Being Elmo: A Puppeteer's Journey Review
By Rich Cline
Growing up in Baltimore, Clash was transfixed when Sesame Street launched in 1969 and introduced the original Muppets. Watching Jim Henson explain how they worked made Clash want to join them. After chopping up his dad's coat to make a puppet, he began putting on shows for the neighbourhood. And audiences responded. While still a teen, he became a local TV celebrity. Then at 17 he met legendary puppet builder, Kermit Love, who taught him the secrets of the business and introduced him to Henson.
The film is assembled nostalgically, as Clash remembers the joy he discovered in making children smile at his puppetry, even though he was picked on at school for playing with "dolls". As he meets his heroes, we vividly get the sense of a talented teen living out his wildest dreams. It's a thoroughly involving story packed with fascinating detail not only about Clash but about the Muppets and showbiz in general. And it's illustrated with fantastic archival footage of Clash, plus telling interviews with friends, family and colleagues.
Most involving is Clash's realisation of how puppets like Elmo both teach children and give them hope. Scenes in which Elmo interacts with needy children are hugely emotional. So when he talks about becoming a father, the film's warmth becomes almost overwhelming. And when Elmo's popularity rockets into the stratosphere, Clash never loses his love of making children laugh, even as he finds it tricky to balance work with family life.
As Clash observes, when a puppet character is meaningful and true, you're seeing the soul of the puppeteer. Indeed, watching Clash put Elmo on his arm is astonishing, as life and personality suddenly burst out of this mass of bright red fur. Now he's not only supervising the Sesame Street Muppets, but he's mentoring aspiring puppeteers just like Henson and Love did with him. Films don't get much more inspirational than this.
Facts and Figures
Year: 2012
Run time: 80 mins
In Theaters: Friday 27th April 2012
Box Office USA: $0.3M
Box Office Worldwide: $286.2 thousand
Distributed by: Submarine Deluxe
Reviews
Contactmusic.com: 4 / 5
Rotten Tomatoes: 94%
Fresh: 68 Rotten: 4
IMDB: 7.7 / 10
Cast & Crew
Director: Constance Marks
Producer: Corinne LaPook, Constance Marks, James Miller
Screenwriter: Philip Shane, Justin Weinstein
Starring: Bill Barretta as Himself, Frank Oz as Himself, Whoopi Goldberg as Narrator (voice), Kevin Clash as Himself, Fran Brill as Herself, Joan Ganz Cooney as Herself, Arsenio Hall as Himself, Jim Henson as Himself, Hugh Jackman as Himself, Kermit Love as Himself
Also starring: Rosie ODonnell, JAMES MILLER