Dave Goelz (b. July 16, 1946) has been one of the lead Muppet performers for over 50 years, performing Gonzo, Beauregard, Dr. Bunsen Honeydew, Zoot, Boober Fraggle, Uncle Traveling Matt, Stinky the Skunk, and Rugby Tiger, as well as succeeding the role of Waldorf from Jim Henson. He is one of the few major performers to have no prior experience as either an actor or puppeteer.
Early years[]
David Charles Goelz[1] was born in Burbank, California. He had an interest in puppetry as a child, including an affinity for the children's television show Time for Beany, but after high school attended the Los Angeles Art Center's College of Design and began work as an industrial designer. The mechanically-minded Goelz worked for such companies as John Deere, American Airlines, and Hewlett-Packard. However, when Sesame Street premiered, he was fascinated by the craftsmanship, as he recalled in a Muppet Central interview:
As Goelz later told Disney twenty-three:
While working full-time for an electronics firm, Goelz began dabbling with puppet building.
Building Muppets[]
In 1972, Goelz met Frank Oz at a puppetry festival, and during a vacation in New York City, he attended the daily Sesame Street tapings. A few months later, Goelz showed his design portfolio to Jim Henson, and in 1973, he was offered a job with Henson Associates as a part-time puppet builder. His first assignment was to build puppets and design effects for a proposed Broadway show. However, the show was soon abandoned in favor of an ABC pilot, The Muppets Valentine Show, for which Goelz built characters and got his first crack at performing, playing Brewster, whom he also designed.
Upon Goelz's return to California, he learned that he had been replaced by his electronics employer, so he set up shop creating puppets for industrial videos. He performed Ray the Raychem Seal in one such video. (YouTube) Eight months later, in the fall of 1974, Henson offered him a full-time position as a builder/designer, and occasional performer in specials, while still allowing him to keep his industrial clients. Returning to New York, Goelz began work on The Muppet Show: Sex and Violence, for which he built the new host character, Nigel. Working from sketches by Jim Henson, Michael K. Frith, and Bonnie Erickson, he also built Animal, Floyd Pepper, and Zoot, the latter becoming his first major character.
The birth of Gonzo[]
In 1976, Goelz joined the rest of the Henson team and flew to London to begin work on The Muppet Show. In addition to reprising his role of Zoot and playing background roles, as in the earlier specials, Goelz was promoted to "Principal Muppet Performer" with the starring role of Gonzo. The puppet had debuted in The Great Santa Claus Switch, as Cigar Box Frackle, and had made brief appearances in Muppet Meeting Films and Herb Alpert and the TJB, with different performers. The sad-eyed creation was now given a permanent name and puppeteer. However, in addition to playing Gonzo, Goelz was still employed in the Muppet Workshop.
Goelz recalled the hectic schedule of working full-time behind the scenes and in front of the cameras in a 2004 Film Threat interview:
Gonzo, that first season, like many of the new Muppet Show creations, was a work in progress, and especially for Goelz, playing his first starring character and major speaking role. When he was assigned the character, he panicked: "I have no voice!"
He thought of the voice the morning before the first taping performance. As recalled later, Goelz thought that he had the worst voice out of all the Muppet performers,[4] and was scared the first time he had to sing.[5]
The early Gonzo, with a permanently sad expression, inspired a similarly depressed portrayal from the novice puppeteer: "The downcast eyes made him easy to play because that was exactly how I felt. I was an impostor in show business. I was learning how to perform and to puppeteer on the job."[6]
In that first season, Gonzo was a misfit and out of place, according to Goelz, which was how he saw himself as a performer:
Looking at the character in retrospect at MuppetFest, he recalled that "over the years, he sort of evolved along with me... I was an impostor in show business. In the first season, Gonzo is always self-effacing and embarrassed. But he knows he has something special." Adding to Goelz's insecurity was the jaded veteran crew members of ATV Studios, who had worked with the likes of Julie Andrews and Bing Crosby, and were thus hard to impress.
Finally, towards the end of the first season, Gonzo had a scene where he had to shout, in amazement, "No!" Jim Henson told him to go bigger, so Goelz obliged with an overemphatic "NO!" This earned his first laugh from the crew members.
As Goelz increased in confidence, and Gonzo transitioned from a nervous depressed failure to a manic, confident stuntman, other facets of the character fell into place. The second season introduces his romantic fascination with poultry. As the performer reminisced in Of Muppets and Men:
Muppet Show characters[]
In addition to the starring role of Gonzo, during the first season of The Muppet Show, Goelz also had the slightly less challenging but still time consuming supporting roles of Zoot and another new creation, scientist Bunsen Honeydew.
