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Sesamstraße

Originaltitel: Sesame Street
  • Fernsehserie
  • 1969–
  • TV-Y
  • 55 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
8,1/10
16.435
IHRE BEWERTUNG
BELIEBTHEIT
1.895
448
Leslie Carrara-Rudolph, David Rudman, Matt Vogel, and Ryan Dillon in Sesamstraße (1969)
Sesame Street Holiday Special from HBO.
trailer wiedergeben1:09
50 Videos
99+ Fotos
SatireSupernatural FantasyUrban AdventureAdventureAnimationComedyDramaFamilyFantasyGame Show

Auf einer speziellen innerstädtischen Straße unterrichten die Bewohner, Menschen und Muppets, Vorschulfächer mit Comedy, Cartoons, Spielen und Liedern.Auf einer speziellen innerstädtischen Straße unterrichten die Bewohner, Menschen und Muppets, Vorschulfächer mit Comedy, Cartoons, Spielen und Liedern.Auf einer speziellen innerstädtischen Straße unterrichten die Bewohner, Menschen und Muppets, Vorschulfächer mit Comedy, Cartoons, Spielen und Liedern.

  • Stoffentwicklung
    • Joan Ganz Cooney
    • Lloyd Morrisett Jr.
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Jim Henson
    • Frank Oz
    • Caroll Spinney
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    8,1/10
    16.435
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    BELIEBTHEIT
    1.895
    448
    • Stoffentwicklung
      • Joan Ganz Cooney
      • Lloyd Morrisett Jr.
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Jim Henson
      • Frank Oz
      • Caroll Spinney
    • 110Benutzerrezensionen
    • 9Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • 6 Primetime Emmys gewonnen
      • 256 Gewinne & 373 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Episoden3248

    Folgen durchsuchen
    HöchsteAm besten bewertet

    Videos50

    Meet M3GAN: Allison Williams on Her Creepy Doll Costar
    Clip 3:08
    Meet M3GAN: Allison Williams on Her Creepy Doll Costar
    Casting the "House of the Dragon" Parody on "Sesame Street"
    Clip 2:34
    Casting the "House of the Dragon" Parody on "Sesame Street"
    Casting the "House of the Dragon" Parody on "Sesame Street"
    Clip 2:34
    Casting the "House of the Dragon" Parody on "Sesame Street"
    Sesame Street: Vol. One
    Clip 1:00
    Sesame Street: Vol. One
    Sesame Street: Elmo's Sing-Along Guessing Game (Trailer 1)
    Clip 0:39
    Sesame Street: Elmo's Sing-Along Guessing Game (Trailer 1)
    Tonight at 7 p.m.
    Trailer 1:09
    Tonight at 7 p.m.
    Friday at 7 p.m.
    Trailer 1:09
    Friday at 7 p.m.

    Fotos2629

    Poster ansehen
    Poster ansehen
    Poster ansehen
    Poster ansehen
    Poster ansehen
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    + 2623
    Poster ansehen

    Topbesetzung99+

    Ändern
    Jim Henson
    Jim Henson
    • Ernie…
    • 1969–2005
    Frank Oz
    Frank Oz
    • Bert…
    • 1969–2014
    Caroll Spinney
    Caroll Spinney
    • Big Bird…
    • 1969–2023
    Jerry Nelson
    Jerry Nelson
    • The Count…
    • 1970–2016
    Martin P. Robinson
    Martin P. Robinson
    • Telly Monster…
    • 1977–2024
    Sonia Manzano
    Sonia Manzano
    • Maria…
    • 1971–2018
    Kevin Clash
    Kevin Clash
    • Elmo…
    • 1980–2019
    Bob McGrath
    Bob McGrath
    • Bob…
    • 1969–2017
    Emilio Delgado
    Emilio Delgado
    • Luis…
    • 1971–2022
    Roscoe Orman
    Roscoe Orman
    • Gordon…
    • 1974–2023
    Fran Brill
    Fran Brill
    • Zoe…
    • 1970–2021
    Loretta Long
    • Susan…
    • 1969–2017
    Richard Hunt
    Richard Hunt
    • Two-Headed Monster…
    • 1972–2004
    David Rudman
    David Rudman
    • Baby Bear…
    • 1977–2024
    Northern Calloway
    • David…
    • 1971–2004
    Joey Mazzarino
    • Murray Monster…
    • 1990–2023
    Linda Bove
    • Linda…
    • 1972–2002
    Carmen Osbahr
    Carmen Osbahr
    • Rosita…
    • 1990–2024
    • Stoffentwicklung
      • Joan Ganz Cooney
      • Lloyd Morrisett Jr.
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen110

    8,116.4K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    Clare-5

    Happy 30th Birthday to a wonderful show!

