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THE MUPPETS
SESAME STREET
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in:
Muppet Show Locations, Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie Locations, The Muppets (2011) Locations
The Muppet Theatre
EDIT
SHARE
Muppet Theatre GO TO MOVIES
The Muppet Theatre in The Muppets Go to the Movies
closer view
Muppettheatre-outside
It's a Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie.
Muppet theatre landmark
Registered as an historical landmark in 2002.
Theatre front 2011
The Muppet Theatre in The Muppets (2011).
The Muppet Theatre is the setting for The Muppet Show, where it was first established over the course of five seasons of television. It is a grand old vaudeville house that has seen better days, but still manages to suit the showbusiness needs of the Muppets.
Contents[show]
The building's exterior is first seen in the series' coda, The Muppets Go to the Movies, where the camera pans back from the stage, out the front doors, and provides a full view of The Muppet Theatre name on the building. Kermit the Frog serves as a house manager to the theatre which is owned by Scooter's uncle J.P. Grosse (a fact Scooter is often happy to reiterate with his amphibious boss).
According to a 1991 storybook, the theatre was built by a stage actor named John Stone in 1802. In The Muppet Show episode 106, Kermit identifies the structure as The Benny Vandergast Memorial Theatre, but following the Muppets' residency, The Muppet Theatre name becomes prominently displayed on advertising posters and backstage signs. The British spelling of Theatre can be attributed to its location in London; while locking up the doors at the end of The Muppets Go to the Movies, Miss Piggy asks Kermit to walk her to The Tube, London's subway system ("I love to walk to The Tube!", she exclaims).
After The Muppet Show, the location of The Muppet Theatre becomes more ambiguous; either as a result of renting playhouses in different cities, or through the magic of the Muppets' inconsistent continuity. Most stage areas occupied by the Muppets are either called The Muppet Theatre in name or bear some resemblance to the their original home on The Muppet Show. For example, commercials for Polaroid, The Muppets Celebrate Jim Henson, Weezer's "Keep Fishin'" music video, and others, are close facsimiles of the original theatre (sometimes with modifications), and are most likely meant to serve as such.
It's a Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie clearly establishes a theatre located in New York City, as Piggy's apartment (in an alternate universe) has a view of the twin towers of New York's World Trade Center. The plot of the TV movie involves the theatre being in jeopardy of finding itself repurposed as a night club. Its owner's plan is ultimately foiled by Pepe the King Prawn when he registers the theatre as an historical landmark; the document uses the Americanized spelling, The Muppet Theater.
The Official Digital Toolset for Dungeons & Dragons
VISIT D&D BEYOND
A third definitive location was established in the 2011 film The Muppets, where it's situated within the Muppet Studios lot in Hollywood. The El Capitan Theatre served as The Muppet Theatre exterior during filming, returning the name to its British spelling, The Muppet Theatre. This version of the theater was used in Muppets Most Wanted and a promotional ad for Orange.
Notable events
TMS507-06
The Muppet Theatre afloat at sea...
TMS507-08
...with Sweetums at the helm in episode 507.
The theatre finds itself in flames throughout much of episode 303; Fozzie keeps the crisis from Kermit for as long as possible.
In need of fumigation, the Muppets vacate the theatre in episode 308, relocating to the train station for the duration of the show.
Gonzo attempts to defuse a bomb in episode 407, but he's foiled by M.A.M.M.A. and blows up half the theatre.
Oil is found under the theatre in episode 410, so J.P. sells the mining rights to the Guest Star's Dressing Room.
The entire theatre sets sail on the open ocean when it's hijacked by pirates in episode 507.
When the roof rots through, contractors relocate it to the shop for maintenance in episode 516.
The lights are out in the theatre throughout the show when an electrical fuse is blown in episode 522. Additionally, guest star Buddy Rich "plays" the theatre, using the walls and items in several areas as percussive instruments for his drum sticks.
Rizzo leads the rats on a hunt to find hidden treasure, demolishing the theatre in the process, in The Muppet Show Comic Book: The Treasure of Peg-Leg Wilson.
The theatre is in danger of being repurposed by its owner, prompting the Muppets to win their stage back from the villainous threat in both It's a Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie and The Muppets (2011).
Rooms
Defined areas seen in The Muppet Theatre include backstage right, the dressing rooms, the attic, the canteen, the prop room, the storage room, the boiler room, the stage, the house, the stage door lobby, and the back alley.
In The Comic Muppet Book and Bo Saves the Show there is also a cellar where the monsters stay.
