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Sept 3, 2003
Secrets of the Third Dimension by AnonyMouse
I visited a friend at his job one day. We shot the breeze, and eventually he said:
"Would you like to take a tour of MuppetVision?"
That's the kind of thing that happens when you have friends who work at Walt Disney World.
"Heck yeah!" I said, after the shock subsided, and I was able to put together a coherent sentence.
There are, to my surprise (and probably yours too), two projectors -- one for each eye. While one is perfectly in focus, the other is 180 degrees out of focus, going back and forth. This is what creates the 3D effect. The projectors are perfectly in synch with each other, digitally counting the frames and using a computer to verify that they're on the same frame at the same time.
At the back of the theater: The two projectors (green arrows), viewing holes (red arrows), the Chef's broken window (blue arrow).
My friend opened the viewing panel and placed a clear plastic sheet in front of the window.
So here's a tip for all of you who want to videotape the show: Take a pair of the glasses, and tape one frame over your lens. If your camera can focus on the film, then you'll be home free. And they don't say no videotaping at MuppetVision...
The sound -- presented in 360° surround sound -- is in a different room, completely separated from the projector. There's one track for each speaker, combining the sound for the film, the animatronics, and the live Sweetums. Simple, huh?
After the last show ended, we walked to the orchestra pit and looked down at our penguin friends.
We went underneath the penguins, and I half-expected to see little feet dangling down. Instead, I saw a number of scissor lifts. When called for, each of the platforms lifts to reveal the penguins to the audience.
We then took a tour of the upstairs of MuppetVision. Just next to the projector room is one of my favorite parts of the tour: the room the Swedish Chef lives in. Or should I say Chefs...
That's right, multiple Chefs! For those of you who've seen the show, you'll remember that at first Kermit calls up to the Chef, who's running the projector for the show, and you see the Chef through the steamy glass.
How do they do it? Well, easy. The two Chefs and the cannon are all on a turntable. The turntable spins to reveal one face at a time towards a hole in the wall -- and in that hole are two versions of the window. If you watched the Chef for the whole 17-minute show -- for example, if you were nuts -- you'd notice the glass move sideways to reveal the broken glass during the finale song, before the cannon is fired at the Chef. Again, the Chef is only built from the waist up -- you're not going to see the whole thing, so why spend the money to build it?
Walking around the top of the theater to the sides, we get to some giant projectors -- these project the walls of the theater in their original and blown-up versions.
Next stop is the catwalks. You probably didn't notice the catwalks at the top of the theater, because nobody looks up there. They're incredibly visible; the creators really didn't hide them at all.
A few things you'll find up there? Water sprinklers. Handy when there's a fire, handier when Fozzie pulls the old squirting flower trick. That wacky Fozzie, I tell ya! What else? Moving spotlights -- these are used during the search for Bean Bunny, when Gonzo shines his flashlight onto the audience. You can also see giant fans, for when the VacuuMuppet is turned on.
The next stop on our tour was the final stop... into Statler and Waldorf's box. They happened to be working on it that night -- somebody lost a finger during the day -- so I was able to get up there and look down from between the two old coots. I've always wondered what their view was like... and I tell ya, it wasn't that great. It's all off to the side -- maybe if they sat on the floor, they wouldn't hate the show so much. But that wouldn't be much fun for us, now would it? And, just like our other animatronic friends, Statler and Waldorf are -- you guessed it! -- only built from the waist up!
That ended my tour of the attraction, but as we walked over to his next attraction, Star Tours, my friend told me some interesting information he's collected over the years. This is his hobby -- collecting Disney trivia.
It would have been easy to record the line -- Richard Hunt had to dub all of his lines in anyhow, as he was unable to make the taping. At that point in time, his health was suffering, and he passed away shortly thereafter.
Other Muppeteers operated Beaker and Sweetums -- John Henson played Sweetums, as he still does today -- but they were still able to have Richard voice his characters.
So we walked. The park was empty, like it was open just for me. We got to Star Tours, and went in to see what a simulator looks like during the ride. But that's another story for another time.
However, I'll be more than willing to answer questions about the show, if you e-mail them to muppetvision3d@hotmail.com. I'll post answers to those questions in another article here on Tough Pigs.
So, as Kermit says at the end of MuppetVision: Thank you for coming, enjoy your stay, and we'll see you again sometime!
Muppet Book Club: "The Great Twiddlebug Mystery" Strange Trip: Big Boy meets the Muppets
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