Itâs been a while now since we finished our enormously popular review series âThe Muppet Show: 40 Years Later,” concluding with the fifth and final season. But I didnât want to be remiss in my season-ending tradition of compiling superlatives from our reviews to find out just what made the season so special.
As you may know, in addition to several paragraphs devoted to sharp-eyed critical analysis (or talk about ), each review contains a section singling out various elements of that episode: What was the best joke? What was the musical highlight? And so on.
So letâs take a look at the best (and not-so-best) of season five, starting withâŠ
MOST VALUABLE MUPPETS
This title goes to the Muppet who makes the greatest contribution to each episode. Last season Kermit took the lead, but this season itâs Fozzie! The comedian bear was anointed MVM four times (for the Señor Wences, Marty Feldman, Gladys Knight, and Brooke Shields episodes). Then itâs a four-way tie for second place, with Kermit, Miss Piggy, Gonzo, and Animal each being named MVM for two episodes.
Other characters who earned the MVM title once each:
Beauregard (Buddy Rich)
The announcer from âPigs in Spaceâ and âVeterinarianâs Hospitalâ (Gene Kelly)
The Gnu (Chris Langham)
The rats (Joan Baez)
Beaker, Beaker, Beaker, Beaker, Beaker, Beaker, Beaker, and Beaker (Mac Davis)
Loretta Swit (Loretta Swit)
Eric the Parrot (Glenda Jackson)
Scooter when he turns into Gonzo after a magic spell gone wrong (Tony Randall)
Lips (Shirley Bassey)
Lew Zealand (Roger Moore)
Here are some of our notable picks from other categories throughout the season…
BEST JOKES
KERMIT: Listen Scooter, if I come up with any more dumb ideas like that, stop me.
SCOOTER: Right. Shall I cancel the blindfolded yodeling hang glider?
KERMIT: Of course not. I said âdumb ideasâ.
(Melissa Manchester)
Kermit explains to Gonzo that a puppet is a doll made to look alive by wiggling it, and Gonzo asks, âWho wants to watch dolls wiggle? Doll wiggling, talk about boring!â
BEAUREGARD: Could I use your window?
BUDDY: Well, I know itâs bad, Beau, but donât jump.
BEAUREGARD: Jump? I was just going to take a nap on the fire escape. That is, unless you know any inspirational songs.
(Buddy Rich)
SAM: Under whose name is this invention to be patented?
MARTY: Wilbur and Orville Wright.
SAM: Which one are you?
MARTY: That is me.
SAM: You are Wilbur and Orville Wright?
MARTY: Exactly. You see, my mother wanted twins. Identical ones. Thatâs why I look so alike.
(Marty Feldman)
ROWLF: Maybe that trickâs too hard for her. Have her do something simple. Like, roll over and play dead.
MISS PIGGY: Why donât you roll over and drop dead? If I want her to do something simple, I would have had her play the piano and make dumb remarks.
(Wally Boag)
Scooter enthusiastically announces âThe act youâve all been waiting for â the one and only Signor Baffi and his flashing knives of death!â complete with Scooter Fist.
(Gladys Knight)
Miss Piggy puppeteers a weird puppet version of herself, only to throw it away.
(Paul Simon)
The âPigs in Spaceâ announcer hurts his ankle, and Link advises him to âget your mommy to kiss it.â
(Gene Kelly)
A Frog Scout gets physically thrown out of Animalâs dressing room.
(Debbie Harry)
Kermit defends Fozzie to Wally Whoopie, laying on the compliments, but he forgets to include the word âfunny.â
(Johnny Cash)
As Kermit begins to explain where Statler and Waldorf are, Fozzie interjects, claiming theyâve died.
(Hal Linden)
Chris Langham does a bizarre impression of an owl, then notes that itâs âjust the sort of stuff you can do at home, you know?â
(Chris Langham)
STATLER: One more chorus wouldâve killed the pig!
WALDORF: Encore! Encore!
(Jean-Pierre Rampal)
JOAN: At least youâre unbiased.
POPS: âTil you came around we were un-Baezed!â
(Joan Baez)
After Mac Davis calls for a round of applause for the band and all their great work…
FLOYD: âItâs nice of you to notice!â
ANIMAL: âNice Mac! Nice Mac!â
ZOOT: âYeah, itâs mighty big of you.â
ANIMAL: âBig Mac! Big Mac!â
(Mac Davis)
LORETTA: Hello! Iâm nurse Loretta, and Iâm here to fill in for nurse Piggy.
ROWLF: Well, uhh, if youâre here to fill in for nurse Piggy, youâd better fill out!
