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{{dablink|This page is about a Sesame Street character. For other uses, see ].}} {{Short description|Sesame Street Muppet character}}
{{About|the Sesame Street character}}
]'']]
{{Use mdy dates|date=September 2021}}
]
{{more citations needed|date=June 2018}}
]'', ], on the cover of The Best of Kermit on Sesame Street.]]
{{Infobox character
], a classic Sesame Street book title]]
| name = Grover
| series = ]
| image = Grover.JPG
| caption =
| first = {{ubl|'']'' on December 24, 1967 (as Gleep)|'']'' on May 1, 1970 (as Grover)}}
| last =
| creator = {{ubl|]|]<ref>{{cite web|last=Sloane|first=Judy|title=Sesame Street's 40th Anniversary – Puppeteers Eric Jacobson & David Rudman|date=November 17, 2009|url=http://filmreviewonline.com/2009/11/17/sesame-streets-40th-anniversary-puppeteers-eric-jacobson-david-rudman/|publisher=Film Review Online|access-date=August 16, 2013}}</ref>}}
| lbl1 = Performed by
| data1 = {{Unbulleted list|Frank Oz (1970–2012)|] (1998–present)}}
| alias = Super Grover
| gender = Male
| species = Muppet Monster
}}
'''Grover''' is a blue ] character on the ]/] children's television show '']''. Self-described as lovable, cute, and furry, he is a blue ] who rarely uses ] when he speaks or sings. Grover was originally performed by ] from his earliest appearances. ] has performed the character regularly from the year 1998 onwards.


==Origins==
'''Grover''' is a friendly, childlike ] in the ] '']''. His character is multi-talented, taking on many different roles and professions throughout the series run.
A prototype version of Grover appeared on '']'' on ] in 1967. This puppet had greenish-brown fur and a red nose. He also had a raspier voice – somewhat like Cookie Monster's – and was played a bit more unkempt than Grover would later behave. The monster was referred to as "Gleep", a monster in ]. He later made a cameo appearance in '']'' in 1968 with the Rock and Roll Monster. In 1969, clad in a necktie, he appeared in the ''Sesame Street Pitch Reel'' in the board-room sequences. During the first season of '']'', the character was nicknamed "Fuzzyface" or "The Hairy One", though neither would be used for his actual name. The muppet was not yet the "cute" character he would become, and he was not all that different in personality from the other monsters with whom he interacted.


In his book ''The Tipping Point'', author ] notes that the character "was used in promotional films for ]". The puppet first received the name "Grover" on May 1, 1970.
Grover described himself on the show as a "cute furry, little monster." He is fuzzy and blue, and much like other Muppets on the show in appearance. Grover does not use ] when speaking, giving him a distinctive vocal pattern in comparison to most television characters.


In an appearance on '']'' on May 31, 1970, the character acquired his present appearance with blue fur and a pink nose. In this appearance, ] tried to sing "]" (accompanying himself on ]), but Grover repeatedly interrupted him. The updated puppet was later used beginning in the second season of '']'', by this point fully formed into his current identity.
In '']'', it is learned that Grover has a toy named Teddy Monster, and an exotically-finned goldfish.

Grover, along with ], is one of the more popular characters created during the show's run, partially for his silly manner of speaking and also for his numerous imaginary adventures (namely as ]), adventures children felt they could easily identify with.


==Appearances== ==Appearances==
] (right) meets with Grover to talk about refugees at the United Nations in New York City, 2016.]]
The Grover character appeared in the following memorable skits:
* 'Fuzzy and Blue'
* 'Over and Under and Through'
* 'Sharing', with Grover and ]
* Grover takes the stairs, while ] takes the elevator
* Grover and ] as policemen singing the ] (may only be shown on ].)
* 'Professor Grover's Tub Tips' with ].
* The ] series
* Various ] skits
* Various skits at Charlie's Restaurant, commonly as a waiter messing up situations for the ] Muppet character
*] singing to him when he was shy
He is perhaps most remembered for the now famous "Near, Far" sketch, in which he demonstrated the positional concepts until he fainted from exhaustion, and also for his role as ].


