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Scores On This Historic Day: November 24, 1983, Sesame Street Says Goodbye to Mr. Hooper

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November 24, 1983:Sesame Street airs its best-remembered episode, perhaps its most important, and certainly its saddest.

William Lee (no middle name) was born on August 6, 1908 in Brooklyn. He was a member of the Group Theatre and then the Federal Theatre in New York in the 1930s, and was later blacklisted as a result of being an unfriendly witness before the House Un-American Activities Committee. He recovered from this, and in 1956, began appearing on the soap opera As the World Turns, as Grandpa Hughes -- already playing a grandfather at the age of 48.

He taught at the American Theatre Wing, and then, in 1969, at the age of 61, he got the part of Mr. Hooper on Sesame Street. Show co-creator Joan Ganz Cooney said, "He gave millions of children the message that the old and the young have a lot to say to each other." He said of the role:

I was delighted to take the role of Mr. Hooper, the gruff grocer with the warm heart. It's a big part, and it allows a lot of latitude. But the show has something extra, that sense you sometimes get from great theater, the feeling that its influence never stops.

Mr. Hooper operated Hooper's Store, across from 123 Sesame, the signature building on the show's set. In a 1974 episode, "Mr. Hooper" (everybody called him that, except Big Bird -- more on that in a moment) was, like his portrayer, canonically revealed to be Jewish, when his phone rang, and he began speaking Yiddish. In a 1977 episode, he told Big Bird, "I grew up in a neighborhood where that was the only language a lot of people spoke."

In the 1978 special Christmas Eve On Sesame StreetMr. Hooper came through to provide a happy ending. Muppet roommates Bert and Ernie unwittingly recreated the O. Henry story The Gift of the Magi: Neither one of them had enough money to buy the other a Christmas present, so Ernie traded his beloved rubber duckie to Mr. Hooper for a cigar box, so Bert would have a good place to store his beloved paper clip collection; and Bert traded that collection to Mr. Hooper for a soap dish, so the rubber duckie wouldn't keep slipping off the edge and into the bathtub.

In one of the rare appearances by one of the show's human characters in Bert and Ernie's apartment, Mr. Hooper gave Ernie a present. He unwrapped it, and it was his rubber duckie. And he gave Bert a present. He unwrapped it, and it was a box containing his paper clip collection. The boys realized what had happened. Then they felt guilty that they hadn't gotten Mr. Hooper anything. He said, "I got the best Christmas present ever: I got to see that everybody got exactly what they wanted!"

A quirk in Big Bird's character was that he always mispronounced Mr. Hooper's name, usually coming out "Mister Looper." I remember a "Mr. Dooper" and a "Mr. Stooper" -- that last one really annoyed Mr. Hooper. When Mr. Hooper got his GED, we finally learned his first name, when he was introduced at the ceremony -- by a grownup -- as "Harold Cooper."

On November 24, 1982, at the age of 74, Will Lee taped an episode of Sesame Street -- as it turned out, for the last time. He didn't feel well that day, and barely spoke to the cast. The next day, he appeared live on national television as part of Sesame Street's float in the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade. There was no indication at that time that he was ill. But, just 12 days later, on December 7, 1982, he died of a heart attack. 

The Children's Television Workshop, producers of Sesame Streethad a dilemma. They based their whole show on the fact that kids were smart enough to learn things. So they knew that kids would notice if Mr. Hooper were played by a different actor, or if he stopped appearing altogether, and would need an explanation. They toyed with the idea of having the character retire and move away. In the end, they decided to tell the truth -- or, rather, write the actor's truth into the character's story.

On November 24, 1983 -- Thanksgiving Day, a day when families were together, to help explain to the kids watching anything that the show might not have properly covered -- it was revealed that Mr. Hooper had died some time earlier (no cause was given), but that Big Bird still didn't grasp what this meant. He had to be told that it means, "Mr. Hooper's not coming back."

Bob McGrath, who played music teacher, said of the human cast, "We barely got through that show." Carroll Spinney, who both wore the Big Bird costume and operated the Oscar the Grouch Muppet, said, "The best episode we ever did was Mr. Hooper's death. Those were real tears. Will was the sweetest man."
Big Bird, played by Carroll Spinney, surrounded by, left to right:
Maria (Sonia Manzano), Bob (Bob McGrath),
Susan (Loretta Long) and Gordon (Roscoe Orman)

For a few years by that point, Northern Calloway had played David, a young black man who had been Mr. Hooper's assistant. David inherited Hooper's Store. After that, David hired Gina, a teenage girl played by Alison Bartlett-O'Reilly. But Calloway fell victim to mental illness, left the show in 1989, and died a year later.

The store was then bought by Mr. Handford, a black retired firefighter played by Leonard Jackson for one season, then by David L. Smyrl. Jackson played Mr. Handford as a grumpy old man, while Smyrl found the same balance between grumpy old man and kindly old gentleman that Lee had. (David's disappearance was explained as the character simply moving away, while the change in actor for Mr. Handford was less drastic, since the character wasn't original and beloved as Mr. Hooper was.)

In 1998, Smyrl left the show, and it was explained that Mr. Handford had sold the store to Alan, whose last name has never been revealed. Alan is played by Japanese-American actor Alan Muraoka, and has run the store ever since -- his 23 years in charge longer than the 13 years we saw Mr. Hooper run it, although we have no way of knowing how long it was open before 1969.

But, to this day, the drawing of Mr. Hooper that Big Bird made, and showed in the farewell episode, rests adjacent to Big Bird's nest, as a reminder of Mr. Hooper, and of Will Lee.

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November 24, 1983 was Thanksgiving Day, a Thursday. The NFL's usual suspects for the day both won. In the opener, on NBC, the Detroit Lions beat the Pittsburgh Steelers, 45-3 at the Silverdome in the Detroit suburb of Pontiac, Michigan. In the nightcap, on CBS, the Dallas Cowboys beat the football version of the St. Louis Cardinals, 35-17 at Texas Stadium in the Dallas suburb of Irving, Texas.

There was 1 college football game: Memphis State University (now the University of Memphis) beat the University of Louisville, 45-7 at Cardinal Stadium in Louisville.

As usual, the NBA did not play on Thanksgiving. But the NHL did. The Quebec Nordiques beat the Boston Bruins, 6-3 at the Boston Garden. And the Winnipeg Jets and the Calgary Flames played to a 4-4 tie at the Saddledome in Calgary.

This was a little unusual, since 3 of the 4 teams that played on the day were in Canada. Canada does celebrated a Thanksgiving Day, on the 2nd Monday in October, when America celebrates Columbus Day.

And they do celebrate it with football: A nationally-televised doubleheader known as the Thanksgiving Day Classic. There's a game in the East, usually hosted by the Montreal Alouettes; and a game in the West, where the host varies. This year, the Alouettes beat the Ottawa Redblacks, 20-16 at Molson Stadium in Montreal; and, while Ontario is not exactly in Western Canada, the Toronto Argonauts beat the Hamilton Tiger-Cats, 24-23 at Tim Hortons Field in Hamilton.

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