Taking on a
new reading challenge this year found me in the biography section of our new
library. Having just watched this movie with my kids, I was drawn to Jim Henson: The Biography by Brian Jay
Jones.
Starting with
Henson's childhood, Jones illustrates both the nurturing influences of his
fun-loving cast of extended relatives and the natural influences of a childhood
spent exploring the creeks of Mississippi. An early fan of television, Henson
soon sought out ways to appear on the small screen. He found an opening through
puppetry and would spend the rest of his life fighting a reputation of being a
children's performer.
Since I spent
many of my own childhood afternoons watching repeats of this Muppet movie and introduced
my own daughter to television with YouTube clips of this show, I was fascinated
by reading the chapters outlining the debut of Miss Piggy’s karate chop and Fozzie’s
bad stand-up jokes.
Even more
striking, though, is the sheer amount of projects Henson was able to work on at
one time. Although there are numerous accounts of Henson's gentle nature in
directing these projects, Jones also points out Henson’s characteristic “whim
of steel” that allowed many of his projects from The Muppet Show to Labyrinth
to go forward.
Fans of Fraggle Rock or The Dark Crystal will learn much about the script writing and
creature crafting of these shows in reading this book. But they will also learn
a lot about the determination, charisma, and joys of the man behind their
creations.
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