Ernie (Sesame Street)

Ernie is an orange Muppet character created and originally performed by Jim Henson for the long-running children's television show Sesame Street. He and his roommate Bert form the comic duo Bert and Ernie, one of the program's centerpieces, with Ernie acting the role of the naïve troublemaker, and Bert the world-weary foil.

Ernie
Sesame Street character
Ernie (pictured on left) with his rubber duckie alongside Bert on Sesame Street in 1977.
First appearanceSesame Street Test Pilot 1 (July 21, 1969)
Voiced byJim Henson (1969–1990)
Steve Whitmire (1993–2014)
John Tartaglia (2003)
Billy Barkhurst (2014–2017)
Peter Linz (2017–present)
Performed byJim Henson (1969–1990)
Steve Whitmire (1993–2014)
John Tartaglia (2003)
Billy Barkhurst (2014–2017)
Peter Linz (2017–present)
BirthdayJanuary 28[1]
In-universe information
AliasCaveman Ernie, Sir Ernie, John Adams, Old King Cole, Robin Hood, Tweedle Dum, etc.
SpeciesHuman Muppet
GenderMale

Characteristics

Ernie has a characteristic chuckling laugh (a trait he shares with his baby cousin, Ernestine), and he also has his signature pronunciation of the word "again" (ay-gain). He is a friend and roommate of Bert; they share an apartment on Sesame Street. Ernie's appearance and clothing contrast with Bert, as he is the shorter and more round of the pair, and he wears a shirt with horizontal stripes, whereas Bert's shirt has vertical stripes, and Bert has a tall, narrow head while Ernie's is wider than it is high. Additionally, Ernie has no visible eyebrows, while Bert displays a pronounced unibrow.

Ernie is known for his fondness for baths with his Rubber Duckie and for trying to learn to play the saxophone. Ernie is also known for keeping Bert awake at night, for reasons such as wanting to play the drums, wanting to count something (like sheep), to observe something like a blackout, or even because he is waiting for his upstairs neighbor to drop his shoes.

Ernie (and Bert) are typically characterized as childlike. Bert's twin brother, Bart, however, is depicted as a traveling salesman, which would mean Bert (and probably Ernie) are both adults.

Appearances

Sesame Street

A typical Bert and Ernie skit has Ernie coming up with a harebrained idea, and Bert trying to talk him out of it, ending with Bert losing his temper, while Ernie becomes oblivious to his own bad idea.

Other sketches have involved Bert and Ernie sharing a snack by division, but finding that one of them has a bit more; Ernie humorously decides to try to make it even by eating the extra piece, which goes forth until the entire snack is all eaten up. Others have also involved Ernie eating part of Bert's snack he prepares for himself, and when Bert comes back from somewhere, Ernie tries to make several (usually unsuccessful) attempts to cover up the crime in front of Bert.

Some other plotlines involved Ernie wanting to play a game with Bert, who would much rather do something else (like read). Ernie keeps irking Bert with the game until Bert joins — and usually, by the time Bert starts enjoying the game, Ernie is tired of playing the game and wants to do something else.

Ernie makes appearances without Bert, usually within the framework of another double act. He has regularly appeared in skits with Grover, Cookie Monster, Sherlock Hemlock and Lefty the Salesman.

Ernie and Bert also appear in Out to Lunch (1974), and are the hosts of this crossover special.

In Christmas Eve on Sesame Street (1978), Ernie decides to buy Bert a cigar box to store his paper clips in. As he does not have any money, he trades his own Rubber Duckie for it. At the same time, Bert decides to get Ernie a soap dish to put his Rubber Duckie in, so that it will not keep falling into the tub, but has to trade his paper clips for it. Thankfully, Mr. Hooper can tell that neither of them really wants to give up their prized possessions, and so gives them their things back as presents.

In Sesame Street... 20 Years & Still Counting (1989), he and Bert get a new video camera, and he talks Bert into using the camera to record footage of Sesame Street so that they can watch Sesame Street on television.

Ernie appears in both of the Sesame Street movies. In Follow That Bird (1985), he and Bert search for Big Bird by plane. Ernie pilots the plane, and eventually, after they find Big Bird, he flies the plane upside-down, singing "Upside Down World". However, after they lose Big Bird, Ernie blames Bert.

Ernie appears in the video special 123 Count with Me (1997), teaching Humphrey and Ingrid at the Furry Arms Hotel how counting can be very useful.