    I am 23 years old and I grew up watching Sesame Street. I love this show. It's so very educational but it makes it fun. I was probably eight or nine when my mom finally corrected me and told me that the real words to the Beatles song I often sang were "Let It Be", not "Letter B".

    I have so many fond memories of this show. Hats off to Sesame Street's 30th birthday and here's to 30 more. This is a show that I want my children to be able to grow up with as well. I applaud and thank the cast and crew for their dedication to children.

    Oh yes, finally, I love Elmo & Grover & Telly Monster & Cookie Monster & Kermit the Frog & Snuffie, & Big Bird & Bert & Ernie& Harry & yes, even Oscar the Grouch.

    Sunny Day, everythings A- OK. Friendly Neighbors. That's where we meet. Can you tell me how to get to Sesame Street.
    Carrieattheprom

    What happended to my show?

    Can this really be the same show that dealt with the death of Mr. Hooper? I can't see them doing anything like that now. They used to count up to twenty. Now they sometimes go past ten. I even remember one cartoon segment where they went up to 40! I miss Mumford the Magician(ala peanut butter sandwiches!) and the honkers. I had a honker doll when I was little. Drove my folks nuts.

    Please get rid of Elmo World! He doesn't even TEACH anything.('cept for that one PC Holiday Speacial) and as many others pointed out he's annoying and talks down to kids.

    For people who tell me not to get upset over a kids show, I remind them that Sesame Street was a show parents could watch with their kids without being bored silly. The show had jokes that parents could get. and some awesome guest stars.

    I have a feeling this show may be coming to an end. It will be replaced by Elmo's World in hour long form.

    Farwell Sesmae we had great times together.
    mentalcritic

    A childhood gem, but it has fallen in standards since I was a lad...

    When I was a child, there were two main educational programs shown to children. Play School, being the other one, basically got me shouting at the television that I was not retarded, not stupid, and not a diminished human being, just a child. From what I've seen from observing some of my cousins' children, it hasn't changed a lot except parents have revised their opinion of its suitability for five year olds. Unfortunately, Sesame Street is going much in the same direction.

    In the 1990s, Sesame Street had a rather nasty competitor in the shape of Barney, a purple dinosaur with a support cast that showed no difference in emotional response. Even when that support cast consisted of four year olds and fourteen year olds. As if that wasn't harmful enough, Barney would openly tell children they weren't good if they didn't have good feelings, or alter the rules of a game to make someone else the winner. That such "lessons" were allowed to be broadcast shows how useful the regulators of television really are. By contrast, the Sesame Street I remember even dealt with such issues as the death of a loved one. Goodbye, Mr. Hooper was one of the most amazing episodes of children's television ever broadcast because it made an effort to try and teach children about something so difficult that even live adults are often no help with it.

    Other brilliant aspects of the show included using monsters to portray certain feelings or behaviours that the audience might be conflicted about. They had a cookie monster to show what a negative (but highly funny, the way they presented it) appearance gluttony can bring. They had a grouchy monster to show the effects of an anti-social mentality. More "cute" monsters such as Grover were used to show things like fear or sadness. There was a good reason for all of this. Negative feelings are difficult enough for a child to understand, so having puppets to thoroughly explain them was very educational.

    Kudos are also due the adult cast of the show. During every episode I saw, even Goodbye, Mr. Hooper, the adults were never condescending or smug. They never acted as if they had every answer. Instead, they told the monster, other puppet, or child characters a few useful tidbits and let these characters work things out for themselves. Even today, if you see the sequences with such annoying characters as Elmo, it is the children or the child-like characters who deliver all the answer lines. Those consultations with child psychologists done by the Children's Television Workshop really paid off.

    Unfortunately, and there always seems to be an unfortunately these days when it comes to children's television, a certain adherence to marketing over education crept in over recent years. The greatness of such characters as Oscar or Grover was that they could appeal to children without needing to be cutesy. Oscar was a grump who appeared to have worked too many night shifts, while Grover seemed to be just a fearful but friendly guy trying to make his way in the world. Perfectly normal, ordinary people wrapped up in some very bizarre-looking trimmings, in other words. Nowadays, characters like Elmo seem so awfully sugarcoated that it makes me wonder if his audience is going to encounter problems in later life when they learn they cannot get by simply on acting cute.

