Google Groups no longer supports new Usenet posts or subscriptions. Historical content remains viewable.
Dismiss

Peter Baird, 52; puppeteer

3 views
Skip to first unread message

Hyfler/Rosner

unread,
Jul 20, 2004, 8:39:21 AM7/20/04
to
Peter Baird, 52; Son of Famed Puppet Masters Built His Own
Career in Television, Film and Stage Productions

Myrna Oliver; LA Times

Peter Baird, the son of legendary puppeteers Bil and Cora
Baird and himself a master puppeteer trained from the age of
5, has died. He was 52.

Baird died of esophageal cancer Friday at Calvary Hospital
in New York City, his wife, Mavis Humes Baird, said Monday.
The couple maintained homes in Manhattan and Los Angeles.

The younger Baird worked on the children's television show
"Shining Time Station" for all 65 episodes from 1990 to
1993, voicing and manipulating Grace the Bass in the show's
Juke Box Puppet Band.

His feature film credits include "The Muppets Take
Manhattan" in 1984 and "Howard the Duck" in 1986.

Baird grew up above his parents' marionette theater in New
York's Greenwich Village. He began taking tickets at age 11,
and by 19 he was a professional puppeteer. He voiced and
manipulated marionettes and moved into writing and directing
shows, working in 15 Bil Baird productions.

He toured Europe with his parents' productions and, after
his mother's death in 1967, worked with his father until he
died in 1987. The son then carried on alone, reproducing his
father's "Davy Jones' Locker" the following Christmas season
at New York's Orpheum Theatre.

In 1995, Baird turned the popular "Davy Jones" puppet show
into a 52-minute film that premiered at the Laemmle theater
in Santa Monica.

Although Baird continued to perform using about 240 of the
1,300 hand and string puppets his father built, he also
moved on to more modern forms of puppetry including working
with computer-generated characters. In addition to stage,
television and film shows, he worked in hundreds of
commercials and industrial productions.

Baird, along with his sister Laura, also worked to preserve
his father's legacy. They received some criticism in 1987
when they auctioned 600 of the puppets to pay their father's
estate taxes.

But Peter Baird pointed out at that time that his father had
given 350 puppets to the Charles H. MacNider Museum in his
hometown, Mason City, Iowa, and that he and his sister had
donated an additional 30.

"Puppets are created to be used, not hidden away in boxes,"
he added.

A fund in Peter Baird's name has been established at the
Iowa museum to preserve his father's puppets.

In addition to his wife, Baird is survived by his sister,
Laura Baird Brundage.

Memorial services are being planned in New York and in Los
Angeles in August.

GRAPHIC: PHOTO: PETER BAIRD. Born to Bil and Cora Baird, he
made a name for himself in projects such as "The Muppets
Take Manhattan" and "Howard the Duck." PHOTOGRAPHER: Mavis
Humes Baird

Maggie

unread,
Jul 20, 2004, 12:12:33 PM7/20/04
to

***Interesting. He was an answer in last Sunday's Washington Post crossword
("puppetry name").

Maggie < so were Willie Mays, Al Gore, Don Adams, Ken Kesey and Gale Sayers for
anyone keeping track of these things

April Cool

unread,
Jul 20, 2004, 1:09:12 PM7/20/04
to
In article <40fd126e$0$5650$61fe...@news.rcn.com>, Hyfler/Rosner
<rel...@rcn.com> wrote:

> Baird grew up above his parents' marionette theater in New
> York's Greenwich Village. He began taking tickets at age 11,
> and by 19 he was a professional puppeteer. He voiced and
> manipulated marionettes and moved into writing and directing
> shows, working in 15 Bil Baird productions.
>
> He toured Europe with his parents' productions and, after
> his mother's death in 1967, worked with his father until he
> died in 1987.

I remember the Bil Baird puppets. There was an ostrich named Magnolia
(I think) and a nasty-tempered crow named Calvin who had a cigarette in
his beak. There were others as well, but I don't remember much more
than those two. They were on television a lot in the 1950s.

Message has been deleted

Hyfler/Rosner

unread,
Jul 20, 2004, 6:44:24 PM7/20/04
to

"Baker, Jane Baker" <nom...@whatever.net> wrote in message
news:ff6rf0h2919d5q2i5...@4ax.com...
> Sorry to top post but OMG!!! OMG!!!
>
> An actual OBITUARY in alt.obituaries!!!
>
>

I was away on a business trip.

Louis Epstein

unread,
Jul 20, 2004, 10:37:05 PM7/20/04
to

Wasn't the elder Baird the puppetteer for Kukla,Fran,& Ollie?

-=-=-
The World Trade Center towers MUST rise again,
at least as tall as before...or terror has triumphed.

April Cool

unread,
Jul 21, 2004, 12:18:51 AM7/21/04
to
In article <s-KdnY0KL79...@fcc.net>, Louis Epstein
<lep...@shell.fcc.net> wrote:

> April Cool <firsto...@fools.com.invalid> wrote:
> > In article <40fd126e$0$5650$61fe...@news.rcn.com>, Hyfler/Rosner
> > <rel...@rcn.com> wrote:
> >
> >> Baird grew up above his parents' marionette theater in New
> >> York's Greenwich Village. He began taking tickets at age 11,
> >> and by 19 he was a professional puppeteer. He voiced and
> >> manipulated marionettes and moved into writing and directing
> >> shows, working in 15 Bil Baird productions.
> >>
> >> He toured Europe with his parents' productions and, after
> >> his mother's death in 1967, worked with his father until he
> >> died in 1987.
> >
> > I remember the Bil Baird puppets. There was an ostrich named Magnolia
> > (I think) and a nasty-tempered crow named Calvin who had a cigarette in
> > his beak. There were others as well, but I don't remember much more
> > than those two. They were on television a lot in the 1950s.
>
> Wasn't the elder Baird the puppetteer for Kukla,Fran,& Ollie?


No, that was Burr Tillstrom, who died on December 6, 1985. Fran
Allison died on June 13, 1989. The puppets were left to the Chicago
Historical Society, which sometimes exhibits them.

Bil and Cora Baird's most often seen puppets (I've looked this up since
last night) were Sir Geoffrey the Giraffe, Magnolia the Ostrich, Albert
the Chipmunk, and Calvin the Crow. They also had a puppet named
Charlemane the Lion who worked with Walter Cronkite (?!?) on CBS's The
Morning Show around 1953.

There's a picture of Bil Baird with Charlemane at

http://desmoinesregister.com/extras/iowans/baird.html

but I can't find pictures of the others.

0 new messages