In later seasons, a new Goelz character was added, the well-meaning but slow-witted janitor, Beauregard:
Fraggle Rock[]
With the debut of Fraggle Rock, Goelz was cast as one of the five leads, the depressed, pessimistic Boober Fraggle. Boober stemmed from something Goelz had said while working on The Muppet Show, that he was so busy on the show that the only things he had time to worry about were death and laundry.[8] At Muppetfest, Goelz related the process of character creation for the show: "They looked at the performers, and picked out our flaws, and made characters out of them. They denied it... So that's how I ended up with Boober, the suspicious, paranoid character." In the Fraggle Rock: Complete First Season interviews, Goelz also mentioned that "I was cast with Boober, who was sort of grumpy and inflexible, just like I could be a lot of the time." Demonstrating his versatility, he also played the pompous Uncle Traveling Matt, the rat-like Philo, and the cantankerous World's Oldest Fraggle, as well as a variety of guest characters and memorable incidentals, such as the obese Large Marvin. In the Fraggle Rock: Complete Second Season interviews, Goelz talked about how he developed Traveling Matt's character, from the starting point as Matt being simply a misinterpreting chronicler of human life, to determining that Matt was also inherently clumsy and inept, which led to Matt covering up his blunders in his postcards and developing a comedic air of ostentation.
Beyond the original series, Goelz has reprised his main characters for various ancillary appearances. For the Fraggle Rock: Rock On! shorts, produced in the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic, Goelz was cautious about performing puppets, and when the Henson Company offered to send the Fraggle puppets, he declined. Instead, he prerecorded the voices of Boober and Uncle Traveling Matt (while John Tartaglia did the actual puppetry).[9] For the reboot series Fraggle Rock: Back to the Rock, Goelz reprises Boober, Matt, and the World's Oldest Fraggle (dubbing their voices as with before), and serves as co-executive producer along with Karen Prell.
Movies and beyond[]
Goelz continued to reprise his roles as Gonzo and Bunsen in feature films, slowly adding more aspects to "the weirdo," and also worked on Henson's forays into "realistic" fantasy, The Dark Crystal (performing the Garthim Master SkekUng and the dog-like Fizzgig), and Labyrinth (playing a variety of roles, notably Sir Didymus).
As the '80s progressed, in addition to switching between the manic Gonzo and the phlegmatic Boober (a variety which Goelz recalled as "stimulating"), Goelz played occasional new roles in specials, notably Rugby Tiger in The Christmas Toy:
Another new character was Digit, a semi-robotic person on The Jim Henson Hour.
1990s to present[]
Following Jim Henson's sudden death in 1990, and with Frank Oz continuing to focus heavily on directing, Gonzo the character and Goelz the performer gained increased significance, starting with the first new feature, The Muppet Christmas Carol. By performing Gonzo as Charles Dickens as narrator, Goelz (accompanied by Steve Whitmire as Rizzo the Rat, a pairing which would be repeated in subsequent productions) largely dominated the Muppet side of the film, and received top billing as "Muppet Performer" (a distinction which would continue through Muppet Treasure Island and Muppets from Space) "...when we did The Muppet Christmas Carol, [Gonzo] developed a soulful side. He played the part of Dickens, and I just loved doing that. It just paralleled my own growth. Jerry Juhl wrote it as a way of getting Dickensian prose into the movie. But the fact that he chose Gonzo was very satisfying to me. And I think it was because he saw me changing and I think he felt that Gonzo could change too."[11] Goelz also took over the part of Waldorf from Henson.
Apart from a brief stint operating the face of Earl Sinclair and performing hand-puppet guest characters on Dinosaurs, as well as reprising Rugby in The Secret Life of Toys, Goelz' most notable new television character was Stinky the Skunk in The Animal Show. Otherwise, the puppeteer remained mostly occupied with Gonzo in movies, videos, and the 1996 series Muppets Tonight, the latter introducing a few new characters such as Randy Pig and Bill the Bubble Guy. Goelz also performed a handful of minor Sesame Street characters, and appeared in The Adventures of Elmo in Grouchland as Humongous Chicken. Goelz guest-starred on Bear in the Big Blue House as Jack the Dog in the two-part Berry Bear Christmas. Goelz took over the role of Chip starting with the 2015 series The Muppets.
Puppeteer credits[]
- for a complete character gallery, see Dave Goelz characters
- The Muppet Show Characters: Gonzo, Dr. Bunsen Honeydew, Zoot, Beauregard, Waldorf (since 1992), and others...
- Sesame Street Characters: Piño, The Elephant, Mr. Between, Rocky, China Shop Clerk, Tom Pipersson, and others...
- The Muppet Show: Sex and Violence: Avarice, Brewster, Zoot, Duke, The San Francisco Earthquake
- Emmet Otter's Jug-Band Christmas: Wendell Porcupine, Will Possum, Catfish
- The Muppets Go Hollywood
- The Muppet Movie: Doglion
- The Great Muppet Caper
- The Dark Crystal: Fizzgig, SkekUng (both puppetry only)
- Fraggle Rock: Boober Fraggle, Philo, Uncle Traveling Matt, Sidebottom, World's Oldest Fraggle, Wrench Doozer, and others...
- The Muppets Take Manhattan: Chester Rat, Bill, Penguin, Dog
- The Muppets: A Celebration of 30 Years: Grapefruit
- Labyrinth: Firey 3, Left Door Knocker, One of The Four Guards, Sir Didymus, Wiseman's Hat (all puppetry only)
- The Christmas Toy: Rugby Tiger, Ditz
- Inner Tube: Jake
- A Muppet Family Christmas
- Wow, You're a Cartoonist!