The attic
Attic
Muppet Theater Auditorium
Auditorium
Backstage
Backstage
The Boiler Room
Boiler Room
The Canteen
Canteen
Guest Star's Dressing Room
Guest Star's Dressing Room
Miss Piggy's Dressing Room
Miss Piggy's Dressing Room
The Muppet Orchestra
The Orchestra Pit
The Prop Room
Prop Room
Reception
Reception
The Recording Studio
Recording Studio
Muppet Theater Stage
Stage
The Stage Door
Stage Door
Beauregard's Storing Room
Storing Room
Statler and Waldorf's Box
Statler and Waldorf's Box
Behind the scenes
Muppet theatre sketch
Production design sketch for the auditorium as seen in The Muppets (2011) by production designer Steve Saklad.
TheMuppets-(2011)-TheaterCurtainRailSystemInstalledOnJimHensonsBirthday
The theater's curtain rail system, installed on the day Jim Henson was born.
Steve Saklad, production designer on The Muppets, was charged with re-creating the theatre interior for the 2011 film. The set itself was reworked from a 1925 set built for The Phantom of the Opera. Of the task, Saklad said:
“They go into the theater, and really the heart of our movie is the transformation of the theater from the way they first find it, which is completely desolate, condemned by the board of health, pigeons are flying around in the open holes in the ceiling.
Eventually they transform this — this nasty looking place into the sort of glory days of the Muppet Theatre. Now I should explain, the — the theater was very important to us to get right. In the old TV show, there’s a simplified version of a kind of Muppet Theatre. It’s kind of sweet and quaint; not very real looking. Our story is this: Once, there was a real Muppet Theatre; great old, 100-year-old, vaudeville Theatre with ghosts and history, and these great acts that had always played there.
We’ll show you the full front of the audience, all the on-stage workings with the pin rails and the dimmer boards, and all the backstage areas and the dressing rooms all in one great space, so that you can go anywhere within that theater. You can go from the front of the audience up onto the stage, over to Kermit’s table, and then up the stairs and go right into Piggy’s dressing room, and it will all — always all be right there. So this was the sketch I did to transform a standing set that exists at Universal Studios for the Phantom of the Opera. This set was built in 1925. It’s still there. It’s a — it’s a relic that we — that — it’s historical, you know, sort of, it’s a space that no one can touch.
So we went in, transformed it into a classic, Broadway-style theater, front of house. We built a proscenium, we built everything behind the proscenium, which this model shows to encompass our backstage. And here are some of the shots of the very decrepit first look at the theater, and then how it gets transformed into the shiny, sparkly, ready-for-opening-night look.[1]”
Special tribute was paid to Muppets creator Jim Henson, with the theater's curtain rail system donning the installation date of September 24, 1936, the day Henson was born. The date can be spotted briefly in a scene that shows the Muppets sleeping on the rafters and in hammocks on stage.
Staff
Kermit the Frog: Host, performer
Pops: Doorman, box office
Scooter: Go-fer
George the Janitor
Beauregard: Janitor and stagehand
Beaker: Stagehand, lab assistant
Hilda: Wardrobe
Gladys: Canteen staff
The Swedish Chef: Canteen staff, performer
Fozzie Bear: Stand-up comedian
Gonzo: Stunt Performer
Miss Piggy: Performer
Lew Zealand: Performer
Wayne and Wanda: Singers
The Electric Mayhem: House band
Nigel: Conductor
The Muppet Orchestra
Security Guard
Harvey: lighting director
J. P. Grosse: owner
Rachel Bitterman: owner
Muppet Theatre slightly closer
Building front exterior, in detail
Muppet Theatre poster TMS316
Promotional poster seen in seasons 2 and 3
Muppet Theatre MB puzzle
Posters seen in a 1980 Milton Bradley puzzle
Muppet Theatre David Lazer Carol Burnett
Muppet Theatre behind the scenes with David Lazer and Carol Burnett
The Muppets Theater (3)
MCT-MuppTheat
Depicted in Muppet Classic Theater
Muppet theatre dirty
The Muppet Theatre in disrepair, as seen in The Muppets.
Theater4
TheMuppets-(2011)-TheOtherBox
The rarely seen balcony, opposite Statler & Waldorf's box.
