All language subtitles for Mr..Dressup.The.Magic.Of.Make-Believe.2023.720p.WEBRip.x264.AAC-[YTS.MX]

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Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:02,000 --> 00:00:07,000 Downloaded from YTS.MX 2 00:00:08,000 --> 00:00:13,000 Official YIFY movies site: YTS.MX 3 00:00:27,153 --> 00:00:30,656 [whimsical music] 4 00:00:30,740 --> 00:00:35,161 Oh, here you are. Well, that was pretty good timing. 5 00:00:35,244 --> 00:00:38,247 You're here and we're here. Casey and Finnegan and I 6 00:00:38,330 --> 00:00:40,541 have just come back from a walk around the block. 7 00:00:40,624 --> 00:00:42,209 We had a very nice walk, too. 8 00:00:45,713 --> 00:00:50,634 Having been Mr. Dressup for 20 years has probably made me a better person. 9 00:00:54,263 --> 00:00:57,892 Tell us what the secret is to 30 years on the air. 10 00:00:57,975 --> 00:00:59,685 I'm a child at heart. 11 00:00:59,769 --> 00:01:02,938 It's all doing things that I always liked to do when I was a kid. 12 00:01:08,235 --> 00:01:11,113 [silly sped up voices] 13 00:01:11,197 --> 00:01:12,907 [Ralph] What does Mr. Dressup mean to you? 14 00:01:12,990 --> 00:01:18,078 [Paul, over phone] Mr. Dressup has brought imagination to the nation. 15 00:01:22,124 --> 00:01:25,252 Ladies and gentlemen, one of the great Canadians, Mr. Dressup. 16 00:01:25,336 --> 00:01:28,672 [crowd cheers] 17 00:01:28,756 --> 00:01:30,758 It didn't matter what race you were, what color you were, 18 00:01:30,841 --> 00:01:34,595 what religion you were, what language you spoke. You watched Mr. Dressup. 19 00:01:34,678 --> 00:01:38,765 Ernie Coombs, Mr. Dressup, he was just so kind and gentle. 20 00:01:38,848 --> 00:01:42,812 [Fred Rogers] Ernie never forgot the child within him. 21 00:01:42,895 --> 00:01:47,399 And that informs everything that he does with children. 22 00:01:47,483 --> 00:01:51,987 When you tell people that Fred Rogers and Ernie Coombs came to Canada together, 23 00:01:52,071 --> 00:01:54,949 most people don't even realize that they were very close friends. 24 00:01:55,032 --> 00:01:58,035 I'm making a book. You're just in time to see how I made it. 25 00:01:58,118 --> 00:02:00,746 His warmth radiated through the screen. 26 00:02:00,830 --> 00:02:04,375 You didn't just learn... "Here, learn this." 27 00:02:04,458 --> 00:02:07,753 There was, "What's over here?" 28 00:02:07,837 --> 00:02:10,005 I've got a good bat costume here to show you. 29 00:02:10,089 --> 00:02:13,342 That's where the adventures would start. As soon as he opened that lid, 30 00:02:13,425 --> 00:02:16,887 something was gonna happen. Something fun, something magical. 31 00:02:16,971 --> 00:02:20,099 This is one of my favorite dress up costumes. 32 00:02:20,182 --> 00:02:23,519 That signature moment every episode. Maybe it was a cape, 33 00:02:23,602 --> 00:02:25,688 and there was nothing on it. But he'd cut out shapes, 34 00:02:25,771 --> 00:02:27,982 "Is it gonna be a wizard? Oh, no, he's a dinosaur." 35 00:02:28,065 --> 00:02:29,942 The endless possibility of that. 36 00:02:30,025 --> 00:02:33,195 One of the reasons I became an actor was, because very early age 37 00:02:33,279 --> 00:02:36,615 this person on television who was an adult, but not an adult... 38 00:02:36,699 --> 00:02:37,741 [silly sounds] 39 00:02:37,825 --> 00:02:40,327 ...taught me that it was okay to let my freak flag fly. 40 00:02:41,745 --> 00:02:44,248 -Casey, are you in... -[Casey] Ha-ha-ha! 41 00:02:44,331 --> 00:02:46,750 I didn't know if Casey was a boy or a girl. 42 00:02:46,834 --> 00:02:48,127 [Casey] Oh, my. What a lovely day. 43 00:02:48,210 --> 00:02:49,962 Can I say gender ambiguous? 44 00:02:50,045 --> 00:02:52,965 Because I was never sure if Casey was a boy or a girl. 45 00:02:53,048 --> 00:02:56,427 Way ahead of its time. Not a little bit, way ahead of its time. 46 00:02:56,510 --> 00:03:00,472 [Catherine Tait] Four thousand episodes, thirty years. 47 00:03:00,556 --> 00:03:04,351 There are not that many shows that last that long. 48 00:03:04,435 --> 00:03:05,686 Hello! 49 00:03:05,769 --> 00:03:10,399 The power of a word. The power of a drawing. The power of dressing up. 50 00:03:26,248 --> 00:03:29,418 [Ernie] What wisdom have I acquired during 30 years 51 00:03:29,501 --> 00:03:32,671 of making various objects out of toilet paper rolls? 52 00:03:32,755 --> 00:03:34,757 [audience laughs] 53 00:03:34,840 --> 00:03:38,510 Is doing crafts on TV a source of wisdom? 54 00:03:40,220 --> 00:03:41,221 Apparently not. 55 00:03:42,765 --> 00:03:45,684 And may I remind you for the last time, 56 00:03:46,977 --> 00:03:50,481 keep an open mind, and an open heart. 57 00:03:50,564 --> 00:03:53,984 Don't take life too seriously, because it doesn't last forever, you know. 58 00:03:55,235 --> 00:03:57,863 And keep your crayons sharp. 59 00:03:57,947 --> 00:04:03,911 Don't get your sticky tape tangled and always put the caps on your markers. 60 00:04:03,994 --> 00:04:07,331 [crowd cheers and applauds] 61 00:04:11,919 --> 00:04:14,129 -[Casey] Finnegan? -[birdsong] 62 00:04:14,213 --> 00:04:19,468 Finnegan, where are you? Oh, there you are. 63 00:04:20,886 --> 00:04:25,474 You want me to tell you a story? Oh, you want to hear the story, too? 64 00:04:25,557 --> 00:04:28,477 In that case, I think I'd better tell it. 65 00:04:28,560 --> 00:04:32,231 A long time ago, in the United States, in Maine, 66 00:04:32,314 --> 00:04:35,859 a boy was born and his name was Ernie Coombs. 67 00:04:37,194 --> 00:04:40,990 What, did I say something wrong? What? 68 00:04:41,073 --> 00:04:45,828 Ernest Coombs. Oh, okay. [sighs] I'll start again, then. 69 00:04:45,911 --> 00:04:51,166 A long time ago, in the United States, in Maine, a boy was born, 70 00:04:51,250 --> 00:04:56,422 and his name was Ernest Coombs. I got it right this time. 71 00:04:56,505 --> 00:05:00,467 Dad was born right before the Depression in Lewiston, Maine. 72 00:05:00,551 --> 00:05:02,136 Twin Cities, Lewiston and Auburn. 73 00:05:04,096 --> 00:05:05,931 [Ernie] I was influenced a lot by my mother 74 00:05:06,015 --> 00:05:10,644 because she was the kind of a person that found something great 75 00:05:10,728 --> 00:05:12,229 and wonderful in everything. 76 00:05:12,312 --> 00:05:15,649 Having that influence when I grew up was good because 77 00:05:15,733 --> 00:05:21,363 it gave me an outlook on life that there is something nice wherever you are. 78 00:05:21,447 --> 00:05:24,533 Way, way, way, way back, before I was in school, 79 00:05:24,616 --> 00:05:27,161 I had a hat that I thought was a policeman's hat, 80 00:05:27,244 --> 00:05:30,789 and I actually jumped off my tricycle and ran in the middle of the street 81 00:05:30,873 --> 00:05:35,335 to stop traffic. And I got heck for it. 82 00:05:35,419 --> 00:05:38,630 There was a screech of brakes, I guess. My mother came running out of the house, 83 00:05:38,714 --> 00:05:41,300 "Ernest, what are you doing in the middle of the street?" 84 00:05:41,383 --> 00:05:45,304 So, you know, I had delusions then of dressing up and being another person. 85 00:05:47,890 --> 00:05:51,143 So when he was a young man, he was drafted eventually into the military 86 00:05:51,226 --> 00:05:54,772 where he was a weatherman, served in the Air Force as a weatherman. 87 00:05:56,482 --> 00:06:00,027 Going into the Philippines post-war after victory must have been, 88 00:06:00,110 --> 00:06:02,946 you know, an incredibly enlightening period of his life. 89 00:06:04,031 --> 00:06:07,034 [Craig Baird] After the military, Coombs comes back to the United States, 90 00:06:07,117 --> 00:06:09,995 but it's a tough time financially. 91 00:06:10,079 --> 00:06:12,539 So, he has to start following in the work, essentially. 92 00:06:12,623 --> 00:06:13,707 ["I've Been Everywhere" by Geoff Mack playing] 93 00:06:13,791 --> 00:06:15,250 ♪ I've been everywhere, man ♪ 94 00:06:15,334 --> 00:06:17,252 ♪ I've been everywhere, man... ♪ 95 00:06:17,336 --> 00:06:19,379 [Craig] And he starts following his brother around 96 00:06:19,463 --> 00:06:22,049 as they move through the Eastern United States 97 00:06:22,132 --> 00:06:24,009 down and as far as Florida 98 00:06:24,093 --> 00:06:26,970 and eventually making their way back up North. 99 00:06:27,054 --> 00:06:31,725 [Ernie] I was going to be an artist, a cartoonist or a commercial artist, 100 00:06:31,809 --> 00:06:37,815 so I went to art school and never thought that I would get into showbiz at all. 101 00:06:37,898 --> 00:06:41,235 But I went into theater through painting scenery 102 00:06:41,318 --> 00:06:45,280 and eventually got work in a touring children's theater 103 00:06:45,364 --> 00:06:47,241 where I acted as well. 104 00:06:47,324 --> 00:06:50,536 I'd been doing a little bit of acting along at the same time. 105 00:06:50,619 --> 00:06:53,372 ♪ Now, there's just one place I haven't been ♪ 106 00:06:53,455 --> 00:06:55,624 ♪ Stamp on the gas and roll her, man ♪ 107 00:06:55,707 --> 00:06:59,461 ♪ Soon we're gonna be there, man Soon we're gonna be there ♪ 108 00:07:01,880 --> 00:07:05,467 Dad found himself at WQED in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, 109 00:07:05,551 --> 00:07:10,013 where he was a jobbing actor, taking just about anything he could get. 110 00:07:10,097 --> 00:07:11,890 That's where he met Fred Rogers. 111 00:07:13,058 --> 00:07:16,311 [Jordan Morris] Fred Rogers was a seasoned TV producer when he met Ernie. 112 00:07:16,395 --> 00:07:19,481 Fred had experience as a floor manager at NBC 113 00:07:19,565 --> 00:07:23,610 and had been working at WQED in Pittsburgh from its inception. 114 00:07:23,694 --> 00:07:28,448 Fred, in the mid-fifties, started a program called The Children's Corner, 115 00:07:28,532 --> 00:07:31,618 and it was extremely successful, not just in Pittsburgh, 116 00:07:31,702 --> 00:07:34,580 it got syndicated in other parts of the country. 117 00:07:37,457 --> 00:07:41,170 [Chris] Dad became involved in that as a sort of a member of the cast. 118 00:07:43,130 --> 00:07:45,966 These two people coming together, in terms of children's shows, 119 00:07:46,049 --> 00:07:47,759 is like Lennon and McCartney. 120 00:07:49,136 --> 00:07:52,723 [Maxwell] Fred really was the innovator who developed this program, 121 00:07:52,806 --> 00:07:58,770 but he was also deeply disappointed in it, because it was very successful 122 00:07:58,854 --> 00:08:03,775 on the level of entertainment, but not so much on the level of education. 123 00:08:03,859 --> 00:08:09,406 And Ernie and Fred were talking about what kind of television could be made. 124 00:08:11,533 --> 00:08:13,911 [Chris] And it was after that that my father moved on 125 00:08:13,994 --> 00:08:16,079 to a show called Dimple Depot. 126 00:08:17,080 --> 00:08:20,500 And that's where he worked with my mother, who was a puppeteer. 127 00:08:21,793 --> 00:08:26,465 Marlene, whom everybody called Lynn, knocked Ernie's socks off immediately. 128 00:08:28,300 --> 00:08:31,053 I was the ingenue and he was the juvenile. 129 00:08:31,136 --> 00:08:33,679 -I was a juvenile at one time. -Yes, he was, once. 130 00:08:33,764 --> 00:08:35,057 Handsome prince. 131 00:08:35,140 --> 00:08:38,518 And we spent all of our courting time sitting in the studio. 132 00:08:38,602 --> 00:08:41,020 I sat on the ladder watching him paint the sets. 133 00:08:42,022 --> 00:08:46,693 [Ernie] That was a typical date for us. I'd go over and paint and we'd talk, 134 00:08:46,777 --> 00:08:51,031 and then we'd go out to have a coffee afterwards. That was a cheap date. 135 00:08:52,783 --> 00:08:55,994 I had a hound dog in those days, a beautiful old dog named Pip, 136 00:08:56,078 --> 00:08:59,122 and he fell in love with Lynn. He used to go over to her apartment. 137 00:08:59,206 --> 00:09:02,626 He'd stay there for overnight, sometimes couple of days. 138 00:09:02,709 --> 00:09:04,544 So, I had to marry her to get the dog back. 139 00:09:08,548 --> 00:09:11,468 [Cathie LeFort] Fred Rogers was the best man at my parents' wedding, 140 00:09:11,551 --> 00:09:14,638 so they had a connection beyond a professional connection. 141 00:09:14,721 --> 00:09:17,933 Maybe something brought two people together 142 00:09:18,016 --> 00:09:21,520 that had something to give to children. 143 00:09:22,437 --> 00:09:28,277 [Maxwell] There was a creative intensity and seriousness about Ernie Coombs 144 00:09:28,360 --> 00:09:31,697 that was matched by Fred Rogers. They were both very creative, 145 00:09:31,780 --> 00:09:37,327 but both very capable of being focused and intense about their work. 146 00:09:37,411 --> 00:09:41,665 [Chris] He was making money, not a ton, but he was earning a living 147 00:09:41,748 --> 00:09:46,086 doing what he wanted to do. And then they just had my sister Cathie. 148 00:09:47,671 --> 00:09:51,174 [Craig] Things seem to be going pretty well, but his contract runs out. 149 00:09:52,217 --> 00:09:55,137 And now he finds himself married, he has a daughter, 150 00:09:55,220 --> 00:09:56,847 and he doesn't have any work. 151 00:09:57,931 --> 00:09:59,474 [Jordan] And that's when CBC, 152 00:09:59,558 --> 00:10:01,685 who had been developing their own children's department, 153 00:10:01,768 --> 00:10:04,896 approached Fred Rogers and offered him complete creative control 154 00:10:04,980 --> 00:10:09,443 and a chance to create a show with more resources than he had ever had before. 155 00:10:09,526 --> 00:10:12,654 [Ernie] Fred knew that I was unemployed when he had this chance 156 00:10:12,738 --> 00:10:16,616 to come up to Toronto and asked me if I'd come along 157 00:10:16,700 --> 00:10:19,286 because he knew he needed an extra puppeteer. 158 00:10:19,369 --> 00:10:21,747 So, we all came up to Toronto. 159 00:10:21,830 --> 00:10:25,042 [whimsical music] 160 00:10:33,884 --> 00:10:38,263 [announcer] This is the CBC Television Network. 161 00:10:38,347 --> 00:10:40,599 [Jordan] When the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation 162 00:10:40,682 --> 00:10:43,643 began broadcasting, almost immediately, television became 163 00:10:43,727 --> 00:10:45,729 the country's number one pastime. 164 00:10:45,812 --> 00:10:48,648 There was no tablet, there was no video games, 165 00:10:48,732 --> 00:10:50,400 so it was a very different role. 166 00:10:50,484 --> 00:10:56,281 The public broadcaster at that time was really the network of choice. 167 00:10:56,365 --> 00:10:59,493 CBC did something that no other market was doing. 168 00:10:59,576 --> 00:11:02,496 They started developing shows directly for children. 169 00:11:02,579 --> 00:11:04,790 Oh, and how are you this fine day? 170 00:11:04,873 --> 00:11:06,583 Very well, sir. [giggles] 171 00:11:06,666 --> 00:11:12,047 The concept at that time was one of, uh, an educational component. 172 00:11:12,756 --> 00:11:17,177 CBC was the epitome of quality children's television 173 00:11:17,260 --> 00:11:19,346 in the '50s, '60s and beyond. 174 00:11:20,806 --> 00:11:24,476 The children's department was a remarkable part of the CBC. 175 00:11:24,559 --> 00:11:29,356 It wasn't really high on the radar of the programmers, 176 00:11:29,439 --> 00:11:33,443 and that allowed something remarkable to happen. 177 00:11:33,527 --> 00:11:36,905 The children's programmers didn't have to worry too much about the politics. 178 00:11:36,988 --> 00:11:38,907 They didn't have to worry about revenue. 179 00:11:38,990 --> 00:11:42,577 They could just create good shows and that's what they did. 180 00:11:42,661 --> 00:11:47,790 We do have a staff of 20 or 25 people who work patiently from day to day, 181 00:11:47,874 --> 00:11:50,794 developing standards for children's programs. 182 00:11:50,877 --> 00:11:53,255 We are proud that we have, perhaps, 183 00:11:53,338 --> 00:11:57,592 the only children's television department in North America. 