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The Number Three Ball Film is a Sesame Street film from 1970 with an electronic, carnival-like soundtrack that follows a small, red ball as it rolls throughout a toy roller coaster. The ball makes its way throughout a number of mechanical devices that help to propel it through the track, occasionally going past three items as an off-screen child voiceover (Brian Henson) counts to 3. When it reaches the end, it drops into a metal box. Originally, the film ended with the ball being ground up into a fine powder. However, kids found this ending too tragic, and a new ending was later shot on August 2, 1974, in which it seems to turn into three cherries that are plopped down onto three sundaes that roll by on a conveyor belt. A little girl (played by Heather Henson) eats one of them. The latter

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  • Number Three Ball Film
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  • The Number Three Ball Film is a Sesame Street film from 1970 with an electronic, carnival-like soundtrack that follows a small, red ball as it rolls throughout a toy roller coaster. The ball makes its way throughout a number of mechanical devices that help to propel it through the track, occasionally going past three items as an off-screen child voiceover (Brian Henson) counts to 3. When it reaches the end, it drops into a metal box. Originally, the film ended with the ball being ground up into a fine powder. However, kids found this ending too tragic, and a new ending was later shot on August 2, 1974, in which it seems to turn into three cherries that are plopped down onto three sundaes that roll by on a conveyor belt. A little girl (played by Heather Henson) eats one of them. The latter
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Publisher
  • Scott Textor Music Publishing, Inc.
Writer
abstract
  • The Number Three Ball Film is a Sesame Street film from 1970 with an electronic, carnival-like soundtrack that follows a small, red ball as it rolls throughout a toy roller coaster. The ball makes its way throughout a number of mechanical devices that help to propel it through the track, occasionally going past three items as an off-screen child voiceover (Brian Henson) counts to 3. When it reaches the end, it drops into a metal box. Originally, the film ended with the ball being ground up into a fine powder. However, kids found this ending too tragic, and a new ending was later shot on August 2, 1974, in which it seems to turn into three cherries that are plopped down onto three sundaes that roll by on a conveyor belt. A little girl (played by Heather Henson) eats one of them. The latter version is the only one that has been released on video. It appears that Brian Henson's narration has either been rerecorded or replaced by Heather Henson, as it is played in a noticeably higher pitch than in the original video. Frank Oz recalls the production of the film in an interview with Kenneth Plume for IGN FilmForce: “The only [directing] I ever did myself [on Sesame Street] was a bizarre thing with this ball for the number 3 where I built an entire kind of bizarre wire sculpture and shot it over many months. Looking back on it, I'm thinking "My God, why the f*** was I doing all of that work?" But it was fun to do. I wouldn't call that directing. I was in a gallery doing wire sculpture and one of my pieces sold, so that's where that came from. It was something where I could control my own little world, but it wasn't directing. It was creating and then just kind of calling the shots.” In addition to directing and building the wire sculpture, Frank Oz sequenced the film by drawing on note cards. Jim Henson produced the film and also drew on some of the cards.
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