Muppet-Stage-Hooray
Theater2
Theater3
Appearances
The Muppet Show, all episodes except episode 308 (1976-1981)
Because We Care (1980)
The Muppets Go to the Movies (1981)
Polaroid commercials (1981)
Playhouse Video series (1985)
Hey, You're as Funny as Fozzie Bear (1988)
The Muppets Celebrate Jim Henson (1990)
Muppet Classic Theater (1994)
V-Chip commercial, The Toreador Song (1999)
Jim Henson's Muppets (2002)
Weezer's "Keep Fishin'" music video (2002)
It's a Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie (2002)
CanTeen commercial (2005)
The Muppets (2011)
Orange commercials (2011)
LittleBigPlanet (2012)
Club Penguin Muppets World Tour (2014)
Illustrated appearances
The Muppet Show Book (1978)
Muppet Show Advent calendar (1979)
The Comic Muppet Book (1979)
The Muppets comic strip (1981-1986)
Bo Saves the Show (1982)
Two for the Show (1982)
Jim Henson's Bedtime Stories (1989)
Foo-Foo, Where Are You? (1991)
The Phantom of the Muppet Theater (1991)
The Muppet Show Comic Book (2009-2010)
I Am Kermit the Frog (2011)
Meet the Muppets (2011)
The Muppets: Theater Stage Set (2011)
TheComicMuppetBook-TheMuppetTheater-(1979)
The Comic Muppet Book.
Theatre-phantombook
The Phantom of the Muppet Theater
Pegleg4b
The Treasure of Peg-Leg Wilson
MupTheater-GBC
As rendered in Jim Henson's Muppets
Sources
↑ The #Muppets: Interview with Production Designer Steve Saklad. www.sippycupmom.com. November 13, 2011.
Categories:
Muppet Show LocationsVery Merry Muppet Christmas Movie LocationsThe Muppets (2011) Locations[Configure Reference Popups]
Community content is available under CC-BY-SA unless otherwise noted.
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Please take notice that we have updated our privacy policy, terms of use and terms of sale to (a) provide greater transparency around the ways we collect, process, and use personal information, and to implement the requirements of the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA), and (b) to create a single privacy policy, terms of use and terms of sale across all of our properties. These changes went into effect on January 1, 2020.
ADVERTISEMENT
Muppet Wiki
Muppet Wiki
36,515
PAGES
ADD NEW PAGE
THE MUPPETS
SESAME STREET
RANDOM MUPPET
HELP
EXPLORE
FORUM
in:
Muppet Show Locations, Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie Locations, The Muppets (2011) Locations
The Muppet Theatre
EDIT
SHARE
Muppet Theatre GO TO MOVIES
The Muppet Theatre in The Muppets Go to the Movies
closer view
Muppettheatre-outside
It's a Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie.
Muppet theatre landmark
Registered as an historical landmark in 2002.
Theatre front 2011
The Muppet Theatre in The Muppets (2011).
The Muppet Theatre is the setting for The Muppet Show, where it was first established over the course of five seasons of television. It is a grand old vaudeville house that has seen better days, but still manages to suit the showbusiness needs of the Muppets.
Contents[show]
The building's exterior is first seen in the series' coda, The Muppets Go to the Movies, where the camera pans back from the stage, out the front doors, and provides a full view of The Muppet Theatre name on the building. Kermit the Frog serves as a house manager to the theatre which is owned by Scooter's uncle J.P. Grosse (a fact Scooter is often happy to reiterate with his amphibious boss).
According to a 1991 storybook, the theatre was built by a stage actor named John Stone in 1802. In The Muppet Show episode 106, Kermit identifies the structure as The Benny Vandergast Memorial Theatre, but following the Muppets' residency, The Muppet Theatre name becomes prominently displayed on advertising posters and backstage signs. The British spelling of Theatre can be attributed to its location in London; while locking up the doors at the end of The Muppets Go to the Movies, Miss Piggy asks Kermit to walk her to The Tube, London's subway system ("I love to walk to The Tube!", she exclaims).
After The Muppet Show, the location of The Muppet Theatre becomes more ambiguous; either as a result of renting playhouses in different cities, or through the magic of the Muppets' inconsistent continuity. Most stage areas occupied by the Muppets are either called The Muppet Theatre in name or bear some resemblance to the their original home on The Muppet Show. For example, commercials for Polaroid, The Muppets Celebrate Jim Henson, Weezer's "Keep Fishin'" music video, and others, are close facsimiles of the original theatre (sometimes with modifications), and are most likely meant to serve as such.
It's a Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie clearly establishes a theatre located in New York City, as Piggy's apartment (in an alternate universe) has a view of the twin towers of New York's World Trade Center. The plot of the TV movie involves the theatre being in jeopardy of finding itself repurposed as a night club. Its owner's plan is ultimately foiled by Pepe the King Prawn when he registers the theatre as an historical landmark; the document uses the Americanized spelling, The Muppet Theater.
