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Movie Review: Muppets creator Jim Henson gets a documentary as exciting as he was

There are moments when the spark of creation suddenly ignites and history stops. Like when the Wright brothers got a plane to fly. Or when Oreo added double filling.
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This image released by Disney+ shows promotional art for "Jim Henson: Idea Man," premiering May 31. (Disney+ via AP)

There are moments when the spark of creation suddenly ignites and history stops. Like when the Wright brothers got a plane to fly. Or when Oreo added double filling. Maybe just as resonant was when cut up his mother鈥檚 green coat into odd shapes and added ping-pong balls for eyes.

At that moment, he birthed who would go on to enchant generations. Kermit's humble beginnings are part of the engrossing and enlightening documentary and it's apt to start with the sweetly outgoing Kermit, who is in many ways Henson's alter ego.

The Ron Howard-directed Disney+ movie is a kinetic mix of show clips, interviews, bloopers, behind-the-scenes workplace videos, home movies and artist sketches 鈥 as animated as Henson's Muppets, who educated millions on 鈥淪esame Street鈥 and entertained even more on 鈥淭he Muppet Show.鈥

Viewers are walked chronologically through Henson's early life in rural Mississippi, his teaming up with his wife, Jane, on early late-night TV appearances, his often oddball sensibility, his self-doubt, embrace of educational TV, his marriage crumbling, the red-hot height of fame and then the fall with 鈥淟abyrinth.鈥 It's a definitive as you can get. We even learn why he chose to grow a beard: acne scars.

It鈥檚 also a portrait of a driven, brilliant creative man who wanted to be taken seriously as an artist and had lifelong ambivalent feelings about becoming America鈥檚 favorite preschool entertainer. Writer Mark Monroe makes it seem as if he often felt straightjacketed, like an arm stuck in a puppet's felt body.

Watchers will walk away with a deeper understanding of a man who had such an outsized presence in their childhoods. Once you realize that Henson was, in his heart of hearts, really a experimental filmmaker, you better understand the whacky, psychedelic videos on 鈥淪esame Street鈥 or why The Great Gonzo eats a rubber car tire to 鈥淔light of the Bumblebee.鈥

The voices Howard has wrangled are fantastic, from Frank Oz (the Burt to Henson's Ernie), puppeteer Fran Brill, puppet builder/costume designer Bonnie Erickson and actors Jennifer Connelly and Rita Moreno. Henson's own short diary entries 鈥 鈥渁ttend seminar in Cambridge re: Children鈥檚 TV workshop鈥 鈥 are also put to good use, as is footage from his funeral, a joyous affair.

One weird quibble is the decision by Howard 鈥 who apparently met Henson once, briefly 鈥 to put his interview subjects in a sterile, grey room with brick walls. Why keep going back there to celebrate a figure who opposed formality?

Frank Oz, the voice of Miss Piggy and Ernie who was Henson's puppeteering partner in crime for decades, is wonderfully honest about his yin-and-yang relationship with Henson 鈥 鈥渋t was both a joy and a grind鈥 鈥 as are Henson's children about their father, who died in 1990.

鈥淭here's an honesty and an integrity to what he was creating. He was creating it because he needed to create it,鈥 one says. Another concludes: 鈥淗e showed that creativity, artistry, metaphor can be used as a great power of good.鈥

There are fascinating moments 鈥 like when we learn that Kermit wasn鈥檛 originally a frog at all 鈥 to ones more sublime, like how Miss Piggy made her dramatic entrance as a star in her own right. (A clip of her flirting with Morley Safer is priceless.) Viewers may shake their head when learning that all the networks initially passed on 鈥淭he Muppet Show鈥 and it had to be made in England.

It's a documentary, ultimately, about creativity and a singular mind, one who dreamed up a gaggle of friends for life: Big Bird, Cookie Monster, the Count and, of course, Kermit, stitched from an old coat.

鈥淛im Henson Idea Man,鈥 a Disney+ release that starts streaming Friday, is rated TV-PG. Running time: 108 minutes. Three and a half stars out of four.

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Mark Kennedy is at

Mark Kennedy, The Associated Press

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