Sesame Street Presents: Follow That Bird

Sesame Street Presents: Follow That Bird (or simply Follow That Bird) is a 1985 American musical road comedy film directed by Ken Kwapis and written by Judy Freudberg and Tony Geiss. Based on the long-running popular children's television series Sesame Street created by Joan Ganz Cooney and Lloyd Morrisett, it was the first theatrical feature-length Sesame Street film. It stars Muppet performers Caroll Spinney, Jim Henson and Frank Oz alongside Sandra Bernhard, John Candy, Chevy Chase, Joe Flaherty, Waylon Jennings, and Dave Thomas with Sesame Street regulars Linda Bove, Emilio Delgado, Loretta Long, Sonia Manzano, Bob McGrath, Roscoe Orman, Alaina Reed, and Kermit Love in supporting roles and the voices of Laraine Newman, Brian Hohlfeld, Cathy Silvers, Eddie Deezen, and Sally Kellerman. It tells the story of Big Bird being assigned to the Dodo Family by a social worker working for the Feathered Friends as he soon runs away from them to get back to Sesame Street as he is searched by the social worker, his friends, and two con artists.

Sesame Street Presents:
Follow That Bird
Theatrical release poster by Steven Chorney
Directed byKen Kwapis
Written byJudy Freudberg
Tony Geiss
Based onSesame Street
by Joan Ganz Cooney
Lloyd Morrisett
Muppet characters
by Jim Henson
Produced byTony Garnett
Starring
CinematographyCurtis Clark
Edited byEvan Landis
Music byVan Dyke Parks
Lennie Niehaus
Production
company
Distributed byWarner Bros.
Release date
  • August 2, 1985 (1985-08-02) (United States)
Running time
89 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box office$13.9 million[1]

Produced by Children's Television Workshop and The Jim Henson Company (one of the few Sesame Street productions they directly produced), and filmed at the Cinespace Film Studios and on location in the Greater Toronto Area, the film was released in the United States on August 2, 1985 by Warner Bros. and received mostly positive reviews from critics. However, it was a box office disappointment, grossing $13.9 million ($36 million when adjusted for inflation) and resulting in a slight loss for the Children's Television Workshop.

This is the only Sesame Street feature film to star both Henson (as Kermit the Frog and Ernie) and Richard Hunt and the last Muppet film to involve them in before their deaths in 1990 and 1992.

Plot

The Feathered Friends' Board of Birds - an organization whose purpose is to place stray birds with nice bird families - discusses the case of Big Bird. The social worker, Miss Finch, is sent to Sesame Street to find and bring Big Bird to a worthy family of dodos in Ocean View, Illinois. However, he begins to feel uncomfortable with them as they all think poorly of non-birds, and reaches his breaking point when they suggest he should have a bird as a best friend instead of Mr. Snuffleupagus, who is watching over his nest back on Sesame Street.

When Big Bird leaves the Dodos' home to return to Sesame Street, he ends up on the news where Miss Finch tells reporter Kermit the Frog that she intends to find him and bring him back to the Dodos. His friends on Sesame Street also see the news and band together to locate him before Miss Finch does, and take several vehicles on their quest after Bob instructs them to head to Toadstool, Indiana to meet up with him. While on the way home, he hitches a ride with a trucker who encourages him to persevere and later meets two kids named Ruthie and Floyd at a farm, who allow him to sleep in their barn overnight. The next morning, Miss Finch arrives and he sneaks away in a haystack.

Two con artist brothers named Sid and Sam Sleaze, who operate a fraudulent carnival called The Sleaze Brothers Funfair, plot to catch Big Bird and put him on display for profit. When he arrives in Toadstool, Miss Finch does so at the same time and chases him there. After escaping her, Big Bird meets the Sleaze Brothers at their carnival and asks if they have a place to hide, resulting in them putting him in their cage and deciding to paint him blue and tout him as "The Bluebird of Happiness", though he sings sadly about wishing to be back home. Despite this, he brings in plenty of customers.

After the show, two kids sneak backstage to see Big Bird, who asks them to call Sesame Street to inform his friends of his whereabouts. The next morning, his friends sneak into the circus tent and try to set him free. However, the Sleaze Brothers quietly wake up and just as Linda unlocks the cage, they drive off in their truck towing the cage with Big Bird still in it. Gordon and Olivia give chase in Gordon's Volkswagen Beetle and successfully rescue him after he jumps from the moving truck. Shortly afterwards, a state trooper pulls the Sleaze Brothers over for speeding and arrests the pair on various charges.

Upon arriving back on Sesame Street, Big Bird is happy to be back home. His happiness is short-lived when Miss Finch arrives to place him with another bird family, still insisting that Big Bird would be "happier with his own kind." However, Maria tells her that he is happy on Sesame Street where it does not matter that his family consists of humans, monsters, grouches, and other species. Considering Maria's statement and realizing how far his friends went to bring him back, a sympathetic Miss Finch officially declares Sesame Street to be his home and happily leaves with her job complete.

As everyone celebrates his return, Oscar the Grouch gets carried around the block in his trash can by Bruno the Trashman in order to get over everyone's happiness.

Cast

Muppet Performers

Additional Board of Bird members performed by Bob Stutt, Nikki Tilroe, Lee Armstrong, Rob Mills, and John Pattison.

Additional Muppets performed by Kevin Clash, Frank Meschkuleit, Terry Angus, Matthew Pidgeon, Stephen Brathwaite, Tom Vandenberg, Francine Anderson, Ron Wagner, Martine Carrier, Karen Valleau, Michelle Frey, Gus Harsfai, Patricia Lewis, Charlotte Levinson, Carolanne McLean, Peter McCowatt, Brian Moffatt, Myra Fried, Jani Lauzon and Sandra Shamas.

