Tag: muppets

  • A Bit Of A Chat with Ken Plume & Bobby Moynihan

    bitofachat-header.png

    lucyline.gif

    I’m Ken Plume, and soon you’ll be listening to “A Bit Of A Chat” with me, Ken Plume.

    In this episode, I have a chat with actor Bobby Moynihan, about pool daze, house living, voices, Disney daughter, pin pearly, small spaces, Flavacol, cotton candy concessions, Mr. Mayor, cancelling balloons, fish biscuit machines, polar bears, SNL, beards, Tommy Porkins, Muppets, takeaway props, Loafy, uncomfortable influencing, DuckTales, and Star Wars rabbit holes.

    Hope you enjoy…

    Download “A Bit of a Chat with Ken Plume & Bobby Moynihan“:

    SUBSCRIBE
    Subscribe to this Podcast via iTunes or via RSS

    ##

    patreon-fred.png

    Drop Ken a line HERE.

    ##

    You can also find more of my interviews by clicking HERE.

    lucyline.gif

  • A Bit Of A Chat with Ken Plume & Calvin Lester & Kelsey Ann Brady

    bitofachat-header.png

    lucyline.gif

    I’m Ken Plume, and soon you’ll be listening to “A Bit Of A Chat” with me, Ken Plume.

    In this episode, I have a chat with performers Calvin Lester & Kelsey Ann Brady, about dignity, Hoop-Dee-Doo, Walt’s chili, Chuy’s balloon animals, Frank and Jim, side hustles, Bird Call Radio, international Disney, Doofenshmirtz, tater tots, Hagrid’s motorbike, undead Cats In The Hat, Suite Life Of Terror, and FozzCasting.

    Hope you enjoy…

    Download “A Bit of a Chat with Ken Plume & Calvin Lester & Kelsey Ann Brady“:

    [audio:http://traffic.libsyn.com/bitofachat/bit_of_a_chat-calvin_lester_kelsey_ann_brady.mp3]

    (PREVIOUSLY: A Bit Of A Chat with Calvin Lester, A Bit Of A Chat with Nate Begle)

    SUBSCRIBE
    Subscribe to this Podcast via iTunes

    ##

    patreon-fred.png

    Drop Ken a line HERE.

    ##

    You can also find more of my interviews by clicking HERE.

    lucyline.gif

  • A Bit Of A Chat with Ken Plume & Nate Begle

    bitofachat-header.png

    lucyline.gif

    I’m Ken Plume, and soon you’ll be listening to “A Bit Of A Chat” with me, Ken Plume.

    In this episode, I have a chat with puppeteer/performer Nate Begle, about love nudges, plane pretzels, Universal Pitywalk, Deep Blue parrots, puppeteering, quaint German mustard, Muppets, tangent holes, Blockbusting, projecting, Pope shows, Last Week Tonight dogs, laser light shows, theme parking, and Groot.

    Hope you enjoy…

    Download “A Bit of a Chat with Ken Plume & Nate Begle“:

    [audio:http://traffic.libsyn.com/bitofachat/bit_of_a_chat-nate_begle.mp3]

    SUBSCRIBE
    Subscribe to this Podcast via iTunes

    ##

    patreon-fred.png

    Drop Ken a line HERE.

    ##

    You can also find more of my interviews by clicking HERE.

    lucyline.gif

  • A Bit Of A Chat with Ken Plume & Craig Shemin

    bitofachat-header.png

    lucyline.gif

    I’m Ken Plume, and soon you’ll be listening to “A Bit Of A Chat” with me, Ken Plume.

    In this episode, I have a chat with writer, producer, and president of the Jim Henson Legacy, Craig Shemin, about Muppets, Jim Henson, Disney deals, legacies, writing, puppet theory, deleted scenes, and a Plume Deluxe.

    Hope you enjoy…

    Download “A Bit of a Chat with Ken Plume & Craig Shemin“:

    [audio:http://traffic.libsyn.com/bitofachat/bit_of_a_chat-craig_shemin.mp3]

    SUBSCRIBE
    Subscribe to this Podcast via iTunes

    ##

    patreon-fred.png

    Drop Ken a line HERE.

    ##

    You can also find more of my interviews by clicking HERE.

    lucyline.gif

  • A Bit Of A Chat with Ken Plume & Calvin Lester

    bitofachat-header.png

    lucyline.gif

    I’m Ken Plume, and soon you’ll be listening to “A Bit Of A Chat” with me, Ken Plume.

    In this episode, I have a chat with puppeteer Calvin Lester, about tiki bars, Muppets, Disney World, fancy drinks, Frank and Jim, Leslie Nielsen, pineapple drops, Skippers, Gadding about, and Bird Call Radio.

    Hope you enjoy…

    Download “A Bit of a Chat with Ken Plume & Calvin Lester“:

    [audio:http://traffic.libsyn.com/bitofachat/bit_of_a_chat-calvin_lester.mp3]

    SUBSCRIBE
    Subscribe to this Podcast via iTunes

    ##

    patreon-fred.png

    Drop Ken a line HERE.

    ##

    You can also find more of my interviews by clicking HERE.

    lucyline.gif

  • A Bit Of A Chat with Ken Plume & Guy Hutchinson

    bitofachat-header.png

    lucyline.gif

    I’m Ken Plume, and soon you’ll be listening to “A Bit Of A Chat” with me, Ken Plume.

    In this episode, I have a chat with author Guy Hutchinson, about Sesame Place, Muppets, TMZ Treehouse, Disney Dining, My Bookie, Hershey Highway, Budge, and The Forgetful Jones.

    And be sure to pick up a copy of his book at sesameplacebook.com!

    Hope you enjoy…

    Download “A Bit of a Chat with Ken Plume & Guy Hutchinson“:

    [audio:http://traffic.libsyn.com/bitofachat/bit_of_a_chat-guy_hutchinson.mp3]

    ##

    SUBSCRIBE
    Subscribe to this Podcast via iTunes

    ##

    patreon-fred.png

    Drop Ken a line HERE.

    ##

    You can also find more of my interviews by clicking HERE.

    lucyline.gif

  • A Bit Of A Chat with Ken Plume & Kirk Thatcher

    bitofachat-header.png

    lucyline.gif

    I’m Ken Plume, and soon you’ll be listening to “A Bit Of A Chat” with me, Ken Plume.

    In this episode, I have a chat with writer/director Kirk Thatcher about creatures, Muppets, Star Trek punks, Star Wars, 8x10s.

    You can read my original interview with Kirk HERE.

    Hope you enjoy…

    Download “A Bit of a Chat with Ken Plume & Kirk Thatcher“:

    [audio:http://traffic.libsyn.com/bitofachat/bit_of_a_chat-kirk_thatcher.mp3]

    And here’s a preview of Kirk as one of the triumvirate of expert judges on Syfy’s Jim Henson’s Creature Shop Challenge reality competition…

    SUBSCRIBE
    Subscribe to this Podcast via iTunes

    ##

    patreon-fred.png

    Drop Ken a line HERE.

    ##

    You can also find more of my interviews by clicking HERE.

    lucyline.gif

  • FROM THE VAULT: Kirk Thatcher Interview

    vaultinterviews.png

    Conducted ~1/2000

    I first met Kirk Thatcher on the set of Muppets From Space in January of 1999, when he remarked that both of our names started with the letter “K”, so we must be brothers.

    Of course, he was right.

    While Thatcher’s name may not be instantly recognizable, his *face* may best be remembered by genre fans as the “punker on the bus” in Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home – whose blaring & acidic music confounded Kirk and Spock, prompting the stoic Vulcan to silence the cacophony with a fabled Vulcan nerve pinch.

    However, Thatcher is much more than just “the punker on the bus” – he has the unique blessing of having been creatively involved with several of fantasy & science fiction’s most beloved franchises: Star Trek (as an Associate Producer), Star Wars (as a Creature Shop technician), and the Muppets (as a writer and director).

    He’s also stepping back in front of the camera as one of the trio of expert judges presiding over the new Jim Henson’s Creature Shop Challenge reality competition on the SyFy channel.

    And he’ll always be my brother.

    From the vaults, I present to you my chat with Kirk Thatcher…

    lucyline.gif

    KEN PLUME: Can you give me a little background on yourself?

    KIRK THATCHER: I started in the industry when I was about 19 at Lucasfilm, ILM, working in the creature shop on Return of the Jedi. I was a self-taught movie and monster maker. I made masks and creatures at home.

    PLUME: Are you from the California area?

    THATCHER: I’m from Los Angeles, so when I was growing up, I would talk to people like Rick Baker and John Chambers, who were very helpful in answering questions. I was just like most guys in the effects industry, just doing stuff in the kitchen sink and in the garage.

