Dave Goelz. In Part 2, Dave and I further discuss his Muppet involvements, focusing more on his work in the first three Muppet movies and some classic Muppet television specials. Enjoy!
Interview with Dave Goelz, Part 2
By Ryan Dosier
Dave Goelz’s Answers © Dave Goelz 2013

RYAN DOSIER:   When The Muppet Movie came along, Gonzo was a major part of the core group of characters, along with your other characters Dr. Bunsen Honeydew and Zoot. What was it like for your characters to reach the popularity of Jim and Frank’s?

DAVE GOELZ:   I don’t know that they reached that kind of popularity, but it was exhilarating being in that kind of company.

RYAN:   “I’m Going to Go Back There Someday” sort of became Gonzo’s anthem in the movie. Can you talk about the song and what it means to you, to Gonzo, or even to Jim?

DAVE:   The brilliance of Paul Williams’ lyrics is that they are enchantingly vague. There’s room to interpret and find your own meaning. Try writing like that sometime… it’s extremely difficult. What a work of art means to one person does not invalidate what it means to another.

Paul has said that he wrote the song because he identified with Gonzo “as a flightless bird.” I think Gonzo would probably feel the same, but would not be conscious of it.

Jim and I never spoke about exactly why he loved the song so much, but he felt very strongly about it.

For me, the song does a couple of things. It’s a wistful song about those rare moments of weightlessness––times when everything is perfect––times we yearn to return to. But ultimately it’s about finding our place in the world… finding soul mates and trying to achieve a state of grace.

That’s just me. For Frank Oz, maybe it’s a song about cabbage.

RYAN:   One of my favorite moments from The Muppet Show is when Gonzo hugs Kermit after singing “My Way” before leaving to go to Bombay to become a movie star. Why do you think it is important for Gonzo and Kermit’s relationship to be more than silly interactions between employee and boss?

DAVE:   There is a philosophy that runs beneath almost everything we’ve done. It’s about connectedness and interdependence.

RYAN:   What was it like working with Jim as a director on The Great Muppet Caper?

DAVE:   By this time you must realize that Jim was a great guy to work with. We played on set, and always had fun. He appreciated everyone’s contribution. The work was more than comedy; it was about life.

RYAN:   The Great Muppet Caper was the first time we really saw Kermit, Fozzie, and Gonzo as a trio. Why do you think this grouping works so well?

DAVE:   I don’t know. One is responsible, one is insecure, and the other is crazy. Kind of like Jim, Frank and I––though not necessarily in that order. There are a lot of ways for them to play off each other.

RYAN:   To close off our first interview installment I have to ask a question that has bugged me for years… Did Gonzo ever finish his photographic essay on kneecaps?

DAVE:   Ryan, I told you about internal reality questions. Let it lie.

RYAN:   You performed Bill, the advertising agency frog, in The Muppets Take Manhattan, where you imitated Jim’s Kermit voice. Did Jim get a laugh out of those three frog impersonations?

DAVE:   Yes.

RYAN:   The Muppets Take Manhattan also restored Camilla to prominence. Can you discuss Gonzo’s relationship with Camilla?

DAVE:   I have my theory, but it’s best I not go into it here.

RYAN:   Everyone loves A Muppet Family Christmas for obvious reasons. What was your favorite memory of that special and its huge crossover of Muppet worlds?

DAVE:   For many years, it was the only time all those characters had been together, until our 2012 show at Carnegie Hall.

Of course, A Muppet Family Christmas remains unique, because each character was performed by its originator.

It meant a lot to see them all in one place.

RYAN:   In The Jim Henson Hour you performed Digit and a few other brand new characters. Why do you think these characters, or even the show itself, didn’t catch on as much as the other Muppets and previous efforts?

DAVE:   There are so many things that have to be working just right for a show to succeed––not the least of which is whether we are in sync with the audience. Sometimes it all comes together, sometimes it doesn’t. It’s complex.

RYAN:   Given the opportunity to resurrect one character from your past that didn’t become a recurring character, which one would you choose?

DAVE:   I could have done a lot with The International Chill. Don’t ask. You’ll have to go back to the Muppet Show and look for it.

