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Interview with Muppeteer Martin P. Robinson
conducted by Ryan Dosier
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MARTY: Thank you for that lovely introduction.
RYAN: Oh, you’re welcome! Let’s see... where should we start here?
MARTY: How can I serve you today?
RYAN: Um, do you have pizza? I’d love some.
MARTY: No, no I’ve raised three kids and I’ve got two more coming along and I’ve had my fill of pizza. If I never see another pizza for the rest of my life, I’d be okay. Plus, after all the work on Ninja Turtles we had pizza coming out of our ears.
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MARTY: I had been in puppetry before that. I graduated from acting school and got some jobs with a puppet company. I was qualified because it was a touring company and I had a driver’s license so I was their man! I learned puppetry... you know, you go out on tour and you learn the puppetry or you go mad.
I started off with marionettes and then worked for Bill Baird’s marionettes after that. He always does a lot of different styles in his shows. He always mixed up marionettes with rod puppets, with handpuppets, with shadow puppets, blacklight puppets... whatever it took to tell the story. I had had some experience with hand puppetry by then and by the time I was asked to audition for the Muppets... I had sent them a picture and a resume. Back in the days when you actually had an 8x10 photo with a resume stapled onto the back! That was the extent of our electronic resumes.
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So anyway, I was hired to do Snuffy in ’81 and then worked into a bunch of other characters from there. It was actually kind of lucky the way I did it because most folks, when they start at Sesame or, you know, at most jobs... they do right hands and background characters for years. Richard Hunt used to say... if anyone complained about not getting any characters, he would remind them that he did right hands for eight years before he was allowed to touch a main character.
While I was doing Snuffy I did Telly’s right hand for about three or four years until I took over the character. I did background character stuff, the way it was normally done, but I had this lead character too which was really nice.
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That’s how it worked out in a nutshell.
RYAN: Could you talk a little bit about working with Jim Henson and Jim Henson in general?
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The people he surrounded himself with, as Jon Stone said at Jim’s funeral--Jon Stone was one of the great movers and shakers and creative forces behind Sesame... one of my personal favorite people in the entire world, so anything he said meant something to me. But he said that the people that Jim surrounded himself with... it was no accident that we were there, that were there because he wanted us to be there because he had chosen us in one way or another. It was a bunch of crazy people with somewhat the same mindset as him and he was certainly iconoclastic in the way that he was and crazy and nutty and irreverent in that way.
You had to be on your game when he was there. You absolutely had to be on your game! But one the whole points of being on your game is have fun. Not being tense, just being free. Free to react to something new and throw something new back and to come up with something a little better, perhaps, then it was intended to. Jim always told us that if you only do a script the way it’s written, the way it’s presented to you, then we haven’t done our job. That our job was to make it better, make it more, certainly make it physically funny and translate the written word into physical comedy, physical communication of useful... type. (laughs)
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RYAN: Well... sort of on the opposite end of the spectrum--not the opposite really, just another spectrum entirely--
MARTY: Who was the worst person I worked with?! Let me see...
RYAN: (laughs) Well I was going to ask about Richard Hunt, so...
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If you passed muster with him then you were golden, then you were part of the fun. He was great. It was Little Shop of Horrors, I think, that got him to actually speak to me. He kind of realized that I had something going besides being a little Muppet fan. I was always a big fan of the Muppets. I saw them on The Ed Sullivan Show when I was a kid... but I wasn’t a huge Muppet fan. I was really honored to have an audition with them and I was really honored to be hired by them, but it wasn’t a life-long ambition. When Richard came backstage after he saw Little Shop of Horrors, he just loved the show and saw that it was something very much involved in puppetry but not Muppet style.
RYAN: I want to talk a little bit about Snuffy now, because he’s one of my favorites and I’m sure he’s one of yours.
MARTY: Well sure.
RYAN: There have to be some physical challenges with that massive costume, puppet going on over all the time. Could you talk a little bit about that?
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As long as you respect the creature, he’ll do good by you. I always warm up before I go inside so that I’m stretched out and warmed up. I don’t mind working hot. Working hot is much better than working cold, it’s much safer. Once I heat up in a scene, as soon as I come out I bundle up with a thick warm up jacket to stay warm so that I don’t get cooled off before I go back inside again. We’re in and out. You do a rehearsal, you’re out. Sometimes we’ll do a rehearsal then shoot it and then come out. My record for being inside is five and a half hours... that was during the Follow That Bird film. Which was on a film schedule and it was in a really difficult position. It’s not a record I intend to beat ever. Generally we don’t stay in more than twenty minutes to half an hour, forty five minutes sometimes. Usually it’s fifteen minutes or less, then we hang it up.
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We have monitors inside of course so we can see what the camera see. I also can see out the mouth for when we get off camera. Because, of course, once you get off camera you’d be blind to keep from trampling children or tripping over wires.
RYAN: That would be a good thing not to do.
MARTY: Yeah... “Child Trampled by Snuffleupagus.”
RYAN: I can see the headlines now! What’s your favorite aspect of Snuffy’s character and his personality?
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I love his relationship with Bird, of course. The two of them... Jon Stone used to call them “Dumb and Dumber.” Bird would say something just patently useless and Snuffy would go, (Snuffy voice) “Hmm, sounds like a good idea to me, Bird!” And they’d go off following this bad train of thought. That’s the kind of stuff I like.
But Snuff kind of has what I typify as tunnel vision. He’s kind of straight forward and things are a certain way and there’s a lot of things that he just doesn’t see.
RYAN: How about your favorite Snuffy moments on the show? I know there are so many, but...
MARTY: Snuffy moments... wow. Goodness. You know, they put Snuffy in a lot of crazy situations--bounce him on trampolines, and making believe he’s a cloud and flying off, and doing all kinds of nutty things to him. My favorite stuff is the really good character stuff with Bird, when he and Bird are going off on flights of fancy sometimes. We did a show where they were kind of making believe they were explorers and they were just going down the street and they would look at the trees and they saw a fancy tree, or they’d look at a bug and oh! It’s this great incredible bug. And every person that they’d meet they’d look at them in a whole new way. Very sweet, very typical of that age type of show.
RYAN: What about Slimey? Because here we’ve got you performing the largest the character and the very smallest.
MARTY: The largest Muppet and the smallest! It’s a fun range to do, especially when you do it all in one day. Although there have been some scripts with Slimey and Snuffy together then I have to give up Slimey. I can’t ask anyone else, of course, to climb in the Snuffleupagus.
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But character-wise, the best thing he does on the show, I think, is reveal Oscar. He reveals Oscar’s golden heart. ‘Cause Oscar just loves him, he’s devoted to him. Sometimes he treats him off-handedly kind of like a pet, but he’s not, he’s a child. In reality, Oscar is sometimes almost Slimey’s child, because Slimey’s sophisticated in his own way, but Oscar treats him like a little kid, reads for him, tucks him in. He just cares for him more than anything. It really reveals Oscar’s inner warmth, which is great. It’s the best service he can provide pretty much.
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Check back next week for Part 2 of our interview with Martin P. Robinson where he discusses Telly at length and a whole lot more.
This interview would not have been possible if not for the kindness of Patrick Cotnoir, to whom I owe immeasurable thanks. Thank you, Patrick! Hope you're enjoying it.
The Muppet Mindset by Ryan Dosier, muppetmindset@gmail.com
Excellent interview! There's something special about the unassuming nature of Robinson's characters!
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