    When I was in high school I met the production designer for Star Wars, a guy named Joe Johnston, and he’d been very kind in showing me around ILM when they were still based in Los Angeles. So after I’d gone to UCLA for two semesters I called Joe up and said that college just wasn’t working for me, they wouldn’t even let me touch a Super 8 camera until I was a junior, and was there any chance that I could come work at ILM. He said, “You know, we’re gearing up for the next Star Wars movie, Return of the Jedi, and we’re starting up a creature shop, so send up your resume.” So I sent up my resume and had an interview with Tom Smith and got the job as a technical assistant, which is basically the lowest man on the totem pole at the company.

    PLUME: But a hired man regardless.

    THATCHER: Exactly. A working man. So I started working at ILM in the creature shop. I actually helped set up the creature shop, working for Phil Tippet. I actually painted the walls and helped set up the paint room to paint the creatures. I worked in the mold shop. Basically just A to Z from sculpting to molding to fabricating to painting them and shipping them out the door.

    thatcher01.png

    thatcher02.png

    thatcher03.png

    PLUME: So this is what, 1981?

    THATCHER: 1981, basically starting about March, and we worked on the movie until about Christmas, then sent everything to London. For most of the Spring and Summer of ’82 I was on location with the movie. I went to Yuma, Arizona and then Oregon. After that, I worked on a bunch of other things at ILM. I worked on Star Treks II and III, Poltergeist, E.T.. I was one of the guys that painted E.T.. I had a great time at ILM learning a bunch of stuff, then Chris Walas got this movie, Gremlins, and Chris and I had become friends, since he had worked at ILM also. He got Gremlins on his own, so I worked with Chris for about a year and helped set his place up and work on Gremlins. After that David Fincher (director of Se7en, The Game, and most recently Fight Club) and I wanted to break out and do our own thing, so we started a rock video company. We were the two youngest guys at ILM. He’s actually a year younger than I am. He’d been a camera assistant in the matte department. So we did some rock videos together. I was the production designer and he was the director. It was a lot of mind-bendingly difficult work for very little money and no time. We had a motto, “We can do it – But it won’t be fun”. We did some Rick Springfield videos and some Martha Davis and the Motels videos. This is about ’83-’84. We did about 10-12 videos together, and then I moved down to L.A., and he moved down from San Francisco soon after and helped form Propaganda Films.

    thatcher04.png

    After I moved down, I interviewed for Star Trek IV to basically be Leonard Nimoy’s right-hand guy, and got that job, and eventually became Associate Producer on the film. Working closely with Leonard Nimoy was great. I started out as assistant to the director and it eventually became Associate Producer. He wanted to call me “Associate Director,” but there was no title like that, and the DGA wouldn’t allow it and so they called me an Associate Producer. He was great. It was the best job I ever had. He let me do a lot of stuff. He let me write dialogue and design aliens, work with the prop and art departments. I was in heaven.

    thatcher05.png

    PLUME: So, basically, you were a jack-of-all-trades.

    THATCHER: Yeah, a jack-of-all-trades, which is why he’d hired me, because I’d done all that at ILM and on my own, and he wanted someone he could trust to see things through. He was definitely directing the picture, don’t get me wrong, but he trusted that I would make sure he was getting what he wanted so he didn’t have to focus on it, because on Star Trek III, he just felt overwhelmed by all the technical stuff, especially all the special effects stuff, because it’s such a technical process. He couldn’t tell if people were telling him the truth or just giving him a run-around, so he kind of wanted someone in his camp. We got along great, and we’re still very good friends.

    PLUME: How did your cameo in Star Trek IV come about?

    THATCHER: Well, we were writing the movie, and I was there from the very beginning, even in the script stages, and they wrote this little bit for this punk rocker. The original idea was that the punk flipped off Spock, then Spock gave him the Vulcan neck grip. I actually came up with the idea of, when he passed out, his face turning off the radio. I actually added a couple little comedy bits. He was supposed to give me the Vulcan “Live Long and Prosper” sign after I flicked him off, but we cut that out. Then I added the scene where Scotty talks to the computer when the guy tells him to use the mouse and he holds it up and tries to use it like a microphone. I’ve always been a Macintosh fan, so I said, “It has to be a Macintosh.” Leonard said, “That’s funny, let’s use it.” Back to the cameo, it was this little bit in the movie, and I walked into Leonard’s office and said, “I want to play the punk on the bus.” Leonard’s got a great sense of humor, he’s very funny, so he looks at me with this big smile and says, “Reaaally…” I said, “Yeah, I think I’d do a great job. I’ll shave my head, get a mohawk, whatever.” He said, “Let me think about it.” I said okay, and I was going crazy, because in 2 weeks he didn’t say anything, and I promised him I wouldn’t bother him. I said, “Look, I’m not going to bother you, I’m only going to ask you this one time,” so I really had to live with it and not bother him. I never brought it up, never hinted at it, nothing. So about 2 weeks later, I walk to his office like I did every day, and he said, “Oh, by the way, you can do it.” I said, “What. You mean.” “Yep, you can play the punk.” I was like, “Ohhh thank you, thank you.” So I went out, shaved the sides of my head, dyed my hair orange and got a mohawk, because they don’t really make a mohawk hairpiece that looks real, so I actually had a bright road cone orange mohawk for about 6 months.

    thatcher06.png

    PLUME: I’m sure they really respected you on the set after that.

    THATCHER: Oh it was great. It was a blast. The first time DeForest Kelley saw me with this outrageous hairstyle he looked me up and down very slowly and said, “Nice shoes”. He then broke into a huge grin and ambled away. He had a very dry sense of humor.

    PLUME: You were featured rather prominently on the French poster for the film.

    THATCHER: That’s what somebody told me.

    PLUME: So the French love you.

    THATCHER: They would. I have sort of a French attitude in the movie.

    PLUME: That shows you the cultural impact you’ve had worldwide.

    THATCHER: Exactly. Leonard said I got the biggest laugh in the entire movie in Russia, because Russia was fraught with punk rockers before the wall had fallen, so they got a big laugh out of that.

    PLUME: You’re an icon now.

    THATCHER: Yeah. I could win the Nobel Peace Prize and my grave would still say “Punk On Bus – Star Trek IV“.

    The funny thing was that I got to write and sing that song that was playing on the radio. “I Hate You”, written by Kirk Thatcher and performed by The Edge of Etiquette. We shot the scene with no sound. There was no music playing. I was just miming to a beat. After we wrapped the movie, the music department was coming to us, and they were playing, like, Duran Duran or whoever Paramount had some deal with. I said, “That isn’t punk rock music. Punk rock is really raw and gritty and dirty.” They said, “Well, we don’t really deal with the Sex Pistols and stuff.” I said to Leonard, “You know, let me write you a song. I can do a song.” I was becoming good friends with the sound editor, Mark Mangini, and a couple of the guys in his sound department. I told Leonard, “We can do a song for you that will sound like a punk rock song. Just let us do it and you won’t have to pay for the rights or anything, and it will be better than Duran Duran.” So I went in with Mark and he wrote the music for it. I had a melody in mind, but I don’t write music, so he turned it into something that could be played on the guitar. We then recorded it in the hallway of the post-production sound facility that Mark had so it would sound bad – very distorted, as if recorded in a garage. We actually used the mics that the sound guys use to do key codes like, “Spock walking down the street, Take 1.” It’s just a cheap mic so it would sound really bad. We did this one weekend and Leonard came in on a Saturday and he listened to it, cracked up, and said, “Great. That’s it. We’ll use it.” And that’s how “I Hate You” came to be.

    thatcher07.png

    PLUME: It was used in another film, wasn’t it?

    THATCHER: Yeah, it was used in Back To The Beach, with Frankie and Annette. They called me up and said, “Can we use it?” and I said, “Yeah.” I actually got paid more for them using it in that than I did for Star Trek. Hey, here is a little known fact for all the Trekkies. The voice of the computer, at the beginning of Star Trek IV when Spock is doing that computer test, that’s me. I actually wrote those questions. We shot with my voice as a temp track, which we sped up, just so Leonard would have something to react to. So we shot with that and we used it on the temp track. Finally, they’re getting ready to redo it, and they asked Leonard and he says, “Naw, it’s fine. Just use that.” So after doing all this other stuff, that’s how I got my SAG card. For being the voice of the computer! And it’s the only thing that I’m not credited for, because if it was, my name would have been in the credits four times. It would have been in there more than anyone else’s name.

    PLUME: You just insinuated yourself everywhere.

    THATCHER: I did, yeah. It wasn’t anything I lobbied for. It just sort-of happened. When I hear that computer voice now , I cringe because it sounds so goofy.

    PLUME: Well, the film still works.

    THATCHER: It’s amazing. It made about $130 million in the US, and I believe the last Star Trek movie only broke $90 million. It just blew all the other Trek movies out of the water with how successful it was. I think a lot of it is due to Leonard’s sense of humor and the fact that Leonard wanted to make a lighthearted romp instead of a serious science fiction picture, and it really reached out to a broader audience.

    thatcher08.png

    thatcher09.png

    PLUME: What was your next project after Star Trek IV?

