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Henson Alternative

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Henson Alternative is a production and distribution brand of The Jim Henson Company. The productions under the Henson Alternative banner feature more mature themes and content than those traditionally associated with Henson Company. Despite the brand of "adult" content, The Henson Company still continues their long-time tradition of producing Family entertainment and Sci-Fi and Fantasy features.

"Henson Alternative" is a title that lets our audience know that what they're watching is not intended for our youngest viewers. Most people know the Henson Company for their successful work with The Muppet Show and Sesame Street, but we have a number of shows that are geared towards older audience members.
- Nicole Goldman, Henson Company Vice President of Marketing and Publicity [1]

Contents

Origins

Under the leadership and direction of Brian Henson, the Jim Henson Company began developing adult-comedy content in 2005. After the sale of The Muppets to the Walt Disney Company, the company assessed new and potential areas for future development and focus. Brain Henson stated in a 2006 interview that "we lost our position as funny, popular entertainment in the prime-time arena, so I'm trying to get back there. To do that and be innovative, we have to really establish a new voice."[2]

However, Henson Alternative was not the first time the Henson Company sought an adult audience. Many of Jim Henson's early projects were very risqué and adult in nature - such as Time Piece, The Cube, The Land of Gorch, and Sex and Violence. As Brian Henson reflected "because of Sesame Street people thought of [Jim Henson] as a children's performer. It was sort of odd for him because he was until then an adult performer."[2]

When developing this new direction, Henson stated that "[We are] starting to develop more comedy that's a little rough around the edges, kind of like Muppets in the early days but with a modern sensibility." [3].

If you look at the original Muppet comedy, the Muppet comedy came from vaudeville, and then vaudeville became television variety shows, and The Muppet Show was borrowing heavily from that tradition of vaudeville and then variety comedy. Presently, what I was trying to do was to look for what’s in contemporary, funny, comedic voice and tone and energy for puppets that wasn’t sort of borrowing from modern sitcoms, which never felt right.
- Brian Henson[4]

Henson was not purposefully forcing the content and focus to go "off-color" or become risqué for the sake "shock comedy" or simply polarizing or reaching to capture a specific demographic, but rather explained the shift of focus as doing what they, as performers, found entertaining. Brian Henson commented on the development saying, "we didn't set out to do risqué adult-exclusive content. What we did set out to do is to forget all the rules of the 8 p.m. sensibility, what puppets do that aren't in preschool, and instead let's just do what we as puppeteers think is the funniest thing we can do in the moment."[2]

In terms of The Jim Henson Company, my dad first started with adult-minded comedies very early on. He also worked in an era where most of the airwaves were highly censored. But he was always a very naughty, irreverent performer and this basically captures that same level of naughtiness and irreverence, but in a contemporary setting. Having said all of that, I think it's very important that everybody always knows that this is for adults only. This is our opportunity to let our hair down and get crazy every now and then, even though generally we are very safe with the material we do.
- Brian Henson [5]

Productions

The first projects realized under the Henson Alternative banner was Puppet Up! - Uncensored, a live improv show which led to a television special on TBS and a web series on TBS.com.

The company later developed and piloted a late night talk show entitled The Late Night Buffet with Augie and Del for TBS. Like most late-night talk shows, "Late Night Buffet" was not geared towards children and the comedic tone was more adult-oriented; as such, all members of the live studio audience were required to be over 18. While the pilot remains unseen, the character of Del went on to star in five original webisodes of Del's Vegas Comedy Binge for TBS.com in November 2007.

Currently, the company is producing the adult-oriented comedy series Tinseltown for the Logo Network. Tinseltown stars two homosexual puppets – Bobby Vegan and Samson Knight - in a faux-reality series. The show began development in 2006 and made its television debuted on November 2, 2007.

In 2007 Henson partnered with Warner Bros to develop three "alternative comedy" webseries. These projects include a monkey detective comedy entitled The Simian Undercover Detective Squad; a puppet reality-show spoof known as Alt-Reality; and a full series adaptation of the company's Puppet Up! improv show.

Branding

The Henson Alternative splash page on Henson.com
The Henson Alternative splash page on Henson.com

The Henson Alternative brand was created as a way to label the productions and let audiences know that the content might not be appropriate for the youngest audience members. The Henson Alternative logo, a variation of the old Henson Associate's "ha!" logo, first appeared in early 2007 on the playbills, programs and promotional material of the Puppet Up! – Uncensored stage show. The logo later appeared on Henson.com's coverage of the Henson Alternative productions and in materials related to the release of Tinseltown.

Sources

  1. "The Jim Henson Company Podcast", Episode 17. October 26, 2007
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Wallenstein, Andrew. "Jokes That Kermit Wouldn't Dare Tell", The New York Times. November 12, 2006
  3. "Interview with Brian Henson", TV.com. May 1, 2006
  4. "Puppet Up! an interview with Brian Henson". March 22, 2007
  5. "Puppet Up! Uncensored - Interview with Brian Henson", TBS.com. 2007

External links

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