A Puppeteer in His Father’s Footsteps
The first project Brian Henson worked on with his father, Muppets creator Jim Henson, was a scene in “The Great Muppet Caper” where Kermit and Miss Piggy are riding bicycles in London. In his Big Think interview, the chairman of The Jim Henson Company describes the scene as a “complex marionetting,” with cranes driving through Battersea Park. It was then that he realized his love for physics could be combined with entertainment and the family business.
In describing the genesis of a puppet character, Henson says that most puppets, at least at his company, are initially based on a real person—though as they are developed they begin to take on a life of their own. And while puppets’ expressions can be restrictive, the magic is that they still brim with emotion: A puppet never smiles, but “you can shoot that scene, and you can show it to people and they’ll say, ‘I love that scene where they all ended with great big smiles.’ It’s like, yeah, but it never really happened, you just sort of imagined it,” says Henson.