- The Jim Henson Hour: Digit and others...
- The Muppets at Walt Disney World
- The Muppets Celebrate Jim Henson
- Dinosaurs: Earl Sinclair (face, through Episode 207), General Chow (puppeteer, "When Food Goes Bad")
- Muppet*Vision 3D
- Muppet Meeting Films: Chairman Blodgett, Franklin ("The Meeting That Would Not Die"), Mulligan, Smerdley
- The Muppet Christmas Carol: Gonzo (as Charles Dickens), Waldorf (as Robert Marley), Bunsen Honeydew, Betina Cratchit, Whatnots, Pigs
- Muppet Classic Theater: Randy Pig
- The Animal Show: Stinky the Skunk
- The Secret Life of Toys
- Muppet Treasure Island: Gonzo, Dr. Bunsen Honeydew, Waldorf (as Figurehead of the Hispaniola), Zoot
- Muppets Tonight: Randy Pig, Bill the Bubble Guy, Gary Cahuenga, and others...
- Muppets from Space: The Birdman
- The Adventures of Elmo in Grouchland: Humongous Chicken
- Bear in the Big Blue House: Jack the Dog ("A Berry Bear Christmas part 1 and part 2")
- Muppet RaceMania
- Kermit's Swamp Years
- It's a Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie
- Muppets Party Cruise
- Statler and Waldorf: From the Balcony (episodes 1-8)
- Pepe's Profiles
- The Muppets' Wizard of Oz
- The Muppet Show: Season One main menus
- The Muppets on Muppets
- Disney Extreme Digital: Penguins, Singing Food
- Muppet viral videos: Pumpkins, Rabbits
- Studio DC: Almost Live
- A Muppets Christmas: Letters to Santa
- The Muppets Kitchen with Cat Cora
- The Muppets: Kermit Moopet, Whatnot Reporter
- Muppets Most Wanted: Baby
- The Muppets 2015 Presentation Pilot: Chip
- The Muppets
- The Muppets Take the Bowl
- The Muppets Take the O2
- The Dark Crystal: Age of Resistance: Baffi
- Fraggle Rock: Rock On!: Boober and Uncle Traveling Matt (voices only)
- Muppets Haunted Mansion: Old Gonzo
- Fraggle Rock: Back to the Rock: Boober, Uncle Traveling Matt, The World's Oldest Fraggle (voices only)
- The Muppets Mayhem: Zoot, Jimmy Shoe, Waldorf
Other credits[]
- As a child, Goelz appeared as an extra in the 1961 Disney film The Parent Trap.[12][13]
- Goelz voiced Subconcious Guard Frank (alongside Frank Oz as Dave) in the 2015 animated film Inside Out.
- Goelz provides the voice of Figment in the "Journey into Imagination with Figment" ride at Walt Disney World. Figment was originally voiced by Billy Barty in the original version of the attraction, "Journey into Imagination."
- In 2018, Goelz voiced the character of Mr. Caterpillar in the Netflix series Ask the StoryBots episode "How Do Flowers Grow?"
- see also: Dave Goelz cameos
Notes[]
- The Animal Show character Dave the Human is based on Goelz.
- With Steve Whitmire's departure in 2016, Goelz is the last core Muppet performer who worked on The Muppet Show still performing his characters regularly.
- According to puppet builder Jane Gootnick, Goelz built the first Uncle Deadly puppet.[14]
- Dave's daughter Amy has served as a production assistant in Muppet productions, including Sesame Street Season 54 (as Child Talent Assistant) and Jim Henson: Idea Man.
Quotes[]
See also[]
Sources[]
- ↑ Entry in the California Birth Index
- ↑ Disney twenty-three, Winter 2011 issue, page 50
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Film Threat - The Geeks Shall Inherit the Earth: Dave Goelz Under the Stage (Part 1)
- ↑ Muppet Morsels -- episode 111
- ↑ Muppet Morsels -- episode 116
- ↑ Goelz, Dave. MuppetFest, "Creating the Classic Muppets Panel." 2001.
- ↑ Finch, Christopher. Of Muppets and Men. Alfred A. Knopf, 1981. p. 40 (Beauregard quote), 85 (Zoot and Bunsen)
- ↑ Muppet Morsels -- episode 121
- ↑ Museum of the Moving Image - "Jim Henson's World: Fraggle Rock Rocks On!" livestream (May 23, 2020)
- ↑ Interview with Ken Plume
- ↑ 11.0 11.1 Film Threat - The Geeks Shall Inherit the Earth: Dave Goelz Under the Stage (Part 2)
- ↑ ToughPigs Presents CABIN FEVER with Craig Shemin (at 22:08), April 15, 2020.
- ↑ An Ode to Gonzo: The Dave Goelz Tribute Event, October 17, 2016
- ↑ confirmed via private communication with Scott Hanson