    THATCHER: A woman I had met through a special effects company we had worked with knew Jim Henson. Her first husband had directed The Muppet Movie. I was starting to pitch movie and TV show ideas with creatures at the time, and she said, “Would you like to meet Jim Henson?” and I said, “Sure, I’d love to.” She said, “I’m sure he’d like this kind of stuff and I’m sure you two would get along.” This is about 1987, and Star Trek IV had just opened, I think in February. So I met Jim in March of that year, and we hit it off and I showed him a bunch of creatures designs and story ideas and all that. We started working on some story ideas, and in March of ’88, after I’d know him for about a year, I moved to New York to work on The Jim Henson Hour. I lived in New York for year and worked in New York and Toronto on The Jim Henson Hour and became very good friends with Jim. In ’89, The Jim Henson Hour was done, and I didn’t really enjoy living in New York, so I moved back to LA and worked on some stuff with Henson, as well as Walt Disney Imagineering. I worked at Disney for nine months, and while I was working there, Jim and I started working on the concept for Dinosaurs. Unfortunately, that’s when Jim passed away, but we took the ideas that he and I had kicked around and started working with a couple of sit-com writers Michael Jacobs and Bob Young who had a development deal at Disney television. Alex Rockwell and I were the Henson side of things, I designed the characters and helped flesh out ideas while Michel and Bob started working on the scripts. Alex, who was the development person at Henson, oversaw the development process. We sold it to ABC in 1990 and in 1991 it went on the air. I worked on Dinosaurs for about four years as a writer and a character designer, and then I started writing the Muppet movies with Jerry Juhl. I cowrote Muppet Treasure Island and a couple of other Muppet films which haven’t been made. I think three all together. So that’s what I’ve been doing till now. I also worked a lot on Muppets Tonight!.

    PLUME: Regarding The Jim Henson Hour and Muppets Tonight!, what do you think were the reasons that neither show gelled either with the audience or the networks?

    THATCHER: I believe The Jim Henson Hour didn’t gel because I think NBC didn’t know what to do with it. I think it was a little all over the place.

    PLUME: It did seem a bit schizophrenic.

    THATCHER: It did, and I don’t think the network was really behind us. If the network is really behind you, I mean, you’ve seen some of these horrible shows that run forever. I think they really didn’t know what to make of it. The great thing about Jim was that he never really repeated himself. It wasn’t just a Muppet Show again. I think that was part of it. We only did thirteen, and I think they only aired six or seven. The same thing with Muppets Tonight!. ABC put us on midseason and they ran eight, then they ran a few off over the summer and kept changing our timeslot, and I think they really didn’t know what to do with us. We weren’t bowling people over in the ratings, but I think we would have found an audience. It’s hard to know why those things don’t pick up. I think a puppet show is kind of a tough sell. I think you’re always going to have a hard time getting people to watch up front. With the Muppet Show, it didn’t really catch on until it’s second season. If it was on a network, it never would have made it past it’s first. With Muppets Tonight!, people still come up and say, “You worked on that? Man, that was such a great show.” We only made 22.

    PLUME: It’s unfortunate that Muppets Tonight! hit its stride in its second season, when it was cancelled.

    THATCHER: Exactly. And it never really aired. Those episodes didn’t air until it moved to the Disney Channel. It takes awhile to figure out what a show is and how it’s going to work. Muppets Tonight! never got that chance with the audience since they pulled us after about 10 shows, and you’re right, we did start to get all the kinks worked out. It takes a while to find out what works and what doesn’t, and to see which characters are going to grow. I think both of the shows would have held up if the networks had given them a longer run.

    PLUME: I noticed with Muppets Tonight! that there where a rather large amount of Star Trek references, along with the wonderful George Takei appearance.

    THATCHER: Yeah, we got George and Bill and even Leonard did a little cameo. I wish we’d done more with Leonard. Bill Shatner’s cameo was very funny. George was hysterical. He had a ball.

    PLUME: And you’re basically lampooning him quite harshly.

    THATCHER: Oh, and he got it. I went up to him and said, “George, Kirk Thatcher.” Like he remembered me, and he said, “Ohhhh yes.” in that big baritone he has, and he said, “Oh my.” And we’d written “Oh my” in there, and he said, “You know, that’s what I say. They play that on Howard Stern.” I said, “I know George, that’s why we wrote it in the script.” He said, “Well, you’ve got me down. This is so much fun.” He totally had a ball lampooning himself, because he’s a very loquacious, very chatty with anecdotes, and he’s got that great voice, and he knew were not being mean. That we were just having fun. And we all like to poke fun at the Star Trek fans.

    PLUME: I’ve also heard that his anecdotes sometimes go beyond a person’s endurance.

    THATCHER: That’s not really true. One of the jokes we made was that he was boring people, but he’s not that bad. He’s actually a very sweet guy. It was funny, though, because I can imitate him pretty well, so in the readthroughs I would do his part and people would laugh. Then he came on the set, and when we did the readthrough with the actor, everyone was elbowing and nudging me and coming up to me later and saying, “Oh my God, he talks just like that! I can’t believe it!” I said, “Well, that’s how George is. He is what he is.” He’s a very theatrical guy with this terrific basso profundo voice.

    PLUME: Were there any episodes of Muppets Tonight! written but never produced?

    THATCHER: Nope. We wrote 22 and we filmed 22. What usually happened was that the biggest issue on those programs was the guest star. We often would have a guest star, and they would change on us literally a week before the shoot, so we’d have to rewrite the entire script since it usually revolved around these guest stars. In fact, we made a show about that where the guest star died and we had to find a replacement. The reality was that we just kept losing guest stars, so we made up the episode where we just couldn’t get a guest star, and the one that we got died, and we had to keep running around to find one. It also became known as the cameo show, since we didn’t have just one guest star, we had a bunch of them. It was a nightmare. We’d get somebody and then they’d change their mind or their schedule would change. Actors and stars have very transient schedules, but whenever they worked with us, they were great. It was just nailing them down that was the problem.

    PLUME: What was the easiest guest star for you to work with?

    THATCHER: They were all easy, but easy in terms of just totally having a ball and getting into the Muppet spirit I would have to say Garth Brooks. He was so much fun. I think it was so much fun to work with him because he was having so much fun. It was like he was a kid and he totally got it . He just wanted to be so out there and goofy, and he’s just a really charming and likeable guy. Jason Alexander was fun, but I think Garth was the easiest, just because everything we wrote, he loved, and he totally threw himself into it.

    PLUME: How closely are you associated with the Henson Company right now?

    THATCHER: I have a consulting deal to develop TV shows.

    PLUME: Hopefully you’ll move into directing the features.

    THATCHER: That would be nice. They seemed to like what I did with second unit on Muppets From Space. I recently wrote and directed some stuff for the new Odyssey Channel. Some bumpers and interstitials. Stuff like that. They were fast and silly. I got to work with Frank Oz and that was a blast.

    PLUME: Well, you certainly provided a relaxed atmosphere to work in.

    THATCHER: Thanks for noticing. My main goal was just trying to get what they wanted and try to keep it fun. It’s scary, but I’ve been working on movie sets now for 18 years. I sound
    like an old man.

    PLUME: Does it sound odd to you, to say 18 years?

    THATCHER: It scares the beejeezus out of me to say that I’ve been working in movies for 18 years.

    PLUME: Are you happy with where you’re at right now?

    THATCHER: Yeah, pretty much. If you’d asked me 10 years ago, I’d say that I would have directed a couple movies by now, but I’m very happy. I love working with the Henson people. They’re incredibly sweet and very genuine. I’ve been very fortunate, actually. If I ever write my biography, I’d have to call it “The Luckiest Guy In Hollywood”, because I’ve never worked with jerks. From the Lucas people to the Star Trek people to the Henson people. All nice, classy people.

    PLUME: Sounds like you picked the right companies.

    THATCHER: Exactly. It’s the companies that are known for quality stuff and the people have all worked together for years and nobody’s in and out. They’re all basically showbiz families. It’s like going from one circus to another circus. It’s all people who have been together and really respect one another and know how to treat each other, so I’ve been very fortunate. The one thing I learned is that the work is very hard. Importantly, it’s the attitude or the tone of the set from the Director or Producer at the top – that can make the entire process comfortable and fun. When I was the guy in the trenches mixing plaster or standing on the set with 300 other people making sure that the actor with the rubber mask on could breathe, I really appreciated people with a sense of humor who kept it light and let everyone know that, “Hey, we’re in this together. It’s not like you’re the peon and we’re the brilliant geniuses who tell you what to do.” It’s more like, “Hey, how about this? Let’s try this?” When I was down in the trenches, I said, “When I’m up there, I’ll treat people the way I like to be treated.” And fortunately, the way I was treated. It’s like families where you grow up with nice parents.