184 00:11:58,718 --> 00:12:02,222 [Jordan] Fred Rogers was a particularly savvy choice of Rainsbury's 185 00:12:02,305 --> 00:12:04,641 to bring up and help develop a show with. 186 00:12:04,724 --> 00:12:10,480 He said, "You know, Fred, I've watched you talk with children. 187 00:12:10,564 --> 00:12:14,568 I'd like you to translate that into television." 188 00:12:15,902 --> 00:12:17,821 If it hadn't been for Fred Rainsbury, 189 00:12:17,904 --> 00:12:20,532 I probably would never have been on camera. 190 00:12:20,615 --> 00:12:23,743 Well, it turned out to be a good day after all. 191 00:12:23,827 --> 00:12:27,956 When you tell people that Fred Rogers and Ernie Coombs came to Canada together, 192 00:12:28,039 --> 00:12:30,750 most people don't even realize that Fred Rogers was ever here, 193 00:12:30,834 --> 00:12:32,878 or that CBC gave him a start. 194 00:12:32,961 --> 00:12:36,173 ♪ My name is Mister Rogers ♪ 195 00:12:36,256 --> 00:12:39,593 ♪ I'm glad that you are near ♪ 196 00:12:39,676 --> 00:12:43,889 ♪ You've made this day a special day ♪ 197 00:12:43,972 --> 00:12:48,435 ♪ By just your being here... ♪ 198 00:12:48,518 --> 00:12:52,564 Mister Rogers was developed in Canada out of Studio One. 199 00:12:52,647 --> 00:12:55,901 Not only was he on camera for the first time, 200 00:12:55,984 --> 00:12:59,196 but there was a wonderful set that was developed with him. 201 00:12:59,279 --> 00:13:04,034 That wonderful trolley that came by King Friday the 13th 202 00:13:04,117 --> 00:13:07,454 and all of the wonderful characters that came about. 203 00:13:07,537 --> 00:13:09,539 And it was on that first show for the CBC, 204 00:13:09,623 --> 00:13:11,666 which at that point was called Mister Rogers, 205 00:13:11,750 --> 00:13:15,545 where Fred really came into his own and started the long journey 206 00:13:15,629 --> 00:13:17,923 to becoming the famous Mr. Rogers we know today. 207 00:13:18,006 --> 00:13:23,470 And watching Fred perfect his on screen persona had an immediate effect on Ernie. 208 00:13:23,553 --> 00:13:26,640 [Dr. Frogg] I prescribe several smiles each and every day 209 00:13:26,723 --> 00:13:30,060 and an occasional chuckle to be taken after each "Please" and "Thank you." 210 00:13:30,143 --> 00:13:31,186 [patient puppet laughs] 211 00:13:31,269 --> 00:13:34,397 [Dr. Frogg] That'll be signed, Dr. Frank Lee Frogg, with two G's. 212 00:13:34,481 --> 00:13:35,649 -Remember that. -Two G's. 213 00:13:35,732 --> 00:13:41,363 The CBC had far, far more resources to support the kind of vision 214 00:13:41,446 --> 00:13:46,701 Rogers was developing than WQED had. Well, you know, just one example, 215 00:13:46,785 --> 00:13:50,372 the carpentry shop was huge and could fashion anything 216 00:13:50,455 --> 00:13:53,959 Rogers could think of for children's television. 217 00:13:54,042 --> 00:13:55,460 And he had a really clear vision. 218 00:13:55,544 --> 00:13:58,004 And the Toronto years is where it crystallized. 219 00:13:58,088 --> 00:14:01,675 [Craig] In Canada, Fred Rogers is churning out content. 220 00:14:01,758 --> 00:14:04,928 He puts out over 300 episodes of Mister Rogers 221 00:14:05,011 --> 00:14:07,180 in the space of only about two years. 222 00:14:07,264 --> 00:14:09,015 But he wants to go back to Pittsburgh, 223 00:14:09,099 --> 00:14:11,935 and that's eventually what he does when his contract runs out. 224 00:14:12,018 --> 00:14:16,398 I remember some of the people saying, "What are we going to do 225 00:14:16,481 --> 00:14:19,484 when Mister Rogers leaves?" And I said, 226 00:14:19,568 --> 00:14:23,905 "Well, why don't you build a program around Ernie? Ernie Coombs." 227 00:14:25,657 --> 00:14:29,911 Ernie has never forgotten the child within him. 228 00:14:31,580 --> 00:14:37,502 And that informs everything that he does with children. 229 00:14:39,087 --> 00:14:43,216 [Sandra Beech] Lynn was the dynamo behind Mr. Dressup. 230 00:14:43,300 --> 00:14:46,595 And Lynn stepped right in and said Ernie could do it. 231 00:14:47,637 --> 00:14:50,056 And that's exactly what happened. 232 00:14:53,018 --> 00:14:56,104 That is the beginning of Ernie's career. That is the beginning 233 00:14:56,187 --> 00:14:58,273 of what became Mr. Dressup. 234 00:14:58,356 --> 00:15:01,151 And it all started with a show called Butternut Square. 235 00:15:03,862 --> 00:15:05,655 -Well, I have a chef's hat here... -Oh. 236 00:15:05,739 --> 00:15:09,159 ...that I can put on if that helps. And I also have a spoon. 237 00:15:10,118 --> 00:15:12,287 And now I'll start my cake with a bowl. 238 00:15:13,413 --> 00:15:18,460 Ernie stayed and became the character Mr. Dressup. 239 00:15:18,543 --> 00:15:22,088 He brought skills with him. He was an artist. 240 00:15:22,172 --> 00:15:24,507 -He was a mimeist. -[quacking] 241 00:15:24,591 --> 00:15:28,637 He had a rapport with people that was exceptional. 242 00:15:28,720 --> 00:15:30,096 [Casey] Yep, we're nearly ready. 243 00:15:30,180 --> 00:15:32,766 There was singing, dancing. There was puppetry. 244 00:15:32,849 --> 00:15:34,309 There was make-believe. 245 00:15:34,392 --> 00:15:36,895 Here we go. Just swing it right around. 246 00:15:36,978 --> 00:15:40,940 [Chris] And it was actually on this show that Mr. Dressup was formed. 247 00:15:41,024 --> 00:15:42,400 Look at all this! 248 00:15:42,484 --> 00:15:44,903 Gee, look at all the marvelous costumes! 249 00:15:44,986 --> 00:15:46,946 Just in time! 250 00:15:47,030 --> 00:15:49,157 [Stu Gilchrist] The cast of Butternut Square 251 00:15:49,240 --> 00:15:54,579 comprised of Sandy Cohen, Don Himes, of course, was the music man. 252 00:15:54,663 --> 00:15:55,664 [piano playing] 253 00:15:55,747 --> 00:15:59,501 And two of the puppets that Dad interacted with very, very much 254 00:15:59,584 --> 00:16:00,710 were Casey and Finnegan. 255 00:16:00,794 --> 00:16:03,046 [Casey] Finnegan, are you sure you saw a squirrel 256 00:16:03,129 --> 00:16:04,881 out there in Butternut Square? You did. 257 00:16:04,964 --> 00:16:07,092 And voiced by Judy Lawrence. 258 00:16:08,551 --> 00:16:11,096 [Judith Lawrence] I was born in a place called Bairnsdale, 259 00:16:11,179 --> 00:16:15,266 but we were living in a city, a small city called Ballarat, 260 00:16:15,350 --> 00:16:18,228 which had been one of the biggest gold finds in Australia. 261 00:16:19,270 --> 00:16:22,440 I used to listen to a children's program on the radio, 262 00:16:22,524 --> 00:16:25,235 and it was called the Children's Session. 263 00:16:25,318 --> 00:16:27,362 They would talk about how to do something. 264 00:16:27,445 --> 00:16:29,948 And the one time they talked about how to do puppets 265 00:16:30,031 --> 00:16:32,200 and I made a puppet head. 266 00:16:32,283 --> 00:16:37,205 And I asked my mother, would she sew the body for this puppet on the machine, 267 00:16:37,288 --> 00:16:40,208 and she said, no, she wouldn't, but she'd show me how to use the machine. 268 00:16:40,959 --> 00:16:44,921 So, she showed me how to use a machine, so I made a puppet, I made two puppets. 269 00:16:45,004 --> 00:16:49,926 I used to be invited to go to kids' birthday parties in the neighborhood. 270 00:16:50,009 --> 00:16:51,886 And that's how I got into puppetry. 271 00:16:51,970 --> 00:16:53,972 -[Casey] Oh, Aunt Abigail? -Yes? 272 00:16:54,055 --> 00:16:57,100 [Casey] Finnegan says, would you bend over just a little bit closer 273 00:16:57,183 --> 00:16:59,728 -so he can get a better look at you? -Well, certainly. 274 00:16:59,811 --> 00:17:04,022 Oh! Oh, oh, oh, oh. Oh, Finnegan. 275 00:17:04,107 --> 00:17:05,692 [Casey] You're not Aunt Abigail. 276 00:17:05,775 --> 00:17:08,737 You know, Mr. Dressup, I had a funny feeling about you. 277 00:17:08,819 --> 00:17:10,363 [Jordan] After only two years of production, 278 00:17:10,446 --> 00:17:14,159 Butternut Square was slated for cancellation due to budget cuts 279 00:17:14,242 --> 00:17:16,202 and to make room for an exciting new talk show 280 00:17:16,286 --> 00:17:17,912 called This Hour Has Seven Days. 281 00:17:17,996 --> 00:17:22,333 [announcer] Ladies and gentlemen, This Hour Has Seven Days. 282 00:17:24,711 --> 00:17:27,756 We were shocked. I mean, I was shocked. 283 00:17:27,839 --> 00:17:31,217 We were getting great ratings. Great ratings. 284 00:17:32,427 --> 00:17:35,930 I told Ernie, and I'll never forget when I told Ernie. 285 00:17:36,014 --> 00:17:38,475 Ernie said, "Well, I'll go back down to Pittsburgh 286 00:17:38,558 --> 00:17:41,644 and maybe I can be a puppeteer with Fred Rogers again, 287 00:17:41,728 --> 00:17:43,396 or maybe I'll drive a school bus." 288 00:17:43,480 --> 00:17:45,774 He really wasn't sure what he was going to do. 289 00:17:46,941 --> 00:17:50,278 [Judith] Some of us, the people who'd been involved, 290 00:17:50,361 --> 00:17:53,323 proposed that we do a different program 291 00:17:53,406 --> 00:17:56,451 and that we build it around one of the characters from Butternut Square. 292 00:17:57,786 --> 00:18:01,039 [Stu] So, I phoned the director of television for the English Network. 293 00:18:01,122 --> 00:18:04,667 I said, "It's a big set? Is there gonna be big set in the studio?" 294 00:18:04,751 --> 00:18:07,337 He said, "No, there's set at all." 295 00:18:07,420 --> 00:18:10,715 He said, "All there is, is a 15-foot riser, 296 00:18:10,799 --> 00:18:12,759 three chairs and a table." 297 00:18:13,927 --> 00:18:17,305 I said, "You're canceling Butternut Square 298 00:18:18,598 --> 00:18:21,518 for a 15-foot riser and three chairs? 299 00:18:22,352 --> 00:18:23,728 Give me half the studio." 300 00:18:26,356 --> 00:18:30,276 I said, "Ernie, can you play around with this half studio?" 301 00:18:30,360 --> 00:18:34,239 And he got the crayons out and a pencil. He started drawing, 302 00:18:34,322 --> 00:18:38,034 he drew Mr. Dressup's house and he drew the counter 303 00:18:38,117 --> 00:18:40,703 and I said, "What about an exterior?" He said, 304 00:18:40,787 --> 00:18:42,831 "Well, we'll put a little patio out the back 305 00:18:42,914 --> 00:18:45,416 and we'll put the tree at the back of the patio." 306 00:18:47,961 --> 00:18:51,923 He said, "Stu, we can't call it 'Butternut Square' anymore 307 00:18:52,006 --> 00:18:53,675 because we have no square." 308 00:18:53,758 --> 00:18:56,761 And I said, "We'll call it 'Mr. Dressup'." 309 00:18:57,512 --> 00:18:59,389 [whimsical music] 310 00:19:04,143 --> 00:19:08,231 Hi, I'm glad you came to see me today. It's a nice day, 311 00:19:08,314 --> 00:19:10,859 and Casey and I have been playing and Finnegan's been playing, 312 00:19:10,942 --> 00:19:13,194 -and we've all been having a good time. -[knocking] 313 00:19:13,278 --> 00:19:15,655 Somebody is at the door. Let's go see who it is. 314 00:19:18,324 --> 00:19:20,326 [exclaiming] 315 00:19:20,410 --> 00:19:22,787 -[Casey] Oh, hi, Mr. Dressup. -Hi. 316 00:19:22,871 --> 00:19:24,247 [Casey] I was being a turtle. 317 00:19:24,330 --> 00:19:28,126 Yeah, that's a nice thing that you did with the blanket, Casey. 318 00:19:28,209 --> 00:19:31,296 [Stu] In the early days, it was heavily scripted 319 00:19:31,379 --> 00:19:34,424 and Ernie didn't respond to scripted. 320 00:19:34,507 --> 00:19:37,010 You know, he'd forget half the lines. 321 00:19:37,093 --> 00:19:41,306 I scrapped the scripting. We're going down to concepts. 322 00:19:41,389 --> 00:19:43,099 Would you like to help me do the dishes? 323 00:19:43,182 --> 00:19:44,183 [Casey] Oh, yes! 324 00:19:44,267 --> 00:19:46,352 [Judith] It was the spontaneity of that 325 00:19:46,436 --> 00:19:49,314 that was the difference between us and a scripted program. 326 00:19:49,397 --> 00:19:51,232 [Casey] Hey, Finnegan, get out from there. 327 00:19:51,316 --> 00:19:54,652 I said, "There will be a theme for each show, 328 00:19:54,736 --> 00:19:59,449 but there will be a series of concepts that will build a narrative." 329 00:19:59,532 --> 00:20:02,535 Hi. We're building all kinds of things. 330 00:20:02,619 --> 00:20:05,496 [Casey] Now, we need a big one of those to go along the top here. 331 00:20:05,580 --> 00:20:10,418 The scripts at the beginning were really only six, seven pages, 332 00:20:10,501 --> 00:20:15,131 and it required and counted on 333 00:20:15,214 --> 00:20:19,677 the talents of Ernie and Judith to adlib. 334 00:20:20,887 --> 00:20:24,557 Maybe Miss Fizz dropped it down from the spot, oh... 335 00:20:24,641 --> 00:20:26,225 [Casey] That's a great big boot! 336 00:20:26,309 --> 00:20:27,936 That's a great big mystery! 337 00:20:28,019 --> 00:20:29,228 [Casey] It's a mystery boot. 338 00:20:29,312 --> 00:20:31,314 Well, what do you mean? 339 00:20:31,397 --> 00:20:34,317 [Mr. Dressup] Well, I found it up in my fireplace chimney 340 00:20:34,400 --> 00:20:36,569 when I was cleaning it out, getting the soot out, 341 00:20:36,653 --> 00:20:39,030 and I can't figure out who could have dropped a boot 342 00:20:39,113 --> 00:20:42,200 -down my chimney or stuck it up in there. -Must be Santa Clause. 343 00:20:42,867 --> 00:20:45,119 -Santa! Santa Clause! -[Casey] Santa Clause! 344 00:20:45,203 --> 00:20:47,538 Great! Where is he? Where is he? 345 00:20:47,622 --> 00:20:51,459 Making the Dressup TV show was old school. 346 00:20:52,335 --> 00:20:55,713 [Judith] We did live to tape, they called it in those days. 347 00:20:55,797 --> 00:20:58,383 We did two rehearsals and then we taped. 348 00:20:58,466 --> 00:21:01,427 And we hardly ever stopped tape because we couldn't afford to. 349 00:21:01,511 --> 00:21:03,596 We didn't have the money for that sort of thing. 350 00:21:03,680 --> 00:21:06,182 Some of the tools I was using, look at this great big wrench. 351 00:21:06,265 --> 00:21:10,269 I thought I was going to need this to tighten up the pipe, you see. 352 00:21:10,353 --> 00:21:14,983 A live show like that, you have to remember all your lines. 353 00:21:15,066 --> 00:21:16,484 There's no second take. 354 00:21:16,567 --> 00:21:19,946 [Jani Lauzon] It's a real skill to be able to not only improvise, 355 00:21:20,029 --> 00:21:23,616 but watch what's going on, get a sense of the length 356 00:21:23,700 --> 00:21:27,662 and know that it's about to wrap up and then you just wrap it up. 357 00:21:27,745 --> 00:21:31,916 And they... Wow, they had that skill. It was really, really incredible. 358 00:21:32,000 --> 00:21:34,252 I'm a fireman. 359 00:21:34,335 --> 00:21:36,796 I'm a fireman, too. [chuckles] 360 00:21:36,879 --> 00:21:42,552 We had a very clear understanding that there would be no sexism, 361 00:21:42,635 --> 00:21:46,973 no racism, none of the... that sort of thing that... 362 00:21:47,056 --> 00:21:51,686 that sometimes does creep in, you know, because people don't know. 363 00:21:51,769 --> 00:21:54,063 -[Mr. Dressup] Joey, come on in. -Hi, Mr. Dressup. 364 00:21:54,147 --> 00:21:57,316 -Hi! Gee, it's nice to see you. -It's nice to see you. 365 00:21:57,400 --> 00:21:59,444 -Actually, I'm here for a reason. -Oh, yeah? 366 00:21:59,527 --> 00:22:01,320 -Well, I had to be in the neighborhood... -Uh-huh. 367 00:22:01,404 --> 00:22:02,530 ...to pick up my tap shoes 368 00:22:02,613 --> 00:22:03,698 -from the shoe repair man. -Oh, yes. 369 00:22:03,781 --> 00:22:07,285 So, do you want me to help you with your tap shoes? 370 00:22:07,368 --> 00:22:10,204 No, no, no, I want to... I really need a costume. 371 00:22:10,288 --> 00:22:13,458 I'd like to borrow one, go over and surprise my granddaughter. 372 00:22:13,541 --> 00:22:15,334 Oh, well, I can help you there. 