LORETTA: Is that some kind of a fat joke?
ROWLF: Uh, yes, unfortunately, itâs not the funny kind.
(Loretta Swit)
After her hench-Muppets tie up Kermit, one of the pirates asks Glenda Jackson if they tied him too tight. Jackson responds, âNo no no, his eyes were always like that.â
(Glenda Jackson)
WALDORF: Oh, I thought that bayou number was okay, didnât you?
STATLER: Well, itâs okay by me if itâs okay bayou!
(Linda Ronstadt)
Piggy falls off the backstage balcony, and Tony asks if she broke anything. Kermit replies âYeah, a couple of floorboardsâ
(Tony Randall)
Fozzie enters the Wonderland episode dressed as a character from The Wizard of Oz and then tells Kermit he thought they were doing Peter Pan.
(Brooke Shields)
An Octopus pushes Waldorf out of the balcony.
(James Coburn)
When Pops meets Shirley Bassey at the stage door and finds out sheâs the guest star on the show, he tells her she can brush his rat. Shirley balks at the suggestion, but Pops tells her everyone pitches in around here. Undeterred, Shirley deadpans, âOh, good, then you can comb my crocodile,â and plops one down on Popsâ desk.
(Shirley Bassey)
Kermit comes out to introduce Roger Moore: âUm, and now a man who needs no introduction, so what am I doing out here?â
(Roger Moore)
CAROL BURNETT AS AN ASPARAGUS: âWhat a lonely asparagus am I. Most of my hollandaise are behind me!â
(Carol Burnett)
FEMALE WHATNOT: âYou know the first thing we should do if we win this dance marathon?â
MALE WHATNOT: âNo, what?â
FEMALE WHATNOT: âSTOP DANCING, DUMMY!â
(Carol Burnett)
WORST JOKES
After the Vienna Downhill Boys Choir find themselves in wheelchairs, covered in casts, they invite Scooter to their âcast party.â
(Melissa Manchester)
Pops is stirring his coffee with his finger and says, âThereâs something terrible in this coffee. Oh! Itâs my finger.â
(Señor Wences)
Buddy Rich talks about lard around Miss Piggy.
(Buddy Rich)
STATLER: Poor Lottie Lemon. I hope someone knows first aid.
WALDORF: Forget first aid, Lottie needs lemonade.
(Wally Boag)
A Muppet construction worker tells Kermit âThereâs something I donât like about heights â falling from them.â
(Glady Knight)
â50 Ways to Love Your Lever” and its a callback.
(Paul Simon)
The gay panic of two male dogs kissing after chasing around a fiddle-playing lady dog in âFit as Fiddleâ
(Gene Kelly)
The Frog Scouts are trying to earn their punk merit badge and ask Debbie for advice because theyâre âonly tender-flippers.â Harry suggests that pogo dancing will give them tender-flippers.
(Debbie Harry)
Waldorf says, âIf men that ride horses are called cowboys, what do you call chickens that ride cows?â Statler responds, âStupid!â
(Johnny Cash)
Muppets fall down a trap door, but emerge unscathed 2 seconds later.
(Hal Linden)
During the closing number, Chris yells âHawaii! Ha-why not?!â
(Chris Langham)
âThatâs what happens when you take Gandhi from a baby.â
(Joan Baez)
After Mac Davisâs underwater numberâŠ
WALDORF: âWas that a topical song?â
STATLER: âNo, topical fish!â
(Mac Davis)
When Dr. Bob asks Loretta Swit if she has the clamps, she says âUh, no. My stomachâs a little upset, but I donât have any clamps.â
(Loretta Swit)
Every joke in the final âAt the Danceâ sketch.
(Glenda Jackson)
SCOOTER: Well, I see the cat came back.
ROWLF: Well, we all came back. Thatâs âcause the numberâs over.
(Linda Ronstadt)
Tony Randall calls the show crummy then everyone cheers.
(Tony Randall)
âIâm looking for a hole.â
âA whole? A whole what?
âI hate smart Alices.â
(Brooke Shields)
Waldorf says of the octopus in the balcony box: âYou canât throw him out! Heâs a family man! Heâs got a wife and squids!â
(James Coburn)
WALDORF: Ah, Fire Down Below! Great number!
STATLER: Thanks!
WALDORF: Thanks? You didnât write Fire Down Below.
STATLER: No, but the guy who did had just had a bowl of my chili!
(Shirley Bassey)
WALDORF: Quite a touching scene. Oh-oh-seven and seven-oh-oh.
