Hooper's Store

From Includipedia, the inclusionist encyclopedia

(Redirected from Mr. Hooper's Store)
Jump to: navigation, search

Mr. Hooper's Store is an integral business and meeting-place on the television show Sesame Street. This fictional establishment has been turned over through many owners throughout the years, all of whom have maintained this establishment's stature, friendliness and cleanliness, and overall unbelievably cheap prices. Its owners have been Mr. Hooper, David, Mr. Handford, and Alan; these managers have been assisted by Tom, Cookie Monster, Bert, Petey, Gina, Carlo, Natalie, and Gabby at times.

Contents

Overview

Image:TV hoopers candy store.jpg
Hooper's Store as a candy shop

Founded by Mr. Harold Hooper before 1969, the store originally ran along the lines of a general/candy store. The menu was extensive and suited to the dietary needs of the different cultures that lived on Sesame Street; along with traditional American diner-type food, the restaurant even served birdseed milkshakes for Big Bird. Not only was the menu broad, the store stocked up in everything from dry goods to soap dishes. The store even sold empty cigar boxes for a while, as evidenced in Christmas Eve on Sesame Street; this is unusual, as no one has ever smoked cigarettes, cigars or pipes in public on Sesame Street.

Based on the Ernie and Bert skit There were monkeys in my bed, in which the song "Living in, on, and under" is sung, it may be plausible that Hooper's is open in early morning hours like a convenience store or truck stop. If this is the case, it is even plausible that Natalie or another New Yorker manages the store during the off-hours for Alan, the present operator of the store.

Early years

During the initial seasons, until actor Will Lee's death, the store was run by Mr. Hooper.

During Season 3 (1971), Larry Block played Tom, a man who worked at Hooper's. Cookie Monster worked at the store in a few episodes (though his large appetite tended to cause problems in a store that sells food).

David and Gina

David, a young African-American who moved to Sesame Street in the early 1970s was soon hired by Mr. Hooper as an assistant. David was originally conceived as a hip, upbeat individual fresh out of high school who was fond of eccentric hats and singing. Although he appeared in Season 3, he began working at the store in Season 4 while studying law at college.

Mr. Hooper left David the store in his will. During seasons 16 and 17, a teenaged boy named Petey (played by Eddie Castrodad) worked at the store. However, he did not last long. Following this, David hired a new resident of the area, Gina (played by Allison Bartlett-O'Reilly) in 1987. This young teenage girl helped David as he himself had helped Mr. Hooper.

Bert was hired to help David in one Sesame Street book; he broke a teapot given to David by Mr. Hooper, but was luckily forgiven for the mistake.

David ran the establishment from 1983 until 1989 (when Northern Calloway, the actor that played David, left the show). It was said that he moved to live with his grandmother in 1989. Actually, Northern Calloway had fallen ill to cancer in real life in the late 1980s. He was forced to leave the show for health reasons, and died in 1990.

David's final appearance was the season finale of Season 20 (the birth of Maria and Luis' daughter). Gina continued to work at the store for a couple of years after was bought out by Mr. Handford. Partway through the 1990s, she got a new job at the local daycare, until she finished college and remained on the show as a veterinarian.

Mr. Handford and Carlo

The enthusiastic Mr. Handford was a new character brought to the show exclusively to run the store, a change from the previous new managements of David and Gina, who started out as characters before store operators. This African-American man was a retired firefighter who bought the store to keep active.

Although Leonard Jackson played him in Season 21, he was then recast and David L. Smyrl took over the role. While Jackson portrayed Mr. Handford as something of a “grumpy old man” with little patience for his friends’ quirks, Smyrl made the character much more cheerful, friendly, and quite young at heart.

In 1991, Sully and Biff tried to hang a picture frame, but one blow from their hammer caused the entire woodwork of the store to fall apart. No one was hurt, but the store was ruined. Mr. Handford considered forgetting about the store, but everyone convinced him that they needed it, so they all pitched in to rebuild it.

A teenager named Carlo (played by Carlo Alban) first appeared in 1993 as one of Gordon’s students. In 1995, he was hired to work at the store.

Mr. Handford and Carlo ran the store from until 1998 when the actors left the show. It was never explained what happened to either character. In 1998, Alan moved onto Sesame Street to buy the store out.

Alan

Image:TV alan at hoopers store.jpg
Alan at Hooper's Store, publicity still

Grease fire

The September 11, 2001 attacks left many children in grave fear of the entire world, and left many parents scrambling to comfort them. Sesame Street takes place in an unnamed borough of New York City; this fact, plus the monstrosity of the events in general caused the producers to react with a plot line dealing with fear. To start, the show created public service messages gingerly dealing with the events, and sent out parenting advice on this fragile topic to subscribers of their email newsletter.

Instead of going with the obvious, distressing idea of, say, having the Muppets discuss how they feel and what they thought of the events, as done with the kids on ZOOM!, Hooper's Store came into play. In one plotline, there is a grease fire. Elmo, who is in the store having lunch, talking with Alan at the time, is scared by the firefighters who come to extinguish the blaze in their inhuman looking gear. Elmo and Maria are taken around the local station, to comfort Elmo and let him learn about what firefighters do. Hooper's Store was then renovated back to its original state, in all ways, except now, the store has a red canopy, rather than a dark forest green.

Natalie fills in for a vacationing Alan

In season 35, Natalie was hired by Alan to sub in for him while he took a vacation. Big Bird and Baby Bear are initially very anxious of the big change, but Natalie gradually assures them things will be fine. Natalie was played by guest star Natalie Portman. Portman was set to star as Natalie in three episodes in the 2004 season, but due to her losing her voice, Sesame Workshop had to film the other two episodes with Gabby in charge.

Discussion of real life

In real life, Northern Calloway, who played David, died in 1990, but the issue was never discussed on camera. He was suffering of stomach cancer, so his character was written out of the show several months before he died.

When Mr. Hooper died, a matter discussed in a famous episode with Big Bird, it was also because of a real life passing. Will Lee, the actor/acting instructor who played Mr. Hooper died in 1982, leaving the producers with a dilemma. Do they replace Will Lee with another actor, and hope the kids don't notice, an unlikely event; do they just phase Mr. Hooper out somehow, and hope the kids don't care he left without saying goodbye; or do they deal with an issue rarely tackled before on children's television? The last and least inviting of choices turned out to be the wisest. This is not only one of the most historic and tear-jerking episodes in television, but it dealt with the most delicate and nearly-impossible matter an educator could ever be faced with teaching young children. In 1999, Actress Sonia Manzano, who played Maria, described the event as "one of my proudest moments" to be a part of Sesame Street adding that "the show felt that kids deserved an honest answer."

Personal tools