373 00:22:15,418 --> 00:22:16,794 Oh, that's good. You know... 374 00:22:16,878 --> 00:22:22,675 There's so much meanness in the world, and some people have... 375 00:22:22,759 --> 00:22:27,555 they've just forgotten human kindness. And he personified it. 376 00:22:27,638 --> 00:22:31,225 [Ernie] Judith was very socially conscious and very much a feminist, 377 00:22:31,309 --> 00:22:34,645 and she was very good at rooting out anything 378 00:22:34,729 --> 00:22:38,816 that where we might have a stereotype. Like the typical woman 379 00:22:38,900 --> 00:22:42,487 has to be a housewife and work in the home and do that. 380 00:22:42,570 --> 00:22:46,741 And Judith would say, "Well, you know, that ain't so, 381 00:22:46,824 --> 00:22:48,326 and let's get rid of that notion." 382 00:22:48,409 --> 00:22:51,579 When it comes to that, the whole question around sexual stereotyping, 383 00:22:51,662 --> 00:22:55,750 we've done quite a lot of work on that, I think, over the years, 384 00:22:55,833 --> 00:22:59,754 and that very much reflects the attitudes of the people involved in the program. 385 00:22:59,837 --> 00:23:03,382 So, I mean, there was a time when Ernie... well, if he needed something sewn, 386 00:23:03,466 --> 00:23:07,011 he might send for one of his women friends to come and do it. 387 00:23:07,095 --> 00:23:09,472 And if... Susan or somebody needed a plumber, 388 00:23:09,555 --> 00:23:12,016 the plumbing fixed, they might get Ernie to come and do it. 389 00:23:12,100 --> 00:23:13,726 But we've changed that. That doesn't happen anymore. 390 00:23:14,393 --> 00:23:15,895 [Paul Soles] How come it worked so well? 391 00:23:15,978 --> 00:23:18,981 [Ernie] I don't know. I think it was just a very lucky combination 392 00:23:19,065 --> 00:23:20,733 of certain people getting together, 393 00:23:20,817 --> 00:23:23,569 and we all liked each other from the start. 394 00:23:23,653 --> 00:23:25,947 And you know, we related very well to each other. 395 00:23:26,030 --> 00:23:30,326 I think we all had the same ideas about what a children's show should be. 396 00:23:30,409 --> 00:23:32,995 [Casey] How much money do you get? I forget how much. 397 00:23:33,079 --> 00:23:36,332 Well, some bottles, it's five cents and some bottles it's two cents. 398 00:23:36,415 --> 00:23:38,501 -And some bottles are three cents. -[Casey] Oh. 399 00:23:38,584 --> 00:23:39,961 We'll just have to see. 400 00:23:40,044 --> 00:23:44,590 You have to have a connection for kids on screen. 401 00:23:44,674 --> 00:23:47,093 And that's what Casey is. That's the child. 402 00:23:47,176 --> 00:23:49,262 [Casey] Come on Finnegan, we have to get busy 403 00:23:49,345 --> 00:23:51,139 'cause we got a lot of cleaning up to do. 404 00:23:51,222 --> 00:23:55,518 You knew he was a puppet and you knew the dog was a puppet, obviously, 405 00:23:55,601 --> 00:23:59,689 but there was something that really came to life. 406 00:23:59,772 --> 00:24:01,482 [Casey] Mr. Dressup? 407 00:24:01,566 --> 00:24:03,693 Casey? Where are you? 408 00:24:03,776 --> 00:24:05,486 [Casey] In the bathroom. 409 00:24:05,570 --> 00:24:07,280 The bathroom? 410 00:24:07,363 --> 00:24:09,323 [Casey] Mr. Dressup, I can't get out. 411 00:24:10,032 --> 00:24:12,368 Is the door locked? Why is the door locked? 412 00:24:12,451 --> 00:24:14,203 [Casey] It was an accident. 413 00:24:14,287 --> 00:24:15,663 Where are you? 414 00:24:15,746 --> 00:24:18,499 [Casey] I didn't want you to be mad at me. I'm behind the door. 415 00:24:18,583 --> 00:24:22,545 Come on, Casey. All I want from you right now is a nice big hug. Come on. 416 00:24:22,628 --> 00:24:23,671 [Casey] All right. 417 00:24:23,754 --> 00:24:27,800 And Finnegan is the sidekick. Everybody has a sidekick or a best friend. 418 00:24:27,884 --> 00:24:29,802 [Casey] How long do you think an hour is, Finnegan? 419 00:24:30,970 --> 00:24:36,184 Fifteen centimeters? Very funny, that's not the same thing at all. 420 00:24:36,267 --> 00:24:40,104 Casey and Finnegan, they were the stars of the show, ultimately. 421 00:24:40,188 --> 00:24:42,064 And he was like the adult. 422 00:24:42,148 --> 00:24:45,693 [Bruce McCulloch] Mr. Dressup had the ability to sort of consider him a friend. 423 00:24:45,776 --> 00:24:48,905 He was just like a pal to them. And I think in a way 424 00:24:48,988 --> 00:24:51,949 that a standard authority figure is not. Even though sometimes, 425 00:24:52,033 --> 00:24:54,327 he would have authoritative things, he would go, "No, no, no, 426 00:24:54,410 --> 00:24:57,914 you need to eat that chicken noodle soup." And that's as mean as he would get. 427 00:24:57,997 --> 00:24:59,540 Casey, your soup is your lunch, 428 00:24:59,624 --> 00:25:02,501 now finish it up so I can get my gardening done, please. 429 00:25:02,585 --> 00:25:06,005 [Casey] I don't want anymore, thank you. I'm finished. 430 00:25:06,088 --> 00:25:11,427 Casey, you asked me especially to have chicken noodle soup for lunch, 431 00:25:11,510 --> 00:25:12,678 and I didn't have any. 432 00:25:12,762 --> 00:25:15,598 Remember, I had to run down and borrow a can of soup from Susan 433 00:25:15,681 --> 00:25:17,808 and heat it up. And it's all special for you. 434 00:25:17,892 --> 00:25:20,228 -And now, you're not eating it. -[Casey] Right. 435 00:25:20,311 --> 00:25:23,940 He'd sometimes get pissed at Casey. He got kind of angry. 436 00:25:24,023 --> 00:25:27,360 Not angry, but just kind of like, "Well, I'm trying to give you soup 437 00:25:27,443 --> 00:25:28,778 and you won't take the soup." 438 00:25:28,861 --> 00:25:31,155 If you don't eat your soup, you're going to be hungry 439 00:25:31,239 --> 00:25:33,658 in the middle of the afternoon. You'll be wanting candy 440 00:25:33,741 --> 00:25:35,284 and all sorts of junk like that. 441 00:25:35,368 --> 00:25:38,913 He demanded the chicken noodle soup and then he didn't want to eat it? 442 00:25:38,996 --> 00:25:43,167 Absolutely... bullshit, Casey. [laughs] 443 00:25:43,251 --> 00:25:47,004 [Casey] Mr. Dressup, why are you making such a loud noise? 444 00:25:47,088 --> 00:25:48,589 What loud noise? 445 00:25:48,673 --> 00:25:50,549 [Casey] Yelling, shouting. 446 00:25:50,633 --> 00:25:51,717 I... 447 00:25:52,468 --> 00:25:55,680 Well, I guess I am shouting, but that's because I was angry at you. 448 00:25:55,763 --> 00:25:58,891 He really listened to what Casey said. He took it into account. 449 00:25:58,975 --> 00:26:01,852 He even listened to what Finnegan said to Casey. 450 00:26:01,936 --> 00:26:04,689 I think that's something that children really need to see. 451 00:26:04,772 --> 00:26:06,607 And I think it's something they really long for, 452 00:26:06,691 --> 00:26:10,319 to be fully accepted by the adults in their lives. 453 00:26:10,403 --> 00:26:12,446 [Casey] I got mad at Mr. Dressup. 454 00:26:12,530 --> 00:26:15,157 [Aunt Bird] You did? Why? 455 00:26:15,241 --> 00:26:18,077 [Casey] Because he was too busy, and I wanted... 456 00:26:18,160 --> 00:26:20,997 I wanted him to help me with my blocks. 457 00:26:21,080 --> 00:26:25,626 The eternal question the children had, was Casey a boy or a girl? 458 00:26:25,710 --> 00:26:28,754 Well, I know when kids would ask me, "Is Casey a boy or a girl?" 459 00:26:28,838 --> 00:26:30,298 I usually would say, "Yes." 460 00:26:32,174 --> 00:26:33,384 [Casey] Hello, dear. 461 00:26:33,467 --> 00:26:36,762 I've got your mail, Mrs. Jacoby, you want to send down your basket? 462 00:26:36,846 --> 00:26:39,307 [Casey] Oh, just a minute, now. 463 00:26:39,390 --> 00:26:41,934 [Kim Wilson] I mean, here we are at this time, everybody's talking about, 464 00:26:42,018 --> 00:26:44,729 "Oh, we better have some non-binary or androgynous..." 465 00:26:44,812 --> 00:26:47,148 like trying to be more reflective of the audience we serve. 466 00:26:47,231 --> 00:26:50,109 And you think back to the '60s, you think, "Oh, there was nothing of that going on," 467 00:26:50,192 --> 00:26:52,069 and here was this character that was designed 468 00:26:52,153 --> 00:26:55,072 so it would look kind of like a boy, kind of like a girl. 469 00:26:55,156 --> 00:26:56,866 I mean, really, if you think about it, 470 00:26:56,949 --> 00:27:00,619 Casey was the first non-binary character on children's television. 471 00:27:00,703 --> 00:27:04,665 Casey, of course, was loveable, and he, or she, 472 00:27:04,749 --> 00:27:10,755 represented the child, so the child could see him or herself in Casey. 473 00:27:12,131 --> 00:27:16,469 [Susan] Judith being the puppeteer she was, 474 00:27:16,552 --> 00:27:22,308 was able to make Casey come completely alive for the viewing audience. 475 00:27:23,309 --> 00:27:26,812 And not just Casey and Finnegan, of course, because she was Aunt Bird. 476 00:27:26,896 --> 00:27:29,148 [Aunt Bird] Everybody has a bad temper sometimes. 477 00:27:29,231 --> 00:27:31,108 [Susan] And she was Alligator Al. 478 00:27:31,192 --> 00:27:34,028 [Alligator Al] I said, "José, do you think we can fix this ukulele?" 479 00:27:34,111 --> 00:27:35,571 And he said, "No way, José." Haha. 480 00:27:35,654 --> 00:27:39,075 [Susan] All completely different characters. 481 00:27:39,158 --> 00:27:40,159 How are you? 482 00:27:40,242 --> 00:27:42,536 [Casey] I'm awful, thank you. How are you? 483 00:27:42,620 --> 00:27:45,331 With Judith, she had an incredible sense of humor. So that was, 484 00:27:45,414 --> 00:27:48,584 you know, that added a lot. And he did too, really. 485 00:27:48,667 --> 00:27:53,130 But she was really quick... with her sense of humor. Really fast. 486 00:27:53,214 --> 00:27:56,217 [Casey] You know, I'll give you a shock, Boo! Ha-ha-ha! 487 00:27:56,300 --> 00:27:57,343 You guys. 488 00:27:57,426 --> 00:28:00,137 [Ernie] Judith was very, very clever, very witty. 489 00:28:00,221 --> 00:28:02,640 Casey would say such things while we were rehearsing. 490 00:28:02,723 --> 00:28:06,811 I'd come out and say, "Casey, could you come out of the treehouse..." 491 00:28:06,894 --> 00:28:08,938 and I'd say, "Well, what are you doing now?" 492 00:28:09,021 --> 00:28:11,565 And he was supposed to be saying, I was playing, and he'd say, 493 00:28:11,649 --> 00:28:15,903 "I was reading Nietzsche and I thought perhaps he might be right. 494 00:28:15,986 --> 00:28:18,322 But Finnegan says, no." You know, these things. 495 00:28:18,406 --> 00:28:20,241 She was a very intelligent woman 496 00:28:20,324 --> 00:28:23,744 and her wit was always on a very high plane. 497 00:28:25,204 --> 00:28:28,499 [Alyson Court] Judith and Ernie vibed so well, 498 00:28:28,582 --> 00:28:31,585 because it was just laid back. 499 00:28:31,669 --> 00:28:35,047 It was together they had the influence that they had. 500 00:28:35,131 --> 00:28:38,300 Can't mention Ernie without mentioning Casey and Finnegan. 501 00:28:38,384 --> 00:28:40,928 You know, Ernie Coombs fought for Judith Lawrence 502 00:28:41,011 --> 00:28:44,515 to be paid as much as he was being paid 'cause she was doing half the work 503 00:28:44,598 --> 00:28:46,684 as she was doing these two puppet characters. 504 00:28:46,767 --> 00:28:51,939 We didn't talk about these things, ever. And I never even knew what he earned. 505 00:28:52,022 --> 00:28:55,359 -Look what I caught. I caught a flower. -[Casey laughs] 506 00:28:55,443 --> 00:28:57,194 [laughs] 507 00:28:57,278 --> 00:28:58,988 [Casey] Was that a pretend dream? 508 00:28:59,071 --> 00:29:01,949 Yeah, that was. I wasn't really dreaming, Casey. 509 00:29:02,032 --> 00:29:05,453 But it just worked, because we didn't plan it, 510 00:29:05,536 --> 00:29:08,080 and we didn't talk about it. We just did it. 511 00:29:08,164 --> 00:29:12,668 It's a trust they have in each other, but it's also a trust they have in us 512 00:29:12,751 --> 00:29:16,714 and in our parents, too... "We're just... we're making this up. 513 00:29:16,797 --> 00:29:20,634 But we have... we have your kids' best interests at heart." 514 00:29:20,718 --> 00:29:23,179 Now, this is the original tickle trunk 515 00:29:23,262 --> 00:29:27,558 that I thought up out of my own head and actually made. 516 00:29:27,641 --> 00:29:31,812 And it's got about, I'd say, at least eight coats of paint, 517 00:29:31,896 --> 00:29:33,939 very, very thickly painted. 518 00:29:34,023 --> 00:29:38,319 And at one point, the top cracked, so I had to repair it. 519 00:29:38,402 --> 00:29:42,865 The tickle trunk was this magical, like Pandora's box, 520 00:29:42,948 --> 00:29:45,493 the anticipation of what's gonna happen. 521 00:29:45,576 --> 00:29:49,914 That's what I liked, was the idea that you open something, a box, 522 00:29:49,997 --> 00:29:53,083 and inside of it are all these things. And you can take these things, 523 00:29:53,167 --> 00:29:56,253 like a wig and a hat and a spoon, a pair of boots, 524 00:29:56,337 --> 00:30:00,424 and you can make another human being. And I thought that was fascinating. 525 00:30:00,508 --> 00:30:03,219 And I became that person. My first one person show, 526 00:30:03,302 --> 00:30:04,678 I toured with a tickle trunk. 527 00:30:04,762 --> 00:30:08,766 I always dug when he put on a hat and he'd become the thing. 528 00:30:08,849 --> 00:30:11,435 How's that look? Okay? 529 00:30:11,519 --> 00:30:14,730 And that was so cool to me. Like, as a kid before I considered acting 530 00:30:14,813 --> 00:30:18,984 as a hobby, let alone a vocation. That putting on a hat 531 00:30:19,068 --> 00:30:23,906 and having it open your heart and your soul to other experiences 532 00:30:23,989 --> 00:30:26,742 and what was it? What would a guy who wore this hat do? 533 00:30:26,825 --> 00:30:29,828 There now. I'm tugboat Captain Dressup. 534 00:30:29,912 --> 00:30:32,790 It astounds me how many kids keep their dressing up clothing 535 00:30:32,873 --> 00:30:35,167 in something which they call a Tickle Trunk. 536 00:30:36,502 --> 00:30:41,674 This fella wears a hat like this most of the time. 537 00:30:41,757 --> 00:30:45,719 There was always a drawing segment. He was a fantastic drawer. 538 00:30:45,803 --> 00:30:48,305 He could cartoon just fantastically. 539 00:30:48,389 --> 00:30:51,100 [Mr. Dressup] And I've seen clowns in circuses 540 00:30:51,183 --> 00:30:54,979 that had great big shoes like that. 541 00:30:55,062 --> 00:30:58,566 The fact that he would use a marker and draw something 542 00:30:58,649 --> 00:31:02,486 and it was like, it's so good. Like, how do you do that? 543 00:31:02,570 --> 00:31:07,324 You're just like, mind blown that he could just draw something so amazing. 544 00:31:07,408 --> 00:31:11,078 Because oak trees are made of such strong wood, 545 00:31:11,161 --> 00:31:15,583 the limbs can go out a long way, right out sort of sideways. 546 00:31:15,666 --> 00:31:17,001 Leaves on it there. 547 00:31:19,712 --> 00:31:22,298 [Bruce] For me, having a tumultuous time in my life, 548 00:31:22,381 --> 00:31:26,051 I think just watching it was very calming as he just drew the things 549 00:31:26,135 --> 00:31:27,928 you got from the grocery store. 550 00:31:28,012 --> 00:31:31,307 And you know it's going to be milk and eggs. 551 00:31:31,390 --> 00:31:34,351 And he draws each egg. And, oh, what is he going to have? 552 00:31:34,435 --> 00:31:36,645 A banana and you can get the answers. 553 00:31:36,729 --> 00:31:40,941 So I think it's just sort of calm and there is a sense of kindness. 554 00:31:41,025 --> 00:31:45,112 [Graham Greene] He taught kids to use their imagination. 555 00:31:45,195 --> 00:31:50,618 The imagination of a child is a spectacular place to be in. 556 00:31:50,701 --> 00:31:56,290 Hi. I'm making something today. A kind of a magical thing. 557 00:31:56,373 --> 00:31:59,335 See what it is? It's a little black box. 558 00:31:59,418 --> 00:32:03,589 And this little black box is going to be a camera. 