November 10, 1969…”Sesame Street” Debuts On PBS

November 10, 1969…”Sesame Street” Debuts On PBS

Here is the full debut episode of the show.

Since almost almost everyone in the world knows the show, since it’s now on in 123 countries, we’ll celebrate the anniversary with a look at the early production history.

In the photos below, we see the original home of the show which was done from the old RKO 81st Street Theater at 2248 Broadway. The theater was owned by Teletape Productions, but before this, it had been the home of the first and only CBS color studio on the east coast…Studio 72 which was created in the fall of 1954.

Also shown here is an early cast and crew photo with the Marconi Mark VII color cameras. The color photo of a Mark VII shooting Grover is the one that I now have in my collection…it was Camera 2 and in the closeup, you can see that the dome tally light number is the same. There were six Mark VIIs in use on the show.

Teletape was a video production company that merged with Reeves Sound Services in 1974 and became Reeves Teletape. Before that, Reeves had been more of a sound and video post edit company.

According to our friend Dennis Degan, who worked at Reeves Teletape, R/T moved ‘Sesame Street’ production in 1983 from 81st Street to the 55th Street studio, which was formerly WNET-TV’s studio on 9th Ave at 55th Street. They made this move because R/T sold the 81st Street studio. They originally bought it from CBS in 1967.

Sesame Street was produced at 55th Street from 1983 to around 1990, first with R/T, then in 1987 with Unitel Video, as R/T went out of business. Sesame moved to Kaufman-Astoria Studios in 1990 where it has remains to this day. The RKO 81 studio was torn down in 1986. This little history lesson was brought to you by the letter B for Bobby. Enjoy and share! -Bobby Ellerbee




Source

8 Comments

  1. Paul Duca November 14, 2016

    A parent-teacher study guide for this first episode…

    http://archives.chicagotribune.com/1969/11/10/page/94/article/display-ad-78-no-title

  2. Gustavo Borjalo November 12, 2016

    My father, Mauro Borjalo (1925-2004), then creative director of Globo TV Network of Brazil, participated in the negotiations with Children’s Television Workshop for the production of the Brazilian version of Sesame Street, which debuted at Globo in March 1972, with the name Vila Sesamo. It was a great success also in Brazil.

  3. Peter K. O'Connell November 11, 2016

    I was one of those kindergarten students who watched in class. Still remember it.

  4. Dave Jones November 11, 2016

    I was on master control at WUFT, CH. 5 (University of Florida) and put this show on the air here for the first time. Great memories!

  5. Bob Johanson November 10, 2016

    I worked at Reeves Sound Studios, in there video department.
    My crew and I fed the feed via telephone switching center and AT&T to Andover, Maine, were the up link to Telstar happened.
    We had two VR 2000s running in sync.
    Opened the feed with a slide and 1/4″ audio and rolled the show.
    Feed started at 10AM Monday -Friday.
    Was a long time ago.
    Great Teletape Crew, epically Frank Biondo camera man and sometimes referred as the “mayor”

  6. Dennis Degan November 10, 2016

    I had the privilege of working on SS for much of my time at R/T (1979-85).
    In those days, someone had told me that Sesame Street’s very first pilot show was actually shot at WNEW-TV’s MetroMedia studios at 205 East 67th Street in New York, but I have not been able to verify this. WNEW has since become the NY FOX station and is now WNYW. Their studios are still at the same location.

  7. Ken Alexander November 10, 2016

    Proud to say that the man “lying down” in the lower right section of the picture is my father Bob Alexander. He TDed the show for the first three seasons at the ripe old age of 30.

  8. Russell Ross November 10, 2016

    I believe Sesame Street was and still is one of the most important tv shows ever produced. How many children as toddlers learned from this show. I know mine did.