===Charlie's Restaurant===
==Behind the scenes==
One of the more frequent sketch segments featuring Grover involves him taking a series of customer service jobs. One of his customers is always Mr. Johnson, a balding, mustachioed customer who invariably becomes frustrated at Grover's bumbling service and/or his (Grover's) insistence that he is serving him properly.
Grover was originally performed by ] (now ]) ]. Since Oz has left the series, newcomer ] has taken over the role. Many note the similarity between Grover's voice and that of ], also an Oz character.


The first Grover-Mr. Johnson series of sketches, set at "Charlie's Restaurant", aired in the early 1970s; here, Grover is employed as a ] and Mr. Johnson is his customer.
Grover may have been named after former ] president ]. It is also speculated, however, that the ] and ] chose this name because it was out of vogue and unlikely to unintentionally offend many viewers.


The sketches followed the same basic premise: Mr. Johnson would order a menu item, Grover would serve the customer, a disagreement results (usually) as a result of Grover's mistakes, and Grover attempting (often, more than once) to correct the mistake with varied degrees of success. Under this backdrop, the sketches served to teach the childhood audience basic concepts such as same and different, big and little, hot and cold, the alphabet, following directions and patience, among other things. This was even parodied in an episode of '']'', where Grover had to keep rushing out of the kitchen to tell Johnson that they had run out of parts of his order. Naturally, ] introduced this performance as "Much Ado About Nothing".
In the children's book "The Monster at the End of This Book", Grover goes through greater and greater efforts to keep the reader from turning the pages of the book, because there is a monster at the end of the book. Despite Grover nailing pages together and building a brick wall to block access to the end of the book, eventually the reader does reach the end of the book, where it is discovered that Grover is, in fact, the monster at the end of the book.


Repeats of the "Charlie's Restaurant" series of sketches aired for many years on ''Sesame Street''. In the years since, new Grover-Mr. Johnson sketches have been produced, with Grover taking other customer service jobs and Mr. Johnson as his hapless customer. Every time, Mr. Johnson recognizes Grover as "that waiter from Charlie's".
==International==
Sesame Street is localised for some different markets, and Grover is often renamed. In Portugal, he's ''Gualter'' (Walter), and, in some skits, he served at a restaurant (Charlie's Restaurant - see ]) whose never appearing female cook was ''Cabidela''.


Grover's jobs have ranged from a taxi driver and a photographer to a flight attendant and ] artist. One sketch parodied the ABC television series '']'' in a segment where Grover began remodeling Mr. Johnson's home despite his express wishes. In another one, Mr. Johnson is the only patron, and Grover is the only actor, for a production of ''Spider-Monster: The Musical'', a parody of the musical '']''. The play is, of course, a complete calamity and finally comes crashing down on both of them.
==See also==

* ]
===Other segments===
* ]
Grover also has an instructional persona who wears a ] to provide educational context for simple, everyday things. His lessons are often wrong, leaving himself open to correction by a group of Muppets. Combined with the failings of the Super Grover character, this means that Grover can be very self-conscious and timid. He is often a source of slapstick humor and often accidentally injures himself.

Early in the series, Grover would often greet ] by running up to him and shouting, "Hey, froggy babeee!" and then giving him a hard slap on the back, which knocked him over.

"Global Grover" is a more recent series of segments, in which Grover hosts a trip to a foreign country to learn about their culture and customs.

In 2010, Grover starred in a parody of an ] Commercial called "Smell Like a Monster" based on "]", albeit a ] with "two tickets to the thing you love" bit his nose and he rode a cow rather than a horse.

===Super Grover===
Grover has a semi-secret superhero identity as the well-meaning but inept ''Super Grover'', sometimes presented as the alter ego of Grover Kent, "ace doorknob salesman for Acme, Inc". Originally his superhero costume consisted of a pink cape and medieval knight's helmet, with a ]-style crest on both the cape and his T-shirt, bearing a letter "G" on his chest instead of "S". During the 1970s and 1980s, '']'' ran a series of Super Grover sketches spoofing the classic '']'' series (in the opening of these, his name was hyphenated "Super-Grover"). An announcer (]) introduced each episode with the lines:
{{blockquote|
Presenting the further adventures of everybody's favorite hero. The man who's faster than lightning, stronger than steel, and smarter than a speeding bullet. It's... Super Grover!
}}

With that, a fanfare sounds, Super Grover bursts through a paper wall bearing his crest, fruitlessly tries to move his helmet up off his eyes, and adds, "And I am cute, too!"

