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"Elmo's Rap Alphabet", a rap version of the Alphabet Song rapped by Elmo, written by Emily Kingsley (lyrics) and Robby Merkin (music). "Elmo's Circle Song", sung by Elmo about his love of circles and other circular objects, at the end of the song, he gets dizzy and falls unconscious, written by Molly Boylan (lyrics) and Steve Nelson (music).
Avigail – A purple female monster who is similar to Elmo, who also speaks in the third person. Brosh – An orange monster; Mahboub (Yousef Sweid) – A blue monster; Noah – A red monster; Sivan – A girl who uses a wheelchair. She moved to Vila Sésamo near the end of its second run.
Elmo Saves Christmas: 1998 Elmopalooza: The Rosie O'Donnell Show on Sesame Street: 1999 CinderElmo: Sesame Street Unpaved: 2000 The Greatest TV Moments: Sesame Street Music A-Z: 2001 A&E Biography: Sesame Street: 2003 Sesame Street 4-D Movie Magic: United States Japan 2004 Sesame Street: The Street We Live On: United States 2005 Sesame Street ...
Barrio Sésamo (Sesame Neighborhood in English) is the Spanish co-production of the popular U.S. children's television series Sesame Street produced by Televisión Española and Sesame Workshop (formerly Children's Television Workshop) from 1979 to 2000, the equivalent of Plaza Sésamo in Latin America. All characters adopted Spanish names ...
The show's 40th anniversary, on 1 October 2012, saw the introduction of new character Elmo: a resident of the street, who appeared in a treehouse setting as the new host of the show. [1] New characters included a female friend of Elmo's, played by Julia Stinshoff, and Susi Schraube, an inventive girl appearing in a series of stop-motion segments.
Sesame Workshop produced 26 episodes in English, which initially aired dubbed in Spain on Antena 3 as a Barrio Sésamo mini-series called Monstruos Supersanos. Around 2011, the segments were also released in Latin America. [1] Each episode featured framing scenes starring Elmo, followed by newly produced Muppet sketches and on-location film ...
Rather than a full co-production, the series featured new host segments featuring Garibaldo (Big Bird) and a new Muppet monster named Bel. The package consists of Portuguese-dubbed episodes of Elmo's World, Play With Me Sesame, and Global Grover, plus selections from the US Sesame Street and Sesame English. Seventy-eight new Brazilian live ...
[30] [31] Barrio Sésamo, made in Spain, featured over the years such characters as Caponata the hen, Don Pimpon, Espinete the pink hedgehog, and Perezgil, a snail character who was able to hide a thousand and one things in his shell. [32]