On “Jim Henson Presents,” I felt Digit could be good––but we couldn’t quite get him working during the few episodes we did. On “Muppets Tonight,” I originated Gary Cahuenga, the vent dummy abandoned forty years earlier by his ventriloquist, but unfortunately the show was cancelled just after his introduction.

RYAN:   One of my favorite Muppet productions is The Muppets at Walt Disney World. What was your favorite part of working on that special?

DAVE:   Gosh, I haven’t seen it since we made it, but I do remember two things: Charles Grodin was funny and one day our Winnebago burned to the ground during lunch.

RYAN:   Of the many Muppet projects you worked on with Jim Henson, which one was the most special for you?

DAVE:   It’s a three-way tie: Emmet Otter’s Jug Band Christmas, Fraggle Rock, and The Muppet Christmas Carol.







The Muppet Mindset by Ryan Dosier, muppetmindset@gmail.com

Sep 17, 2013

Interview with Legendary Muppet Performer DAVE GOELZ, Part 1

Today I am thrilled, honored, and proud to present the first part of our four part interview with the man, the myth, the whatever: Dave Goelz. For those who don't know, Dave has been an integral Muppet performer for over 35 years, originating unforgettable and irreplaceable characters including Gonzo the Great, Dr. Bunsen Honeydew, Boober Fraggle, Uncle Traveling Matt, and countless more. It is a true honor to welcome Dave to The Muppet Mindset for an interview and I truly cannot thank him enough for answering my questions. He is truly hysterical, wonderful, and the best in the business. Read on to see what I mean!
Interview with Dave Goelz
By Ryan Dosier
Dave Goelz’s Answers © Dave Goelz 2013

RYAN DOSIER:   We at The Muppet Mindset are extremely thrilled and honored today to welcome a true Muppet legend for an interview: Dave Goelz! First of all, Dave, welcome to The Muppet Mindset. Make yourself at home, don’t mind the mess—it’s always there. If I find anything edible, can I offer it to you?

DAVE GOELZ:   Ryan, you know very well we are not in the same room. This is being done by email. Jeez, can we just try to keep it real?

RYAN:   Well the people didn’t come to read small talk (I don’t think), so why don’t we get things started? How did you meet Jim Henson?

DAVE:   I met Frank Oz first, at a Puppeteers of America conference in Oakland, CA. He was gracious enough to allow me to visit the Sesame Street set a month later. I spent a week there, watching them shoot. Caroll Spinney kindly took me to lunch. When I showed him the puppets I had built, he suggested I meet Bonnie Erickson, who ran the Muppet Workshop. She took a look at my puppets and suggested that Jim and I meet, which happened a couple months later on his next trip to California.

RYAN:   You started off as a puppet builder but quickly rose through the ranks and became one of the main Muppeteers. How did this come about? What did this show you about Jim’s belief in people?

DAVE:   I just moved laterally from designing/building into performing. During the first season of the Muppet Show I did both jobs.

I showed Jim my industrial design portfolio to illustrate how I might be useful to him. The last three items were puppets that I had recently built. I told him that I was interested in puppeteering. Jim said they already had three star performers, but that if I were to join as a designer/builder, he would work with me and use me as an extra puppeteer in specials. Within a few months I joined the Muppet Workshop, and true to his word, Jim came by with Frank Oz after work twice that summer to teach me the Muppet performing style. Also true to his word, Jim offered me three parts to play when the Muppet Valentine Special came along a few months later. Though Jim wanted me to stay with the company, at the time I preferred California to New York, so I went home and started my own puppet business, doing trade shows and industrial videos. My business was successful, and within a few months Jim offered me the chance to return to Muppets and also maintain my primary client. I would relocate to New York, but have several trips back to California and other locations each year to service my client. At the same time, my client would now have a direct association with the Muppets, and the assurance that another Muppet performer would be provided if for any reason I were unable to service them. In addition to performing, I was functioning as a producer and director for my client––getting lots of valuable experience doing business, writing, working with songwriters and recording studios. On a small scale, I was doing all the things that Jim was doing in his company. It was a total win-win for everyone involved.

RYAN:   Your first major character was, obviously, Gonzo. Did Jim provide any advice on making Gonzo explode (probably literally) from a secondary character to one of the most popular Muppets?