    PLUME: There was a very marked style difference between your directing and Tim Hill’s on the film. His set was much more hushed.

    THATCHER: That’s the way a lot of director’s like it. Very quiet with the director very deep in thought, and that’s the way they work. I tend to be more exuberant and loud, and that’s because that’s just the way I work. That’s who I am.

    PLUME: I was actually quite surprised that you had never directed anything before then.

    THATCHER: If you’re on enough sets, you now what it’s supposed to be like. It goes back to being a lot of hard work. If you can make it fun and at least keep people from thinking that you’ll bite their heads off if they get it wrong, then you’re doing fine. I guess…I’m not an expert…

    PLUME: So, what was your final take on Muppets From Space?

    THATCHER: I think it’s nice how it’s contemporary and brings the Muppets up to the present day and it’s great how we get to see and meet some of the new characters we developed on Muppets Tonight!, like Bobo, Pepe, and Clifford. I liked that about it. I liked the fact that it’s not just another Kermit and Piggy story. It’s an interesting risk that we took, because in some ways, you don’t go to a James Bond movie to go see Moneypenny. We’re taking a bit of a risk saying Kermit’s there and Piggy’s there, but it’s Gonzo’s story and he’s dragging the rest of the Muppets with him. It’ll be interesting to see what the audience thinks about that. The other Muppet films are ensemble pieces, but it’s interesting to see the crux of the story not be on Kermit and Piggy. To be honest, from the inside, I’m a little tired of that. It’s like, “Okay, they’re not married. They probably won’t be. Let’s move on.” On the other hand, people love that dynamic. Those are the things I liked going into the film. What we were trying to achieve.

    PLUME: Well, I think we’ve covered a good chunk of material. Is there anything that you’d like to mention?

    THATCHER: God bless America. I just hope to write and direct my own shows someday. So keep those cards and letters coming!

    PLUME: Is directing what you want to focus on for the future?

    THATCHER: Writing and creating movies and TV shows and directing movies. That’s all… Pretty typical goals for a creative working stiff in Hollywood these days…

    lucyline.gif

    NOTE: Here… fully printed & intelligible for the first time anywhere (to the best of my knowledge)… are the complete lyrics to Thatcher’s punker / hate song from Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home:

    “I HATE YOU”

    Lyrics by Kirk R. Thatcher

    Music by Mark Mangini

    (to be sung Allegro con Temptible)

    Just what is the future?
    The things we’ve done and said.
    Let’s just push the button.
    We’d be better off dead!

    And I hate you!
    and I berate you !
    and I can’t wait to get to you…

    The sins of all the fathers,
    being dumped on us – the sons
    The only choice we’re given is:
    How many megatons?

    So I eschew you!
    And I say “SCREW YOU”!
    And I hope you’re blue too!

    We’re all bloody worthless,
    Just greedy human scum,
    The numbers all add up
    to a negative sum…

    And I hate you!
    And I hate you!
    And I hate you…too!

    (Repeat in angry scream ’til hoarse – or blood sprays from throat. Whichever comes first…)

    -This piece courtesy of & copyright Kirk R. Thatcher

    thatcher10.png

    lucyline.gif

    10 QUESTIONS

    1. What is your favorite piece of music?

    “Pictures At An Exhibition” by Mussorgsky, as orchestrated by Ravel.

    2. What is your favorite film?

    I have three favorite films, each of different mood and genre, they are in no particular order: Star Wars, Citizen Kane and Monty Python and the Holy Grail.

    3. What is your favorite TV program, past or current?

    I’ve logged so many hours in front of the television, I can’t pick one. The original Twilight Zone and The Outer Limits were very influential. Monty Python’s Flying Circus, Laugh In, and the classic Warner Brothers cartoons shown on Saturday morning were also a big part of who I am today. Recently, I’ve enjoyed South Park, The Simpsons, Northern Exposure, and Spongebob Squarepants.

    4. What do you feel has been your most important professional accomplishment to date?

    Directing a movie…finally!

    5. Which project do you feel didn’t live up to what you envisioned?

    There are certain aspects of every project I’ve worked on in my career in all sorts of capacities that didn’t live up to what I had envisioned, but I have strange and elaborate visions… which is usually why I was hired to work on the projects in the first place. So I guess I’m dropping back and punting on this one…

    6. What is your favorite book?

    I love too many to pick out one, but one of the most influential was a series of books printed in the early part of the twentieth century entitled, My Book House by Olive Beaupre Miller. It was an incredibly beautiful series of six children’s books filled with amazing artwork, incredible stories, and poetry… A trifecta of visual and literary inspiration for me at a very early age. The set I have belonged to my father when he was young and I still leaf through the pages for inspiration and to get the sweet smell of old books.

    7. If you could change one thing about the industry, what would it be?

    By the “industry” I assume you mean “the biz” – babe! Seriously? If I were king of the forest? I would put creative people in charge of the creative decisions… Too many bankers and middle management type executives are involved in the creative pipeline and that is why we find ourselves with such an abundance of well financed dreck…

    8. Who – or what – would you say has had the biggest influence on your career?

    For what, see questions 2 and 6. As far as people go, it would be George Lucas, Jim Henson, and Leonard Nimoy. All three men mentored me in one way or another, Leonard and Jim in a more direct and personal manner. George Lucas has always been an inspiration to think big and outside of the box and to eschew what is considered standard operating procedure in Hollywood in lieu of better products or processes.

    9. What is your next project?

    I have a lot of irons in the fire, as they say. I’m being considered for some solely as a director, the others as both writer and director. But nothing is going to move ahead until early 2003, so I’m not going to jinx anything by mentioning them here.

    10. What is the one project that you’ve always wanted to do, but have yet to be able to?

    To write and direct a movie of my own and then turn it into a videogame, a TV series, a novel and an amusement park ride.

    lucyline.gif

  • Win THE MUPPETS: CHARACTER ENCYCLOPEDIA!

    contestheader.jpg

    In conjunction with DK Publishing, we’re giving away three (3) copies of THE MUPPETS: CHARACTER ENCYCLOPEDIA.

    Contest ends at 11:59pm EST on Wednesday, March 5th 2014.

    Enter the contest!
    Email:
    First name:
    Last name:
    Street Address:
    Address Line 2 (if needed):
    City:
    State/Province/Whatever:
    Zip Code/Postal Code:
    Country:
    Birth Month:
    Birth Day:
    Birth Year:

    Official Rules

    No member of FRED Entertainment or their immediate families may enter.

    No Purchase necessary to win.

    Must be 18 years of age or older to enter.

    One entry per day, per person.

    All submitted entries must be received by 11:59pm EST on Wednesday, March 5th 2014.

    The winner must allow 4-6 weeks after notification of win to receive the product.

  • A Bit Of A Chat with Ken Plume & Brian Jay Jones

    bitofachat-header.png

    lucyline.gif

    I’m Ken Plume, and soon you’ll be listening to “A Bit Of A Chat” with me, Ken Plume.

    In this episode, I have a chat with biographer Brian Jay Jones about Jim Henson, Muppets, choreography of the unseen, Washington Irving, and Daily Show mugs.

    Be sure to pick up his wonderful new biography of Jim Henson titles, appropriately, JIM HENSON: THE BIOGRAPHY.

    Hope you enjoy…

    Download “A Bit of a Chat with Ken Plume & Brian Jay Jones“:

    [audio:http://traffic.libsyn.com/bitofachat/bit_of_a_chat-brian_jay_jones.mp3]

    ——

    brianjoneshen.png

    SUBSCRIBE
    Subscribe to this Podcast via iTunes

    ##

    patreon-fred.png

    Drop Ken a line HERE.