559 00:32:03,672 --> 00:32:08,010 This is going to be a mask. Now, I know usually when you make masks, 560 00:32:08,093 --> 00:32:13,807 you make masks of animals or clowns or something like that. 561 00:32:13,891 --> 00:32:18,437 When he did a craft, you felt like you could make that 562 00:32:18,520 --> 00:32:24,276 'cause he did it with actual toilet paper tubes and paste and... 563 00:32:24,360 --> 00:32:26,654 -Stuff you have in your house. -Yeah, and tissue paper. 564 00:32:26,737 --> 00:32:30,324 I like to save these. You know, you get them from paper towels, 565 00:32:30,407 --> 00:32:34,161 from toilet paper rolls. And here's a great big one. 566 00:32:34,244 --> 00:32:37,206 I don't know what this came from, but it's a good one to use. 567 00:32:37,289 --> 00:32:42,044 We had a beer together and I opened the beers and I had the bottle caps 568 00:32:42,127 --> 00:32:44,755 and I was looking to throw them away and he took them, 569 00:32:44,838 --> 00:32:48,967 he said, "No, no, save those for crafts," and put them in his pocket. 570 00:32:49,051 --> 00:32:52,137 -There you go. Eyeballs for something. -Yeah. 571 00:32:52,221 --> 00:32:56,517 [Mr. Dressup] Here goes tape. Here goes the cap. 572 00:32:56,600 --> 00:33:00,270 And he always wanted it to be simple stuff, he said, 573 00:33:00,354 --> 00:33:04,400 so that nobody was excluded, so that everybody could make the crafts. 574 00:33:04,483 --> 00:33:05,818 I take scissors... 575 00:33:06,944 --> 00:33:10,155 and I make a cut, a little cut in it. 576 00:33:10,239 --> 00:33:12,700 As a father, we're always doing arts and crafts together. 577 00:33:12,783 --> 00:33:16,370 We were making lanterns for Lunar New Year, 578 00:33:16,453 --> 00:33:20,165 and like, I had all the materials out, laid out. 579 00:33:20,249 --> 00:33:22,960 I was doing the cuts, showing them, helping them with it. 580 00:33:23,043 --> 00:33:25,087 And that's from the show. 581 00:33:25,170 --> 00:33:26,922 There's my lantern. 582 00:33:27,005 --> 00:33:30,300 And you can draw decorations on it if you want to, but you don't have to. 583 00:33:30,384 --> 00:33:32,386 Now we've got the lanterns. I think I'll go out 584 00:33:32,469 --> 00:33:35,013 and see how Casey's coming along. See you outside. 585 00:33:35,097 --> 00:33:36,849 It just felt like there was no agenda. 586 00:33:36,932 --> 00:33:39,059 It was like, "Hey, let's hang out together. 587 00:33:39,143 --> 00:33:42,604 Let's draw some pictures, Let's talk." You know, there is no strict agenda, 588 00:33:42,688 --> 00:33:47,067 but there kind of is, in a sense of like how to be kind. How to be kind? 589 00:33:47,151 --> 00:33:50,028 Sometimes nice isn't considered the most important thing, 590 00:33:50,112 --> 00:33:52,030 but it kind of is. 591 00:33:52,114 --> 00:33:55,617 Thousands and thousands of Canadian children would be watching Mr. Dressup. 592 00:33:55,701 --> 00:34:00,706 At its peak, it was bringing in 500,000 viewers every single day. 593 00:34:00,789 --> 00:34:03,208 I know I have a lot of clown things in here. 594 00:34:03,292 --> 00:34:05,878 So, in many ways, it kind of unites the country because 595 00:34:05,961 --> 00:34:07,671 no matter where you are, whether you're in Vancouver, 596 00:34:07,755 --> 00:34:10,591 you're in Halifax or you're up North, you're getting Mr. Dressup 597 00:34:10,674 --> 00:34:14,136 talking directly to you, it's like he's talking one-on-one with you. 598 00:34:14,219 --> 00:34:19,850 What would a clown be without a big red nose? Beep-Beep. Woo-hoo! 599 00:34:19,933 --> 00:34:25,938 I wonder how his children felt about sharing their dad with the country. 600 00:34:26,607 --> 00:34:28,942 [gentle guitar music playing] 601 00:34:34,364 --> 00:34:36,909 [Cathie] It was really a kind of a blessed childhood, 602 00:34:36,992 --> 00:34:39,828 not necessarily because dad was Mr. Dressup, 603 00:34:39,911 --> 00:34:42,873 but probably more because my parents were who they were as people. 604 00:34:42,956 --> 00:34:46,710 [Chris] You assume that he comes home and kicks off his Mr. Dressup shoes 605 00:34:46,793 --> 00:34:49,045 and becomes a different person when he's at home. 606 00:34:49,129 --> 00:34:50,297 And that just simply didn't happen. 607 00:34:51,089 --> 00:34:54,176 I remember watching Friendly Giant one time with my son 608 00:34:54,259 --> 00:34:57,054 before it was time for him to start school, 609 00:34:57,137 --> 00:34:59,348 and Friendly Giant was coming to an end, 610 00:34:59,431 --> 00:35:00,808 and Chris turned to me and said, 611 00:35:00,891 --> 00:35:03,101 "Daddy, you've got to go to the studio, you're on next." 612 00:35:03,185 --> 00:35:06,355 [Chris] There was always laughter, great laughter, 'cause my dad 613 00:35:06,438 --> 00:35:07,731 was a very funny, funny man 614 00:35:07,815 --> 00:35:09,399 and my mum had a fantastic sense of humor 615 00:35:09,483 --> 00:35:11,568 and the two of them got on like a house on fire. 616 00:35:12,236 --> 00:35:14,780 [Lynn] The kids tease me a lot because I laugh at his jokes. 617 00:35:14,863 --> 00:35:17,574 That's why I married you, because you're such a great audience. 618 00:35:17,658 --> 00:35:19,827 -I'm a good audience, right. -She still laughs after. 619 00:35:19,910 --> 00:35:22,746 I can hear the same joke and I still laugh and the kids say, 620 00:35:22,830 --> 00:35:25,707 "Mom, come on, you've heard that 17 times." 621 00:35:26,792 --> 00:35:30,629 [Cathie] Chris and I each had our activities. He was involved in sports. 622 00:35:31,213 --> 00:35:34,550 I was crazy about horses from the time I could walk. 623 00:35:34,633 --> 00:35:37,928 It's kind of funny. For instance, when Chris, he's on a skiing team, 624 00:35:38,011 --> 00:35:42,599 freestyle skiing team, and I, as a father, went out to help set up 625 00:35:42,683 --> 00:35:45,477 during the competitions, and I think it was kind of funny at first 626 00:35:45,561 --> 00:35:49,815 when the other kids realized that Chris Coombs' dad was Mr. Dressup. 627 00:35:49,898 --> 00:35:54,820 As a young child, there were times where kids would make fun of me. 628 00:35:54,903 --> 00:35:56,905 "Your dad plays with puppets for a living," you know, 629 00:35:56,989 --> 00:35:58,198 or "Your dad's a sissy" or whatever. 630 00:35:58,282 --> 00:36:00,659 And I found that difficult to deal with sometimes. 631 00:36:00,742 --> 00:36:05,706 They handled it pretty well. They just said, "Well, does your father have a job?" 632 00:36:05,789 --> 00:36:07,833 "Yeah." "Well, my father has a job too." 633 00:36:07,916 --> 00:36:11,837 Some of their peers expected more from them or something from them 634 00:36:11,920 --> 00:36:15,132 that they really didn't want to give. But I think now that they're teenagers, 635 00:36:15,215 --> 00:36:17,259 it's all taken for granted, now. 636 00:36:18,719 --> 00:36:21,597 She was the kind of lady, from everything I could see, 637 00:36:21,680 --> 00:36:25,601 that wanted to be the best that she could be at any job she was doing, 638 00:36:25,684 --> 00:36:30,772 whether it was as a mother to her two children or as a supporter for Ernie. 639 00:36:32,399 --> 00:36:35,193 [Cathie] My mom was a pretty amazing woman. 640 00:36:35,277 --> 00:36:39,698 Whatever she put her mind to, she was successful at. 641 00:36:40,490 --> 00:36:43,535 My mom was trying to find a nursery school for my brother. 642 00:36:43,619 --> 00:36:46,163 He would have been about preschool age. 643 00:36:47,247 --> 00:36:51,960 And in her inimitable way, she couldn't find one, so she started one. 644 00:36:53,629 --> 00:36:58,383 Butternut Learning Center. The name came from Butternut Square. 645 00:36:59,801 --> 00:37:03,055 They took over a building, which was an old schoolhouse. 646 00:37:03,138 --> 00:37:04,973 And that was a huge venture. 647 00:37:05,057 --> 00:37:09,645 We want the child, by the end of the time that he spends in Butternut, 648 00:37:09,728 --> 00:37:13,565 to feel very good about himself. Any effort that he's made 649 00:37:13,649 --> 00:37:18,612 toward developing in any area is roundly applauded by the staff. 650 00:37:18,695 --> 00:37:23,992 We want them to have a good concept of themselves. "I can do it. 651 00:37:24,076 --> 00:37:27,496 If I can't do it now, I'll be able to do it in a little while, 652 00:37:27,579 --> 00:37:29,790 once I've developed to a certain point." 653 00:37:30,791 --> 00:37:35,504 [Terry McManus] His wife, Lynn, wonderful, wonderful woman, had started a daycare. 654 00:37:35,587 --> 00:37:38,590 That costs money. It costs money to do, 655 00:37:38,674 --> 00:37:41,802 and it costs money to build it and the rest of it. 656 00:37:41,885 --> 00:37:47,432 And so, being out on the road was a way for Ernie to pay those bills. 657 00:37:47,516 --> 00:37:52,104 I think, for Ernie, it was the best time. Ernie loved being on the road. 658 00:37:52,187 --> 00:37:56,608 ["Born To Be Wild" by Steppenwolf playing] 659 00:37:57,359 --> 00:38:00,862 [Chris] Dad was a very resourceful person. He built a replica, 660 00:38:00,946 --> 00:38:06,368 a tickle trunk that turned into a horse. He came up with magic and songs and dance 661 00:38:06,451 --> 00:38:09,746 and everything like this and started touring the show by himself, 662 00:38:09,830 --> 00:38:13,709 carting all of the stuff in the VW bus, setting the set, doing the show, 663 00:38:13,792 --> 00:38:17,004 striking the set, selling merchandise out front, 664 00:38:17,087 --> 00:38:19,548 signing autographs, meeting people, and then, you know, 665 00:38:19,631 --> 00:38:22,009 coming home exhausted and a few hundred bucks richer. 666 00:38:23,802 --> 00:38:27,055 [Terry] I mean, the tickets were only four and five dollar tickets. 667 00:38:27,139 --> 00:38:33,145 He was going off and playing places and walking away with $100, $150. 668 00:38:33,228 --> 00:38:36,273 And Don Jones changed that. 669 00:38:38,316 --> 00:38:41,570 My father is a concert promoter in Canada. 670 00:38:41,653 --> 00:38:45,240 Clients in Canada were Alice Cooper and Deep Purple. 671 00:38:45,323 --> 00:38:49,578 The Mr. Dressup touring show would go to Nova Scotia, 672 00:38:49,661 --> 00:38:54,624 New Brunswick, P.E.I., Newfoundland and Southern Ontario, Northern Ontario. 673 00:38:54,708 --> 00:38:57,961 They'd go out to B.C. and go as far as the island. 674 00:38:58,045 --> 00:38:59,463 [screeching brakes] 675 00:38:59,546 --> 00:39:02,466 ♪ Born to be wild ♪ 676 00:39:06,094 --> 00:39:09,222 ♪ Born to be wild ♪ 677 00:39:13,226 --> 00:39:16,188 [Jim Parker] He felt a responsibility to his audience. 678 00:39:16,271 --> 00:39:20,692 You know, they took the time to come and see him. 679 00:39:20,776 --> 00:39:23,904 He was gonna take the time to meet with them. 680 00:39:25,614 --> 00:39:28,158 I saw him, I saw one of his shows and I met him, 681 00:39:28,241 --> 00:39:30,577 and it was, like, one of the biggest memories of my life, 682 00:39:30,660 --> 00:39:34,498 is I got to meet Mr. Dressup. And I told him I loved his drawings. 683 00:39:34,581 --> 00:39:37,626 And we had a little interaction, and I held on to that for the rest of my life. 684 00:39:38,293 --> 00:39:42,214 Can you imagine a little Andrew going and actually seeing Mr. Dressup? 685 00:39:43,256 --> 00:39:46,051 [Craig] The children are able to go up to Mr. Dressup and actually see him, 686 00:39:46,134 --> 00:39:47,803 shake his hand and get a picture with him. 687 00:39:47,886 --> 00:39:52,557 So, it makes it feel like his world, his house actually exists. 688 00:39:53,558 --> 00:39:57,395 When I go on tour, and we frequently perform at colleges 689 00:39:57,479 --> 00:40:00,607 and high school auditoriums, and you get some big strapping kid 690 00:40:00,690 --> 00:40:04,111 come up and say, "Mr. Dressup!" and gives me a big hug, you know. 691 00:40:04,194 --> 00:40:06,363 That's, uh, that's kind of nice. 692 00:40:10,700 --> 00:40:15,413 Don Jones set up the whole tour and did all the advance work. 693 00:40:15,497 --> 00:40:17,916 I couldn't say enough good things about him. 694 00:40:17,999 --> 00:40:20,710 And you know what? They were close friends. 695 00:40:20,794 --> 00:40:25,507 Very different people. Not the kind of people that you would necessarily think 696 00:40:25,590 --> 00:40:28,844 would go together because here you have Ernie, this artist, 697 00:40:28,927 --> 00:40:32,889 kind of slight in stature to some degree. And then you had Don, 698 00:40:32,973 --> 00:40:38,770 who was a pretty big guy, and he was the boss. Don was the boss. 699 00:40:38,854 --> 00:40:42,149 And God bless him for what he did for Ernie. 700 00:40:42,232 --> 00:40:44,276 [Jim] The tour is almost over. 701 00:40:44,359 --> 00:40:48,071 -Two more shows. Two more shows. -[Jim chuckles] 702 00:40:48,155 --> 00:40:51,700 There is a Lord and a God. Two more shows. 703 00:40:51,783 --> 00:40:54,578 -[Jim] And here's Ernie. -[Don] Here's Ernie. 704 00:40:54,661 --> 00:40:56,371 [Jim] The end of the tour. 705 00:40:56,454 --> 00:40:59,791 -This is what we've made so far. -[Jim laughs] 706 00:40:59,875 --> 00:41:02,043 I had some, but Don took it. 707 00:41:04,296 --> 00:41:08,675 His share, he takes the first 100%. And then after that, I get what's left. 708 00:41:08,758 --> 00:41:09,968 [Jim] You lucky fella. 709 00:41:12,846 --> 00:41:15,348 [Terry] Ernie had this clown routine that he did, 710 00:41:15,432 --> 00:41:18,226 and he put this clown nose on. 711 00:41:18,310 --> 00:41:21,438 Well, Don filled it with shaving cream. 712 00:41:21,521 --> 00:41:25,317 So, Ernie opens up the tickle trunk. "Let's see what we have in here." 713 00:41:25,400 --> 00:41:29,487 And we can hear him start to laugh, okay? He's starting to laugh 714 00:41:29,571 --> 00:41:33,241 because he sees the nose there with the shaving cream. 715 00:41:33,325 --> 00:41:37,370 The son of a gun, he had an extra clown nose. 716 00:41:37,454 --> 00:41:42,042 And he put that on and he turned around, kind of looked at us offstage, 717 00:41:42,125 --> 00:41:44,753 like, you know, "You can't get me." 718 00:41:45,754 --> 00:41:47,797 Who carries extra clown noses? 719 00:41:47,881 --> 00:41:51,968 [children laughing] 720 00:41:52,052 --> 00:41:55,430 He could have been a vaudevillian comedian. He was... 721 00:41:55,513 --> 00:41:59,434 Actually, he was a comedian just hamming it up, doing something. 722 00:41:59,517 --> 00:42:01,645 [Jim] That's quite an outfit you're wearing, sir. 723 00:42:01,728 --> 00:42:04,231 Thank you. It is my "at home." 724 00:42:06,983 --> 00:42:10,445 There's green, and then there's mint and there's chartreuse. 725 00:42:13,323 --> 00:42:15,325 [man] And then there's only one olive left. 726 00:42:15,408 --> 00:42:18,662 Which is racing green. And then there's olive green. 727 00:42:18,745 --> 00:42:20,247 -[Jim laughs] -Ooh. [indistinct] 728 00:42:21,081 --> 00:42:23,208 [Jim] There was a snowstorm. 729 00:42:23,291 --> 00:42:27,420 We had to pull off the highway and just wait out the storm. 730 00:42:27,504 --> 00:42:31,800 So, we stayed up way into the night. 731 00:42:31,883 --> 00:42:34,511 I was having anxiety attacks at the time, 732 00:42:34,594 --> 00:42:36,388 and it turned out that he was having them, too. 733 00:42:37,055 --> 00:42:39,766 [voice breaking] He and I talked all night. 734 00:42:42,143 --> 00:42:45,021 And I think that's when we became like that, you know. 735 00:42:45,105 --> 00:42:46,398 [Mr. Dressup] You know what, folks? 736 00:42:46,481 --> 00:42:49,317 I think Mr. Dressup is gonna need all your clapping hands 737 00:42:49,401 --> 00:42:51,695 to help him keep time. So, let's hear it. 738 00:42:51,778 --> 00:42:56,074 -[clapping] -[singing] 739 00:42:56,157 --> 00:42:58,785 [Peter Moss] When you're in a studio, you feed an audience. 740 00:42:58,868 --> 00:43:01,454 When you're up on stage, you're fed by an audience. 