{{blockquote|
''Announcer:'' And now, on to our story.

''Super Grover:'' Yes! On to our story!
}}

From there, episodes followed a simple formula: Super Grover is flying somewhere over Metro City when he hears the cries of a Muppet child in some small trouble and immediately sails in to assist. The excited child is quickly disillusioned as Super Grover crash-lands nearby. From there, Grover continues to be enthusiastic but no help whatsoever, his "dramatic" feats of strength or speed serving only to kill time while the child solves the problem on their own and wanders off. By then, Grover's efforts have usually landed him in a comical predicament of his own.

Super Grover has appeared in the '']'' theatrical films '']'' (1985) and '']'' (1999), where it is revealed he stretches his arms out and spins into his costume in homage to '']''), as well as the PBS special '']'' (1983), where he first appears as regular Grover, but quickly changes into his costume in an attempt to make friends with a suit of armor (having no idea that there's no one inside it).

For ''Sesame Street''{{'}}s 41st season in 2010, the character was revamped as ''Super Grover 2.0'', who debuted on '']'', flying in and crash-landing behind the chair where he was meant to sit. His new costume consists of a Roman Centurion-style helmet with a spiked crest, a red cape, metal gauntlets and boots, a utility belt, and a black rubber vest, most of which resembles bike racing gear. Both the cape and the vest are adorned with his crest, now with a lightning bolt added behind the "G". The helmet has a hinged visor which still tends to fall over Grover's eyes, and his tagline is: ''Super Grover 2.0 – He Shows Up!''

===Grover's Mother ("Mommy")===
"Grover's Mommy" plays an integral but often unrecognized role on '']''. She has been seen almost exclusively in print, including the many illustrated books starring Grover. She was also occasionally seen in photographs, as a photo puppet, such as on the cover of Volume 4 of ''The Sesame Street Treasury''. Over the course of time, her appearance has fluctuated greatly.

Her earliest known appearance as a ] is a 1970s sketch in which Grover speaks to the audience about being afraid of the dark. At the end of the sketch, his mom (]) enters his room to kiss him goodnight. In this appearance, the puppet used for her is recycled from ]. Another early appearance (circa 1981) involves his mother (]) coming into the bathroom while Grover is telling the audience about how to take a bath.

She has more recently appeared (performed by ]) in a brief '']'' sequence (from the "Families" episode), with her son as his alter-ego Super Grover, as her own alter-ego, "Super-Mommy". Grover crashlands, screaming "Moooommy!" and his mom follows shouting "Soooonny!" crashing on top of him. They recover, acknowledge each other, and almost hug, but they both fall down before they are able to.

==Books==
In the children's book '']'' (1971), Grover goes to great effort to keep the reader from turning the pages of the book, because there is a monster on the final page. Grover ties pages down, nails pages to the next one and builds a brick wall to block access; at the end it is discovered that the monster at the end of the book is Grover himself, who is mortified ("Oh, I am so embarrassed..."). The late 1990s saw a sequel to the book where Grover desperately tries to stop ] from reaching the end of the book, eventually directing him to leave the book and enter from the back. Therefore, when both of them reach the end, they wind up scaring each other.

Another popular children's book, ''Would You like to Play Hide & Seek in This Book with Lovable, Furry Old Grover?'', had Grover trying different ways to hide from the reader, eventually getting upset and begging the reader to just say "no" they do not see him, even though he was just crouching down in a corner.

