Productions
In order to keep the show running annually in the same cities, new plotlines are created and rotated through the tour. Because the target audience changes as children grow up, shows are often removed from the rotation for a few years, then return with some modifications.
In order of their creation, the Sesame Street Live shows have been:
- Missing Bird Mystery (1980)
- Big Bird's Super Spectacular Totally Amateur Show (1981–82)
- Sesame Jamboree (1982)
- Around the World (1983)
- Save Our Street (1985)
- Big Bird Goes to Hollywood (1986–87)
- Big Bird and the ABCs (1987)
- Big Bird's Sesame Street Story (1987–89)
- Silly Dancing (1989–91)
- Let's Play School (1990–92)
- Sleeping Birdie (1991)
- Where's the Birdie? (1991–1995)
- When I Grow Up (1993–2001)
- Big Bird and Friends (1993–94)
- Let's Be Friends (2000)
- Big Bird's Sunny Day Camp Out (2000)
- 1-2-3...Imagine! (2002)
- Everyone Makes Music (2003)
- Out of This World (2003–04)
- Elmo's Coloring Book (1997–2004)
- Super Grover! Ready for Action (2005)
- Elmo Makes Music (2006–07)
- When Elmo Grows Up (2007)
- Elmo's Green Thumb (2008)
- 1-2-3...Imagine! with Elmo and Friends (2009)
- Elmo's Healthy Heroes! (2010)
- Can't Stop Singing (2012)
Read more about this topic: Sesame Street Live
Famous quotes containing the word productions:
“If you think it will only add one sprig to the wreath the country twines to bind the brows of my hero, I will run the risk of being sneered at by those who criticize female productions of all kinds. ...Though a female, I was born a patriot.”
—Annie Boudinot Stockton (17361801)
“Most new things are not good, and die an early death; but those which push themselves forward and by slow degrees force themselves on the attention of mankind are the unconscious productions of human wisdom, and must have honest consideration, and must not be made the subject of unreasoning prejudice.”
—Thomas Brackett Reed (18391902)
“If in many of my productions terror has been the thesis, I maintain that terror is not of Germany, but of the soul.”
—Edgar Allan Poe (18091849)