741 00:43:01,538 --> 00:43:04,874 You go out there and you're up on stage and there's lots of kids 742 00:43:04,958 --> 00:43:07,669 and they're all singing along and they're clapping and they're laughing. 743 00:43:07,752 --> 00:43:11,047 It's great. For someone like Ernie, I'm sure it was terrific. 744 00:43:13,133 --> 00:43:15,760 One time he came to pick me up from the school, 745 00:43:15,844 --> 00:43:20,390 and that was probably the day that I really realized, like, how big he was. 746 00:43:21,057 --> 00:43:26,938 Three packed school busses in the front and just screaming like it was a concert. 747 00:43:27,022 --> 00:43:30,191 I just remember him being like, you know, "Hi." 748 00:43:32,819 --> 00:43:35,196 [caller] Mr. Dressup, I have to tell you, I grew up on your show. 749 00:43:35,280 --> 00:43:37,907 My son, when he was four, I had an opportunity to take him 750 00:43:37,991 --> 00:43:41,619 to see your live show here in Nappanee. And I have to tell you 751 00:43:41,703 --> 00:43:44,706 how magical you made my childhood and his childhood. 752 00:43:44,789 --> 00:43:46,958 And I just want to say thank you. 753 00:43:47,042 --> 00:43:49,002 [chuckles] Well, thanks, for saying that. 754 00:43:49,085 --> 00:43:50,837 -It's great. -It's nice, but... 755 00:43:50,920 --> 00:43:54,549 you know, I had a lot of help, though. If we hadn't had all of our great writers 756 00:43:54,632 --> 00:43:58,011 and puppeteers and musicians, it wouldn't have been much of a show. 757 00:43:58,094 --> 00:44:01,139 For more than two years, Mr. Dressup greeted kids every single morning 758 00:44:01,222 --> 00:44:03,350 in a way that no other show ever had. 759 00:44:03,433 --> 00:44:08,104 It was a unifying, dependable daily voice, unlike anything that had come before it. 760 00:44:08,188 --> 00:44:09,856 And there was almost no competition. 761 00:44:09,939 --> 00:44:12,484 One of the more fascinating additions to the morning hours 762 00:44:12,567 --> 00:44:15,737 will be what is perhaps the most interesting and acclaimed 763 00:44:15,820 --> 00:44:19,866 children's series ever made. It's called Sesame Street. 764 00:44:19,949 --> 00:44:23,870 [whimsical music] 765 00:44:23,953 --> 00:44:27,415 [Deb Bernstein] It was the first time where you brought together producers, 766 00:44:27,499 --> 00:44:32,170 writers, educators and researchers to create a show 767 00:44:32,253 --> 00:44:34,714 with specific developmental goals. 768 00:44:34,798 --> 00:44:36,674 [Sesame Street narrator] That's a something. 769 00:44:36,758 --> 00:44:37,842 Something starts with "S." 770 00:44:37,926 --> 00:44:40,804 What Sesame Street, I think, did extremely well, 771 00:44:40,887 --> 00:44:44,516 was taking a lot of the educational concepts... 772 00:44:44,599 --> 00:44:46,142 counting, reading... 773 00:44:46,226 --> 00:44:50,772 You need a "W" to make such words as "Wash" and "Woman" 774 00:44:50,855 --> 00:44:53,691 and "Weeping Willow" and, um... 775 00:44:55,652 --> 00:44:57,695 Of course, when Sesame Street came on, they said, 776 00:44:57,779 --> 00:44:59,072 "Oh, that'll be the end of you." 777 00:44:59,155 --> 00:45:00,698 You know, "Dressup will be canceled." 778 00:45:01,825 --> 00:45:05,036 Somebody, a producer, thank goodness, I don't remember who it was, said, 779 00:45:05,120 --> 00:45:07,330 "You know, you have to do something with those puppets. 780 00:45:07,414 --> 00:45:11,459 You're gonna have to make their eyes move and make their mouths move." 781 00:45:11,543 --> 00:45:13,086 And I said, "No, I'm not going to." 782 00:45:13,169 --> 00:45:17,632 Finnegan's mouth moved. Casey's didn't. Didn't matter to the kids anyway. 783 00:45:17,715 --> 00:45:22,929 [Susan] We were worried that maybe this is the way it's gonna go. 784 00:45:23,012 --> 00:45:26,307 And if that's the way it's gonna go 785 00:45:26,391 --> 00:45:30,061 with fast-paced shows, 786 00:45:30,145 --> 00:45:35,442 how are we gonna survive with our gentle, quiet, 787 00:45:35,525 --> 00:45:38,862 take-our-time... show? 788 00:45:38,945 --> 00:45:40,530 One banana... 789 00:45:41,531 --> 00:45:43,908 [Casey] Do you have a lot of monkeys coming to this bank, Mr. Banks? 790 00:45:43,992 --> 00:45:46,286 No, this is the first monkey so far, 791 00:45:46,369 --> 00:45:48,538 and the first monkey I've ever seen that said "oink." 792 00:45:48,621 --> 00:45:50,623 -[Casey] Oh. -That's why I like working in the bank. 793 00:45:50,707 --> 00:45:54,627 You meet so many different people. Two bananas. 794 00:45:55,545 --> 00:45:59,632 While other shows have gone to be disco-fied, video hit shows, 795 00:45:59,716 --> 00:46:03,178 this show has remained as serene and simple as it always was. How come? 796 00:46:03,261 --> 00:46:07,765 Because we program to preschoolers, and they have their own little world. 797 00:46:07,849 --> 00:46:10,560 They're not familiar with the great outside world too much. 798 00:46:10,643 --> 00:46:13,271 They're dealing with their own emotions and how to grow up 799 00:46:13,354 --> 00:46:16,566 and how to learn to tie your shoelaces, eh, Casey? 800 00:46:16,649 --> 00:46:18,234 [Casey] I'm still learning to do mine. 801 00:46:18,318 --> 00:46:19,360 It's not easy. 802 00:46:19,444 --> 00:46:23,072 Whereas Sesame Street had to be more current, 803 00:46:23,156 --> 00:46:28,328 and even Mr. Rogers to an extent, had to be more reflective of the world outside. 804 00:46:28,411 --> 00:46:30,663 Mr. Dressup was a haven. 805 00:46:30,747 --> 00:46:35,293 At first, I didn't think that Sesame Street was going to work, 806 00:46:35,376 --> 00:46:37,170 but obviously it did. 807 00:46:37,253 --> 00:46:40,256 So, we didn't go the Sesame Street route. 808 00:46:40,340 --> 00:46:43,468 We let them go their way and we continued on our way. 809 00:46:43,551 --> 00:46:47,805 Our audience reduced for a while, again, you know what? 810 00:46:47,889 --> 00:46:52,310 Not very long after, our audience came back. 811 00:46:53,478 --> 00:46:54,979 And stayed with us. 812 00:46:55,063 --> 00:46:59,192 [announcer] Live from the Harbor Castle Hotel in Toronto, 813 00:46:59,275 --> 00:47:03,279 the 1978 ACTRA Awards! 814 00:47:03,363 --> 00:47:07,408 The best children's television program... Mr. Dressup! 815 00:47:07,492 --> 00:47:10,912 [audience cheers] 816 00:47:10,995 --> 00:47:13,998 I've never been so nervous in all my life. I usually talk to puppets. 817 00:47:14,082 --> 00:47:15,208 [audience laughs] 818 00:47:15,291 --> 00:47:19,254 Actually, Casey and Finnegan should be here to accept this lovely lady, 819 00:47:19,337 --> 00:47:22,298 but it's past their bedtime. So, I have to accept it 820 00:47:22,382 --> 00:47:26,553 on behalf of the entire family that produces Mr. Dressup. 821 00:47:27,595 --> 00:47:30,557 Before I mention the names, I would like to say that 822 00:47:30,640 --> 00:47:34,852 I'm very happy that ACTRA finally... Well, I shouldn't say "finally," 823 00:47:34,936 --> 00:47:39,357 but I'm very happy to say that there is a children's category now in television. 824 00:47:42,110 --> 00:47:43,570 Thank you. 825 00:47:44,612 --> 00:47:47,490 [Scott Henderson] By the 1970s, television's a mainstay. 826 00:47:47,574 --> 00:47:51,286 You know, it's starting to turn into a full blown industry. 827 00:47:51,369 --> 00:47:53,413 ["Takin' Care of Business" by Bachman-Turner Overdrive playing] 828 00:47:54,956 --> 00:47:58,668 ♪ You get up every morning from your alarm clock's warning ♪ 829 00:47:58,751 --> 00:48:02,171 ♪ Take the 8:15 into the city ♪ 830 00:48:02,255 --> 00:48:05,925 ♪ There's a whistle up above and people pushin', people shovin' ♪ 831 00:48:06,009 --> 00:48:08,761 ♪ And the girls who try to look pretty... ♪ 832 00:48:08,845 --> 00:48:12,515 Having those early shows like Mr. Dressup that were a staple, 833 00:48:12,599 --> 00:48:14,642 every day you go and see Mr. Dressup, 834 00:48:14,726 --> 00:48:17,437 you know, started to bring a lot of similar shows. 835 00:48:17,520 --> 00:48:21,274 TVO launched with Polka Dot Door, Today's Special. 836 00:48:22,400 --> 00:48:24,444 So, there was a lot more live action. 837 00:48:24,527 --> 00:48:28,740 ♪ And I'll been taking care of business every day ♪ 838 00:48:28,823 --> 00:48:32,118 ♪ Taking care of business every way ♪ 839 00:48:32,201 --> 00:48:34,537 ♪ I've been taking care of business... ♪ 840 00:48:34,621 --> 00:48:37,165 As the importance of Canadian programing 841 00:48:37,248 --> 00:48:40,835 and the relevance of Canadian programing grew, 842 00:48:40,918 --> 00:48:43,546 so did the restrictions on it. 843 00:48:43,630 --> 00:48:46,299 And that, I think, was a result of politics. 844 00:48:46,382 --> 00:48:50,803 It was the turn of both the CBC and CTV television networks today to appear 845 00:48:50,887 --> 00:48:54,307 before the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission. 846 00:48:55,141 --> 00:49:00,104 [Craig] In the 1980s, the landscape is starting to change for the CBC. 847 00:49:00,188 --> 00:49:03,608 The economy, there's big changes happening with that. 848 00:49:03,691 --> 00:49:08,029 But one of the biggest changes is in 1984, when the Liberal government 849 00:49:08,112 --> 00:49:12,367 that had been in power since about 1963 is defeated. 850 00:49:12,450 --> 00:49:17,121 [newscaster] Look at this. Conservatives, leading are elected in 190 seats. 851 00:49:17,205 --> 00:49:19,123 The Liberals totally wiped out. 852 00:49:20,208 --> 00:49:23,753 [Craig] And that brings in the progressive Conservative government to Brian Mulroney. 853 00:49:23,836 --> 00:49:27,256 We're gonna recapture the Canadian dream together 854 00:49:27,340 --> 00:49:30,259 and we're gonna bring about a brand-new wave of prosperity 855 00:49:30,343 --> 00:49:31,928 that will do honor to all of you. 856 00:49:32,011 --> 00:49:36,474 And they're looking to cut costs. And because the CBC is heavily funded 857 00:49:36,557 --> 00:49:39,560 by the federal government, that means the CBC 858 00:49:39,644 --> 00:49:41,854 is going to be suffering some deep cuts. 859 00:49:41,938 --> 00:49:45,316 And they have to start looking at where they're going to cut. 860 00:49:45,400 --> 00:49:47,735 Now they can look at something like Hockey Night in Canada, 861 00:49:47,819 --> 00:49:51,072 which is bringing in massive dollars with advertising. 862 00:49:51,155 --> 00:49:53,032 Or they can look at the children's department 863 00:49:53,116 --> 00:49:55,576 where there's not really any advertisers. 864 00:49:55,660 --> 00:50:00,832 And they have to start looking at ways to cut costs there. And unfortunately, 865 00:50:00,915 --> 00:50:05,336 one of the main ways they do that is they end The Friendly Giant. 866 00:50:05,420 --> 00:50:07,714 The CBC has chopped The Friendly Giant. 867 00:50:07,797 --> 00:50:11,551 The final episode of the popular children's show was taped last week. 868 00:50:11,634 --> 00:50:14,554 Friendly Giant has been on the air for 26 years. 869 00:50:14,637 --> 00:50:17,348 I couldn't even understand why the show was canceled in the first place, 870 00:50:17,432 --> 00:50:19,767 because it was popular and it was a wonderful show. 871 00:50:19,851 --> 00:50:22,603 [Craig] Mr. Dressup does survive through that, 872 00:50:22,687 --> 00:50:24,605 but you see changes in the show. 873 00:50:24,689 --> 00:50:28,443 [Susan] In the beginning, there seemed to be more money 874 00:50:28,526 --> 00:50:32,780 for certain things. There was a lot more money for filming. 875 00:50:32,864 --> 00:50:38,619 We went on location and filmed things like "Casey and Finnegan in the car wash." 876 00:50:38,703 --> 00:50:44,709 We went to Marineland. We did a film shoot about ice fishing. 877 00:50:44,876 --> 00:50:49,172 We did a shoot going to the dentist. So there was money for that, 878 00:50:49,255 --> 00:50:53,301 which seemed to dwindle out later on. 879 00:50:53,384 --> 00:50:59,390 But when I got there, the costume budget was $25 for two episodes, 880 00:50:59,474 --> 00:51:04,479 and I think I managed to get up to $35 an episode by the time I left. 881 00:51:05,188 --> 00:51:07,398 And Ernie and I would make jokes about this. He'd say, 882 00:51:07,482 --> 00:51:10,109 "You know, it's not like the show is called Mr. Math." 883 00:51:10,193 --> 00:51:13,613 And I'd say, "No, it is Mr. Dressup, you'd think there'd be a costume budget." 884 00:51:13,696 --> 00:51:15,573 But it was just such a low budget show. 885 00:51:15,656 --> 00:51:20,620 We kind of absorbed the need to make money, to an extent, 886 00:51:20,703 --> 00:51:22,997 from the American influence. 887 00:51:24,040 --> 00:51:26,626 It became much more of a bottom-line thing. 888 00:51:28,628 --> 00:51:33,966 [Judith] I felt as if we were moving towards creating consumers, 889 00:51:34,050 --> 00:51:36,677 and I didn't like that idea at all. 890 00:51:36,761 --> 00:51:39,931 I mean, that was what I really hated about television, was that, 891 00:51:40,014 --> 00:51:44,310 you know, so much was commercial and it's selling stuff to people. 892 00:51:46,020 --> 00:51:49,023 [Susan] There were a couple of us that knew 893 00:51:49,106 --> 00:51:51,484 that Judith was talking about leaving the show. 894 00:51:52,652 --> 00:51:57,406 Her decision to leave the show, obviously, really well thought out 895 00:51:57,490 --> 00:52:00,201 and in some way, a courageous one. 896 00:52:00,284 --> 00:52:04,664 But she left a big, big hole in the show when she went. 897 00:52:04,747 --> 00:52:10,586 Casey and Finnegan, Aunt Bird, Alligator Al. That was a huge deal. 898 00:52:10,670 --> 00:52:14,257 There was a question whether the show would go on without her. 899 00:52:15,091 --> 00:52:17,885 [Susan] It was worrisome because... 900 00:52:17,969 --> 00:52:21,222 "Is it gonna fly? Is it gonna continue?" 901 00:52:21,305 --> 00:52:27,144 What will happen? I mean, as much as Mr. Dressup was Mr. Dressup, 902 00:52:27,228 --> 00:52:29,939 and all the things that he was and brought to the show, 903 00:52:30,022 --> 00:52:35,319 could not imagine how the show could go on without Casey and Finnegan. 904 00:52:36,320 --> 00:52:39,532 [Ernie] When Casey and Finnegan left, it was a little bit like 905 00:52:40,241 --> 00:52:42,702 my kids growing up and leaving home. 906 00:52:43,953 --> 00:52:47,957 Judith had her own particular way of going through rehearsals 907 00:52:48,040 --> 00:52:51,878 and her own particular wit that I missed a lot. 908 00:52:51,961 --> 00:52:57,091 I had a bit of a tussle with the CBC about who owned Casey and Finnegan. 909 00:52:58,092 --> 00:53:01,137 And I said, "Well, I made them, you know. I do own them." 910 00:53:02,138 --> 00:53:07,226 And they tried to tell me that they did. But anyway, that didn't go anywhere. 911 00:53:07,310 --> 00:53:11,230 I said, "No, no, you can't do that." I said, "When I'm dead, 912 00:53:11,314 --> 00:53:14,483 up to that point, no, they're mine. You know, I own them. 913 00:53:14,567 --> 00:53:16,527 I made them. They're my puppets." 914 00:53:18,487 --> 00:53:20,406 [easy guitar music playing] 915 00:53:23,868 --> 00:53:28,956 I remember driving off the ferry onto Hornby Island and thinking, 916 00:53:29,040 --> 00:53:31,292 "Oh, yes, this is where I want to be." 917 00:53:33,085 --> 00:53:35,922 This is a small island off Vancouver Island 918 00:53:36,005 --> 00:53:38,549 between Vancouver Island and the mainland. 919 00:53:51,562 --> 00:53:54,607 [man over mic] We're gonna go way back in time 920 00:53:54,690 --> 00:53:57,109 and remember a guy named Mr. Dressup. 921 00:53:57,193 --> 00:53:59,070 [audience cheering] 922 00:53:59,153 --> 00:54:02,865 Ladies and gentlemen, Casey and Finnegan. 923 00:54:06,035 --> 00:54:08,704 [Judith] I mean, it's astounding. I couldn't believe it. 924 00:54:08,788 --> 00:54:10,706 Lot of these adults were crying and I thought, 925 00:54:10,790 --> 00:54:13,501 "What the earth's matter with these people? What are they crying for?" 926 00:54:13,584 --> 00:54:15,670 [man] Does Finnegan ever say anything? 