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Jim Henson

b. 1933 – d. 1990

Creation Date

b. 1933 – d. 1990

Induction Year

2016

Jim Henson was a puppeteer, stop-motion animator, director, and producer whose wide breadth of creativity and imagination made him one of the top fantasy creators of the 20th century.

Born in Mississippi, Henson began crafting puppets in high school for a local Saturday morning children's show called The Junior Morning Show. During college, he developed his first show, Sam and Friends, for WRC television, which ultimately led to a request in 1969 to create characters like Bert and Ernie and Oscar the Grouch for the new children's show Sesame Street.

Henson is best known for his television series The Muppet Show, which aired from 1976 to 1981. Kermit, Miss Piggy, and the whole crew were a success, gaining them, and Henson, international fame and allowing the show to spin off several films.

In 1982, Henson created and directed the film The Dark Crystal (1982). Although the movie featured a full cast of puppets, it possessed a more serious nature in comparison to Henson's other projects. His next television project, Fraggle Rock (1983–1987), was a children's program that featured three very different puppet societies trying to live in harmony. Although Henson continued working with puppets, he also branched out and directed live-action films such as Labyrinth (1986), which starred David Bowie as The Goblin King.

Selected Bibliography/Related Works

Selected Filmography/Adaptations

Sesame Street, television series (1969)

The Muppets, film (1976)

The Dark Crystal, film (1982)

Fraggle Rock, film (1983)

Labyrinth, film (1986)

Associated Inductees