Muppet Wiki

Kermiteye Welcome to Muppet Wiki!


Please visit Special:Community to learn how you can collaborate with the editing community.

READ MORE

Muppet Wiki
Register
Advertisement

Early computer animation[]

Henson Scanimate 10

Henson's early Scanimate films

As early as 1970, Jim Henson started exploring the use of computer animation, and used the budding technology for some Sesame Street counting films.[1] The films were animated using the Scanimate process at Computer Image in Denver, Colorado in 1970.

Henson collaborated with Digital Productions in 1986 to produce the opening title sequence for Labyrinth, featuring a computer animated owl flying back and forth, rippling a pool of water. The sequence was created by animators Larry Yaeger and Bill Kroyer,[2] and marked the first use of a realistic CGI animal in a film.[3] The opening sequence of Labyrinth won its animators the NCGA Best Computer Animation award of 1986.[4]

Digital environments[]

Secrets3

Jim Henson showcases the digital set of The Jim Henson Hour.

Music of the forest

Digital environments featured in The Song of the Cloud Forest.

Henson was interested in the developments in the field of computers and looked for opportunities to incorporate computer-generated images into his work. An outer-space television project called Starboppers that was in development in the early 1980s seemed like an ideal match. Henson got in touch with Digital Productions, an LA company whose Digital Scene Simulation capabilities had evolved from their early work shot on mechanical analog computer systems. The firm's principals, John Whitney, Jr. and Gary Demos, had worked on Westworld and 2001: A Space Odyssey respectively. At the time of Henson's meeting with Digital in 1983, they were in production with The Last Starfighter.[5]

While Starboppers was planned to be a puppet production, Henson imagined that the background sets would be digitally created and the characters would perform before a green screen. The puppeteers, while performing, would watch their performances on television monitors, but instead of the green screen, they would see their characters within the virtual sets. In the end, the project did not come to be, but this technique with digital backgrounds was eventually used in such productions as The Jim Henson Hour, Song of the Cloud Forest, and The Wubbulous World of Dr. Seuss.

Henson showed a demonstration of the digital environments used on The Jim Henson Hour in the "Secrets of the Muppets" episode.

In "Elmo's World," Elmo (or variants thereof) often appear in front of digital backgounds in the imaginary world seen by Dorothy. Other segments, such as "Journey to Ernie," "Super Grover 2.0," and "Elmo the Musical," also employed the use of fully computer-generated backgrounds. Additionally, many of the sets in the direct-to-DVD series Sesame Beginnings were digital environments.

The special Muppets Haunted Mansion utilizes LED-wall technology,[6] previously employed on such productions as The Mandalorian. In this process, instead of a green or blue screen, the performances are done in front of a series of LED screens displaying a virtual environment. The same methods were applied for the desert scenes in The Muppets Mayhem episode "Break on Through."

Digital puppets[]

Waldo

Jim Henson began to explore a marriage of digital animation and puppetry with the development of the Henson Digital Puppetry System. Using what he knew from the Henson Performance Control System (the radio controlled puppetry used to help Kermit ride a bike, Emmet Otter row a boat, and extensively throughout Fraggle Rock), Henson joined forces with Pacific Data Images to create Waldo C. Graphic, a digitally animated character for The Jim Henson Hour and Muppet*Vision 3D.[7]

The characters of Tizzy the Bee on Jim Henson's Animal Show with Stinky and Jake and Horace D' Fly in Kermit's Swamp Years were also created and performed using a similar technique.

Fully-digital Muppet mosquitos also appeared in the opening of Muppet Treasure Island.

Sesame Street 4-D Movie Magic featured several digital characters created by Jim Henson's Creature Shop, including a 3-D chicken.

The various faces of the Wizard in The Muppets' Wizard of Oz were also created and puppeteered using Henson's Digital Puppetry System.

Computer animated characters[]

Rhubarb

Rhubarb the Grouch

Early on, many of the animated characters in Elmo's World - such as Elmo's computer, drawer, shade and door - were performed in real-time alongside through the use of motion-capture puppeteering. However the use of motion-capture performances was dropped as production got more complicated. Simple stand-ins and markers were used in later episodes and the animated characters were added in post-production using traditional key-frame computer animation techinques.

The Christmas ghosts in A Sesame Street Christmas Carol - Rhubarb the Grouch, Christmas Carole, and iSam - were animated using traditional key-frame animation techniques by Magnetic Dreams. The company also animated the Twiddlebugs in promos and a series of Sesame Street inserts.

Abby Cadabby was adapted into a computer animated form for the Sesame Street segment Abby's Flying Fairy School. The segment was the first time a Sesame Street Muppet was modeled for a 3D animated world.[8]

Digital enhancements[]

Bts themuppets2011 kermit

Digital enhancements have been used to make the Muppets appear as autonomous, stand-alone beings free of their strings, rods, wires, and puppeteer operators using the chroma key technique. Unlike most effects-heavy movies, Muppet productions have used digital effects to conceal what's actually there instead of adding things to the scene.

Beginning with 1999's Muppets from Space, the arm rods or arm sleeves of the Muppets were digitally removed in major productions.[9] The practice is also employed in select episodes of The Furchester Hotel. Many times, digital effects are used to composite a shot or allowing for chroma key techniques to be used.

Other times, digital effects are used to enhance a scene or add other specific effects. For example, in The Muppets, digital enhancements were used to alter Walter's reflection in a carnival mirror, change the El Capitan Theatre into The Muppet Theatre, create the large crowd of fans filling Hollywood Boulevard, and switch a poster outside the Muppet theater for Gnomeo & Juliet to promote Cars 2.[10]

Henson Digital Puppetry Studio[]

Hdps

Puppeteer Julianne Buescher demonstrates the Henson Digital Performance System at the Museum of Television and Radio in Los Angeles

Brian Henson has continued his father’s work in the area of motion-capture digital puppeteering with the development of the Creature Shop's Henson Digital Puppetry Studio (HDPS).The HDPS allows for digital puppets to be controlled and manipulated in fully digital environments.

In 2000, Henson produced MuppetToons, a series of shorts featuring digitally puppeteered and computer-rendered versions of the classic Muppet characters. A demonstration of the digital Muppets were shown to fans at MuppetFest.

Henson's PBS series Sid the Science Kid is produced with the digital puppetry system. Other HDPS series and productions include Frances, The Skrumps, and Wilson & Ditch: Digging America.

Sources[]

Scooter_at_TED

Scooter at TED

Scooter appears at TED2012 to disucss if tactile icons can survive in an integer-driven environment (AKA "Muppets vs. CGI")

Advertisement