DAVE:   During the first season, Jim and Frank encouraged me to develop the manic side of Gonzo’s personality, along with his insane certainty that he was a genius. Two things stood in my way: lack of confidence and the fact that Gonzo’s downcast eyes looked sad and defeated. I’ve told the story too many times, so I’ll just say that during the first season of The Muppet Show I got exactly one laugh from the crew, and it occurred when I allowed Gonzo to overreact strongly. That convinced me that it could be funny when Gonzo got excited, but the problem was he could not look excited. So I asked Jim if I could build a new Gonzo between the first and second seasons whose eyes could open wide. Jim agreed, I did it, and the next season I got another laugh from the crew. There was no stopping me now.

Another pivotal moment came during an episode where Gonzo had to interview real dancing chickens to use in his act. The animal trainer promised the chickens would dance, but after three weeks in training, they flatly refused. I had Gonzo ask one of the chicks to “do a little two-step,” and the chicken walked out the door. Gonzo said “Don’t call us, we’ll call you,” then turned to camera and said “nice legs, though.” That cracked Jim up, and thus began Gonzo’s fascination with poultry.

RYAN:   Who were some of your favorite guest stars on the show that you got to work with? Who were some of Gonzo’s favorites?

DAVE:   I was amazed by what the guests could do. For me, straight off the street, it was a revelation of how entertainment was made of air. The shows were made out of nothing… just ideas fleshed out by characters, foam, fabric, sets, music and a lot of talent and hard work.

Of course there were a lot of unforgettable moments, some of which included: Peter Sellars, John Cleese, Paul Simon, Jonathan Winters, Edgar Bergen, Senor Wences, Blondie and Carol Burnett. There were dinners with Peter Sellers, Jonathan Winters, and Roy Rogers––who reminded me of my dad, and he was just the greatest guy. There are many, many other sparkling memories. If I don’t stop we’ll have to build a server farm.

RYAN:   You often got to test your singing chops on the show as well, especially as Gonzo. What songs were some of your favorite?

DAVE:   I have no singing voice of my own, but I can sort of manage in character. If I auditioned for American Idol as myself, they would definitely use my audition––only in one episode, of course. They would just slaughter me. That’s how bad I am. But as a character, I can hold my own.

So it has been an honor, in a Walter Mitty way, to spend thousands of hours working in recording studios. It’s really fun.

But you asked about songs. Again, I could go on for a long time, but I can think of several off the top of my head that I love: "I’m Going to Go Back There Someday," which Paul Williams wrote for Gonzo for The Muppet Movie. "When the River Meets the Sea," written by Paul for Emmet Otter’s Jug Band Christmas, is heartbreakingly gorgeous. I’d include everything written for Fraggle Rock by Dennis Lee and Phil Balsam. Those two were an astonishing team. Barry Mann and Cynthia Weill wrote Professional Pirate for "Muppet Treasure Island" (along with half the hits I grew up with). These writers are all geniuses, and I can hardly believe I’ve had the privilege of working with them. I’ve sung on hundreds, if not thousands, of recordings. If you are a song and I have left you out, please forgive me.

RYAN:   You, of course, perform Dr. Bunsen Honeydew, head of Muppet Labs. Of all the useful inventions you showed off over the years, which one do you think would actually be profitable or practical?

DAVE:   That’s an internal reality question. I can’t answer those.

RYAN:   And you also perform Zoot, both awake and asleep. With the Electric Mayhem you got to rock out on many great numbers. Are there any favorites that stand out?

DAVE:   Here are some: "Your Mama Won’t Like Me," the Suzi Quatro song sung by Jim as Dr. Teeth, "New York State of Mind," sung by Jerry Nelson as Floyd, "Fever," performed by Rita Moreno and Animal, "Can You Picture That?" from The Muppet Movie. Oh, and "Sax and Triangle," with me performing Zoot.

RYAN:   As Beauregard you got to be... well, dumb, but at the same time very endearing and loyal. What is your favorite aspect of Beauregard’s character?

DAVE:   I like his unquestioning loyalty. It’s endearing when we see that in horses and dogs. They just trust us and go along with us. They put their lives in our hands. You feel protective of them. I feel that way about Bo. See? I even spell it the way he does.

RYAN:   Like Kermit, Jim had an incredible knack of seeing the talent in people and attracting a wonderful group of crazies to work with him. Can you talk about how this affected the work environment and the way Jim interacted with his fellow makers of entertainment?