    ##

    You can also find more of my interviews by clicking HERE.

    lucyline.gif

  • Weekend Shopping Guide 8/16/13: Moving Right Along

    weekendshopping.png

    The weekend’s here. You’ve just been paid, and it’s burning a hole in your pocket. What’s a pop culture geek to do? In hopes of steering you in the right direction to blow some of that hard-earned cash, it’s time for the FRED Weekend Shopping Guide – your spotlight on the things you didn’t even know you wanted…

    (Please support FRED by using the links below to make any impulse purchases – it helps to keep us going…)

    Due to its relatively low production budget, The Muppet Movie (Walt Disney, Rated G, Blu-Ray-$26.50 SRP) is never going to look pristine, but the new high definition restoration has the film looking and sounding far better than it ever has, and for that – and the fact that it’s finally out – I’m terribly happy. The bonus materials are limited, but the extended version of the original camera tests for the film (a truncated version was available on the previous DVD release) and the uncut production footage of Doc Hopper’s commercial are much appreciated.

    blankguide.gif

    When I first heard that those producers of to-scale miracles, Hot Toys, were looking to begin creating vehicles for their already-stunning line of 1/6-scale figures, I thought they were mad. When you’ve got a figure that already stands a foot, how in the heck are they going to do – and release with anything resembling a reasonable price – something that would have to be simply massive? Well, in a slap to my foolish doubt, they’ve done just that. And, in person, the 1/6-scale Batmobile ($629.99) from the 1989 Tim Burton Batman film is simply incredible. The details and accessories are incredible, from the grappling hook and machine guns to the bat discs and LED lights for the headlamps, engine, and dash, this is the perfect accessory (if you can call something so massive and intricate an accessory). To make the display that much more perfect, the appropriate Michael Keaton Batman figure – which Hot Toys released last year – fits perfectly into the cockpit. This is an iconic film vehicle, and Hot Toys has done right by it. And guess what? It comes shipped with a protective cover – which just happens to be perfectly sculpted to represent the armored version of the Batmobile seen in Batman Returns. So yes, head over to Sideshow and get this while you can. Here’s hoping Hot Toys eventually releases a Buckaroo Banzai line.

    weekendpicks20130816-02.png

    weekendpicks20130816-03.png

    weekendpicks20130816-04.png

    weekendpicks20130816-05.png

    weekendpicks20130816-06.png

    thinkgeek-01.jpg

    If there’s something that Thinkgeek excels at, it’s offering up items you never thought you needed. Case in point is Twiddle ($9.99), which is… Well, I don’t know quite how to describe it. It’s a jointed length of plastic that you just mess around with. Endlessly. And it comes in different colors, because, of course. A great little stress reliever.

    thinkgeek-02.jpg

    Kick your celebrations of Doctor Who‘s 50th anniversary into high gear with a trio of releases, starting with the very first high definition release of a classic Doctor serial with Doctor Who: Spearhead From Space (BBC, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$29.98 SRP), the inaugural story of Jon Pertwee’s 3rd Doctor. And it looks and sounds amazing. Bonus materials include a pair of documentaries on Pertwee and companion Caroline John, a look at the restoration process, and title sequences.

    blankguide.gif

    Keep the Who party going with a new special edition of the 3rd Doctor story with the space maggots, Doctor Who: The Green Death (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$34.98 SRP), which adds to all of the usual audio commentaries and featurettes with the inclusion of the 2-part Sarah Jane Adventures adventure guest-starring Katy Manning & Matt Smith, and a wonderful documentary with Russell T. Davies on the machinations behind the show’s return in 2005.

    blankguide.gif

    And finally (until next month, anyway), there’s The Doctors Revisited: One To Four (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP), which brings together a representative story from each of the first four incarnations of the Doctor – “The Aztecs”, “The Tomb Of The Cybermen”, “Spearhead From Space” and “Pyramids Of Mars” – and pairs them with a documentary retrospective of that Doctor’s tenure.

    blankguide.gif

    A few years back, William Shatner produced a wonderful little documentary called The Captains, in which he had candid conversations with the other actors who have held that rank in the Star Trek franchise. To follow that up, he’s gone back and cut extended versions of those interviews with Patrick Stewart, Avery Brooks, Kate Mulgrew, Scott Bakula, and Chris Pine – plus himself – for the expanded The Captains Close Up (E1, Not Rated, DVD-$19.98 SRP). And the result? Still wonderful. In fact – More, please.

    blankguide.gif

    After being unceremoniously cancelled, it seems rather fitting that HBO is only giving a non-high definition release to the second (and now final) season of Enlightened (HBO, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP), Mike White and Laura Dern’s sublime dramedy about a post-rehab corporate executive eager to expose her own company’s sins. Bonus materials include audio commentaries and featurettes.

    blankguide.gif

    The second season of Girls (HBO, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.98 SRP) is where Leah Dunham’s already-soapy dramedy moves fully into guilty pleasure territory, as it cranks the absurd emotional pendulum all the way to 11. And yet I can’t stop watching. Bonus materials include audio commentaries, featurettes, deleted/extended scenes, interviews, featurettes, and more.

    blankguide.gif

    Raymond Burr takes his final cases in the second volume of the 9th and final season of Perry Mason (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$45.98 SRP) – at least until he’d return decades later in TV movies. The 4-disc set contains 15 episodes or courtroom drama, plus an introduction to the episode “The Case Of The Twice-Told Twist” with Barbara Hale.

    blankguide.gif

    I gave it the ol’ college try for its first few weeks, but I could never get into the groove of The Mindy Show (Universal, Not Rated, DVD-$29.98 SRP) – which is unfortunate, because I find Mindy Kaling both a funny performer and writer, but the show just never seemed to gel. Maybe I’ll give it another go for its second season, and hope for the best. Bonus materials include deleted scenes.

    blankguide.gif

    So there you have it… my humble suggestions for what to watch, listen to, play with, or waste money on this coming weekend. See ya next week…

    -Ken Plume
    ##

  • Win THE MUPPET MOVIE on Blu-Ray!

    contestheader.jpg

    In conjunction with Disney, we’re giving away a copy of THE MUPPET MOVIE on Blu-Ray.

    Contest ends at 11:59pm EST on August 14th.

    Enter the contest!
    Email:
    First name:
    Last name:
    Street Address:
    Address Line 2 (if needed):
    City:
    State/Province/Whatever:
    Zip Code/Postal Code:
    Country:
    Birth Month:
    Birth Day:
    Birth Year:

    Official Rules

    No member of FRED Entertainment or their immediate families may enter.

    No Purchase necessary to win.

    Must be 18 years of age or older to enter.

    One entry per day, per person.

    All submitted entries must be received by 11:59pm EST on Wednesday, August 14th.

    The winner must allow 4-6 weeks after notification of win to receive the product.

  • FROM THE VAULT: Dave Goelz Interview

    vaultinterviews.png

    Conducted ~1/1999

    After my interview with Muppeteer Jerry Nelson, Jerry was kind enough to provide access for to the set of Muppets From Space, and vouched for me to his fellow Muppeteers.

    What followed was over a month of me just hanging around the set in the increasingly cold January of 1999, part of which was spent chatting with and ultimately interviewing Muppeteers. Also, getting my hair cut by the production’s hairdresser… just because. Well, my hair was getting too long. She cut it with a razor. I felt like a movie star.

    Anyway.

    One of the Muppeteers I met was Dave Goelz. Goelz, if you’re not familiar, is the Muppeteer responsible for Gonzo, Dr. Bunsen Honeydew, Boober Fraggle, Zoot, Beauregard, Uncle Travelling Matt, and many, many more.

    And he’s a pretty nice guy, to boot. Below, you’ll find our conversation…

    lucyline.gif

    KEN PLUME: First of all, tell me a little bit about your background…

    DAVE GOELZ: I have always enjoyed puppets, but at two times during my childhood puppetry became a hobby. When I was five I became a huge fan of Howdy Doody, and when I saw a Howdy dummy at the local toy store, I got very excited. My folks said that if I saved half the money, they would match my funds and I could get the dummy, which I believe cost either $3.95 or $7.95. I saved every penny of my 25 cents per week allowance, and in no time my parents were surprised that I was ready to make the purchase. The next Christmas my parents gave me a Howdy Doody marionette. During this period I was also interested in the original Time for Beany puppet show, starring Stan Freberg and Bob Clampett. I had Beany and Dishonest John hand puppets made by Ideal Toys, but was disappointed by the official rubbery Cecil the Seasick Sea Serpent puppet. My mother made a beautiful Cecil for me completely from scratch. She was a big influence; she showed that you could make whatever you needed.

    When I was thirteen, I became interested in marionettes. In junior high school I had become fascinated by the theater, with its curtains and colored lighting. My father built a marionette stage for me, and I equipped it with three strings of our Christmas lights; one whole string in blue, one in red, and the other in yellow. That way we could plug in different strings to make a range of colors. My friend Eddie Paul and I wrote scripts and put on marionette shows for our family and friends. I had a little printing press and we made tickets for the shows, for which we charged ten cents. We made well over a dollar in less than a month. Easy money.

    After high school I studied to be an industrial designer, and entered the profession. After a couple of years I started watching Sesame Street on Saturday mornings and just got hooked. I had been a Muppet fan for many years, but now I started getting fascinated with the design process that went into what I was seeing on the screen. Who were these people who created the puppets, costumes and performances that were so evocative? I got very curious.

    One day, I read in a newspaper and read that Frank Oz was to appear nearby at a puppetry festival, so I took a day of vacation time and went to see him. I was just blown away by the two shows Frank did at Mills College in Oakland. During the first show, I was like an assassin. I was in a window above and to the side of the stage with a telephoto lens and a couple of rolls of film. It was fascinating to see Frank working. During the second show – they had to give two shows since so many people came – I sat out in the audience. I could feel the love for those characters all around me. After the show, I got up to go back home and back to my job of designing these boxes for scientific instruments. As I trudged to the car amidst a buzzing crowd, I had a strong feeling that I should be doing puppetry, but I had no idea how I could make a living at it. I didn’t think there was any potential at all, so I was just sad. Within about a month of that day I was asked to make a business trip, which was a very rare event. Not only that, it took me to Pennsylvania. At the end of my work, I took a week of vacation time and went to New York and visited Sesame Street. How odd that my whole career grew out of six days of vacation time. I went to Sesame Street every day and just watched them work.