The Official Digital Toolset for Dungeons & Dragons
VISIT D&D BEYOND
A third definitive location was established in the 2011 film The Muppets, where it's situated within the Muppet Studios lot in Hollywood. The El Capitan Theatre served as The Muppet Theatre exterior during filming, returning the name to its British spelling, The Muppet Theatre. This version of the theater was used in Muppets Most Wanted and a promotional ad for Orange.
Notable events
TMS507-06
The Muppet Theatre afloat at sea...
TMS507-08
...with Sweetums at the helm in episode 507.
The theatre finds itself in flames throughout much of episode 303; Fozzie keeps the crisis from Kermit for as long as possible.
In need of fumigation, the Muppets vacate the theatre in episode 308, relocating to the train station for the duration of the show.
Gonzo attempts to defuse a bomb in episode 407, but he's foiled by M.A.M.M.A. and blows up half the theatre.
Oil is found under the theatre in episode 410, so J.P. sells the mining rights to the Guest Star's Dressing Room.
The entire theatre sets sail on the open ocean when it's hijacked by pirates in episode 507.
When the roof rots through, contractors relocate it to the shop for maintenance in episode 516.
The lights are out in the theatre throughout the show when an electrical fuse is blown in episode 522. Additionally, guest star Buddy Rich "plays" the theatre, using the walls and items in several areas as percussive instruments for his drum sticks.
Rizzo leads the rats on a hunt to find hidden treasure, demolishing the theatre in the process, in The Muppet Show Comic Book: The Treasure of Peg-Leg Wilson.
The theatre is in danger of being repurposed by its owner, prompting the Muppets to win their stage back from the villainous threat in both It's a Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie and The Muppets (2011).
Rooms
Defined areas seen in The Muppet Theatre include backstage right, the dressing rooms, the attic, the canteen, the prop room, the storage room, the boiler room, the stage, the house, the stage door lobby, and the back alley.
In The Comic Muppet Book and Bo Saves the Show there is also a cellar where the monsters stay.
The attic
Attic
Muppet Theater Auditorium
Auditorium
Backstage
Backstage
The Boiler Room
Boiler Room
The Canteen
Canteen
Guest Star's Dressing Room
Guest Star's Dressing Room
Miss Piggy's Dressing Room
Miss Piggy's Dressing Room
The Muppet Orchestra
The Orchestra Pit
The Prop Room
Prop Room
Reception
Reception
The Recording Studio
Recording Studio
Muppet Theater Stage
Stage
The Stage Door
Stage Door
Beauregard's Storing Room
Storing Room
Statler and Waldorf's Box
Statler and Waldorf's Box
Behind the scenes
Muppet theatre sketch
Production design sketch for the auditorium as seen in The Muppets (2011) by production designer Steve Saklad.
TheMuppets-(2011)-TheaterCurtainRailSystemInstalledOnJimHensonsBirthday
The theater's curtain rail system, installed on the day Jim Henson was born.
Steve Saklad, production designer on The Muppets, was charged with re-creating the theatre interior for the 2011 film. The set itself was reworked from a 1925 set built for The Phantom of the Opera. Of the task, Saklad said:
“They go into the theater, and really the heart of our movie is the transformation of the theater from the way they first find it, which is completely desolate, condemned by the board of health, pigeons are flying around in the open holes in the ceiling.
Eventually they transform this — this nasty looking place into the sort of glory days of the Muppet Theatre. Now I should explain, the — the theater was very important to us to get right. In the old TV show, there’s a simplified version of a kind of Muppet Theatre. It’s kind of sweet and quaint; not very real looking. Our story is this: Once, there was a real Muppet Theatre; great old, 100-year-old, vaudeville Theatre with ghosts and history, and these great acts that had always played there.
We’ll show you the full front of the audience, all the on-stage workings with the pin rails and the dimmer boards, and all the backstage areas and the dressing rooms all in one great space, so that you can go anywhere within that theater. You can go from the front of the audience up onto the stage, over to Kermit’s table, and then up the stairs and go right into Piggy’s dressing room, and it will all — always all be right there. So this was the sketch I did to transform a standing set that exists at Universal Studios for the Phantom of the Opera. This set was built in 1925. It’s still there. It’s a — it’s a relic that we — that — it’s historical, you know, sort of, it’s a space that no one can touch.