Humans of Sesame Street

Production

The film was filmed on location in Ontario, Canada (Bolton, Schomberg and Georgetown), and at Toronto International Studios (now Cinespace Film Studios) in 1984. The street set, rebuilt to make it look more realistic than in the television series, was expanded in the film to include a music store, a fire station, an auto body shop, a family clinic, a bakery, a bookstore, and a grocery store.

According to Noel MacNeal after filming the footage of Big Bird on the farm with Ruthie and Floyd, the filmmakers discovered that the film was badly scratched and unusable. The actors, crew, and performers promptly had to return to the same location months later in winter, whereupon many of the green leaves in the film are spray-painted and after each take, the kids would run to put their coats on. Early in production, the crew noticed that Oscar's trash can looked too new, so they banged it up and dirtied it to match the one in the television series.

While filming Bert and Ernie's "upside down world" song, Jim Henson and Frank Oz were actually in an upside down biplane eighteen feet from the ground.

After filming wrapped, the filmmakers did not believe that the voice of Cheryl Wagner, who had performed Miss Finch while voicing her simultaneously, seemed appropriate for the character, so her voice was dubbed over by that of Sally Kellerman.

Before Ken Kwapis was chosen to be the director of the film, John Landis (who had previously performed Grover in the "Rainbow Connection" finale in The Muppet Movie) was asked by Warner Bros. to direct the film. He liked it, but dropped out due to scheduling conflicts with Into the Night.

Due to having a criminal record there, Northern Calloway was banned from entering Canada for the film's production causing his character David to not appear.

Music and soundtrack

Songs

  1. "Sesame Street Theme" (Written by Joe Raposo, Jon Stone, and Bruce Hart)
  2. "The Grouch Anthem" – Oscar the Grouch and the Grouch chorus (Written by Jeff Pennig, Jeff Harrington, and Steve Pippin)
  3. "Ain't No Road Too Long" – Waylon Jennings, Gordon, Olivia, Cookie Monster, Grover, Count von Count and Big Bird (Written by Jeff Pennig, Jeff Harrington, and Steve Pippin)
  4. "One Little Star" – Big Bird, Olivia and Mr. Snuffleupagus (Written by Jeff Moss)
  5. "Easy Goin' Day" – Big Bird, Ruthie and Floyd (Written by Jeff Pennig, Jeff Harrington, and Steve Pippin)
  6. "Upside Down World" – Ernie and Bert (Written by Jeff Moss)
  7. "All Together Now" – Alabama (Written by Wood Newton and Michael Noble)
  8. "Workin' on My Attitude" – Ronnie Milsap (Written by Eddie Setser and Troy Seals)
  9. "I'm So Blue" – Big Bird (Written by Randy Sharp and Karen Brooks)

Soundtrack

Sesame Street Presents: Follow That Bird
Soundtrack album by
Released1985
GenreSoundtrack
LabelRCA
ProducerJim Henson
Steve Buckingham
Sesame Street chronology
Sesame Street Christmas Sing-Along
(1984)
Sesame Street Presents: Follow That Bird
(1985)
Christmas on Sesame Street
(1986)
Side One

1. "The Grouch Anthem"
2. "Big Bird's Goodbye/The Runaway" - Big Bird, Mr. Snuffleupagus, and Kermit the Frog
3. "Ain't No Road Too Long"
4. "Big Bird on the Farm/One Little Star" - Big Bird, Ruthie, Floyd, Olivia, and Mr. Snuffleupagus
5. "Easy Goin' Day"

Side Two

6. "Don't Drop Inn/Workin' on My Attitude" - Ronnie Milsap (Written by Eddie Setser and Troy Seals)
7. "Upside Down World"
8. "I'm So Blue"
9. "The Chase/Sesame Street Theme" - Big Bird, Gordon, and Olivia
10. "All Together Now"

Reception

Critical response

The film was a critical success upon its release. On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has a "Fresh" rating of 92% based on 12 reviews, with an average score of 6.40/10.[2]

The Orlando Sentinel called the film "a flip and funny 'road picture' for children that doesn't let its kind heart get in the way of its often biting wit."[3] Walter Goodman observed in The New York Times that "by and large, the script by Tony Geiss and Judy Freudberg and the direction by Ken Kwapis don't strain for yuks; what they seek, and more often than not attain, is a tone of kindly kidding."[4]

Commercial performance

In spite of the near-universal critical acclaim, the film underperformed at the box office due to having opened the same day as Fright Night and Weird Science and faced heavy competition from Back to the Future, Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome, Warner's own Pee-wee's Big Adventure, The Black Cauldron and Warner's own National Lampoon's European Vacation among other films. It grossed merely $2,415,626 on its opening weekend. By the end of its theatrical run, its total gross was $13,961,370. This production, along with other unsuccessful ventures, hurt the Children's Television Workshop financially during the 1980s, though they did recover afterwards.[5]

Home media

The film was first released on VHS and LaserDisc in 1986 and was re-released onto VHS three times by Warner Bros. Family Entertainment starting in 1993, then a second time in 1999 and the third time in 2002 and also on DVD (the opening of it starts with the Warner Home Video logo and a text on a black screen says, "This film has been modified as follows from its original version: it has been formatted to fit your screen", in which it appears in some different movies on DVD). Another DVD release followed in 2004, which was re-issued as a special "25th Anniversary Edition" in 2009 with the original theatrical widescreen version and the new bonus features and cover art intact.[6]

References

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