
3 minute read
Jim Henson doc tugs on heartstrings
from LA Times (test)
by Marketing
Ron Howarddirected feature looks at the life and lasting influence of the creator of ‘Sesame Street,’ the Muppets and other classic kids’ TV.
WHEN OSCAR-WINNING director Ron Howard got word that Disney+ and the late Jim Henson’s children were interested in collaborating on a definitive portrait of the beloved Muppet creator, he immediately welcomed the opportunity. “I had nothing but respect for him,” he says during a recent Zoom interview from his office. “I met him ever so briefly once backstage at a talk show, and my friend George Lucas was a close friend and huge admirer and characterized him as a bona fide genius. Of course, my own relation with Jim Henson’s creations also evolved through my kids and ‘Sesame Street.’ ” ¶ The narrative question that emerged, he says, was: “How in the world did he create such a lasting legacy of work with such a burst of creativity in only a few decades? The dimensions of his output were a complete surprise to me. He was completely in touch with the cultural zeitgeist, and he kept shifting with it — not cynically but very organically with the kind of creative curiosity that I both admired and related to.” ¶ “Jim HensonIdea Man” is a lively and revealing look at the life and career of Henson. The 90minute film, which recently premiered on Disney+, charts his career from his early days as a young puppeteer at a local D.C. TV station to the creation of the “Sesame Street” puppets and “The Muppet Show,” through the growth of the Jim Henson Co. and the Creature Shop and later works “The Dark Crystal” and “Labyrinth.”
How did you end up directing this? We were brainstorming about our next project with [producers] Sarah Bernstein and Justin Wilkes at Imagine Documentaries. We were told that Disney+ was very interested in doing something about Jim Henson, and the family has had reservations over the years, but they’ve liked the documentaries I had done on Pavarotti and the Beatles. So we met with the Hensons, and then about two years ago, we began diving into the material.
There was so much archival footage to go through. Not just great stuff about the Muppets or “Sesame Street” and old interviews with Jim, but also his personal family footage was creative. He just didn’t cover a birthday party the way the rest of us dads do. He knew he would make a great story out of it, and he would use stopmotion or different creative techniques. He was excited by avantgarde and experimental filmmaking.
Your film features terrific footage of his early work, as well as revealing interviews with his children. You even dug up a fascinating, unaired interview Henson did with Orson Welles. Because the family was on board and sanctioned me getting involved as a director, they were incredibly supportive. ... They were very forthcoming in their interviews about the price of Jim’s creative energy. They’re so proud of and feel privileged to have had him as a dad, but they’re also grownup people who could now say that some aspects of life were challenging and [talk about] the stress that the work put on their parents’ marriage. So we were allowed to really get behind the scenes and understand that there are no free lunches, and you pay a price for everything. I thought it was important to understand his emotions, his insecurities about himself, the childhood events that shaped him and the urgency with which he worked, and to find him in a lot of ways beyond just the brilliant genius level of creativity.
What came as the biggest surprise for you?
I didn’t know that he didn’t really plan to be a puppeteer. He was such a child of television and was fascinated by innovations. ... He wasn’t a guy who got one good idea and rode it to great success: He kept adapting, exploring and was pushing the boundaries of the medium. It was also quite amazing that he kept failing to sell “The Muppet Show,” because you just assume all he had to do was walk through the door with a couple of puppets and people would just fall over themselves to buy the show. It’s just a reminder that those big, commercial breakthroughs often come from very unexpected places.
Brian Henson talks about how his fatherbelieved in the value of doing good and the interconnectedness of all living things on Earth. Can you elaborate on that?
Jim was on a quest to understand that connection, and it always seems to come back to something I really related to: You can’t know for sure about much of anything except that goodness has value.
What do you hope audiences will take away about Henson’s life and career? I hope they will understand this sort of lasting legacy. I would love it if this makes them go back and review all those “Muppet Show” episodes. That’s time well spent because they’re hilarious. In Jim’s case, it’s really much more a celebration of how to lead a creative life and how to solve problems with openness and an excitement for what’s possible. I hope people take that inspiration from Jim’s life along with just really being blown away by the range and level of his achievements.

Story by Bob Strauss ■
Photograph by Shayan Asgharnia For The Times