Bert and Ernie are two Muppets on the long-running PBS children's television show Sesame Street. The two appear together in numerous skits, forming a comic duo that is one of the centerpieces of the program. In the tradition of many movie comic duos, notably Abbott and Costello, the interplay forms between the mischievous innocent (Ernie) and the world-weary partner (Bert).
Ernie was originally performed by Jim Henson until his death in 1990. Muppeteer Steve Whitmire inherited the character. Bert was originally performed by now-director Frank Oz.
When Henson died, Frank Oz commented that he "couldn't imagine doing Bert and Ernie without Jim." Eventually, however, Oz would perform Bert opposite Steve Whitmire's Ernie. Beginning around 2001, Eric Jacobson began to be phased in as Bert's primary performer, and Jacobson now exclusively performs the character.
Ernie's rendition of the song Rubber Duckie was released as a single in 1970 and reached the top 40 on the Billboard charts.
Characters named Bert and Ernie appear in the film It's a Wonderful Life as a cop and a taxi driver, respectively, though the use of the names by Henson is said to be a coincidence.
Ernie and Bert share an apartment in the basement of 123 Sesame Street. Although they sleep in separate beds, this has led to the occasional suggestion that they are representations of gay lovers. This is denied by Sesame Workshop, the corporation that owns the show and the characters, but the idea is sufficiently widespread that it has been used as the basis of jokes by comedians or other TV shows. In an early episode of Saturday Night Live, in Chevy Chase's "Weekend Update" news satire segment, a picture of Bert and Ernie was displayed, and Chevy read from his script that "Bert and Ernie confirmed this week that they are practicing homosexuals." Whether this SNL joke was the source of this rumor, or was merely a reference to the rumor, is unclear. In a Family Guy episode entitled Mind over Murder, the main character Peter Griffin watches a show called "Homicide: Life on Sesame Street", a parody of the real life show Life on the Street, that depicts Ernie and Bert as a bickering married couple, with Bert playing the role of a gruff, alcoholic police detective and Ernie as a "nagging wife".
The characters Rod and Nicky, from the Broadway musical Avenue Q, were designed as a comic takeoff of Bert and Ernie. In the musical, Rod (based on Bert) is a closeted homosexual; Nicky (based on Ernie) is straight and encourages Rod to come out of the closet.
An example Bert and Ernie skit is the banana in my ear joke:
Celebrity duos | Sesame Street Muppet characters | Fictional pairs | Epi y Blas | Bert en Ernie
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Bert and Ernie".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world