    PLUME: Was the set more open then as opposed to now?

    GOELZ: At that time Sesame Street was shot at Teletape Studios at 81st & Broadway. I had pre-arranged with Frank Oz to visit the set. This was the fall of 1972. I watched them shoot for the entire week and they were all very kind to me. I had brought some puppets with me that I had made, and the Muppet people there said, “You should show these to Bonnie Erickson, head of the Muppet Workshop,” .

    So I phoned Bonnie and went across town to visit her. When I showed her my puppets, she said, “Oh, that’s great! You can build puppets. You should meet Jim, but he’s in France right now.” About a month after that, I was sitting at my desk in California and the phone rang and this voice said, “Hi there. This is Jim Henson.” I went, “WHAA?!?” He sounded like Ernie! I jumped up and looked over the partitions around the lab. Everyone was just working normally, and I had Jim Henson on the phone! I couldn’t believe it. He suggested that we meet in Los Angeles the following week when he was scheduled to appear on a Perry Como special. So we met in Los Angeles, and I showed him my portfolio. It was an industrial design portfolio that covered my career. It went something like this: John Deere tractor, American Airlines interior, Hewlett Packard laser interferometer — puppet. I told him my objective was to illustrate how my background was perfect for becoming a puppet designer. In fact, it was.

    We agreed to stay in touch. I planned to borrow some video equipment and start performing in my own videotapes. In about a month or two I got another call from Jim saying, “I’m coming to San Francisco – would you like to get together?” So I booked a hotel for him in Los Gatos. I took him out to dinner and when I picked him up he was waiting outside; a tall, gaunt figure standing in the rain. He looked frail and vulnerable. Later I would learn just how strong he really was. After dinner I showed him the tapes that I had just completed. This was around February of 1973, and he was contemplating doing a Broadway stage play that utilized many forms of puppetry. He asked me if I would be interested in being involved both as a designer and a performer. We stayed in touch and by June we worked out a deal where I came to work for six months on the designing and building phase of that project. During my stint, Muppets got a series pilot with ABC, so we put the stage play aside and worked on the pilot. Jim asked me to perform three characters in the show, so I stayed an extra couple of weeks for the shoot. Jim invited me to join the company, but I didn’t feel at home in New York, so I went back to California.

    I had been on a leave of absence from my electronics job, and during the extra two weeks that I stayed in New York, I was replaced. I realized this was a good thing, because I had been afraid that I’d go back to work, get comfortable and secure and never pursue this work that I was passionate about. After a few weeks I started my own business doing industrial advertising and videotape work using puppets. Soon I had a couple of clients and was doing good business. After about 8 months, Jim made me an offer that I couldn’t really refuse. Jim proposed that I keep my main industrial client, come to the Muppet Workshop as a designer/builder, and perform occasionally in specials. It gave me the Muppet work that I was passionate about, and included several escapes to California each year. This was an example of Jim’s business genius. He knew I didn’t like New York, so he conceived of a deal whereby I would get to leave frequently to service my client. How could I say no? So I did it.

    Continued below…

  • FROM THE VAULT: Jerry Nelson Interview

    vaultinterviews.png

    Conducted ~12/1998

    While trying to come up with the best term that describes Jerry Nelson, one’s mind turns inevitably to the words multi-talented and multi-faceted. Both contain the prefix “multi,” meaning many, and they illustrate the numerous talents – and characters – contained within him. From his humble roots in Oklahoma to his literal hand in creating cultural icons (The Count von Count, Floyd Pepper, Gobo Fraggle, Robin, Emmet Otter, Lew Zealand, Crazy Harry, Herry Monster… The list goes on and on…), Jerry has accomplished much in his long and distinguished career. Although you don’t ever see him, you know and appreciate it when he’s there.

    I’ve long been a fan of the Muppets, and being the inquisitive person I am, I researched exactly who the people were that worked to bring the Muppets to life – those wild men and women known collectively as Muppeteers.

    Through the still-newish medium of the internet, I had begun a correspondence with longtime Muppeteer Jerry Nelson, and when the back-to-back filming of Elmo In Grouchland and Muppets From Space brought him to my backyard, I arranged to have a lengthy sit-down interview with him.

    It was also through Jerry that I was able to hang around the set for months on end (effectively sacrificing my college career – an anecdote for another time) and befriend many a Muppeteer.

    Jerry has become a good friend over the years (we also share a birthday, which led to me helping pull off a big surprise party for his 65th – gulp! – 10 years ago), and his life’s work has contributed nothing but joy to both children and adults for generations. I hope you’ll understand why doing this interview was so important to me, and I hope you get a kick out of it as well…

    lucyline.gif

    KEN PLUME: Tell me a little bit about your background…

    JERRY NELSON: I was born in Oklahoma in 1934. I lived there with my mom until I was about 6, then we moved to Washington, D. C. and I grew up in that area.

    PLUME: Was it a job related move?

    NELSON: Yeah, as a kid it was my job to go to school. It was during the war. My mom and dad were divorced, and she took a job with the Navy Department, so we moved there for that. I spent summers with my grandparents in Tulsa, and the rest of the time I lived in D.C.

    PLUME: So you were 6 when you moved to Washington…

    NELSON: Well, I was probably 7 or 8. I know I was already in school. I remember about three schools in Oklahoma. One would have been a kindergarten, one would have been a first grade, and the other one would probably have also been first grade or the beginning of second grade. I know when I started school in Washington I was in the second grade. The reason I remember one of the places in Oklahoma was because is was a one-room schoolhouse. I was in a class room with all age kids and the teacher would move around, kind of like an arena. That was a good learning experience early on.

    PLUME: Going to Washington schools must have been quite a shock after that…

    NELSON: Yeah, going to Washington was a big change in my life. It was a big school. The first school I went to in Washington, I had to wait after school because my cousin went to the high school next door, and I used to wait in the playground so we could go home together. We had to go by public transit that involved a streetcar and a transfer to a bus. It was fairly complicated travel for a second grader.

    During those days we’d listen to radio. That’s probably where I became fascinated by voices and accents. I would hear names and think, “Oh, that’s the same guy that does this other voice on that other show.” That was probably where I became interested in the fact that you could regulate your voice and do different characters.

    PLUME: How cliché was it that families would gather around the radio and listen, whereas today you have every member of the family going to their rooms to watch their own TVs…

    NELSON: Radio was more of a family thing, although in my family when we watched TV we would do that together as well. I suppose today everyone has their own TV or computer or whatever they’re interested in and it certainly seems more fragmented. Society is more fragmented. People, rather than staying with their nuclear family, tend to adopt families who are more in tune with them.

    One of the major things that Jim saw with puppets, and Bill Baird also, was that they weren’t just a children’s entertainment, that they could also entertain and educate adults as well. Jim was the one who really connected in this struggle with The Muppet Show, but it took the success of a children’s show to enable that. People who had never seen The Muppet Show used to ask me, “What is that?” and I used to say it was an entertainment program for children of all ages. That’s the way I always thought of it, because there were different levels that appeal to different intellects, different age groups. The jokes were there for very young minds, but the jokes were also there for the older audience. That’s the interesting thing about Sesame Street. Young children would watch it over and over again and they’d watch the same show at the end of the week. When they first started, at the end of the week, they’d run the full week’s programs and children would watch them all over again. Nowadays, kids will do that with videos so that they know it by heart. They have minds that are busy looking at other things. They’ll watch the storyline, then they’ll watch a character, then they’ll watch the background. Eventually life comes along to distract us.

    PLUME: Sesame Street is on what, its third generation now?

    NELSON: At least. That was the interesting part. When kids were 6 or 7, they’d go, “Aw, I don’t watch that stuff anymore. I’m too old for that. That’s a children’s show.” Then somewhere in their teens they’d start watching it again, and then in college they’d start watching it again. It has a perennial quality to it.

    PLUME: Nothing is really too dated, either.

    NELSON: No, not really. You can look at some of the haircuts, maybe that would date it, but not the themes or the humor.

    PLUME: What were your interests in school?