In 1974, Grover went on a learning expedition in ''Grover and the Everything in the Whole Wide World Museum'', written by ] and Daniel Wilcox, and illustrated by Joe Mathieu. He tours rooms such as "The Long Thin Things You Can Write with Room", as well as "The Things That Make So Much Noise You Can't Think Room". Grover wanders through "The Things That Are Light Room", returns a rock to "The Things That Are Heavy Room", and just when he wonders whether it is possible to have a museum that holds everything in the whole wide world, he comes upon a door labeled "Everything Else", which opens to take him out into the world. As of 1996, Publishers Weekly ranked the book at 79 on their list of best-selling children's paperbacks,<ref>{{cite journal |date=February 5, 1996 |title=All-Time Bestselling Paperback Children's Books |journal=Publishers Weekly |volume=243 |issue= 6 |pages=30 |publisher=Cahners Publishing Company |location=New York |issn=0000-0019 }}</ref> and ] of ] included the book on his list of 12 examples of how Muppets have qualified as quality entertainment.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.ibj.com/lou-harrys-ae/2009/11/11/the-muppets-greatest-hits/PARAMS/post/11095 |title=The Muppets' greatest hits |access-date=November 22, 2009 |last=Harry |first=Lou |date=November 11, 2009 |publisher=IBJ.com (Powered by Indianapolis Business Journal |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091117200005/http://www.ibj.com/lou-harrys-ae/2009/11/11/the-muppets-greatest-hits/PARAMS/post/11095 |archive-date=November 17, 2009 }}</ref>

''The Adventures of Grover in Outer Space'' is a Sesame Street storybook featuring Grover that was published in 1984.<ref>{{cite book | title=American Bookseller | publisher=Bookseller's Pub., Incorporated | issue=v. 7 | year=1983 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=zGsgAQAAMAAJ | page=47}}</ref> ''When Grover Moved to Sesame Street'' was published in 1985.<ref>{{cite journal|title=The New Yorker|date=December 1, 1985 |volume=61 |issue=6 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jKAeAQAAMAAJ&q=%22|language=en|last1=Ross |first1=Harold Wallace |last2=White |first2=Katharine Sergeant Angell }}</ref> He was also featured in ''I Want a Hat Like That'' (1987, reprinted 1999).<ref>{{cite book|last1=Children's Television Workshop|title=I Want a Hat Like That |date=November 1999 |publisher=Random House Children's Books |isbn=9780375804380 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=wwuul8tq-k4C |language=en}}</ref>

== International ==
'']'' is modified for different national markets, and Grover is often renamed.
* In ], his name is ''Kajkoal'',<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/afghanistan/8926319/Sesame-Street-to-be-broadcast-in-Afghanistan.html |title=Sesame Street to be broadcast in Afghanistan |work=] |first=Ben |last=Farmer |date= November 30, 2011|access-date=December 5, 2011}}</ref> meaning a ] and refers to his mouth.
* In ], he was known as ''Cosmo'' in the 70s seasons. In later decades he began to be referred to as Grover.
* In ], he is called ''Bohoušek''.
* In ], he is called ''Gaafar''.
* In ], he is ''Grobi'', a ] of the German ''grob'', meaning "rough" or "rude".
* In ], he is called ''Qarqor''.
* In ], he is called ''Gatot''.
* In ], he is called ''Kruvi'', which is a play on the word ''kruv'' ("cabbage").
* In ] and ], he is known as ''Archibaldo''.
* In ], he is known as ''Gunnar'' and voiced by ].
* In ], he is ''Banka'', meaning immature or youthful.
* In ], he is called ''Florek'' ("Sesame Street" only).
* In ], he is ''Gualter'' (Walter).
* In ], he is ''Geurobeo'' (그로버).
* In ], he is called ''Coco'', which is Spanish for '']'', due to the shape of his head and mouth; and his Super Grover identity called Super Coco.
* In ], he is known as ''Açıkgöz'', meaning "leery".

==References==
{{Reflist}}


==External links== ==External links==
{{commons category-inline|Grover (Muppet)}}
*

*
{{Sesame Street Characters}}
*
{{Authority control}}


]
] ]
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Latest revision as of 11:42, 7 December 2024

Sesame Street Muppet character This article is about the Sesame Street character. For other uses, see Grover (disambiguation).