927 00:54:15,753 --> 00:54:17,880 [Casey] He only says things to me. 928 00:54:19,590 --> 00:54:23,844 He says he's learned a lot of good, new, rude words tonight. 929 00:54:23,928 --> 00:54:25,262 [audience laughs] 930 00:54:25,346 --> 00:54:28,683 And I thought it was just good fun, and I couldn't imagine what... 931 00:54:28,766 --> 00:54:32,353 I said afterwards... I said, "Why were people crying?" 932 00:54:33,104 --> 00:54:35,606 Well, because they were put in touch with their childhood 933 00:54:35,690 --> 00:54:40,277 in a way that I guess I didn't appreciate, or something. I don't know. 934 00:54:42,613 --> 00:54:47,118 -Did you want something? What? Come on. -[chickens clucking] 935 00:54:50,371 --> 00:54:52,373 Looking back on it, well, now I wonder, 936 00:54:52,456 --> 00:54:55,292 how on earth did I manage to do it for so long? 937 00:54:55,376 --> 00:54:56,377 Come on, chickens. 938 00:54:57,420 --> 00:55:02,091 And then, how on earth have I managed to survive so long after I finished? 939 00:55:02,174 --> 00:55:04,427 Those questions are very hard to answer. 940 00:55:13,936 --> 00:55:17,148 [Bob Dermer] When Judith left, they had some big shoes to be filled, 941 00:55:17,231 --> 00:55:22,028 and how to dole that out to one puppeteer. They didn't see doing that, 942 00:55:22,111 --> 00:55:25,698 so they invited several of us to come in and do the show. 943 00:55:25,781 --> 00:55:31,370 Cheryl Wagner, and Nina Keogh, Karen Valleau and myself. 944 00:55:34,165 --> 00:55:35,499 [Truffles] Here I am! 945 00:55:35,583 --> 00:55:36,792 -Hello. -Hello. 946 00:55:37,877 --> 00:55:38,919 -Hi. -Hi. 947 00:55:39,003 --> 00:55:43,132 [Susan] I think Truffles might have been the first and then Chester the Crow. 948 00:55:43,215 --> 00:55:47,094 Oh, Mr. Dressup. You knew it was me all the time! 949 00:55:47,178 --> 00:55:48,763 [Susan] And Granny. 950 00:55:48,846 --> 00:55:50,973 [Granny] Okay. Thank you very much, Mr. Dressup. 951 00:55:51,057 --> 00:55:52,516 -I'll see you later. -[Mr. Dressup] Okay. 952 00:55:52,600 --> 00:55:54,018 [Susan] And Lorenzo. 953 00:55:54,101 --> 00:55:57,855 Well, it is an old sock, but it's also my trunk. 954 00:55:57,938 --> 00:55:59,023 [Susan] And Annie. 955 00:55:59,106 --> 00:56:02,985 [Annie] That's it, I'd like to build a castle when I grow up. 956 00:56:03,069 --> 00:56:06,530 -[puppet] Hello! -[laughs] 957 00:56:06,614 --> 00:56:09,700 [Jani Lauzon] You know, the realization that we were actually going to tape. 958 00:56:09,784 --> 00:56:13,954 We were actually going to do this. I was actually here. It was actually Ernie. 959 00:56:14,038 --> 00:56:16,248 And then trying to figure out the mechanics 960 00:56:16,332 --> 00:56:19,460 of how we could actually make all of this work. 961 00:56:19,543 --> 00:56:23,964 While the learning curve was high, I think we were all just really, really excited. 962 00:56:27,134 --> 00:56:29,929 All of our newer puppeteers could be very outrageous... 963 00:56:30,012 --> 00:56:31,055 [Granny] Ooh! 964 00:56:31,138 --> 00:56:35,267 ...very witty, and just break me up completely during our rehearsals. 965 00:56:35,351 --> 00:56:38,395 [Granny] Not fair, I was fixing my legs. See? [laughs] 966 00:56:38,479 --> 00:56:40,606 Oh, Truffles! Hiya, hiya, hiya. 967 00:56:40,689 --> 00:56:43,734 He was really good with me, because I would be below the set 968 00:56:43,818 --> 00:56:48,280 and I was always next to his legs when I'm working my puppet. 969 00:56:48,364 --> 00:56:52,618 And so I would always... I'd bite his leg or something during rehearsals. 970 00:56:52,701 --> 00:56:54,703 -I'll race ya! Okay! -Oh, all right. 971 00:56:54,787 --> 00:56:57,039 Here I go. Here I go! [laughs] 972 00:56:57,873 --> 00:57:01,168 Follow the puck. Whoops. 973 00:57:01,252 --> 00:57:03,796 She's a speedy little devil, isn't she? 974 00:57:03,879 --> 00:57:06,090 It's not going the way it went last time. 975 00:57:06,173 --> 00:57:11,303 [Susan Sheehan] Nina, she was very good to work with, very upbeat and fun. 976 00:57:11,387 --> 00:57:14,723 They all were, actually. Puppeteers are amazing people. 977 00:57:14,807 --> 00:57:17,184 [Jim] Hi, Nina. Nina does Truffles. 978 00:57:17,268 --> 00:57:20,020 When I came in, and then, Karen and the others, 979 00:57:20,104 --> 00:57:23,858 I think it was maybe a lot more playful or something, or crazy. 980 00:57:23,941 --> 00:57:26,861 Do you think this is funny? [farts] 981 00:57:26,944 --> 00:57:29,155 [laughs] 982 00:57:29,238 --> 00:57:30,781 Yeah, pretty funny, Chester. 983 00:57:30,865 --> 00:57:34,618 Boy, last time Mr. Dressup did this to me, I couldn't sit down for a week. 984 00:57:34,702 --> 00:57:36,704 [crew laughs] 985 00:57:36,787 --> 00:57:40,749 I don't know if they really knew what was gonna hit them when we arrived. 986 00:57:40,833 --> 00:57:44,628 And we were like, "Pow, we're here!" You know, so... 987 00:57:44,712 --> 00:57:48,924 Hey, everybody, I'm Alex. You haven't met me yet. 988 00:57:49,008 --> 00:57:51,927 I'm the new addition to the Mr. Dressup show. 989 00:57:52,011 --> 00:57:56,307 Jim Parker started out as a guest singer. 990 00:57:56,390 --> 00:58:00,144 -Hey, Jim! Hi! -Hi, Mr. Dressup! [chuckles] 991 00:58:00,227 --> 00:58:05,065 [Susan] Jim Parker became interested in doing the new puppet Alex. 992 00:58:05,149 --> 00:58:10,404 And we did auditions, and he really worked very, very hard 993 00:58:10,487 --> 00:58:13,282 because he was not a puppeteer. 994 00:58:13,365 --> 00:58:19,079 Jim's a pretty special guy. He just had a similar kind of personality to Ernie 995 00:58:19,163 --> 00:58:24,084 and that same kind of love and enthusiasm for children and play. 996 00:58:24,168 --> 00:58:29,089 And the way that he expressed himself creatively and just a super nice guy. 997 00:58:29,173 --> 00:58:33,135 Like a super nice guy. Would it have been nice 998 00:58:33,219 --> 00:58:38,599 to have a black puppeteer? Absolutely. Not taking anything away from Jim. 999 00:58:39,391 --> 00:58:41,477 [Jim Parker] Today, it would have been totally different. 1000 00:58:41,560 --> 00:58:44,355 Think it was, "Here's Parker, he can do it. 1001 00:58:44,438 --> 00:58:47,441 He's got the relationship with Ernie already. 1002 00:58:47,524 --> 00:58:50,527 So let's, you know, if he can do it, let's let him do it." 1003 00:58:50,611 --> 00:58:53,614 -[guest] Yoo-hoo. We're here. -[Granny] Oh, hello? 1004 00:58:53,697 --> 00:58:55,532 -[guest] Anybody around? -[Granny] In here. 1005 00:58:55,616 --> 00:58:57,993 -Where's Granny? -[Granny] Over here. 1006 00:58:58,077 --> 00:59:00,120 Oh, there you are, Granny. How are you? 1007 00:59:00,204 --> 00:59:01,914 [Granny] I'm fine, thank you. 1008 00:59:01,997 --> 00:59:04,416 We brought the costumes, Granny. You want to see them? 1009 00:59:04,500 --> 00:59:06,460 [Granny] Oh, good. Yes, of course I do. 1010 00:59:06,543 --> 00:59:08,504 I don't even think it was a different show, 1011 00:59:08,587 --> 00:59:11,715 but it had certainly felt a little different, I think. 1012 00:59:11,799 --> 00:59:16,011 New set, that community center. Yeah, the community center. 1013 00:59:16,095 --> 00:59:18,889 As a Métis woman, I think the idea of community 1014 00:59:18,973 --> 00:59:21,183 has always been really, really super important, 1015 00:59:21,267 --> 00:59:24,353 and the community center offers an environment 1016 00:59:24,436 --> 00:59:28,857 where that is the most important thing. 1017 00:59:28,941 --> 00:59:32,361 For writers, it was a little easier to work with that, 1018 00:59:32,444 --> 00:59:36,323 because you had different characters who could have different experiences. 1019 00:59:36,407 --> 00:59:39,910 But everybody missed Casey and Finnegan. 1020 00:59:39,994 --> 00:59:42,371 But it didn't really affect the ratings. 1021 00:59:42,454 --> 00:59:46,166 I mean, it didn't affect how kids responded to Mr. Dressup. 1022 00:59:46,250 --> 00:59:50,212 ♪ We have a band This is how we play ♪ 1023 00:59:50,296 --> 00:59:56,302 ♪ We each make music in a different way ♪ 1024 00:59:56,385 --> 01:00:00,347 [Lynn] Here we have my big sister Caitlin, holding me. 1025 01:00:00,431 --> 01:00:03,517 Well, my grandchildren like to come over and visit 1026 01:00:03,600 --> 01:00:06,478 and come down here and get into the tickle trunk. 1027 01:00:06,562 --> 01:00:10,524 They dress up in the costumes and do little plays. 1028 01:00:11,984 --> 01:00:14,987 And even though the costumes don't fit, they have a lot of fun. 1029 01:00:15,070 --> 01:00:20,034 Look, a Christmas elf ringing the Christmas bells. 1030 01:00:20,117 --> 01:00:25,914 ♪ Oh, Tannenbaum, oh, Tannenbaum How lovely are your branches ♪ 1031 01:00:25,998 --> 01:00:32,004 ♪ And your electric lights and all the other decorations ♪ 1032 01:00:32,087 --> 01:00:34,757 -Can't take it out. Ooh, it's a secret. -[Ernie laughs] 1033 01:00:34,840 --> 01:00:37,051 Can't take it out. We have to put it in the box. 1034 01:00:37,134 --> 01:00:40,054 [Ernie] All right, we better cut here. There's an elf in the way. Cut! 1035 01:00:40,137 --> 01:00:42,931 ♪ We wish you a merry Christmas ♪ 1036 01:00:43,015 --> 01:00:47,311 ♪ And a Happy New Year ♪ 1037 01:00:47,394 --> 01:00:48,771 We wish you were here. 1038 01:00:48,854 --> 01:00:52,358 Yes, but since you're there, have a good Christmas anyway. 1039 01:00:52,441 --> 01:00:55,694 And Natalie, too. And we'll see you as soon as possible. 1040 01:00:55,778 --> 01:00:56,779 Bye! 1041 01:00:56,862 --> 01:00:58,989 [Cathie] From Casey and Finnegan. 1042 01:00:59,073 --> 01:01:02,159 And me, Mr. Dressup. [laughs] 1043 01:01:14,588 --> 01:01:17,216 [Nina] We were having a wrap party, 1044 01:01:17,299 --> 01:01:21,095 and we didn't want to really start the event 1045 01:01:21,178 --> 01:01:25,599 'cause we were waiting for Ernie's wife, Lynn, to come. 1046 01:01:27,643 --> 01:01:29,478 He had bought her flowers. 1047 01:01:31,313 --> 01:01:33,399 They were her favorite color. 1048 01:01:35,359 --> 01:01:36,443 Um... 1049 01:01:37,903 --> 01:01:41,782 He was like a kid in a candy store waiting for his wife. 1050 01:01:41,865 --> 01:01:44,576 But then, as time went on, I think we were getting the sense 1051 01:01:44,660 --> 01:01:47,037 that Ernie was getting concerned. 1052 01:01:47,121 --> 01:01:50,624 My dad had called me, this is before the time of cell phones, 1053 01:01:50,707 --> 01:01:53,252 but he had called me to ask if I'd heard from my mom. 1054 01:01:53,335 --> 01:01:58,966 I just... my last memory of Ernie that day was just holding those flowers. 1055 01:02:00,134 --> 01:02:03,637 I remember my neighbor coming in and saying, 1056 01:02:03,720 --> 01:02:05,764 "Cathie, let me hold the baby." 1057 01:02:05,848 --> 01:02:08,892 And as soon as he said that to me, I knew. 1058 01:02:10,519 --> 01:02:14,815 The wife of popular children's entertainer Ernie Coombs, better known as Mr. Dressup, 1059 01:02:14,898 --> 01:02:17,651 has been killed in a tragic motor vehicle accident. 1060 01:02:17,734 --> 01:02:21,613 Marlene Coombs was hit by a car outside a downtown supermarket. 1061 01:02:21,697 --> 01:02:23,824 CFTO's Austin Delaney has more. 1062 01:02:23,907 --> 01:02:26,034 [Austin Delaney] Fifty-five year old Marlene Coombs 1063 01:02:26,118 --> 01:02:28,412 was walking on the sidewalk on Young Street in Temperance 1064 01:02:28,495 --> 01:02:31,832 late yesterday afternoon, when a southbound car clipped another vehicle 1065 01:02:31,915 --> 01:02:34,376 and went out of control. The car mounted the curb 1066 01:02:34,460 --> 01:02:36,587 and ended up in the doorway of a Loblaw's store. 1067 01:02:41,550 --> 01:02:43,302 [Chris] Dad... 1068 01:02:43,385 --> 01:02:48,599 just took me and he said, "I've lost my wife. 1069 01:02:48,682 --> 01:02:50,058 But you've lost your mother. 1070 01:02:51,977 --> 01:02:54,480 And I'm going to look after you." 1071 01:02:56,648 --> 01:02:58,901 And I said, "I'll stay as long as you want." 1072 01:02:58,984 --> 01:03:01,403 And he said, "Well, how about forever?" [chuckles, sniffles] 1073 01:03:05,532 --> 01:03:09,912 And he wrote a letter to the universe... 1074 01:03:09,995 --> 01:03:12,206 [voice breaking] about how that made him feel. 1075 01:03:15,042 --> 01:03:16,168 And, uh... 1076 01:03:20,631 --> 01:03:22,508 You know, it was hard to read. 1077 01:03:25,177 --> 01:03:29,223 The way life takes someone so beautiful as she was 1078 01:03:29,306 --> 01:03:34,228 and so important to Ernie is very, very sad. And I've never forgotten it. 1079 01:03:35,896 --> 01:03:40,901 [Susan] How in the world was Ernie going to continue? 1080 01:03:40,984 --> 01:03:46,990 Would he want to? How could he possibly? And what was he gonna need if he did? 1081 01:03:48,325 --> 01:03:51,578 [Denise] I remember speaking to Cathie, his daughter, 1082 01:03:51,662 --> 01:03:54,540 and sort of trying to suss it out. And she said, 1083 01:03:54,623 --> 01:03:59,586 "The two most important things in my dad's life was his marriage to my mom 1084 01:03:59,670 --> 01:04:03,173 and being Mr. Dressup." And she said, "He's lost one this year, 1085 01:04:03,257 --> 01:04:05,008 he can't lose two this year." 1086 01:04:07,970 --> 01:04:12,849 Nobody talked about... As soon as we got on set, nobody talked. 1087 01:04:12,933 --> 01:04:14,851 Because he didn't want it. 1088 01:04:16,395 --> 01:04:22,067 He just wanted to be able to come on set, do the job, and he did it. 1089 01:04:22,150 --> 01:04:26,822 It was clear that we were gonna go on now as long as he wanted to go on. 1090 01:04:27,864 --> 01:04:30,075 [Fred] When he came on my show, that's when the... 1091 01:04:30,158 --> 01:04:34,079 That's when the challenge happened. This was, I think, 1092 01:04:34,162 --> 01:04:38,041 only maybe two or three weeks after his wife had been tragically killed. 1093 01:04:38,125 --> 01:04:42,546 And we contacted him and said, "You know, we're fine canceling. 1094 01:04:42,629 --> 01:04:45,841 You know, we're so sorry, etc..." And he said, "No, no." 1095 01:04:45,924 --> 01:04:49,553 That the day he and his wife had talked about his being on the show 1096 01:04:49,636 --> 01:04:53,890 and he was really looking forward to it. So, we proceeded. 1097 01:04:54,725 --> 01:04:55,934 [Fred] Are you okay? 1098 01:04:56,018 --> 01:04:59,062 Yep! Just working my way through the log. What a great log you have there. 1099 01:04:59,146 --> 01:05:01,607 -It's a long crawl. -[laughs] Yes, but it's fun. Hi! 1100 01:05:01,690 --> 01:05:03,734 -It's good to see you. -Oh, I'm glad to be here. 1101 01:05:03,817 --> 01:05:05,027 Say hello to my friends. 1102 01:05:05,110 --> 01:05:07,487 Hi. We're going to have a lot of fun today. 1103 01:05:07,571 --> 01:05:09,197 Glad you're visiting too. 1104 01:05:09,281 --> 01:05:12,659 So, we worked the whole thing through. All the pieces were there. 1105 01:05:12,743 --> 01:05:18,749 And we got to the last song. We're sitting on the top level, 1106 01:05:18,832 --> 01:05:19,958 just outside of the log 1107 01:05:20,042 --> 01:05:22,210 and the song we're doing is a Tom Chapin song 1108 01:05:22,294 --> 01:05:24,546 called "Together Tomorrow." 1109 01:05:24,630 --> 01:05:30,218 And I don't know how we had not realized what this song was really saying 1110 01:05:30,302 --> 01:05:32,471 because it was talking about his wife. 1111 01:05:32,554 --> 01:05:37,267 ♪ But we will be happy together tomorrow ♪ 1112 01:05:37,351 --> 01:05:41,605 ♪ Together tomorrow again ♪ 1113 01:05:41,688 --> 01:05:46,735 ♪ Every day must pass away ♪ 1114 01:05:46,818 --> 01:05:51,448 ♪ Never to come again ♪ 1115 01:05:51,531 --> 01:05:57,287 ♪ Tonight when I'm sleeping I'll dream of us being ♪ 1116 01:05:57,371 --> 01:06:00,415 ♪ Together tomorrow again ♪ 1117 01:06:00,499 --> 01:06:02,042 [Fred] That's my dream. 