    NELSON: By the time I got to high school, I was interested in country music and at some point in school, I don’t know how it happened, I got involved in a school play. It was fascinating and a lot of fun. As a youngster, my mom had put me in some group that traveled and did shows for Jaycees and Lions Clubs called Juvenile Review that a guy had put together. We did shows like Tom Sawyer and Hellzapoppin, Jr., which was basically tried-and-true vaudeville routines. We also sang on the radio in the Washington area. After that, I didn’t do much until the play in high school, and I thought, “I find this interesting.” I stayed with the idea of being an actor after that. For a while I thought radio and television were good. Throughout high school my musical tastes developed… I still like country, but now I like jazz and classical music as well. I realize music has shades for various moods and you’re not restricted. I stopped playing guitar when I was focused on jazz and thought, “Well, I can’t play jazz.” At some point, maybe in the 60’s movement came about, I started playing again because I thought, “Oh, I can play that.” In terms of acting, that was put on hold when I went into the Army. I was in the Army for two years and went to Japan.

    PLUME: Was this right after high school?

    NELSON: About a year afterwards. This was at the tail end of the Korean conflict, so I got the GI Bill and was able to go to school. I went to school for about a year and a half and thought, “Well, I’m not really doing anything here. If it’s acting I want to do, I should be in New York studying acting.” I felt like the thing to do was forget about school and pursue acting.

    PLUME: When year was this around?

    NELSON: I got back from the military in ’56 and went to school from ’56-’57, moved to New York in ’58, and stayed there for a couple of years.

    Continued below…

  • A Bit Of A Chat with Ken Plume & Rhys Thomas 3

    bitofachat-header.png

    lucyline.gif

    I’m Ken Plume, and soon you’ll be listening to “A Bit Of A Chat” with me, Ken Plume.

    In this episode, I have another chat with hyphenate Rhys Thomas, about Doctor Who, Tom Baker, Swiss Toni, and Queen. WARNING: Game Of Thrones Spoilers.

    Hope you enjoy…

    Download “A Bit of a Chat with Ken Plume & Rhys Thomas 3“:

    [audio:http://traffic.libsyn.com/bitofachat/bit_of_a_chat-rhys_thomas_3.mp3]

    SUBSCRIBE
    Subscribe to this Podcast via iTunes

    ##

    patreon-fred.png

    Drop Ken a line HERE.

    ##

    You can also find more of my interviews by clicking HERE.

    lucyline.gif

  • A Bit Of A Chat with Ken Plume & Rhys Thomas 2

    bitofachat-header.png

    lucyline.gif

    I’m Ken Plume, and soon you’ll be listening to “A Bit Of A Chat” with me, Ken Plume.

    In this episode, I have another chat with hyphenate Rhys Thomas, about following birds, the Muppet legacy, comedy stunts, killer plants, and paper towels.

    Hope you enjoy…

    Download “A Bit of a Chat with Ken Plume & Rhys Thomas 2“:

    [audio:http://traffic.libsyn.com/bitofachat/bit_of_a_chat-rhys_thomas_2.mp3]

    SUBSCRIBE
    Subscribe to this Podcast via iTunes

    ##

    patreon-fred.png

    Drop Ken a line HERE.

    ##

    You can also find more of my interviews by clicking HERE.

    lucyline.gif

  • Weekend Shopping Guide 3/23/12: Spy Games

    weekendshopping.png

    The weekend’s here. You’ve just been paid, and it’s burning a hole in your pocket. What’s a pop culture geek to do? In hopes of steering you in the right direction to blow some of that hard-earned cash, it’s time for the FRED Weekend Shopping Guide – your spotlight on the things you didn’t even know you wanted…

    (Please support FRED by using the links below to make any impulse purchases – it helps to keep us going…)

    It’s n ice that the original adaptation of John Le Carre’s Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (Acorn, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$59.99 SRP), starring Sir Alec Guinness as the sidelined spy George Smiley who’s tapped to root out a mole, makes its high-def debut at the same time as the new big screen Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (Universal, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$34.98 SRP), starring Gary Oldman as Smiley. Both are beautiful bits of clockwork intrigue and suspense, but Guinness gets the edge only because, as a mini-series, the story is allowed to breath and get far richer in its plot and character. Both, however, are worth watching.

    thinkgeek-01.jpg

    If you want to make your weekend decidedly Kubrickian, why not go about your life and run your errands wearing your very own Horse Head Mask ($25.99). Not only will you be a true individual, but you’ll also be downright creepy.

    thinkgeek-02.jpg

    There are quite a few ways that The Muppets (Walt Disney, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$49.99 SRP) is just an awful, misguided attempt to bring Jim Henson’s beloved creations back into the public consciousness. Perhaps the one that galls me the most is that this really isn’t a film about The Muppets. It’s fanfiction about Jason Segal and his resurrection of The Muppets with the help of a character he created, the Anything-Muppet Walter… Who’s really just a proxy for Jason Segal. If you’re going to make a film about The Muppets, present them without first setting them up to have become culturally irrelevant failures, and also, maybe, let them be the actual stars of their own damn film, and not second fiddles. So, yeah. Anyhoo, bonus materials include an audio commentary, featurettes, a blooper reel, and more.

    blankguide.gif

    I’m not about to go and say it’s anything brilliant, but as far as family films about the Easter Bunny as played by Russell Brand go, Hop (Universal, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$39.98 SRP) is a fun little diversion with enough humor and energy yo make for an enjoyable watch with the kids. Even with the pooping jelly beans thing. Bonus materials include a new mini-movie, featurettes, and more.

    blankguide.gif

    It’s not very often that a stage play makes the transition to film and retains its single location, and even rarer that it actually works, but Carnage (Sony, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$35.99 SRP) uses its enclosed locale to brilliantly bring together the parents of a bully with the parents of his victim for a conversational dinner that devolves into verbal warfare. The ensemble is the key, and John C. Reilly, Jodie Foster, Kate Winslet, and Christoph Waltz pull it off beautifully. Bonus materials include a trio of featurettes.

    blankguide.gif

    Fans of ABC Family’s series about a high school student leading a double life as a fashion house intern, Jane By Design (ABC Family, Not Rated, DVD-$29.99 SRP) can pick up the first volume, containing the initial 10 episodes of its debut season.

    blankguide.gif

    Jonah Hill’s blink-and-you-missed-it The Sitter (Fox, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP) is an affable, if unmemorable piece of pass-the-time comedy. Think Adventures In Babysitting, but raunchy. And with Jonah Hill. Bonus materials include featurettes, deleted scenes, outtakes, and more.

    blankguide.gif

    MGM opens their vaults for more releases from their MOD Limited Edition Collection. Titles this time around include John Huston’s Sinful Davey (MGM, Rated R, DVD-$19.98), Robert Carradine & Billy Dee Williams in Number One With A Bullet (MGM, Rated R, DVD-$19.98), Anthony Edwards & Kathy Bates in the Depression-era romance Summer Heat (MGM, Rated R, DVD-$19.98), and the National Enquirer-esque tabloid spoof The American Snitch (MGM, Rated R, DVD-$19.98).

    blankguide.gif

    While many of you are waiting for the cinematic arrival of The Hunger Games, there are many who claim that it’s ripping off a now-legendary cult Japanese action flick that’s getting a deluxe treatment with Battle Royale: The Complete Collection (Anchor Bay, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$49.99 SRP), which features multiple cuts of the film, the sequel, and loads of bonus materials. So if you want to check out if this bloody war between Japanese Junior High students and see how it stacks up against Hunger Games, this is the way to do it.

    blankguide.gif

    Deep in the caves of Androzani Minor, the Doctor and Peri are swept up in a struggle full of political backstabbing and murder pitting Androzani Major against a deformed madman named Sharaz Jek. Well, now you can get both Jek and Peri via the nifty Caves Of Androzani Set ($40), so you can finally re-enact the death of Peter Davison’s 5th Doctor.

    weekendpicks20120323-10

    So there you have it… my humble suggestions for what to watch, listen to, play with, or waste money on this coming weekend. See ya next week…

    -Ken Plume

    ##

  • My Favourite Things – May 2011

    my-favourite-things

    May

    lucyline.gif

    My name is Aaron Poole. Some of you may remember me as the boring one from the FRED podcast Cabin Fever. Other’s may remember me making fun of their band with my Musical Myspace Tour. But most of you don’t care so let’s just get on with this.

    In an attempt to send off the month of May the way it deserves I’m going to present you with a list of the things I’ve enjoyed in the past month. I’m hoping that we can share a common love or, if you missed it, I can show you something you might enjoy. Of course, if you hated anything on the list and think I’m a doo-doo head… well that’s what the comment section is for.

    1) American Idol / Paul F. Tompkins

    Listen, you don’t have to enjoy the show to know that it’s watched by the majority of people. I have a penchant for singing competitions (and judging people from the comfort of my armchair) so Idol ticks a lot of boxes for me. I don’t expect the winners to go on and be legitimate musicians. In fact, I don’t expect to ever hear from these people again once the show is over. But for the 3 months or so that the show is on, I dig it.

