Muppet Wiki

Kermiteye Welcome to Muppet Wiki!


Please visit Special:Community to learn how you can collaborate with the editing community.

READ MORE

Muppet Wiki
Muppet Wiki
44,519
pages
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 11: Line 11:
 
Image:Cartoonleg.jpg|[[Jasper and Julius]]
 
Image:Cartoonleg.jpg|[[Jasper and Julius]]
 
Image:ChristopherClumsy.jpg|Christopher Clumsy and the hole
 
Image:ChristopherClumsy.jpg|Christopher Clumsy and the hole
 
Image:Cliffroberts.shapes.jpg|Shapes {{eka|3874}}
 
Image:2257p.jpg|Dry and Wet {{eka|2257}}
 
Image:2257p.jpg|Dry and Wet {{eka|2257}}
 
File:CRoberts.Mouseelephant.jpg|What if a mouse and an elephant switched bodies? {{eka|1044}}
 
Image:Appleflash.jpg
 
Image:Appleflash.jpg
 
Image:Robertsman.jpg
 
Image:Robertsman.jpg
Image:Cliffroberts.shapes.jpg|Shapes {{eka|3874}}
 
File:CRoberts.Mouseelephant.jpg|What if a mouse and an elephant switched bodies? {{eka|1044}}
 
 
</gallery>
 
</gallery>
   

Revision as of 00:05, 28 June 2009

Cliffroberts

Cliff Roberts, ca. 1950s

Cliff Roberts (1929-1999) was a cartoonist and animator who worked on inserts for Sesame Street as well as the spin-off comic strip and Sesame Street Magazine. Roberts spent much of his early career in New York City as a freelance commercial artist and director. He also worked as a photographer, with work displayed at the 1964 World's Fair, and contributed cartoons to Playboy and The New Yorker. He soon became a popular designer for animation, creating character model sheets for Terrytoons and UPA projects. Roberts' style, reflecting his commercial illustration background, involved flat but appealing forms and a minimal color palate; most of his characters were white blobs with occasional splashes of color.

For Sesame Street, Roberts created Jasper and Julius, two characters who would engage in debates over body parts, as well as Christopher Clumsy. These characters were brought over to Roberts' Sesame Street strip, alongside Big Bird, Oscar the Grouch and Cookie Monster.

Roberts later worked on the Saturday morning cartoons The Smurfs, Scooby-Doo, and The Pink Panther, and illustrated the Langston Hughes book The First Book of Jazz. He retired in 1993.

Characters

External links