So we went in, transformed it into a classic, Broadway-style theater, front of house. We built a proscenium, we built everything behind the proscenium, which this model shows to encompass our backstage. And here are some of the shots of the very decrepit first look at the theater, and then how it gets transformed into the shiny, sparkly, ready-for-opening-night look.[1]”
Special tribute was paid to Muppets creator Jim Henson, with the theater's curtain rail system donning the installation date of September 24, 1936, the day Henson was born. The date can be spotted briefly in a scene that shows the Muppets sleeping on the rafters and in hammocks on stage.
Staff
Kermit the Frog: Host, performer
Pops: Doorman, box office
Scooter: Go-fer
George the Janitor
Beauregard: Janitor and stagehand
Beaker: Stagehand, lab assistant
Hilda: Wardrobe
Gladys: Canteen staff
The Swedish Chef: Canteen staff, performer
Fozzie Bear: Stand-up comedian
Gonzo: Stunt Performer
Miss Piggy: Performer
Lew Zealand: Performer
Wayne and Wanda: Singers
The Electric Mayhem: House band
Nigel: Conductor
The Muppet Orchestra
Security Guard
Harvey: lighting director
J. P. Grosse: owner
Rachel Bitterman: owner
Muppet Theatre slightly closer
Building front exterior, in detail
Muppet Theatre poster TMS316
Promotional poster seen in seasons 2 and 3
Muppet Theatre MB puzzle
Posters seen in a 1980 Milton Bradley puzzle
Muppet Theatre David Lazer Carol Burnett
Muppet Theatre behind the scenes with David Lazer and Carol Burnett
The Muppets Theater (3)
MCT-MuppTheat
Depicted in Muppet Classic Theater
Muppet theatre dirty
The Muppet Theatre in disrepair, as seen in The Muppets.
Theater4
TheMuppets-(2011)-TheOtherBox
The rarely seen balcony, opposite Statler & Waldorf's box.
Muppet-Stage-Hooray
Theater2
Theater3
Appearances
The Muppet Show, all episodes except episode 308 (1976-1981)
Because We Care (1980)
The Muppets Go to the Movies (1981)
Polaroid commercials (1981)
Playhouse Video series (1985)
Hey, You're as Funny as Fozzie Bear (1988)
The Muppets Celebrate Jim Henson (1990)
Muppet Classic Theater (1994)
V-Chip commercial, The Toreador Song (1999)
Jim Henson's Muppets (2002)
Weezer's "Keep Fishin'" music video (2002)
It's a Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie (2002)
CanTeen commercial (2005)
The Muppets (2011)
Orange commercials (2011)
LittleBigPlanet (2012)
Club Penguin Muppets World Tour (2014)
Illustrated appearances
The Muppet Show Book (1978)
Muppet Show Advent calendar (1979)
The Comic Muppet Book (1979)
The Muppets comic strip (1981-1986)
Bo Saves the Show (1982)
Two for the Show (1982)
Jim Henson's Bedtime Stories (1989)
Foo-Foo, Where Are You? (1991)
The Phantom of the Muppet Theater (1991)
The Muppet Show Comic Book (2009-2010)
I Am Kermit the Frog (2011)
Meet the Muppets (2011)
The Muppets: Theater Stage Set (2011)
TheComicMuppetBook-TheMuppetTheater-(1979)
The Comic Muppet Book.
Theatre-phantombook
The Phantom of the Muppet Theater
Pegleg4b
The Treasure of Peg-Leg Wilson
MupTheater-GBC
As rendered in Jim Henson's Muppets
Sources
↑ The #Muppets: Interview with Production Designer Steve Saklad. www.sippycupmom.com. November 13, 2011.
Categories:
Muppet Show LocationsVery Merry Muppet Christmas Movie LocationsThe Muppets (2011) Locations[Configure Reference Popups]
Community content is available under CC-BY-SA unless otherwise noted.
Recent Wiki Activity
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
CWF 20 • 1 hour ago
Johann Sebastian Bach
CWF 20 • 1 hour ago
Symphony No. 5
CWF 20 • 1 hour ago
Ludwig van Beethoven
CWF 20 • 1 hour ago
Help us grow Muppet Wiki!
GET STARTED
EXPLORE PROPERTIES
Fandom
Gamepedia
D&D Beyond
Muthead
Futhead
FOLLOW US
OVERVIEW
About
Careers
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Contact
Terms of Use
Privacy Policy
Global Sitemap
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Support
Help
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Media Kit
Contact
FANDOM APPS
Take your favorite fandoms with you and never miss a beat.
D&D Beyond
Muppet Wiki is a FANDOM TV Community.
Follow Fandom Wikis on TwitterJokeyPsychEndgameHonestGalaxyQuest