DAVE:   That is the essence of the Muppets. The Muppet Show character group is just like the company that Jim gathered together. Jim relished life; he felt like part of everything. And he appreciated all sorts of people. Jim was rare in that while he was an astute judge of character, he carried almost no prejudices. He almost always found something to like about a person. That was a great lesson for me. Through my association with Jim, I have been enriched by friendships from many different cultures around the world.

I had come from Silicone Valley, where the workforce was kind of homogeneous. At Jim Henson Productions there were all sorts of personality types. It occurred to me that many of these folks would not be employable in the world I had just left. But Jim not only gave them jobs, he treasured them. That love of diversity is woven into the Muppet character world.

RYAN:   You’ve often been quoted about your stories of the encouraged upstaging atmosphere on the set of The Muppet Show and other projects Jim helmed. Can you talk a little bit more about this?

DAVE:   “Helmed?” So you read the Hollywood Reporter.

Jim loved to laugh. He was generous. He enjoyed it when others shone. He appreciated their work. He loved surprises. He loved ambushes. And he established his own company culture that accommodated these things.

Now, can you imagine a more fun boss than that? So we relished playing tricks on each other. These consisted of scares, ambushes, explosions, fish heads in the toilet, monsters in the closet, fake mice that made you jump and ran straight under you, real mice that ran around the workshop on elevated tramways made of Slinky Toys, video pranks, and, of course, upstaging. Our work usually includes lots of layers, and there’s nothing more fun than watching a scene for the third time and discovering a juicy little tidbit of upstaging. Before Steve Whitmire had any characters on the Muppet Show, he spent many backstage scenes performing a nondescript rat by himself up on the balcony. He invented business, often developing his own narrative that was quite separate from the string of backstage scenes in an episode. He was learning. Jim loved it and appreciated it. The rat became Rizzo. And later, Steve became Kermit. Jim’s permissiveness was an act of creation.

RYAN:   What were some of your favorite moments from The Muppet Show when you got to work close to Jim?

DAVE:   Here’s one you would never know about: The Gills Brothers (a fish barbershop quartet) sang a song. Jim asked me to work out choreography for the number. I did this, and taught it to the other puppeteers, one of whom was Jim. At the end of the song, I had the fish keel over out of sight. Jim said “what kind of ending is that?” Well, choreographers invent names for moves, so I said “this the ‘die’ ending. The fish just keel over.’’ Jim said “you can’t do a ‘die ending!’” We got into a mock argument about the ‘die ending.’ We went back and forth with me claiming it was a genius invention, and Jim responding that it was idiotic. “That’s a stupid ending. We can’t do a ‘die ending.’ That’s just stupid!” I kept insisting that its very stupidity was exactly why it was so cutting edge. We went on and on, and of course we did not do the “die ending.” But we had a lot of fun pretending to argue about it.

RYAN:   What are some of your favorite characters on the show other than your own?

DAVE:   There are many, but here’s a partial list:

On The Muppet Show I adore Fozzie. Of course I love Kermit. Others are Floyd, Animal, Dr. Teeth and Janice. Frank’s Marvin Suggs just puts me away. Then there’s Bobo the Bear, Pepe the King Prawn and Howard Tubman.

On Fraggle Rock I love Gobo, Wembley, The Storyteller, Junior Gorg, The Architect, Gunge (Richard Hunt’s rodent shill for the Trash Heap).

Jerry Nelson created many, many one-shot characters that were just brilliant. He did it on every project he was involved with. I wouldn’t know where to begin. Well, we could start with Blind Pew from The Muppet Treasure Island. On Jim Henson’s Secret Life of Toys, Jerry performed Balthazar, a sweet old teddy bear. It just goes on and on.

A new favorite is Lips, the trumpet player. Steve Whitmire has been frustrated that for thirty years he hasn’t really found a character hook for Lips the trumpet player. Just last winter he had to say the line “but we don’t have any instruments.” In a gravelly voice, Steve came out with “Buh we don’ got no insuh-menz.” And the character was born after 30-odd years in labor. I love Lips, and am waiting raptly for his next line.

That’s what keeps it fun.
Huge thanks to Dave Goelz! Check back next Tuesday for Part 2 of our interview!






The Muppet Mindset by Ryan Dosier, muppetmindset@gmail.com
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