STATLER: Seven-oh-oh? Is that Miss Piggyâs code name?
WALDORF No, itâs her weight!
(Roger Moore)
MOST CLASSIC MOMENTS
The Newsman reports that beef stocks are falling dramatically, and then a cow falls on his head.
(Melissa Manchester)
Beauregard is performing a Punch and Judy act for Kermit backstage when Miss Piggy enters and expresses her disbelief that theyâre replacing her act on the show this week.
Buddy Richâs drumming, when he plays the theater and has a drum battle with Animal. (Buddy Rich)
The âAli Babaâ scene, where the magic words âOpen Sesame!â result in a cameo by several Sesame Street Muppets.
(Marty Feldman)
The Leprechaun Brothers (Animal, the Swedish Chef, and Beaker) sing âDanny Boy.â
(Wally Boag)
A âVetâs Hospitalâ where the patient is a weatherman who keeps singing weather-related standards.
(Gladys Knight)
The medley of piano songs that arenât âSinginâ in the Rain.â
(Gene Kelly)
Debbie Harry sings âCall Me,â with a band of punk Muppets backing her.
(Debbie Harry)
Johnny Cash and Miss Piggy sing some of âJackson.â
(Johnny Cash)
Kermit and Fozzie hang out in Statler and Waldorfâs balcony.
(Hal Linden)
The Time Travel Apparatus sketch.
(Chris Langham)
Jean-Pierre Rampalâs performance of âThe Little Shepherd.â
(Jean-Pierre Rampal)
Floyd and Janiceâs performance of âBlackbird.â
(Joan Baez)
Piggy is fired, FIRED!
(Loretta Swit)
âThe Cat Came Backâ number.
(Linda Ronstadt)
The moment when Miss Piggy is turned into a statue.
(Tony Randall)
Everything to do with the Muppetsâ adaptation of Alice in Wonderland.
(Brooke Shields)
The âBear on Patrolâ sketch with Banananose Maldonado.
(James Coburn)
âBarnyard Boogieâ
(Shirley Bassey)
âIn the Navyâ
(Roger Moore)
MOST DATED JOKES
Doctor Bob asks if Pinocchioâs mother was frightened by the Concorde.
(Señor Wences)
Marty Feldmanâs Scheherazade notes that they used up some of the showâs budget hiring his curly blonde wig from Bette Midler.
(Marty Feldman)
During the âPecos Billâ number, a particular inappropriate term for Native Americans is used.
(Wally Boag)
Gladys Knightâs fur coat in the good nights is not a joke, but it couldnât possibly be more 70s.
(Gladys Knight)
Statler references not hearing from The Beatles, because at this point they were all still alive.
(Hal Linden)
The codeword in Chris Langhamâs escape artist act is âHoopla!â Itâs 1980, so they didnât have to worry about the audience thinking of âWe Built This City.”
(Chris Langham)
Link says of Piggy âYou said it was a rat trap, it looks more like a fat trap!â Also, a rat wearing a sombrero who speaks in a stereotypical accent says âNot until you let me do my famous Mexican rat dance!â
(Joan Baez)
A lot of jokes about Miss Piggy being fat.
(Tony Randall)
Kermit mentions The Gong Show, a show that is even more 70s than The Muppet Show.
(James Coburn)
FEMALE SACK: Itâs all your fault! Youâve got no sense of rhythm!
MALE SACK: Aw, shut up, you old bag!
(Shirley Bassey)
When Miss Piggy tries to romance Roger Moore, wishing she could get him âOn a Slow Boat to China,â Moore responds, ânot even Concorde.â
(Roger Moore)
COOLEST PUPPETRY TRICKS
Skiers tumble with the help of some fast-paced Chroma Key backgrounds of snowy hills, Beauregard plays harmonica while rocking in a chair, and the Muppets fly into the air after being launched by a teeter-totter.
(Melissa Manchester)
Everything by special guest Bruce Schwartz, a bunraku puppeteer.
(Señor Wences)
The âNight and Dayâ number features singing puppet sarcophagi and puppet mummies.
(Gladys Knight)
A Muppet walks on stilts throughout the âScarborough Fairâ number, and at one stage Gonzo goes between his legs.
(Paul Simon)
A member of the jugband gargles real water.
(Gene Kelly)
Any time Lipsâ fingers move on his trumpet.
(Hal Linden)
At the beginning of the UK spot, Rowlf lights a candelabra on his piano⊠and then blows out the match.
(Mac Davis)
The use of miniatures and video editing in âI Feel the Earth Moveâ is really good to make Thog appear as a kaiju-style monster rampaging through the town.