1118 01:06:02,125 --> 01:06:07,547 ♪ Together tomorrow ♪ 1119 01:06:07,631 --> 01:06:13,053 ♪ Together tomorrow, my friend... ♪ 1120 01:06:13,136 --> 01:06:17,641 In all of the shows that I had done, you know, 900-plus, 1121 01:06:17,724 --> 01:06:22,479 that was the most poignant moment that I had ever experienced 1122 01:06:22,562 --> 01:06:25,982 on, you know, on television or on a stage. It was just... 1123 01:06:26,066 --> 01:06:28,568 It was powerful, to say the least. 1124 01:06:28,652 --> 01:06:33,740 ♪ We will be happy when we get together ♪ 1125 01:06:33,824 --> 01:06:39,830 ♪ Together tomorrow again ♪ 1126 01:06:43,375 --> 01:06:44,835 [cheering] 1127 01:06:44,918 --> 01:06:47,045 [reporter] One hundred and twenty-seven Canadians, 1128 01:06:47,129 --> 01:06:49,631 a little later this afternoon right here on Parliament Hill, 1129 01:06:49,715 --> 01:06:51,967 will be sworn in as new Canadians. 1130 01:06:52,050 --> 01:06:54,886 [Peter Mansbridge] You know who one of those is going to be? Mr. Dressup? 1131 01:06:54,970 --> 01:06:56,179 [reporter] Mr. Dressup. 1132 01:06:56,263 --> 01:07:01,435 When I asked Ernie why he decided to become a Canadian citizen 1133 01:07:01,518 --> 01:07:05,772 after all of these years of living in Canada and being in America, 1134 01:07:07,190 --> 01:07:11,069 he told me about a letter that he received from a nine-year-old child 1135 01:07:11,153 --> 01:07:14,072 whose class project was to 1136 01:07:14,740 --> 01:07:18,243 write to and learn about their favorite Canadian. 1137 01:07:18,326 --> 01:07:21,163 And this child had written to Ernie, 1138 01:07:21,246 --> 01:07:26,001 and he had had to reply back that he wasn't a Canadian. 1139 01:07:26,084 --> 01:07:28,420 [announcer] Here to share with us his unique talent 1140 01:07:28,503 --> 01:07:33,800 for bringing generations of Canadians together each and every day, Mr. Dressup. 1141 01:07:33,884 --> 01:07:38,430 [cheering] 1142 01:07:40,432 --> 01:07:41,725 ♪ Oh, Canada! ♪ 1143 01:07:41,808 --> 01:07:43,101 ♪ Oh, Canada! ♪ 1144 01:07:43,185 --> 01:07:44,352 ♪ Hey, Canada! ♪ 1145 01:07:44,436 --> 01:07:45,520 ♪ Hey, Canada! ♪ 1146 01:07:45,604 --> 01:07:46,688 ♪ Oh, Canada! ♪ 1147 01:07:46,772 --> 01:07:48,023 ♪ Oh, Canada! ♪ 1148 01:07:48,106 --> 01:07:49,232 ♪ Hey, Canada! ♪ 1149 01:07:49,316 --> 01:07:50,609 ♪ Hey, Canada! ♪ 1150 01:07:50,692 --> 01:07:55,155 ♪ My name is Mr. Dressup You can call me Mister D ♪ 1151 01:07:55,238 --> 01:08:00,327 ♪ I'll sing you a song about Canada from Newfoundland to B.C ♪ 1152 01:08:00,410 --> 01:08:02,037 ♪ Hey, Canada! ♪ 1153 01:08:02,120 --> 01:08:05,957 [crowd cheers] 1154 01:08:06,041 --> 01:08:08,418 [Chris] He is such a massive part of Canadian culture. 1155 01:08:08,502 --> 01:08:11,296 And yeah, he's American, born in Maine. 1156 01:08:11,379 --> 01:08:14,633 But he was able to get Canadian citizenship eventually, 1157 01:08:14,716 --> 01:08:16,009 and it meant a lot to him. 1158 01:08:19,136 --> 01:08:21,890 [indistinct chatter] 1159 01:08:21,973 --> 01:08:25,143 And it's so wonderful to be able to say... "fellow citizens." 1160 01:08:28,604 --> 01:08:32,192 [Chris] He was constantly humbled and honored by the accolades, 1161 01:08:32,274 --> 01:08:33,734 that he got. 1162 01:08:37,531 --> 01:08:40,700 [Fred Rogers] I would like to say, Ernie, that all of your friends here 1163 01:08:40,783 --> 01:08:43,787 in this neighborhood are very proud of you. 1164 01:08:43,870 --> 01:08:49,209 We've worked together a long time and known each other for many, many years 1165 01:08:49,292 --> 01:08:52,254 and just know that we all love you 1166 01:08:52,337 --> 01:08:56,006 and that you are in our thoughts and prayers always. 1167 01:08:56,091 --> 01:08:57,716 Congratulations to you. 1168 01:08:59,261 --> 01:09:02,346 [Chris] When Dad received his Earle Grey Award at the Geminis, 1169 01:09:02,430 --> 01:09:04,640 and he dedicated it to Mom. 1170 01:09:04,724 --> 01:09:07,352 I wish that my wife Lynn could've been here. 1171 01:09:07,435 --> 01:09:11,356 She would love things like this. You know, she gave me so much support 1172 01:09:11,439 --> 01:09:15,026 and criticism over the years and a lot of information 1173 01:09:15,109 --> 01:09:18,029 about the right way to handle preschoolers, 1174 01:09:18,113 --> 01:09:19,906 because that was her field of expertise. 1175 01:09:19,990 --> 01:09:23,868 So, this is gonna be dedicated to Lynn's memory. 1176 01:09:23,952 --> 01:09:27,497 That was a lovely moment. And she would have been very proud. 1177 01:09:27,581 --> 01:09:29,416 Thank you. Thank you all. 1178 01:09:35,546 --> 01:09:39,926 [Nina] It's interesting when you're doing a series, I mean, you never know 1179 01:09:40,010 --> 01:09:46,015 if or when it's going to be canceled. I mean, if it's really popular, 1180 01:09:46,099 --> 01:09:50,060 you figure it's gonna go on forever, you know. 1181 01:09:50,145 --> 01:09:54,399 And then something will always happen 'cause no show ever goes on forever. 1182 01:09:54,482 --> 01:09:57,861 Hi, there you are. I've been sitting here waiting for you. 1183 01:09:57,944 --> 01:10:00,780 And I'm glad you're here. And I'm really glad that I'm here. 1184 01:10:00,864 --> 01:10:03,325 [Chris] We also asked him about when he was thinking of retirement. 1185 01:10:03,408 --> 01:10:05,243 It was a question that a lot of people started to ask him 1186 01:10:05,327 --> 01:10:08,747 simply because he'd been on the air for so long, and he was kind of like, 1187 01:10:08,830 --> 01:10:11,124 "I don't know. I hadn't thought about it until you mentioned it." 1188 01:10:11,207 --> 01:10:13,168 For the last three years, people have said, 1189 01:10:13,251 --> 01:10:17,422 "Do you have any plans for retirement?" I think finally it got into me and I said, 1190 01:10:17,505 --> 01:10:19,758 "Do I have... Yeah, I guess I better retire. 1191 01:10:19,841 --> 01:10:21,593 It looks like the thing to do." 1192 01:10:21,676 --> 01:10:23,803 Where do we want to put the sun in? 1193 01:10:24,512 --> 01:10:26,681 [Cathie] I think, you know, he just kind of maybe felt 1194 01:10:26,765 --> 01:10:30,352 that he'd come to a point where they'd done as much as they could do. 1195 01:10:30,435 --> 01:10:35,148 And it was time in his life to try... while he was still feeling healthy 1196 01:10:35,231 --> 01:10:37,984 and at a good place in his life, it was time to move on 1197 01:10:38,068 --> 01:10:40,111 and do some things for himself. 1198 01:10:43,156 --> 01:10:46,201 [Chris] You know, it wasn't because of my mom's passing. 1199 01:10:46,284 --> 01:10:48,620 You know, it certainly wasn't any pressure by the CBC 1200 01:10:48,703 --> 01:10:51,081 or Canadians turning away from him or anything like that. 1201 01:10:51,164 --> 01:10:52,666 It just was the right time for him. 1202 01:10:53,333 --> 01:10:57,754 [Jani] There was something that had changed in him that he was gonna be okay, 1203 01:10:57,837 --> 01:11:01,091 that he'd made that decision, that that was good for him. 1204 01:11:01,174 --> 01:11:06,179 I remember thinking that he deserved the rest, you know? 1205 01:11:06,262 --> 01:11:11,601 That he had done so much for so many generations, for so long, 1206 01:11:11,685 --> 01:11:17,691 that just spending time with grandkids and that's just really what he wanted to do. 1207 01:11:22,821 --> 01:11:24,739 [Nina] When you are doing a series 1208 01:11:24,823 --> 01:11:28,284 and you spend months or years every year, 1209 01:11:28,368 --> 01:11:32,664 and you get really close to people and you realize that, "Oh, my gosh," 1210 01:11:32,747 --> 01:11:35,917 you know, like, "This isn't gonna be happening anymore." 1211 01:11:36,001 --> 01:11:40,797 There's this real sense of sadness, you know, and loss. 1212 01:11:42,632 --> 01:11:46,386 I didn't want it to end. I could've kept going. 1213 01:11:46,469 --> 01:11:48,304 That would've been all right for me. 1214 01:11:49,597 --> 01:11:54,686 I had never realized what taping the last show would be, 1215 01:11:54,769 --> 01:11:57,689 what it would be like. I still don't know what it's going to be like. 1216 01:11:57,772 --> 01:11:59,858 but it's going to be very, very emotional. 1217 01:12:00,567 --> 01:12:03,069 Here it is! February 14th. 1218 01:12:04,738 --> 01:12:05,989 Right there. 1219 01:12:06,948 --> 01:12:09,284 Last... Last day. 1220 01:12:18,626 --> 01:12:23,256 Okay, before we start, I just want to say I want to make this like a regular show. 1221 01:12:23,339 --> 01:12:27,052 I love you all. [voice breaking] And it won't be easy. 1222 01:12:27,135 --> 01:12:28,928 Okay, let's go. 1223 01:12:29,012 --> 01:12:32,515 [crew applauds] 1224 01:12:35,060 --> 01:12:38,396 [Chris] You know, I was there when Dad spoke to the crew. 1225 01:12:40,190 --> 01:12:41,191 Yeah. 1226 01:12:42,692 --> 01:12:46,154 Yeah, 'cause... what he must have been feeling. 1227 01:12:47,322 --> 01:12:52,660 You've made me what I am today. You know that. And I appreciate it. 1228 01:12:52,744 --> 01:12:55,872 Okay, so, this is for the kids. So... 1229 01:12:55,955 --> 01:12:59,250 [Chris] Because everything in his life was leading up to that moment, 1230 01:12:59,334 --> 01:13:02,045 and he was just going to take some time for himself 1231 01:13:02,128 --> 01:13:05,090 and reflect and be a grandfather. 1232 01:13:05,173 --> 01:13:10,678 Hi. Here I am in the kitchen, but I'm not cooking anything. 1233 01:13:10,762 --> 01:13:14,182 [Cathie] That last show, if you were to watch it, 1234 01:13:14,265 --> 01:13:17,435 you would never know it was the last taped show. 1235 01:13:17,519 --> 01:13:20,980 Dad was the ultimate consummate professional. 1236 01:13:21,064 --> 01:13:25,819 But underneath, we knew as a family that it was a real bittersweet moment, 1237 01:13:25,902 --> 01:13:30,323 because it was four years after my mom had passed away. 1238 01:13:30,406 --> 01:13:36,204 And, you know, it was supposed to have been their time together. 1239 01:13:37,539 --> 01:13:41,292 Until the next time, we'll say bye-bye from... 1240 01:13:41,376 --> 01:13:44,212 -Lorenzo... -Truffles... 1241 01:13:44,295 --> 01:13:47,966 -And me! -Mr. Dressup! 1242 01:13:48,049 --> 01:13:49,300 [blows horn] 1243 01:13:49,384 --> 01:13:52,470 And then, whoever said, "And that's a wrap..." 1244 01:13:53,763 --> 01:13:54,931 And then the tears. 1245 01:13:55,014 --> 01:13:56,432 [Mr. Dressup theme music] 1246 01:13:56,516 --> 01:14:01,896 [Chris] Don Himes played out the regular Mr. Dressup theme 1247 01:14:01,980 --> 01:14:06,901 and then added some lovely extension to it 1248 01:14:06,985 --> 01:14:10,405 that he that he played for a minute or two, which was pretty sweet. 1249 01:14:10,488 --> 01:14:12,991 [grand piano finish] 1250 01:14:24,043 --> 01:14:27,672 [Jani] The last theme song, the last note, the last show. 1251 01:14:27,755 --> 01:14:31,801 That was the finality of it. The last note of that song was the end. 1252 01:14:32,969 --> 01:14:37,765 [Jim] It was sad. It was a bit of a celebration, too. But it was sad. 1253 01:14:37,849 --> 01:14:42,645 That, you know, I can't believe that last moment. "And me, Mr. Dressup." 1254 01:14:42,729 --> 01:14:46,441 [deep inhale, exhale] 1255 01:14:46,524 --> 01:14:49,068 [Ed Robertson] It's a rare thing 1256 01:14:49,152 --> 01:14:51,946 that someone devotes their whole life to something. 1257 01:14:52,030 --> 01:14:57,035 Lives up to all of everyone's expectations of them. 1258 01:14:57,118 --> 01:15:01,289 Goes out completely classy and graceful. 1259 01:15:01,372 --> 01:15:06,920 And is untarnished. You know, it's pretty amazing. 1260 01:15:08,254 --> 01:15:11,257 [Patty] I don't think we realized at the time when it ended 1261 01:15:11,341 --> 01:15:16,638 that that is an end of an era. It was an end of a kind of show 1262 01:15:16,721 --> 01:15:18,973 that I don't know if we'll ever see again. 1263 01:15:19,057 --> 01:15:20,725 I think people will try. 1264 01:15:21,976 --> 01:15:24,729 But there will only ever be one Mr. Dressup. 1265 01:15:31,736 --> 01:15:36,658 [Caitlin] My grandpa's from Maine. And when they were younger, 1266 01:15:36,741 --> 01:15:41,204 they bought a property right on the water, just like you can smell the ocean. 1267 01:15:41,287 --> 01:15:43,331 -I'm with you, Grandpa. -Okay, that's a wrap. 1268 01:15:44,874 --> 01:15:46,834 Everybody's invited to wrap party. 1269 01:15:48,253 --> 01:15:52,382 Dad was really a social guy. He really enjoyed spending time 1270 01:15:52,465 --> 01:15:56,427 with friends and family, so, you know... 1271 01:15:56,511 --> 01:15:59,180 I think that really... really became the focus for him. 1272 01:15:59,264 --> 01:16:04,018 Here we are, Labor Day weekend after much labor by Ken and Gerri, 1273 01:16:04,102 --> 01:16:08,606 providing a beautiful feast of hamburgers and salad. 1274 01:16:11,693 --> 01:16:13,194 The old, old, olden car. 1275 01:16:13,278 --> 01:16:16,489 [Cathie] He was doing all those things he had, for whatever reason, 1276 01:16:16,572 --> 01:16:18,366 had put off for all these years. 1277 01:16:18,449 --> 01:16:23,496 [Ernie] Drive the car. Vroom, vroom, goes the Auburn. Vroom, vroom! 1278 01:16:26,457 --> 01:16:30,420 That's me. Yep. 1279 01:16:30,503 --> 01:16:34,257 Maine's finest. No mad cow disease there. 1280 01:16:34,340 --> 01:16:35,842 [Chris] How do you feel? 1281 01:16:35,925 --> 01:16:38,011 -Full. -[Chris] Full? 1282 01:16:41,222 --> 01:16:45,184 And so, he was having an absolute whale of a time 1283 01:16:45,268 --> 01:16:50,815 being able to live his life, on his schedule, and have a great time. 1284 01:16:54,110 --> 01:16:57,071 I don't think retirement slowed dad down at all. 1285 01:16:59,490 --> 01:17:03,786 [cheering] 1286 01:17:03,870 --> 01:17:05,288 It is water. 1287 01:17:05,371 --> 01:17:07,165 [laughs] 1288 01:17:07,248 --> 01:17:11,085 Ernie and I came up with this idea, it was called "The Tales of the Tickle Trunk," 1289 01:17:11,169 --> 01:17:13,880 because so many of those generation, the younger generation, 1290 01:17:13,963 --> 01:17:15,089 were now in university. 1291 01:17:15,173 --> 01:17:17,383 I was wondering about the story behind Casey and Finnegan 1292 01:17:17,467 --> 01:17:19,177 'cause when I was a kid, I used to wonder 1293 01:17:19,260 --> 01:17:21,346 why he didn't have a mommy and daddy and why didn't he go home? 1294 01:17:21,429 --> 01:17:25,266 Shall we explain why Casey and Finnegan are supposed to be little 1295 01:17:25,350 --> 01:17:28,853 and live out in the treehouse? [laughs] 1296 01:17:28,936 --> 01:17:31,439 So we decided, "No, we'll just forget about it." 1297 01:17:31,522 --> 01:17:35,109 And kids like you who wanted to know about that 1298 01:17:35,193 --> 01:17:37,487 could just try to figure it out yourself. 1299 01:17:37,570 --> 01:17:40,865 And they basically just became Mr. Dressup Love Fests. 