Journey to Ernie

From Sesame Street season 33 (2002) until season 36 (2005), Ernie and Big Bird starred in a daily segment called "Journey to Ernie". Ernie was one of the hosts of the show Play with Me Sesame, where he was performed by John Tartaglia during the second season. One regular segment that he hosted was "Ernie Says", a variation of the game Simon Says. In season 39 Bert and Ernie have appeared in the Bert and Ernie's great adventures segment

Roles in other projects

Ernie also appears in the finales of The Muppet Movie and The Muppets Take Manhattan, in the last of which he gets a line.

Ernie and Bert introduce a montage of Sesame Street clips in The Muppets: A Celebration of 30 Years. Ernie also narrates a Christmas pageant, 'Twas the Night Before Christmas, in A Muppet Family Christmas. In that same special, Ernie and Bert have a conversation with Doc, making them the only Sesame Street characters (not counting Kermit the Frog) to have interacted with Doc.

"Rubber Duckie" song

Ernie sang about his affection for Rubber Duckie in a skit, which aired during the first season of Sesame Street. The song "Rubber Duckie" from that skit became a modest mainstream hit, reaching No. 16 on the Billboard Hot 100 in September 1970.[2]

Performing Ernie

Ernie is a "Live Hand Muppet," meaning that while operating the head of the puppet with his right hand, the puppeteer inserts his left hand into a T shaped sleeve, capped off with a glove that matches the fabric "skin" of the puppet, thus "becoming" the left arm of the puppet. A second puppeteer usually provides the right arm, although sometimes the right arm is simply stuffed and pinned to the puppet's chest or the second puppeteer will perform both arms.

The original segment of the song "I Don't Want To Live On The Moon" was one of the rare instances when Ernie's full body was shown. It reportedly took three puppeteers to perform Ernie in this segment: Jim Henson performed Ernie's head and left hand, while two other puppeteers operated Ernie's right hand and feet respectively. Other puppets of this type include Cookie Monster, Fozzie Bear, Beaker, and Bunsen Honeydew.

Jim Henson's original Ernie puppet is on display at the Center for Puppetry Arts in Atlanta, Georgia.[3]

In other media

Books

Ernie is the subject of numerous books including:

  • 2021, Bert & Ernie, Random House ISBN 9780593308233
  • 2019, The Importance of Being Ernie (and Bert), Imprint ISBN 9781250304568
  • 2012, Bert and Ernie Go Camping, Candlewick Press ISBN 9780763657932
  • 1992, Ernie And His Merry Monsters, Western Publishing ISBN 9780307295019
  • 1990, Ernie and Bert's New Kitten, Random House ISBN 9780679804208
  • 1987, Ernie's Neighborhood, Western Publishing ISBN 9780303231585
  • 1987, Just like Ernie, Golden Books Publishing ISBN 9780307290083
  • 1987, Little Ernie's Animal Friends, Random House ISBN 9780394885087
  • 1984, The Adventures of Ernie & Bert in Twiddlebug Land, Random House ISBN 9780394859255
  • 1983, Ernie's Little Lie, Random House ISBN 9780394854403
  • 1981, Ernie's Big Mess, Random House ISBN 9780394848471
  • 1984, Ernie's Work of Art, Western Publishing ISBN 9780307601094
  • 1979, The Many Faces of Ernie, Western Publishing OCLC 6248054

Theme parks

Ernie was one of the first characters to appear at Sesame Place theme park as a costumed character, in May 1983.[4] (He had previously appeared at the attraction's groundbreaking event.) [5]

International

Sesame Street is localized for some different markets, and Ernie is often renamed. For instance, in episodes that are aired in Portugal, Ernie's name has been changed to Egas, in Brazil, his name is Ênio, in Spain, he is renamed "Epi", in Latin America, his name is "Enrique", on Egyptian Alam Simsim (Sesame World) Ernie's name is given as "Shadi" (rhyming with Bert's which is "Hadi"), in Russia, he also known as Yenik (Еник), in Turkey, he is named "Edi", in Israel, he is called "Arik" (אריק) and in Norway, he is known as "Erling".

References

  1. "Happy birthday, Ernie, we're awfully fond of you!". Twitter.com. Retrieved 2022-07-24.
  2. Whitburn, Joel (2007). Top Pop Singles: 1955–2006.
  3. McGhee, Shayla (December 11, 2015). "The Center For Puppetry Arts Opens The New Worlds Of Puppetry Museum". Georgia Public Broadcasting.
  4. "Sesame Place open with new attractions". Vineland Times Journal. Vineland NJ. 13 May 1983. p. 8. Retrieved 29 January 2020.
  5. Karst, Frederick (26 August 1979). "Travel tips" (Newspapers.com). The South Bend Tribune. South Bend IN. p. 17. Retrieved 29 January 2020.
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