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Folkmanis, Inc is a company that makes stuffed puppets, like hippos. The first version of the company's hippo puppet came out in 2002, referred to in the lawsuit as "Hippo 1."
Beginning in 2008, the show began incorporating puppets in the cold open; many were given to Ferguson by Folkmanis Puppets. [21] Ferguson stated in an interview with Playboy magazine that the impetus behind starting to do the puppets is hearing an episode of Jonesy's Jukebox during his drive in to work where "The Lonely Goatherd" was played
Ventriloquism or ventriloquy is an act of stagecraft in which a person (a ventriloquist) speaks in such a way that it looks like their voice is coming from a different location, usually through a puppet known as a "dummy".
Funday PawPet Show is an Internet-based puppet show created by Randy "Yappy" Fox in November 1999, broadcast on Sunday nights from 18:00 to 22:00 ET from his home in Kissimmee, Florida. [2] Before November 25, 2007 the show aired from 19:00 to 23:00 EST , but this was changed due to an increasing international audience, and until September 20 ...
Lewis with her puppets, Lamb Chop and Charlie Horse, 1960. NBC gave Lewis her first network program, The Shari Lewis Show, which debuted on October 1, 1960, replacing The Howdy Doody Show. The show ran until September 28, 1963, and featured such characters as Hush Puppy, Charlie Horse, Lamb Chop, and Wing Ding, a black crow.
Bertie the Bunyip (~1960) Bertie the Bunyip was the lead puppet character on the popular American children's television series The Bertie the Bunyip Show [1] which aired on KYW-TV (known as WPTZ until 1956, then WRCV-TV from 1956-1965) in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, which ran from 1954 to 1966. [2]
The Neighborhood of Make-Believe is the fictional kingdom inhabited by hand puppet characters on the children's television series Mister Rogers' Neighborhood, which originally aired on PBS (and its predecessor NET) from 1968 to 2001, and its predecessor Mister Rogers, which originally aired on CBC from 1963 to 1966. [1]
Bill Diamond with Gorgo the Gargoyle at a fan convention in Hanover, MA. Bill Diamond, (born June 5, 1957) is an American puppeteer, puppet fabricator, and producer. [1] He worked for Jim Henson at his New York office, and has won three Emmy Awards for his work on the YES Network.
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