Friday, December 28, 2012

There's a long entry about Jerry and the roles he took for the Muppets on the Muppet Wiki, at:

http://muppet.wikia.com/wiki/Jerry_Nelson

There is a note on Jerry's starting with the Muppets in 1965 in the Jim Henson Red Book:

http://www.henson.com/jimsredbook/2011/12/03/121-51965/

In addition to doing the Chrysler Show at the 1964 World's Fair, Jerry had also performed as a puppeteer, doing traditional puppets, at the Bill Baird theater in the Village.






Friday, November 30, 2012

Jerry, Jacquie, and Jacquie's sister Vannessa worked on the Chrysler Show at the 1964 World's Fair.  Jacquie writes:


Jerry and I worked at the 1964 World's Fair for two years. -- we were puppeteers at the Chrysler Pavilion.  We were animated "car parts" created by Bil Baird.  It was a hoot and great fun.  We wore what puppeteers call "blacks" because we were not on a bridge up above the stage, as was often the case with Bil Baird marionettes.  These were (mostly) hand puppets, so we were on stage and would have been visible to the audience. The solution --  we were covered head to toe in soft cotton black costumes.  Only the most observant could see an occasional shadow of us moving around.

At the time we lived just off Queens Boulevard in a two family house.  We lived on one side of the house and the owner (our landlady) was on the other side.  We had half of the back yard, which was divided by a grape arbor with a little walkway.  Our landlady was a nice older lady who kept her back yard neat and mowed.  We didn't have a lawn mower and we just let the grass grow.  Christine loved it and so did we.  It was a tiny wild meadow.  The grass was almost 3 feet high and it waved in the wind.  For some reason it stopped growing at 3 feet so it never got crazy high.  And to Jerry's and my surprise, our landlady never complained, never asked us to mow it, and never had it mowed herself.  Maybe she liked us.  Jerry was handsome.  I was pretty and Christine was adorable at 3 years old.  We didn't know yet that she had cystic fibrosis.  It was happy times.

There was a shiny silver diner next door to us, with red velvet booths and all that kind of fancy stuff.  They had chocolate chip cookies that were the size of a large salad plate.  We were shocked by that excess and renamed the diner The Fat People’s Diner.  We didn't see fat people, but we figured we would one day because of the cookies.

When they first moved to New York, Jerry was taking acting classes.  Jacquie was working at the Gaslight Club, which was a precursor of the Playboy Clubs that came along later.  They shared an apartment with Vaughn Maeder and his wife.  The apartment was laid out on a long hallway.  They each had one end of it.  Vaughn did a wonderful, funny impersonation of John Kennedy that was very popular.  Of course after Kennedy was killed it also killed Vaughn's act.  There is a Wikipedia entry about Vaughn:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vaughn_Meader

The apartment was nondescript.  To liven it up they painted a skyline - profiles of buildings - on the wall of their living room.  It wasn't a replica of the New York skyline, just an interesting design.


Jacquie sent this comment about living in New York in an apartment on 89th St.

  Did he ever tell you the cockroach story?  We used to sleep on the floor on Japanese tatami mats in that funky apartment on 89th street (you'll recall he was stationed in Japan and had adopted some of their ways - for awhile).  When we realized that the feisty New York cockroaches refused to stay off the tatami mats we got a bed.  Problem solved.  You may recall that the first floor of that apartment building had a Greek diner, hence more than the usual number of roaches.  Ick.


Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Jacquie posted this comment on the New York Times blog after Jerry died.  Apropos of the clip from the Great Muppet Caper:

  "What a loss for children everywhere. ..little children and grown up children.   Jerry's voice could twist and turn, and COUNT and laugh, and sing and growl....He must have had a hundred voices, as did our beloved daughter Christine Elizabeth Nelson.  Jerry and I were married for 7 years  and it was sometime after she was  diagnosed with cystic fibrosis that our marriage ended.

     But Jerry and I remained good friends and we held Christine's hand together when she died in 1982.   Many of Christine's happiest times were with her father, on the Sesame Street set,  on Fire Island for many summers, in London with him making The Great Muppet Caper where she had a small speaking part with her father, and when it was time to film her scene, Christine didn't like what the wardrobe department had selected for her to wear, so  Christine and Jerry  both went to Jim Henson and Jerry said,

"Jim, Christine isn't happy with the  wardrobe department's choice for her scene with me, she wants  to wear what she has on, okay?"

Jim looked her up and down and said, "Great."  And then Jerry said, "and I'm going to wear what I have on too"....and so they did.  What a pair they were.  What wonderful imps.

     All his life,  Jerry brought joy and laugher and giggles to all who heard him.  There was only one Jerry Nelson, although the COUNT would have preferred more Jerries, so he could count them.

Good by dear Jerry.  No one is laughing today
Here's a link to a YouTube video, Philly Joe Jones, Blues for Dracula.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lz3d8C6xnmU&feature=youtu.be

There's an article on Wikipedia on the evolution of the Dracula role - Dracula in popular culture.

Incidentally, Philly Joe was on his way to Las Vegas with John Hicks and Freddy Williams to receive an award for this recording but he never made it.  He died on the way out there.

More later, my dears.


Wednesday, September 26, 2012



  Jerry and I discovered the I Ching separately.  He learned about it from someone in New York.  Marty Siegel brought the book to us in Connecticut with the pronouncement that, “every household should have one.”  We both used it.

  It seems odd looking back on it that we never discussed the Ching explicitly, but we didn't feel the need to.  We would refer to it, saying things like, “I asked the I Ching,” or “The Ching said...,”  but we each assumed, correctly, that the other knew about it and understood the background.

  Jerry did bring me a deck of Morgan’s Tarot cards, which are a sort of zen re-working of the Tarot.  I thought it was wonderful and used them several times to give readings.  While they were still available I bought extra decks and gave them to people I thought would want to know about them.  Eventually Morgan (James Morrison Morrison, A Meager Prophet Orgznization, Boulder Crick, California) subtracted a few cards from the deck, he said to make it less confusing, but I prefer the original 88-card version.

  Here are a few cards from the deck.  In case you can't read them, the titles say: The Virgin: Sun Queen; Keep Up the Good Work; No Trips without a Tripper; The Universe: Not Unfolding the Way It Should.


  You can see it would be more fun to use, and less esoteric to interpret, than the usual tarot deck.

  If you search for “Morgan’s Tarot” you’ll find several web sites.  The deck has been republished by U.S. Games and is available from Amazon:

  http://www.aeclectic.net/tarot/cards/morgans/