enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Sesame Street: 25 Wonderful Years - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sesame_Street:_25...

    Montage of Ernie songs: "Rubber Duckie" "The Honker-Duckie-Dinger Jamboree" "Put Down the Duckie" "Do De Rubber Duck" "C Is For Cookie" - Cookie Monster "Monster in the Mirror" - Grover "I'm an Aardvark" (re-filmed version) - Joe Raposo "Fuzzy and Blue and Orange" (cuts off before Frazzle appears/new sound effects added) - Grover, Herry, and ...

  3. Monster in the Mirror - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monster_in_the_Mirror

    The song appeared in the 1993 video Sesame Street's 25th Birthday: A Musical Celebration. [10] "Monster in the Mirror" was one of the songs in the 1995 album "Sesame Street: Platinum All-Time Favorites" [2] and the 2003 album Songs from the Street: 35 Years of Music. [11] One of the song's refrains is "Wubba Wubba Woo". [8]

  4. List of songs from Sesame Street - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_songs_from_Sesame...

    This is a list of songs from Sesame Street. It includes the songs are written for used on the TV series. The songs have a variety of styles, including R&B, opera, show tunes, folk, and world music. [1] Especially in the earlier decades, parodies and spoofs of popular songs were common, although that has reduced in more recent years. [1]

  5. Sesame Street Jam: A Musical Celebration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sesame_Street_Jam:_A...

    The show opens with the characters enjoying a day in Central Park as a calypso version of the Sesame Street theme plays. Big Bird, Prairie Dawn, and Telly Monster watch as the others make music and dance. Big Bird remembers his Granny Bird saying, "The whole world is a stage." Prairie decides to put on a show, assuring the others that it will ...

  6. The Adventures of Elmo in Grouchland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Adventures_of_Elmo_in...

    The film was one of the few Sesame Street productions directly produced by The Jim Henson Company. This was the final Muppet feature film to involve Fran Brill and Oz, who retired from being full-time puppeteers the following years, [3] and the last Muppet film to feature Spinney before his retirement in 2018 and his death in 2019.

  7. Don't Eat the Pictures - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Don't_Eat_the_Pictures

    Don't Eat the Pictures: Sesame Street at the Metropolitan Museum of Art (or simply Don't Eat the Pictures) is a one-hour Sesame Street special that aired on PBS on November 16, 1983. The title comes from a song in the special, "Don't Eat the Pictures", [ 1 ] sung by Cookie Monster . [ 2 ]

  8. Sesame Street - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sesame_Street

    Sesame Street was conceived in 1966 during discussions between television producer Joan Ganz Cooney and Carnegie Foundation vice president Lloyd Morrisett.Their goal was to create a children's television show that would "master the addictive qualities of television and do something good with them," [16] such as helping young children prepare for school.

  9. Big Bird's Birthday or Let Me Eat Cake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Bird's_Birthday_or_Let...

    Big Bird's Birthday or Let Me Eat Cake is a 1991 television special based on the children's television show Sesame Street. In the special, Big Bird celebrates his sixth birthday . The special aired on PBS stations during the week of March 9, 1991 as part of the PBS pledge drive season.