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Fictional character
Grover
Sesame Street character
First appearance
Created by
Performed by
In-universe information
AliasSuper Grover
SpeciesMuppet Monster
GenderMale

Grover is a blue Muppet character on the PBS/HBO children's television show Sesame Street. Self-described as lovable, cute, and furry, he is a blue monster who rarely uses contractions when he speaks or sings. Grover was originally performed by Frank Oz from his earliest appearances. Eric Jacobson has performed the character regularly from the year 1998 onwards.

Origins

A prototype version of Grover appeared on The Ed Sullivan Show on Christmas Eve in 1967. This puppet had greenish-brown fur and a red nose. He also had a raspier voice – somewhat like Cookie Monster's – and was played a bit more unkempt than Grover would later behave. The monster was referred to as "Gleep", a monster in Santa's workshop. He later made a cameo appearance in The Muppets on Puppets in 1968 with the Rock and Roll Monster. In 1969, clad in a necktie, he appeared in the Sesame Street Pitch Reel in the board-room sequences. During the first season of Sesame Street, the character was nicknamed "Fuzzyface" or "The Hairy One", though neither would be used for his actual name. The muppet was not yet the "cute" character he would become, and he was not all that different in personality from the other monsters with whom he interacted.

In his book The Tipping Point, author Malcolm Gladwell notes that the character "was used in promotional films for IBM". The puppet first received the name "Grover" on May 1, 1970.

In an appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show on May 31, 1970, the character acquired his present appearance with blue fur and a pink nose. In this appearance, Kermit the Frog tried to sing "What Kind of Fool Am I?" (accompanying himself on piano), but Grover repeatedly interrupted him. The updated puppet was later used beginning in the second season of Sesame Street, by this point fully formed into his current identity.

Appearances

The Deputy Secretary of State Antony Blinken (right) meets with Grover to talk about refugees at the United Nations in New York City, 2016.

Charlie's Restaurant

One of the more frequent sketch segments featuring Grover involves him taking a series of customer service jobs. One of his customers is always Mr. Johnson, a balding, mustachioed customer who invariably becomes frustrated at Grover's bumbling service and/or his (Grover's) insistence that he is serving him properly.

The first Grover-Mr. Johnson series of sketches, set at "Charlie's Restaurant", aired in the early 1970s; here, Grover is employed as a waiter and Mr. Johnson is his customer.

The sketches followed the same basic premise: Mr. Johnson would order a menu item, Grover would serve the customer, a disagreement results (usually) as a result of Grover's mistakes, and Grover attempting (often, more than once) to correct the mistake with varied degrees of success. Under this backdrop, the sketches served to teach the childhood audience basic concepts such as same and different, big and little, hot and cold, the alphabet, following directions and patience, among other things. This was even parodied in an episode of Monsterpiece Theater, where Grover had to keep rushing out of the kitchen to tell Johnson that they had run out of parts of his order. Naturally, Alistair Cookie introduced this performance as "Much Ado About Nothing".

Repeats of the "Charlie's Restaurant" series of sketches aired for many years on Sesame Street. In the years since, new Grover-Mr. Johnson sketches have been produced, with Grover taking other customer service jobs and Mr. Johnson as his hapless customer. Every time, Mr. Johnson recognizes Grover as "that waiter from Charlie's".

Grover's jobs have ranged from a taxi driver and a photographer to a flight attendant and singing telegram artist. One sketch parodied the ABC television series Extreme Makeover: Home Edition in a segment where Grover began remodeling Mr. Johnson's home despite his express wishes. In another one, Mr. Johnson is the only patron, and Grover is the only actor, for a production of Spider-Monster: The Musical, a parody of the musical Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark. The play is, of course, a complete calamity and finally comes crashing down on both of them.

Other segments

Grover also has an instructional persona who wears a cap and gown to provide educational context for simple, everyday things. His lessons are often wrong, leaving himself open to correction by a group of Muppets. Combined with the failings of the Super Grover character, this means that Grover can be very self-conscious and timid. He is often a source of slapstick humor and often accidentally injures himself.

Early in the series, Grover would often greet Kermit the Frog by running up to him and shouting, "Hey, froggy babeee!" and then giving him a hard slap on the back, which knocked him over.

