Big Bird in Japan

Big Bird in Japan was a follow-up special to Big Bird in China. Produced in association with NHK and filmed on location in Tokyo and Kyoto, the special debuted in Japan on NHK in the late fall of 1988, and on PBS in January 1989.

Big Bird and Barkley, having previously seen China independently, have signed up for a bus tour of Japan. The officious, hyper-organized guide has the trip organized to the detail, with little intended contact with the Japanese people. Wandering off, the pair are soon abandoned, but find aid from a friendly young woman, whose identity is eventually revealed through Japanese theater. The production included four original songs: "Homesick" and "Going to Kyoto" by Tony Geiss, and "Ichi, Ni, San" and "Moon, Moon" by Carol Hall.

Trivia
Although Brian Muehl appears as Barkley, when the special aired, Fred Garbo Garver had taken over the role on Sesame Street.

Cast

 * Caroll Spinney as Big Bird
 * Brian Muehl as Barkley
 * Maiko Kawakami as Young Woman/Kaguya-Hume
 * and


 * Masayuki Kato, Akira Muriyama, Kumiko Hironaka Hikojiro Matsumura, Fukami Harue, Mariko Hirano, Akiko Nemoto, Yoko Haruta
 * Pat Morita as "Bamboo Princess" Play Narrator (voice)

Crew

 * Directed by: Jon Stone
 * Written by: Jon Stone
 * Producer: Sonia Rosario
 * Associate Producer: Cheryl Ann Jung
 * Editor: Ilene Merenstein
 * Music composed and conducted by: Dick Lieb
 * For Jim Henson's Muppets: Kermit Love, Caroly Wilcox, Richard Termine, Connie Peterson, Mark Zeszotek
 * Executive Producer: Jon Stone

Reviews
"What we get is a kind of gentle travelogue, although this is not a very enthusiastic endorsement for guided tours... Wandering off on their own, the Muppets eventually conclude that they "saw more and learned more than if we never got lost at all."

...It is all very gentle. Big Bird's dizzy innocence may be getting a bit less ingratiating as the years roll by, but the gawky creature is thoroughly convincing when it declares: I'm homesick for Japan and I haven't even left. One interesting detail: As Big Bird and Barkley waddle and scamper through public streets, the passers-by seem remarkably unfazed. There is a reluctance to stare. The boundaries of Japanese politeness seem wonderfully wide."
 * --- John J. O'Connor, The New York Times. January 16, 1989.