(Loretta Swit)
Scooterâs changes as Tony Randall reads magic spells.
(Tony Randall)
The use of the green screen in the âFallingâ song and âJabberwocky.â
(Brooke Shields)
Two Fazoobs perform “Isn’t It a Lovely Day,” with one of them firing cannonballs that land back inside its head. And “After You’ve Gone,” with each member of the Muppet orchestra playing their instrument remarkably convincingly.
(Shirley Bassey)
All the puppetry.
(Roger Moore)
When dancing Muppet couples do a bob-and-weave move. Itâs hard to describe, but I like it. And when Carol Burnettâs Charwoman sings her melancholy solo song and we can see the shadows of the dancing Muppets on the wall behind her.
(Carol Burnett)
MUSICAL HIGHLIGHTS
Melissa Manchester and Floyd bang out âWhenever I Call You Friendâ with some serious sexual tension, only to be blocked by a chorus of Muppets joining in around the piano.
(Melissa Manchester)
The whole episode, especially âGood Day Sunshine / Dancing in the Dark.â.
(Buddy Rich)
Kermit insists to a menacing genie (played by Sweetums) that heâs not Sinbad the Sailor. Heâs Sinbad the Surfer. He proves it by singing âSurfinâ USA.â
(Marty Feldman)
Gladys Knight sings âI Heard It Through the Grapevineâ with Muppet grapes.
(Glady Knight)
Floyd and Janice sing â50 Ways To Leave Your Loverâ backed up by Animal and Rizzo.
(Paul Simon)
âGhost Riders in the Skyâ
(Johnny Cash)
âMaybe Itâs Because Iâm a Londonerâ
(Chris Langham)
âRockinâ Robin,â with the Electric Mayhem perched up in a tree.
(Jean-Pierre Rampal)
âThe Night They Drove Old Dixie Downâ
(Joan Baez)
âI Believe in Musicâ
(Mac Davis)
âI Feel the Earth Moveâ
(Loretta Swit)
The end medley of âRule, Britannia!,â âSailing, Sailing,â âAnchors Aweigh,â El Rancho Grande, and Dead Manâs Chest blend together well for an exciting and fun battle at sea performance onstage.
(Glenda Jackson)
Linda Ronstadt and Janice belt out âItâs in His Kiss.â
(Linda Ronstadt)
âYakety Yakâ
(Tony Randall)
âFallingâ
(Brooke Shields)
Wayne sings âClose to Youâ in a curly blue wig and mustache.
(James Coburn)
Shirley Bassey sings âGoldfinger.â
(Shirley Bassey)
The orchestra plays an instrumental version of âHow High the Moon.â
(Roger Moore)
ADULTIEST CONTENT
âPuppet Man,â a song about a man doing anything for his woman if she just âpulls his string,â is made a million times creepier by it being Pinocchio singing the song to Geppetto.
(Señor Wences)
When Debbie Harry first enters the Muppet Theater at the beginning of the episode and has her interaction with Pops, sheâs wearing her sunglasses indoors. She appears to be playing the scene a little hungover!
(Debbie Harry)
After Chris Langham says that heâs zen skiing, Sam the Eagle says âIâve always had the greatest respect for other peopleâs crackpot beliefs.â Itâs the perfect summary of Sam.
(Chris Langham)
Two random French Muppets are getting totally frisky during the UK-only âLa Seineâ number.
(Jean-Pierre Rampal)
The song âHonest Lullabyâ includes the phrase âlusted after football heroesâ and then âspending all my energy in keeping my virginity.â
(Joan Baez)
When Mac Davis sings âItâs Hard to Be Humble,â he includes the line âI must be a hell of a man.â Later in the song, all the Muppets sing it with him!
(Mac Davis)
In the âAinât Nobody Here But Us Chickensâ number, a posse of chickens with guns manage to shoot their way through a henhouse occupied by some nasty critters who have broken in.
(Loretta Swit)
James Coburn pulls out a gun and shoots at Scooter twice.
(James Coburn)
Dancing Sacks. Heh.
(Shirley Bassey)
Link drinks a glass of champagne.
(Carol Burnett)
Thanks to all Tough Pigs contributors who wrote reviews â David Beukema, Jarrod Fairclough, Julia Gaskill, Evan G, Sarah Grace, Joe Hennes, Louie Pearlman, Staci Rosen, Ryan Roe, Matthew Soberman, Anthony Strand, and Matt Wilkie!
Click here to comb your crocodile on the Tough Pigs forum!
by Ryan Roe – Ryan@ToughPigs.com