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
Line 27: Line 27:
 
MV3D-WaldoMickey.jpg|Waldo as Mickey Mouse.
 
MV3D-WaldoMickey.jpg|Waldo as Mickey Mouse.
 
Waldo_art.jpg|Original character sketch of Waldo C. Graphic
 
Waldo_art.jpg|Original character sketch of Waldo C. Graphic
  +
HowWaldoworks.jpg|How Waldo works diagram by Pacific Data Imaging
 
Whitmire grignon.png|Steve Whitmire and Rex Grignon perform Waldo
 
Whitmire grignon.png|Steve Whitmire and Rex Grignon perform Waldo
 
</gallery>
 
</gallery>

Revision as of 16:32, 25 February 2020

Waldo
PERFORMER Steve Whitmire
DEBUT 1989
DESIGN Kirk Thatcher designer
  Pacific Data Images animation
The_Jim_Henson_Hour_"Waldo"

The Jim Henson Hour "Waldo"

Jim Henson explains to Jojo how Waldo is performed.

Waldo front view

Waldo C. Graphic, "the spirit of 3D", is a computer graphic, as his name suggests, rather than a standard fleece-and-foam Muppet. As such, he's able to morph into any shape imaginable. He has the playful nature of a clown, yet with the intelligence of a computer. Waldo first appeared in 1989 on The Jim Henson Hour where he was the demographics expert for MuppeTelevision. His most prominent role was in the Disney theme park attraction Muppet*Vision 3D, engaging with the Muppets and audience members, attempting to get out of the film, and even morphing into Mickey Mouse (voiced by Wayne Allwine).

Despite his CG nature, Waldo was controlled in real time by a puppeteer, making use of a mitten-like motion-capture device called a waldo (which he was named after). Jim Henson had begun experimenting with creating digital characters in the mid-1980s and Waldo's underlying technology grew out of experiments conducted to create a computer generated version of Kermit the Frog.[1]

Waldo's strength as a computer generated puppet was that he could be controlled by a single puppeteer[2] in real-time, in concert with conventional puppets. The computer image of Waldo was mixed with the video feed of the camera focused on physical puppets so that all of the puppeteers in a scene could perform together. Afterward, in post production, he would be re-rendered in full resolution, adding a few dynamic elements on top of the performed motion.[3]

Waldo's design was led by Kirk Thatcher with input from a variety of other artists, including Timothy Young (who provided concept sketches) and animated by Pacific Data Images,[2] now known as PDI/DreamWorks. Thatcher was greatly influenced by Chris Wedge's 1987 CG Short, "Balloon Guy".[4] Jim Henson performed Waldo in a special demonstration of how he worked in The Jim Henson Hour episode "Secrets of the Muppets."

In 2011, a Waldo "Template:Medialink" was produced in the second series of Muppet Vinylmation figures. Funko also produced a Waldo figure in its fifth wave of Park Starz in 2017.

Appearances

A list of Waldo's appearances (including his transformations).

Sources

  1. Finch, Christopher. Jim Henson: The Works (New York: Random House, 1993)
  2. 2.0 2.1 Henson.com Featured Creature: Behind the Scenes @ Archive.org
  3. Walters, Graham. The Story of Waldo C. Graphic. Course Notes: 3D Character Animation by Computer, ACM SIGGRAPH '89, Boston, July 1989, pp. 65-79
  4. Jim Henson Company Podcast, April 18, 2011, Interview with Kirk Thatcher

Links