    I don't know who pulls the strings on this show these days, but I would like to implore them for the sake of future generations. The old way of educating the children about the fundamentals of life, and letting the cute factor take care of itself, was a much better one. Please go back to it. I might not be part of the audience anymore, but I do have second cousins, and maybe one day a niece or nephew, who are.
    8james-szabo

    My daughters are the judge

    This was one of my favorite shows as a child in the 70s. (Though my sister always preferred "The Electric Company" - if anyone remembers that.) So, naturally, I thought my own two daughters would love it. Well, at age 2-3, my oldest loved Elmo, but at age 4, she's long over both Elmo and Sesame Street - and she won't enter Kindergarten for two more years! So, I give the current show a 6. It's too inane for my 4 year old. As for myself, I was much older when I stopped watching. This was one of my favorite shows. I give the old Sesame Street a 10/10. Thus we get 8 stars overall.

    When I do occasionally watch the new show, I miss Kermit, am dismayed that Snuffy is visible to everyone (where's the fun in that?), think Big Bird acts like an imbecile (was he always such a baby? maybe so), wish Grover and Cookie Monster and the Count got more face time, suspect that the current production team is trying to make Ernie and Bert seem gay, and miss some of the old segments. I think they should just stop producing new shows and start re-running the old shows starting with season 1. The ratings would probably go way up and they'd save a lot of money.

    "Oh waiter! There's a fly in this production!"
    Hotoil

    Classic show, but lowering it's standards

    This is a children's television classic. It's educational and entertaining, and not painful for parents to watch with their kids. At least it never used to be. It used to be quite edgy, high-brow, very adult-accessible. It's been dumbed down considerably over the years. This is a result of playing to lower age-groups, shorter attention spans, and competing with the run-of-the-mill trash in the kid's TV arena.

    The adults have virtually vanished, the muppets have gotten annoying (I'm sure we're all familiar with Elmo by now), the show has shrunk to 40 minutes, the last 20 being a new show-within-a-show known as "Elmo's World". As if the 20 minutes of Elmo aren't enough, even more grating is that there are only about 10-20 episodes of Elmo's World, yet it runs every day! And rather than dealing with reading, writing, counting, nature, social skills, Elmo's World revolves around things like balls, puppies, hair, etc. Yes, this is not your parent's Sesame Street, or probably even the Sesame Street you grew up with. It's a more modern, simple, conformist Street that has considerably less charm but at least more educational value than the other, more commercial stuff out there.

    The only reason to turn your kids on to television is rapidly shrinking into another Barney.

    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      When Will Lee died, the production staff decided not to cast another actor as neighborhood grocer Mr. Harold Hooper. Instead, they wrote a special episode dealing with the loss of a loved one ("Goodbye, Mr. Hooper"). When the other cast members talk to Big Bird about the death of loved ones, some are visibly near tears. A child psychologist was brought in to help the writers. The episode announcing Mr. Hooper's death was scheduled for a public holiday, and was publicized in many newspapers so parents could be prepared to answer their children's questions. They were very careful not to say that Mr. Hooper died in a hospital, to avoid making children fear going to the hospital. In polls, fans have consistently voted this episode as the most moving and memorable.
    • Patzer
      During the final stanza of the Anything Muppets' song "J Friends", when the four Muppets jump up at the line "Let's jump with Jane", the hair and forehead of Muppet performer Frank Oz are briefly visible at the bottom of the screen.
    • Zitate

      Old King Cole: What ho! Bring me my royal pipe. And step on it.

      Kermit the Frog: [to the TV audience] At this point, you might think we'd go for the cheap joke. But we're not going to.

    • Crazy Credits
      Most episodes aired from 1969 to the 2000s do not have complete closing credits; ending credits usually appeared at the end of the Friday installment, or when another weekday episode ran short.
    • Alternative Versionen
      In 2006, selected episodes from the first five seasons of the series (1969-1973) were released to DVD. Due to rights issues regarding music and some footage, slight edits were made to these episodes, sometimes involving substituting other segments. In addition, the 5 complete episodes in the set (entitled Sesame Street: Old School Vol. 1) are each preceded by newly made animated segments introducing each episode.
    • Verbindungen
      Edited from Luxo Jr. in 'Surprise' and 'Light & Heavy' (1991)
    • Soundtracks
      A NEW WAY TO WALK
      Written by Mark Saltzman and Joe Raposo

      Performed by The Oinker Sisters

      1986 Sesame Street Records, Instruct. Children's Music, Inc. (ASCAP)

    Top-Auswahl

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 21. Juli 1969 (Vereinigte Staaten)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprachen
      • Englisch
      • Spanisch
      • Amerikanische Gebärdensprache
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Sesame Street
    • Drehorte
      • Kaufman Astoria Studios - 3412 36th Street, Astoria, Queens, New York City, New York, USA(1993-present)
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Children's Television Workshop (CTW)
      • Curious Pictures
      • Sesame Workshop
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      55 Minuten
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • Mono
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.33 : 1

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