"Global Grover" is a more recent series of segments, in which Grover hosts a trip to a foreign country to learn about their culture and customs.

In 2010, Grover starred in a parody of an Old Spice Commercial called "Smell Like a Monster" based on "The Man Your Man Could Smell Like", albeit a clam with "two tickets to the thing you love" bit his nose and he rode a cow rather than a horse.

Super Grover

Grover has a semi-secret superhero identity as the well-meaning but inept Super Grover, sometimes presented as the alter ego of Grover Kent, "ace doorknob salesman for Acme, Inc". Originally his superhero costume consisted of a pink cape and medieval knight's helmet, with a Superman-style crest on both the cape and his T-shirt, bearing a letter "G" on his chest instead of "S". During the 1970s and 1980s, Sesame Street ran a series of Super Grover sketches spoofing the classic Adventures of Superman series (in the opening of these, his name was hyphenated "Super-Grover"). An announcer (Jerry Nelson) introduced each episode with the lines:

Presenting the further adventures of everybody's favorite hero. The man who's faster than lightning, stronger than steel, and smarter than a speeding bullet. It's... Super Grover!

With that, a fanfare sounds, Super Grover bursts through a paper wall bearing his crest, fruitlessly tries to move his helmet up off his eyes, and adds, "And I am cute, too!"

Announcer: And now, on to our story.

Super Grover: Yes! On to our story!

From there, episodes followed a simple formula: Super Grover is flying somewhere over Metro City when he hears the cries of a Muppet child in some small trouble and immediately sails in to assist. The excited child is quickly disillusioned as Super Grover crash-lands nearby. From there, Grover continues to be enthusiastic but no help whatsoever, his "dramatic" feats of strength or speed serving only to kill time while the child solves the problem on their own and wanders off. By then, Grover's efforts have usually landed him in a comical predicament of his own.

Super Grover has appeared in the Sesame Street theatrical films Follow That Bird (1985) and The Adventures of Elmo in Grouchland (1999), where it is revealed he stretches his arms out and spins into his costume in homage to Wonder Woman), as well as the PBS special Don't Eat the Pictures (1983), where he first appears as regular Grover, but quickly changes into his costume in an attempt to make friends with a suit of armor (having no idea that there's no one inside it).

For Sesame Street's 41st season in 2010, the character was revamped as Super Grover 2.0, who debuted on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon, flying in and crash-landing behind the chair where he was meant to sit. His new costume consists of a Roman Centurion-style helmet with a spiked crest, a red cape, metal gauntlets and boots, a utility belt, and a black rubber vest, most of which resembles bike racing gear. Both the cape and the vest are adorned with his crest, now with a lightning bolt added behind the "G". The helmet has a hinged visor which still tends to fall over Grover's eyes, and his tagline is: Super Grover 2.0 – He Shows Up!

Grover's Mother ("Mommy")

"Grover's Mommy" plays an integral but often unrecognized role on Sesame Street. She has been seen almost exclusively in print, including the many illustrated books starring Grover. She was also occasionally seen in photographs, as a photo puppet, such as on the cover of Volume 4 of The Sesame Street Treasury. Over the course of time, her appearance has fluctuated greatly.

Her earliest known appearance as a Muppet is a 1970s sketch in which Grover speaks to the audience about being afraid of the dark. At the end of the sketch, his mom (Frank Oz) enters his room to kiss him goodnight. In this appearance, the puppet used for her is recycled from the early Grover puppet from the first season. Another early appearance (circa 1981) involves his mother (Kathryn Mullen) coming into the bathroom while Grover is telling the audience about how to take a bath.

She has more recently appeared (performed by Stephanie D'Abruzzo) in a brief Elmo's World sequence (from the "Families" episode), with her son as his alter-ego Super Grover, as her own alter-ego, "Super-Mommy". Grover crashlands, screaming "Moooommy!" and his mom follows shouting "Soooonny!" crashing on top of him. They recover, acknowledge each other, and almost hug, but they both fall down before they are able to.

