Does "Muppet" mean "Marionette and puppet"? (original) (raw)

Creatorbook-marionette

The children's biography Jim Henson: Creator of the Muppets depicts Ernie as a marionette, providing a provably false etymology of the word Muppet.

Dancingclown

While marionettes were used sparingly by the Muppets, the operation of the Dancing Clown, a standard hand puppet built for episode 508 of The Muppet Show, mocks the hybridization of the two styles of puppetry.

The answer seems to depend on when the question was asked.

This etymology of the word "Muppet" was first promulgated by none other than Jim Henson himself. Later, as in a 1977 appearance on The Mike Douglas Show, Henson acknowledged that Muppet was originally a combination of the words, but stated that the definition wasn't accurate later in his career because they used marionettes so infrequently. Later still, Henson and other members of his troupe claimed that the origin story was never true and he just liked the sound of the word.

This page examines the evidence that the name "Muppet" was coined by combining the words "marionette" and "puppet."

Pro[]

press release printed in at least 14 newspapers[1]

M. Belmont Van Stander, ad agency president[2]

Dave Garroway on The Today Show

Jim Henson to The Sentinel newspaper[3]

Jim Henson to the UPI news service[4]

Jim Henson on Wonderama, December 29, 1974

Jim Henson on The Mike Douglas Show

Nellie Blagden for People magazine[5]

Muppet Show Fan Club Newsletter vol. 1, no. 5.

Dr. Jerry Nelson, while giving a speech on the Muppets' history, The Vent Event

Jim Henson: The Works, page 18

Alison Inches for Jim Henson's Designs and Doodles

Con[]

Washington Post, September 2

Katharine Elson for Washington Post and Times Herald[6]

John Skow for Time magazine[7]

Jim Henson for Cinefantastique[8]

Jim Henson for the Baltimore Evening Sun[9]

Jim Henson for The Gettysburg Times[10]

Jim Henson on Breakfast Time

Cheryl Henson in A&E Biography: Sesame Street

Fern Shen for The Washington Post[11]

Other Etymologies[]

Sources[]

  1. The News Leader (Staunton, Virginia) pg 2 "Sunday TV Highlights", April 20, 1957
  2. The Sun (Baltimore MD) pg 10 "Look and Listen" by Donald Kirkley, June 2, 1958
  3. The Sentinel (Carlisle PA) page 11 "Jimmy Dean and Muppet" by Ruth E. Thompson, May 16, 1964
  4. The Cumberland News (Cumberland MD) "TV Muppets Got Start In Capital" by William D. Laffler, February 19, 1966
  5. People "Is This Any Way for Grownups to Make a Living? Yes, for Muppet Masters Jim & Jane Henson", by Nellie Blagden, November 7, 1977
  6. Washington Post and Times Herald "For Jane and Jim, Rollicking Muppets Set a Merry Pace", Katharine Elson, February 17
  7. Time "Those Marvelous Muppets", by John Skow, December 25, 1978
  8. Cinefantastique "Of Precious Pigs, Singing Cabbages, and a Little Green Frog Named Kermit: The Story of Jim Henson and the Muppets" by Judith P. Harris, April/May 1983
  9. reprinted in The Sun (Vancouver BC) page B9 "New movies sees Muppets married" July 10, 1984
  10. The Gettysburg Times "Kermit the Frog turns 30" by Lee Mitgang, January 7, 1986
  11. The Washington Post p. C14 "Do You Know the Muppet Man?" by Fern Shen, September 22, 2003

See also[]