Sesame Place is the official Sesame Street theme park located at 100 Sesame Road in Langhorne, Pennsylvania. First opening in 1980, the park is operated by SeaWorld Parks & Entertainment and is developed in cooperation with Sesame Workshop. The 16-acre park consists of water attractions, rides, shows and interactive entertainment, along with walk-around versions of the Sesame Street Muppets. Special events, including appearances by the Sesame Street cast, are held at the park as well.
History
Currently the park encompasses 16 acres, employs a staff of over 1,500 and is home to more than 30 rides, shows and attractions. However, the park began in 1980 as a small 3-acre theme park with just over 100 staff and very little attractions. The original park featured play areas and large computer labs where visitors could play educational video games and use basic art programs. Walk-around characters would not appear until years later.
Robert J. Caruso, executive vice president and general manager of Sesame Place, was quoted in 2005, saying:
Sesame Place added Sesame Neighborhood, a replica of Sesame Street in 1988. The neighborhood is the nation's only fully functioning replica of the street.
Over the years, water rides were added to the park, the first being Slippery Slopes. The park grew as a water park, adding more than 15 water rides, slide, playgrounds and pools. A large and elaborate lazy river, called Big Bird's Rambling River, opened in 1990. Twiddlebug Land's Sky Splash, the park's biggest water slide, opened in 1995.
In 1997, the park began investing in more "dry" rides. Although the park had several playgrounds and stage shows, the park was primarily a water park. In 1998 the park opened Vapor Trail, a Super Grover-themed roller coaster. Big Bird's Balloon Race and Grover's World Twirl, two other dry rides were added in 2002. In 2006, the park opened Elmo's World, a new area themed around the Sesame Street segment of the same name. Elmo's World opened with three new rides.
"Neighborhood Street Party", a choreographed musical parade replaced "The Rock Around the Block Parade" in 2010. The parade is held twice a day at the park. Additionally, new live stage shows have been introduced repeatedly throughout the years; including the currently running "Elmo Rocks!", "Let's Play Together!", and "Elmo the Musical Live!". A new area, Cookie's Monster Land, opened in May 2014.
Walk-around characters
The park is home to 15 characters from Sesame Street who wander around the park greeting guests in addition to appearing in shows and parades. Occasionally the characters sport different outfits and attire depending on the occasion, including formalwear, beachwear, safari attire, hipster threads or just their traditional garb.
Regular characters
- Abby Cadabby (2007 on)
- Baby Bear
- Bert (debut pre-1988)
- Big Bird (debut pre-1988)
- Cookie Monster (debut pre-1988)
- The Count
- Dinger (2014 on)
- Elmo
- Ernie (debut pre-1988)
- Grover (1988 on)
- Honker (1980s, 2014 on)
- Murray Monster (2011 on)
- Oscar the Grouch (1994 on)
- Prairie Dawn (1988 on)
- Rosita (1994 on)
- Telly Monster (1994 on)
- Zoe (1996 on).
Discontinued characters:
- The Honkers
- Jackman Wolf (removed in 2010)
- Tessie Twiddlebug (Tessie Twiddlebug)
- Thomas Twiddlebug
Trivia
- Muppeteer John Tartaglia performed in stage shows as Cookie Monster and Bert. [1]
- Brian Henson and Bill Barretta both worked at the park in 1980. Henson often jokes that the two met while cleaning toilets.[2]
- Local Boy Scout council, Bucks County Council, issued a Sesame Place council strip as part of their uniform in honor of the area landmark. Several variations of this council strip and an Order of the Arrow lodge patch were also created for the 2005 National Boy Scout Jamboree.
- An episode of reality show Jon and Kate Plus 8 was filmed at the park, as was an episode of Dinner Impossible.[3]
- Sonia Manzano and Alaina Reed visited the Park and talked to Guests, the space is now in Cookie's Monster Land
See also
- Sesame Place Attractions
- Sesame Place stage shows
- Sesame Place in Texas, active from 1982-1985
- Tokyo Sesame Place, Sesame Place theme park in Tokyo, Japan (no longer active)
- Parque Plaza Sesamo, theme park based on Plaza Sésamo in Monterrey, Mexico
Sources
- ↑ John Tartaglia Bio
- ↑ Plume, Ken.Interview with Ken Plume, August 2000
- ↑ Publicity shot, Facebook fan page for Sesame Place
External links
- SesamePlace.com - Official website
- Official social media: Blogger Facebook Twitter YouTube Flickr
- Jim Henson's Red Book entry
- Big Bird Bridge, a fan blog dedicated to the park