1300 01:17:40,948 --> 01:17:42,241 [girl] Thank you so much. 1301 01:17:43,534 --> 01:17:47,246 I have a confession to make. I started a rumor about you when I was a kid 1302 01:17:47,330 --> 01:17:50,625 that you used to trace your drawings. [laughs] 1303 01:17:50,708 --> 01:17:53,878 And I wanted to apologize and ask you if that was true. 1304 01:17:53,961 --> 01:17:56,464 Sometimes I practiced a lot if they were gonna be hard. 1305 01:17:56,547 --> 01:17:59,467 But, um, I forgive you. 1306 01:17:59,550 --> 01:18:01,260 [laughs] 1307 01:18:01,344 --> 01:18:04,722 That, to me, was really significant because it spoke to 1308 01:18:04,806 --> 01:18:08,101 how he had touched the young people at the time, 1309 01:18:08,184 --> 01:18:12,188 and what that kind of childhood memory and nostalgia meant for them. 1310 01:18:12,271 --> 01:18:13,898 Cheese! Say "chicken feet." 1311 01:18:13,981 --> 01:18:16,526 [Cathie] People were generally kind of in awe of the fact 1312 01:18:16,609 --> 01:18:19,529 that he was there in their pub, somebody that they looked up to. 1313 01:18:19,612 --> 01:18:22,907 So, I think that people were really respectful of who he was. 1314 01:18:22,990 --> 01:18:25,243 Now, do we have Mr. Rogers on the phone right now? 1315 01:18:25,326 --> 01:18:28,121 Okay, well, you all know Fred Rogers I would imagine 1316 01:18:28,204 --> 01:18:32,041 as well as you know Mr. Dressup. And Fred has joined us on the phone now, 1317 01:18:32,125 --> 01:18:36,170 to say hi to Ernie and I guess, to say bye to Ernie. How are you, Mr. Rogers? 1318 01:18:36,254 --> 01:18:38,005 [Fred Rogers, over phone] I'm just fine, is this Ralph? 1319 01:18:38,089 --> 01:18:39,382 -It is. -That's Ralph. 1320 01:18:39,465 --> 01:18:41,259 [Fred] Hello, Ralph, and hello, Ernie. 1321 01:18:41,342 --> 01:18:43,553 -Hello, Fred! This is wonderful! -[Fred] How are you? 1322 01:18:43,636 --> 01:18:47,473 I'm just overwhelmed. I was going to send you a letter. 1323 01:18:49,809 --> 01:18:52,145 [Chris reading] 1324 01:19:21,215 --> 01:19:25,887 [audience cheering] 1325 01:19:25,970 --> 01:19:28,764 [Jonathan Torrens] There are two highly rated episodes of Jonovision. 1326 01:19:28,848 --> 01:19:33,853 One was the Degrassi reunion and the other was childhood heroes. 1327 01:19:33,936 --> 01:19:37,607 It had Sharon, Lois and Bram. It had Polkaroo. 1328 01:19:37,690 --> 01:19:43,237 And even in that room, Mr. Dressup was just on a whole other level. 1329 01:19:43,321 --> 01:19:45,531 Please welcome Mr. Dressup. 1330 01:19:45,615 --> 01:19:47,742 [cheering] 1331 01:19:47,825 --> 01:19:51,537 People couldn't contain themselves, and the noise was deafening. 1332 01:19:51,621 --> 01:19:53,873 What have you been up to since you've retired? 1333 01:19:53,956 --> 01:19:56,542 Oh, I've been very busy. I've been touring, 1334 01:19:56,626 --> 01:19:59,837 -I've been doing personal appearances... -[girl] We love you! 1335 01:19:59,921 --> 01:20:02,965 ...and making speeches and keeping busy 1336 01:20:03,049 --> 01:20:05,510 and restoring my old car and all kinds of stuff. 1337 01:20:06,260 --> 01:20:10,264 Dad had lost a few teeth, wore a bridge. 1338 01:20:10,348 --> 01:20:13,726 And I think he thought, "You know what, I'd like to have a set of teeth." 1339 01:20:13,809 --> 01:20:19,023 But he had to undergo surgery to remove cartilage from his rib 1340 01:20:19,106 --> 01:20:22,735 and have it grafted into his jaw so that his jaw would be strong enough 1341 01:20:22,818 --> 01:20:23,861 to take the implant. 1342 01:20:24,445 --> 01:20:27,532 Don Jones, his best friend and manager, said, 1343 01:20:27,615 --> 01:20:30,576 "You know, Ernie, you sure? You sure you need to do that?" 1344 01:20:30,660 --> 01:20:33,788 And you know, and Dad said, "Yeah, you know, it'll be fine." 1345 01:20:33,871 --> 01:20:36,249 And so he underwent the surgery. 1346 01:20:37,291 --> 01:20:40,419 [Jim] We were talking about doing another tour and he wanted to come over 1347 01:20:40,503 --> 01:20:43,214 and just do some preliminary writing. 1348 01:20:44,298 --> 01:20:50,054 He was complaining because he had had a little operation on his rib. 1349 01:20:50,137 --> 01:20:55,851 And yeah, so we hung out and then, "Okay, see ya." 1350 01:20:55,935 --> 01:20:59,605 I got home and there were a couple of messages from my dad 1351 01:20:59,689 --> 01:21:01,607 saying he wasn't feeling well. 1352 01:21:01,691 --> 01:21:04,652 So, I went to his house 1353 01:21:04,735 --> 01:21:09,240 and he was, you know, obviously uncomfortable. 1354 01:21:09,323 --> 01:21:11,867 I was kind of saying, you know, "We really should 1355 01:21:11,951 --> 01:21:13,869 go to the hospital and get this checked out." 1356 01:21:13,953 --> 01:21:16,372 There was a drug they were going to give him that would've helped 1357 01:21:16,455 --> 01:21:19,792 against pancreatitis, but because of the heart medication that he was on, 1358 01:21:19,875 --> 01:21:21,752 he couldn't take the drug. 1359 01:21:21,836 --> 01:21:24,880 So they were doing some testing, and I sat with him. 1360 01:21:24,964 --> 01:21:27,967 And then at some point, it was, you know, 11:00 or 12:00 at night, 1361 01:21:28,050 --> 01:21:30,928 and I said, "I'm gonna go home and get the kids off to school, 1362 01:21:31,012 --> 01:21:34,765 and I'll come back," and I left. 1363 01:21:34,849 --> 01:21:37,977 And at some point in the night, I got a call from the hospital. 1364 01:21:38,060 --> 01:21:41,105 He had a stroke. He had a major stroke. 1365 01:21:43,858 --> 01:21:48,195 My brother was in the UK having his second daughter 1366 01:21:48,279 --> 01:21:49,947 who was born on September 10th. 1367 01:21:51,365 --> 01:21:55,369 [Chris] We're still completely wired from the birth of my daughter, 1368 01:21:55,453 --> 01:21:57,204 and the phone rang and it was somebody that said, 1369 01:21:57,288 --> 01:21:59,415 "Oh, my God, turn on the television." 1370 01:21:59,498 --> 01:22:03,044 And that's when we saw the events of 9/11. 1371 01:22:09,550 --> 01:22:13,304 I was calling my brother on the phone and saying, you know, 1372 01:22:13,387 --> 01:22:16,515 "You really you really need to come to Canada. Dad's not well." 1373 01:22:16,599 --> 01:22:20,936 And he said, "All flights are grounded. I can't come over there." 1374 01:22:21,020 --> 01:22:24,857 [Chris] I tried to get onto an Air Canada flight and they said, "No, there's no way. 1375 01:22:24,940 --> 01:22:28,778 There's no way. We've got, you know, days of people trying to get back home." 1376 01:22:30,363 --> 01:22:33,991 I've never done this before, but I... The guy was Canadian. 1377 01:22:35,868 --> 01:22:37,745 And I said, "Do you know who Mr. Dressup is?" 1378 01:22:37,828 --> 01:22:39,580 He's like, "Yeah, of course I do." 1379 01:22:40,498 --> 01:22:43,042 I said, "Look, between me and you, 1380 01:22:43,125 --> 01:22:46,295 but he's my dad. He's had a stroke. 1381 01:22:46,379 --> 01:22:48,756 I don't think he's gonna make it, and I need to get home." 1382 01:22:50,341 --> 01:22:55,179 Guy was like, "Hang on a second." He said, "All right, I got you a seat." 1383 01:22:55,262 --> 01:22:59,308 If he's watching... I appreciate you. 1384 01:22:59,392 --> 01:23:02,603 That meant the absolute world to me, because I got home 1385 01:23:02,687 --> 01:23:04,105 and I was able to be with him. 1386 01:23:07,149 --> 01:23:10,111 I just remember being with him and just telling him 1387 01:23:10,194 --> 01:23:15,825 it was okay to go and be with mom. You know, we're gonna be okay. It's okay. 1388 01:23:16,659 --> 01:23:17,952 You know, I thought about it and I thought, 1389 01:23:18,035 --> 01:23:20,871 "Wow, you know, what a life, 1390 01:23:22,373 --> 01:23:26,127 and what a death in the company of family, in comfort, 1391 01:23:26,210 --> 01:23:30,464 dignity, respect and love." 1392 01:23:30,548 --> 01:23:32,758 We were all staying at his house. 1393 01:23:32,842 --> 01:23:36,512 I just felt like there was, like, a ton to do, because there was... 1394 01:23:37,346 --> 01:23:42,810 It wasn't just us that had lost him. It was everybody. 1395 01:23:42,893 --> 01:23:47,022 Before Barney, before Teletubbies, there was Mr. Dressup, 1396 01:23:47,106 --> 01:23:50,609 a gentle man who delighted generations of children. 1397 01:23:50,693 --> 01:23:54,071 Ernie Coombs died this morning in a Toronto hospital 1398 01:23:54,155 --> 01:23:55,573 after suffering a stroke. 1399 01:23:55,656 --> 01:23:59,243 He was a wonderful, special, gentle person, 1400 01:23:59,326 --> 01:24:04,874 and you will not likely see him again... a person like him again. 1401 01:24:04,957 --> 01:24:07,668 [sniffles] Sorry. 1402 01:24:07,752 --> 01:24:11,380 Our whole generation was shaped by seeing Mr. Dressup. 1403 01:24:11,464 --> 01:24:14,133 Well, he was your weekday routine. 1404 01:24:14,216 --> 01:24:16,677 I mean, he'll be missed, but he'll be really remembered. 1405 01:24:16,761 --> 01:24:19,930 The fact that everyone's talking about it and everyone remembers him is really nice. 1406 01:24:23,893 --> 01:24:28,647 [Craig] In parliament, they even take a moment to talk about Ernie Coombs 1407 01:24:28,731 --> 01:24:31,066 and Mr. Dressup, Prime Minister Jean Chretien. 1408 01:24:31,150 --> 01:24:34,111 He issues a statement because of the impact that 1409 01:24:34,195 --> 01:24:36,655 Ernie Coombs had on generations of children. 1410 01:24:36,739 --> 01:24:39,700 I remember when John Lennon was killed, I remember when Elvis died. 1411 01:24:39,784 --> 01:24:41,994 And I remember when Mr. Dressup died. 1412 01:24:42,745 --> 01:24:46,373 I think a lot of adults were probably more affected by it 1413 01:24:46,457 --> 01:24:48,459 than they thought they would be. 1414 01:24:48,542 --> 01:24:53,172 It took me back to my kidhood, and I felt like I had lost a parent. 1415 01:24:53,255 --> 01:24:55,966 He had filled my life with so much joy. 1416 01:24:57,551 --> 01:25:00,471 Somehow, you thought that he would never die. 1417 01:25:00,554 --> 01:25:04,225 I don't know. He was so much a part of our lives. 1418 01:25:05,184 --> 01:25:08,395 [Jonathan] It had never occurred to me that he was mortal. 1419 01:25:08,479 --> 01:25:11,774 He's forever. He always was and he just always is. 1420 01:25:13,609 --> 01:25:17,404 We had a commemoration. 1421 01:25:17,947 --> 01:25:19,448 I went into Dad's closet... 1422 01:25:19,532 --> 01:25:21,742 [audience laughs] 1423 01:25:21,826 --> 01:25:24,662 ...in the bedroom this morning looking for something to wear 1424 01:25:24,745 --> 01:25:26,330 because Dad and I are about the same size, 1425 01:25:26,413 --> 01:25:31,001 and I saw this and I thought, "Well, hey, I can't think of anything 1426 01:25:31,085 --> 01:25:33,170 that would be better suited to the event." 1427 01:25:33,254 --> 01:25:36,632 [Casey] Hey, come on, Finnegan. This looks like a good spot to me. 1428 01:25:41,470 --> 01:25:43,430 [Casey] Mr. Dressup's not here anymore. 1429 01:25:43,514 --> 01:25:46,892 -No, no, he's not. -And we're pretty sad about that. 1430 01:25:46,976 --> 01:25:49,687 -Yes, we are. -[Casey] We're very sad about it. Yep. 1431 01:25:50,771 --> 01:25:54,441 Huh? Hey, Finnegan says he knows where Mr. Dressup is. 1432 01:25:54,525 --> 01:25:55,776 -Really? -[Casey] Mm-hmm. 1433 01:25:56,443 --> 01:25:57,736 Where is he? 1434 01:25:57,820 --> 01:25:59,488 [Casey] He says he's in our hearts. 1435 01:26:00,614 --> 01:26:03,284 -Well, Finnegan... Finnegan's right. -[Casey] That's right. 1436 01:26:03,367 --> 01:26:05,452 Mr. Dressup is in our hearts. 1437 01:26:06,579 --> 01:26:08,873 People just broke up over that. 1438 01:26:10,040 --> 01:26:13,752 And I think that's probably true. He was... He was in our hearts. 1439 01:26:17,631 --> 01:26:19,341 [children chatter] 1440 01:26:19,425 --> 01:26:22,428 Just sit down over there, guys. Close to the front. 1441 01:26:28,350 --> 01:26:34,356 I adored all those times that we talked about how amazing children were. 1442 01:26:35,858 --> 01:26:37,818 Kid-me would say thank you. 1443 01:26:40,613 --> 01:26:42,448 And adult-me would say thank you too. 1444 01:26:42,531 --> 01:26:47,036 Oh, hello. You're here now, so I'll put my book down. 1445 01:26:47,119 --> 01:26:51,165 You still live in my imagination, and I hope you never go away. 1446 01:26:51,248 --> 01:26:52,917 Casey and Finnegan are out in the yard. 1447 01:26:53,000 --> 01:26:55,002 I don't know what they're doing, but they were... 1448 01:26:55,085 --> 01:26:58,255 [Casey] Mr. Dressup, we found one, we found one. We found the worms. 1449 01:26:58,339 --> 01:27:02,051 You played such an important part of my life growing up, 1450 01:27:02,134 --> 01:27:03,594 and I didn't even realize it. 1451 01:27:03,677 --> 01:27:05,679 [Casey] I'll put them back in the dirt where I found them 1452 01:27:05,763 --> 01:27:07,348 and then they can find their family. 1453 01:27:07,431 --> 01:27:10,351 It was the show that was fundamental 1454 01:27:10,434 --> 01:27:14,355 in developing me into the human being that I am today. 1455 01:27:14,438 --> 01:27:17,858 You exceeded all of my expectations 1456 01:27:17,942 --> 01:27:21,737 of what meeting a childhood hero can be like. 1457 01:27:21,820 --> 01:27:25,157 All right, I'll get my duck costume on, it's right here in the trunk. 1458 01:27:25,240 --> 01:27:27,368 I think of you all the time. 1459 01:27:27,451 --> 01:27:31,997 When I'm putting on a costume, when I'm drawing something. 1460 01:27:33,332 --> 01:27:36,043 Or when I talk to my son, Finnegan. 1461 01:27:36,126 --> 01:27:40,297 Well, you are a good dog, Finnegan, so I'll do what I promised. 1462 01:27:40,381 --> 01:27:44,176 It's hard to imagine anyone having had a bigger influence on my life. 1463 01:27:44,259 --> 01:27:46,428 [Casey] And that's the end of the story. 1464 01:27:47,805 --> 01:27:50,224 Right now it's time for us to say goodbye to you. 1465 01:27:50,307 --> 01:27:52,726 -[Casey] Oh. -For now, until we see you next time. 1466 01:27:52,810 --> 01:27:56,814 Goodbye from Casey and Finnegan and me... 1467 01:27:56,897 --> 01:27:58,440 -[Casey] Mr. Dressup. -Bye-bye. 1468 01:28:24,800 --> 01:28:26,927 [audience applauding] 1469 01:28:32,808 --> 01:28:35,310 We stand here tonight in front of a nation 1470 01:28:35,394 --> 01:28:39,106 who loves our grandfather just as much as we do. 1471 01:28:39,189 --> 01:28:43,777 My whole life, I have felt inspired by the legacy my grandfather has left behind. 1472 01:28:44,862 --> 01:28:47,531 He gave the people of Canada a unique kind of warmth, 1473 01:28:47,614 --> 01:28:50,993 kindness and compassion that is still present to this day. 1474 01:28:51,076 --> 01:28:56,665 I feel so honored to be his granddaughter, so lucky to have known him 1475 01:28:56,749 --> 01:28:58,792 and to have him be a part of my life. 1476 01:28:58,876 --> 01:29:02,046 And I feel a totally unmatched kind of joy 1477 01:29:02,129 --> 01:29:05,049 when I share with someone that he was my grandfather 1478 01:29:05,132 --> 01:29:07,885 and they respond with such love in their voices. 1479 01:29:07,968 --> 01:29:12,389 Ernie Coombs was never acting when he was Mr. Dressup. 1480 01:29:12,473 --> 01:29:17,728 Sure, he may have been reading a script, but all of his drawings, 1481 01:29:17,811 --> 01:29:22,691 his gentle nature, warmth, candor and his ability 1482 01:29:22,775 --> 01:29:26,987 to create an imaginative space was just him being himself. 1483 01:29:27,071 --> 01:29:30,532 So tonight, we accept this award as his grandchildren, 1484 01:29:30,616 --> 01:29:33,869 but I think we accept it on behalf of all Canadians 1485 01:29:33,952 --> 01:29:37,998 because we realize he belongs just as much to you as he does to us. 1486 01:29:38,082 --> 01:29:39,875 Thank you so much, Canada. 1487 01:29:55,974 --> 01:29:57,810 [Casey] It's been a long time. 1488 01:29:58,811 --> 01:30:00,104 Yes, it has. 1489 01:30:00,896 --> 01:30:05,234 But I hope that you're gonna come back and visit us again soon. 1490 01:30:05,317 --> 01:30:08,362 And I hope that you've learned all sorts of things from us. 1491 01:30:09,029 --> 01:30:12,741 How to make things and how to do things and how to have fun. 1492 01:30:12,825 --> 01:30:15,953 But now it's time for us to say goodbye 1493 01:30:16,036 --> 01:30:18,372 because I'm gonna take Finnegan for a walk. 1494 01:30:19,039 --> 01:30:20,874 He's coming with me. 1495 01:30:22,918 --> 01:30:24,837 [soft whimsical music] 127847

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