Books

In the children's book The Monster at the End of This Book (1971), Grover goes to great effort to keep the reader from turning the pages of the book, because there is a monster on the final page. Grover ties pages down, nails pages to the next one and builds a brick wall to block access; at the end it is discovered that the monster at the end of the book is Grover himself, who is mortified ("Oh, I am so embarrassed..."). The late 1990s saw a sequel to the book where Grover desperately tries to stop Elmo from reaching the end of the book, eventually directing him to leave the book and enter from the back. Therefore, when both of them reach the end, they wind up scaring each other.

Another popular children's book, Would You like to Play Hide & Seek in This Book with Lovable, Furry Old Grover?, had Grover trying different ways to hide from the reader, eventually getting upset and begging the reader to just say "no" they do not see him, even though he was just crouching down in a corner.

In 1974, Grover went on a learning expedition in Grover and the Everything in the Whole Wide World Museum, written by Norman Stiles and Daniel Wilcox, and illustrated by Joe Mathieu. He tours rooms such as "The Long Thin Things You Can Write with Room", as well as "The Things That Make So Much Noise You Can't Think Room". Grover wanders through "The Things That Are Light Room", returns a rock to "The Things That Are Heavy Room", and just when he wonders whether it is possible to have a museum that holds everything in the whole wide world, he comes upon a door labeled "Everything Else", which opens to take him out into the world. As of 1996, Publishers Weekly ranked the book at 79 on their list of best-selling children's paperbacks, and Lou Harry of Indianapolis Business Journal included the book on his list of 12 examples of how Muppets have qualified as quality entertainment.

The Adventures of Grover in Outer Space is a Sesame Street storybook featuring Grover that was published in 1984. When Grover Moved to Sesame Street was published in 1985. He was also featured in I Want a Hat Like That (1987, reprinted 1999).

International

Sesame Street is modified for different national markets, and Grover is often renamed.

  • In Afghanistan, his name is Kajkoal, meaning a bowl and refers to his mouth.
  • In Brazil, he was known as Cosmo in the 70s seasons. In later decades he began to be referred to as Grover.
  • In Czech Republic, he is called Bohoušek.
  • In Egypt, he is called Gaafar.
  • In Germany, he is Grobi, a diminutive of the German grob, meaning "rough" or "rude".
  • In Gulf Cooperation Council, he is called Qarqor.
  • In Indonesia, he is called Gatot.
  • In Israel, he is called Kruvi, which is a play on the word kruv ("cabbage").
  • In Latin America and Puerto Rico, he is known as Archibaldo.
  • In Norway, he is known as Gunnar and voiced by Harald Mæle.
  • In Pakistan, he is Banka, meaning immature or youthful.
  • In Poland, he is called Florek ("Sesame Street" only).
  • In Portugal, he is Gualter (Walter).
  • In South Korea, he is Geurobeo (그로버).
  • In Spain, he is called Coco, which is Spanish for coconut, due to the shape of his head and mouth; and his Super Grover identity called Super Coco.
  • In Turkey, he is known as Açıkgöz, meaning "leery".

References

  1. Sloane, Judy (November 17, 2009). "Sesame Street's 40th Anniversary – Puppeteers Eric Jacobson & David Rudman". Film Review Online. Retrieved August 16, 2013.
  2. "All-Time Bestselling Paperback Children's Books". Publishers Weekly. 243 (6). New York: Cahners Publishing Company: 30. February 5, 1996. ISSN 0000-0019.
  3. Harry, Lou (November 11, 2009). "The Muppets' greatest hits". IBJ.com (Powered by Indianapolis Business Journal. Archived from the original on November 17, 2009. Retrieved November 22, 2009.
  4. American Bookseller. Bookseller's Pub., Incorporated. 1983. p. 47.
  5. Ross, Harold Wallace; White, Katharine Sergeant Angell (December 1, 1985). "The New Yorker". 61 (6). {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  6. Children's Television Workshop (November 1999). I Want a Hat Like That. Random House Children's Books. ISBN 9780375804380.
  7. Farmer, Ben (November 30, 2011). "Sesame Street to be broadcast in Afghanistan". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved December 5, 2011.

External links

Media related to Grover (Muppet) at Wikimedia Commons

Sesame Street characters
Muppets of Sesame Street
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