    I get emotionally invested in geeky beardy kids like Casey Abrams. I get reminded by my girlfriend that I shouldn’t look at Haley Reinhart that way because she’s 8 years younger than me. Yes, I got shocked by Pia getting eliminated so early and yes I got shocked that Jacob is that camp. I’m a sucker for it all.

    casey-abrams-and-haley-reinhart
    Haley and Casey talking about how much they like me too.

    In addition to the show was the wonderful Paul F. Tompkins recaps done for nymag.com. Or is it techincally vulture.com? I can’t tell anymore. MAKE SENSE INTERNET! Anyhoo… Paul would give a run down on his opinion of each show and cut through all the bull to ask the serious questions. Like, who does Randy really believe was in it to win it? And will Steven like any of the performances?

    I laughed, I cried. I mostly read. Now that the show is over I would highly recommend reading his recap of his recaps which offers a nice run down on his thoughts on American Idol in general and the task of writing about it twice a week. But if you want to go back over his run and share in the laughs through hindsight just click this dang link here.

    2) Jonathan Hickman on War Rocket Ajax

    Jonathan Hickman is one of the best comic writers working today. There, I said it. Too controversial a statement? Let’s say that he’s one of my favourites then. But secretly I’ll know I’m right and that he’s one of the best. Whatever gets you through the day, reader person. His Marvel comics S.H.I.E.L.D., Secret Warriors and Fantastic Four are all great reads and considering I’ve never cared about the FF books before his run, that’s saying something.

    hickman
    “Bring me the head of Johnny Storm”

    He recently guested on the podcast War Rocket Ajax which is hosted by big time blogger Chris Sims and Matt Wilson. Hickman talks openly about his work at Marvel and behind the scenes info about what he’s currently working on. It’s a fascinating conversation especially for anyone interested in working in the comic industry as he’s quite frank about what it’s like to create them.

    You can listen to the show by clicking this fandabidoozy link. It would be rude of me to say that you can skip to his interview about two thirds of the way into the show so I won’t say anything like that.

    3) Jim Henson

    May saw the 21st anniversary of Jim Henson’s death. Jim was a man of unending heart and his creations influenced millions of children (and grown ups) around the world. The Muppets and Sesame Street still survive to this day and if you haven’t seen Labyrinth yet then for the love of god GO! DO IT NOW!

    Upon hearing of the anniversary I decided to look for some video footage of Jim’s memorial service. I remembered hearing that there were some nice things said and done. Well, I had heard right and I ended up crying like a baby.

    Here is a video of Jim’s long time collaborator and friend Frank Oz describing a story highlighting Jim’s crazy sense of humour.

    And here are a number of Muppeteers singing a medley of Jim’s favourite songs.

    If you’re not wiping away a tear at this point you’re a monster with no soul. FACT.

    4) Jesse Lonergan

    I discovered Jesse’s blog a couple of months ago and dug it instantly. He is a comic writer/artist who has been noted for his range of dancing Star Wars characters and Superheroes. But I personally enjoy his strips a lot more.

    To give you an idea, his About Me page is littered with comics about him and his wry sense of humour is clear.

    who_is_jesse_lonergan_09

    who_is_jesse_lonergan_03

    who_is_jesse_lonergan_08

    But specifically in May he began regularly updating his blog with sketches from a moleskin notebook that he draws in everyday. About nothing in particular, they are a neat look into the daily life of a stranger to me.

    dailies_051811

    dailies_052611

    So to check out more of the above head on over to http://jesselonergan.blogspot.com/

    5) Barack O’Bama

    Regardless of what you think of the man politically, it can’t be denied that the current President of the United States is a wonderful orator. He recently visited my home town of Dublin and gave a speech to 20,000 Irish men and women on the streets.

    It was great fun for everyone involved and the speech itself is a nice comment on the relationship between my tiny island and America over the years. At the very least he got a good giggle from me by stating “I’m Barack Obama, of the Moneygall Obamas. I’ve come home to find the apostrophe we lost somewhere along the way.”

    Try to ignore the guy talking at the very start. He’s our current head of state.
    Click this linkymabob to watch.

    ——————————————————————

    And that’s it! My favourite things of the last month.

    Aaron Poole is the creator of the “hustle” dance craze. He is also more acurately an editor for FRED and rarely leaves the house. If you like what you read here check out his blog http://aaronfever.blogspot.com

  • FROM THE VAULT: An Interview with Frank Oz

    vaultinterviews.png

    I first met Frank Oz on the set of Muppets From Space, in January of 1999. We got on quite well, and made plans to do an in-depth interview sometime in the near future.

    Towards the end of the year, our schedules finally met in the middle, and we had quite a long conversation, marked by Oz’s complete candor about his time with the Muppets, his move into directing, and much more. I also learned that Frank Oz swore.

    Like a sailor.

    It was an endearing verbal affectation that sticks out in my memory to this day. Here was an iconic performer who brought to life a fair chunk of my childhood – Miss Piggy, Fozzie Bear, Cookie Monster, Animal, Grover – and he cussed. A lot.

    From the vaults, I present to you my chat with Frank Oz…

    lucyline.gif

    KEN PLUME: You were born in England. When did your parents move to the States? Why did they?

    FRANK OZ: I was born in Hereford, England in 1944. We moved when they had an opportunity to get a visa, about 1950. My Dad always thought Europe was a bit too small for him. He wanted to see the United States…

    The typical immigrant story. He wanted a better life for his children, too. He always tried to get the visa and it didn’t come up. Even before the war he wanted to come to the United States.

    At that time you had to have six months residence supported by a sponsor in the United States. He finally found a sponsor in Montana, bizarrely enough, so in 1951 he took my brother and I and my mom, who I think was pregnant with my sister, from Belgium to Montana.

    PLUME: What was your father’s profession?

    OZ: He was a window trimmer, like for Ladies’ apparel stores.

    PLUME: Your parents were both puppeteers, weren’t they?

    OZ: Right.

    PLUME: What was his profession in the States?

    OZ: He stayed a window trimmer. He was a freelance window trimmer.

    PLUME: So the puppeteering was a hobby…

    OZ: It became a hobby, right.

    PLUME: Did your parents foster puppeteering within the family?

    OZ: No. My brother had no interest in it whatsoever and my sister didn’t have interest in it till later years. My brother was into cars. It was something that I latched on to because it was a way to please them and it was a means of expression for a shy, self-effacing boy.

    PLUME: Did it come naturally to you?

    OZ: I have no idea. In the beginning I imagine you’re a kid, you don’t know what the hell you’re doing. It took awhile. At that time, it was only marionettes, not hand puppets.

    PLUME: Where were your interests growing up?

    OZ: The usual things: girls and sports. That was the interest, mainly. I never wanted to be a puppeteer. I stopped puppeteering when I was about 18. I puppeteered when I was eleven years old to 18 to make extra money to go to Europe, which I made half of and my parents gave me half.
    I bought a tape recorder and some stuff and went to Europe for three months when I was 18. The puppeteering was only there as a hobby. I wanted to be a journalist. When I was 19 and after I had spent about a year in college, Jim Henson asked me to come out and try puppeteering for awhile.

    PLUME: Where did you first meet Jim (Henson)?

    OZ: They have these puppeteers conferences, which I never used to go to… ever…except for this one I went to when I was 17 years old and Jim happened to be there.

    PLUME: Jim Henson wanted to hire you right out of high school, right?

    OZ: He saw what I did there, and I was working with an old friend of mine named Jerry Juhl, so he hired Jerry, who went on to be the writer for the Muppets. Two years later when I finished high school and was in college, he asked me to come out to work part-time with him. I tried to continue my studies at CCNY in New York, but that lasted only about a semester or two. I continued on with the Muppets. What was going on was too exciting.

    PLUME: What were your first impressions of Jim during that first meeting?

    OZ: He didn’t have a beard. At that time I was 17, so he must have been about 23. He was this very quiet, shy guy who did these absolutely f***ing amazing puppets that were totally brand new and fresh, that had never been done before.

    (continued below…)

  • Holiday Havoc: SCRUBS

    holidayhavocheader.jpg

    holly.jpg

    Some people hang the holly, others decorate the tree, and a few even terrorize the neighborhood with off-key caroling.

    Not us.

    Here at Quick Stop Entertainment, we’re celebrating the holiday season by giving a little something back to you, our readers (you know who you are).

    Every weekday leading up to the holiday break, we’ve got uber-exclusive gifts provided by a whole range of artists, actors, comedians, and studios. One a day, straight from them to you (and you can check out last year’s fun here).

    Ain’t that cool?

    Today, we’ve got an exclusive video from those fine folks at SCRUBS, featuring Zach Braff and a Muppety guest star announcing their move to ABC in the New Year.

    SCRUBS premieres January 6th at 9:00pm on ABC, so be sure to tune in!

    holidayhavoc-blank.jpg

    Check out the rest of this year’s Holiday Havoc – and past Havoc – HERE

    holly.jpg