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The Muppets have borrowed many motifs from vaudeville or burlesque, especially in their earliest variety show appearances. Drag, or female impersonation, was one of these recurring motifs, sometimes deliberately intended as such, or simply recycling a male puppet in a wig or dress for a specific sketch. The practice has its roots in many vaudeville comics who had female characters, as well as the concept of the pantomime dame (where matrons or ugly stepsisters in stage were always men in drag and young boys were usually women in drag and all the women in Shakespearean plays were portrayed by young men in drag).

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  • Cross-dressing characters
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  • The Muppets have borrowed many motifs from vaudeville or burlesque, especially in their earliest variety show appearances. Drag, or female impersonation, was one of these recurring motifs, sometimes deliberately intended as such, or simply recycling a male puppet in a wig or dress for a specific sketch. The practice has its roots in many vaudeville comics who had female characters, as well as the concept of the pantomime dame (where matrons or ugly stepsisters in stage were always men in drag and young boys were usually women in drag and all the women in Shakespearean plays were portrayed by young men in drag).
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dbkwik:muppet/prop...iPageUsesTemplate
abstract
  • The Muppets have borrowed many motifs from vaudeville or burlesque, especially in their earliest variety show appearances. Drag, or female impersonation, was one of these recurring motifs, sometimes deliberately intended as such, or simply recycling a male puppet in a wig or dress for a specific sketch. The practice has its roots in many vaudeville comics who had female characters, as well as the concept of the pantomime dame (where matrons or ugly stepsisters in stage were always men in drag and young boys were usually women in drag and all the women in Shakespearean plays were portrayed by young men in drag). Kermit the Frog in particular, in his earliest years, often donned a wig to lip sync to female vocalists such as Keely Smith or Rosemary Clooney. In an early appearance on The Today Show, the host complimented Jane Henson, performing the character opposite Jim Henson's Sam, on the "feminine" quality she brought to the character (though Jane tried to stress that the puppet was named Kermit, and normally male). The Whatnots, Anything Muppets, Grouches, Unisaurs, and many have appeared incongruously as both genders. On still other occasions, instead of a drag performance, a puppet is refurbished or recycled as a differently gendered character, a practice done with both male and female Muppets, for example, Miss Kitty was recycled for the Whatnot Monster's love in the "All of Me" number in The Muppet Show episode 108. In "The Limerick Song (Come On and Sing Along With Me)", when Ernie sings a limerick about Bert, Bert complains about the fact that he's "always the one in the skirt". __TOC__
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