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MuppetMonsters-30Years-4
Premiere September 14, 1985
Finale September 21, 1985
Network CBS
Seasons 1
Episodes 3 aired, 18 made
LMM promo Edit
Slide scan
Tug, Boo

Boo, Scooter and Tug

MuppetMonsters-30Years-1
LMM The Works Edit
MuppetMonsters-30Years-19

The cast in The Muppets: A Celebration of 30 Years.

Little Muppet Monsters was a short-lived 1985 Saturday morning TV show which aired only three episodes on CBS.[1] The first season of Muppet Babies did very well in the ratings, so CBS decided to expand the series from half an hour to an hour-long block, pairing Muppet Babies with Little Muppet Monsters to make an hour-long package (with its own intro) called Muppets, Babies and Monsters.

The show was anchored by three young Muppet monsters, TugBoo, and Molly, living with Muppet rats, penguins and other characters. Muppet Show characters such as ScooterKermit, Janice, and Floyd appeared in cameos. The Electric Mayhem were featured in both intros watching the show on television, as they excitedly bounced about on a living room sofa. Miss Piggy also appears in the intro.

Muppet segments included "Fozzie's Comedy Corner," with Fozzie discussing issues related to old jokes, illustrated through animation of a baby chicken, and Gonzo presenting a cavalcade of weirdness, using silent film footage. Each episode also featured an original Muppet song.

Recurring animated segments included "Pigs in Space," "Kermit the Frog, Private Eye" (with Fozzie and Miss Piggy, and introduced by the puppet Kermit), "Muppet Sports Shorts" starring Animal, and Muppet Labs with Bunsen and BeakerGonzo would also have appeared in animated segments.

Storyboard director Scott Shaw discussed the show in MuppetZine issue #3 (Winter 1993): "The concept of this second half-hour was neither simple nor particularly well-developed. A trio of new (live-action) Muppet Monster Kids, working from the basement of the adult Muppets' home, create their own television station which broadcasts only to the TV sets in the house upstairs...

Although eighteen episodes were produced, only three of them ever aired; Henson Associates and CBS agreed that the concept had never been properly thought out and just wasn't up to Henson's high standards. To Jim's credit, it was his idea to pull the show from the Saturday morning lineup.

I've always felt that the juxtapositioning of live-action and animated Muppets invited an unfavorable comparison, to which the cartoon version inevitably suffered; the puppetry was just too good. The combination of Muppet babies, adults and kid monsters was very disorienting. Also, due to a lack of development time, the concept -- and therefore, the writing and designs -- never quite jelled. The now-vacant second half-hour was filled with repeats of the first season's Muppet Babies episodes, and the ratings stayed strong."

Another factor that contributed to the shows cancellation was the fact that Marvel Productions had trouble delivering the animation on time, after the first three episodes aired. Marvel "blew it," as series writer and puppeteer Kathy Mullen remembered in 2013, and there were no completed shows to fill the extra half hour: "So they [CBS] put another Muppet Babies on, two episodes back-to-back, the viewership shot up, and they said, 'Forget Little Muppet Monsters.'" As for the unaired episodes, "We never finished them. The puppet wrap-arounds were done, but they never put the animation in."[2]

Even after Little Muppet Monsters was cancelled, an instrumental version of its opening theme was used for the Muppet Babies end credits from 1985 onward.

The three monster kids were also seen briefly in the special The Muppets: A Celebration of 30 Years, which was broadcast in January 1986. The special was shot before the decision was made to take Monsters off the air, so the show cheerfully plugged the Muppets' latest production -- even though that production had been cancelled four months earlier.

Merchandise

Henson archivist Karen Falk has discussed the licensing: "As to Little Muppet Monsters, I do not have any licensed product from that show. There was an ambitious licensing program discussed (toys, games, puzzles, apparel, housewares, and stationery) but very little produced."

Toy Fair 1986 would have seen the launch of plush by Hasbro, board games and puzzles by Milton Bradley, puzzles by Playskool, costumes by Ben Cooper, stickers by Diamond Toy, balloons by Balloon Concepts, boys and girls sportwear by Allison Mfg., greeting cards by Hallmark, belts by Lee Belts, pajamas by PCA Apparel, and party supplies and gift wrap by Beach Producers. The show was not on the air long enough for this to occur. A Playskool puzzle drawn by Guy Gilchrist was produced in very limited quantities.

Puppet Cast

With
And

Voice Cast

Crew

Episode Listing

  • "In the Beginning" - 9/14/1985
  • "Space Cowboys" - 9/21/1985
  • "The Great Boodini" - 9/27/1985
  • "Hi, Mars" - Unaired
  • "Monster Measles" - Unaired
  • "Gonzo's Talent Hunt" - Unaired
  • "Can't Stop the Music" - Unaired
  • "Boo Monster Ace Reporter" - Unaired
  • "Feels Like Rain" - Unaired
  • "Foo-Foo Phooey" - Unaired
  • "Penguin for a Day" - Unaired
  • "Gunko" - Unaired
  • "Mail-Order Guest" - Unaired
  • "Episode 14 (Title Unknown)" - Unaired
  • "Episode 15 (Title Unknown)" - Unaired
  • "Episode 16 (Title Unknown)" - Unaired
  • "Episode 17 (Title Unknown)" - Unaired
  • "Episode 18 (Title Unknown)" - Unaired

Notes

  • The opening sequence to episode 3 is slightly different from the others, containing a few animated clips from the episode.
  • The unaired song "Gunko" was described as a "musical parody" by "James Carroll." (Possibly Joe Carroll?) [3]

Gallery

Sources

External Links

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