Rechov Sumsum

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Rechov Sumsum
Also known asSesame Street
Country of originIsrael
Original languagesHebrew
Arabic
No. of seasons10 seasons and 2 spin-offs
No. of episodes337
Production
Producer
HOP! Channel
Release13 March 1983 (1983-03-13) –
present

Rechov Sumsum (

Hebrew: רחוב סומסום, literally: Sesame Street) is the Israeli adaptation of the U.S. children's show of the same name
.

The first three series of the show were a joint production of the Israeli Educational Television and the Sesame Workshop, a Worldwide American non-profit organization which has been co-producing the original American Sesame Street since 1969.[1]

The story line and casts of Rechov Sumsum are tailored to an Israeli audience.

History

The idea for Sesame Street being aired in Israel goes all the way back to 1971, where black and white episodes of the show broadcast in English were briefly shown on Israeli television. But the Israeli Ministry of Education thought it was entertaining, but not educational enough for Children, so it was eventually taken off air.[2]

Rechov Sumsum consists of five television series and one short lived spin-off: Rechov Sumsum, Shalom Sesame, Rechov Sumsum/Shara'a Simsim, Sippuray Sumsum and Rechov Sumsum (2006), Shalom Sesame (2009) .

Rechov Sumsum (1983–1996)

This original Israeli version of the series was the most popular. 195 episodes were produced and broadcast between 1983 and 1986 on the educational television channel. Puppet segments were taken from the American series and dubbed in Hebrew (the same has been done in all other Israeli versions of the series). All other aspects of the production were local: The program took place in an Israeli neighborhood in which children and adults played together. Original connecting segments were added in which Israeli children shared a view of their lives. The series had a parallel character to Big Bird – a big porcupine, by the name of "Kippi" and a parallel character to Oscar The Grouch, by the name of "Moishe Oofnik". Oofnik was a punk and used to complain a lot and bother the neighborhood's residents, but even so, he soon became friends with the children in the neighborhood. The residents who lived in the street included Avner and Hanna, who were the owners of the coffee shop near Kipi's burrow. After they moved to a different city they were replaced by a new coffee shop named Gabi (Gabi Amrani [he]). Opposite to the coffee house lived Miki (Miki Kam) and Nathan (Nathan Dattner [he]). Nathan lived in front of an older resident named Yona (Yona Atari). In front of Yona's apartment was Shmil's (Shmuel Shilo) electricity appliance repairing shop, where Miki worked as Shmil's assistant.

Occasionally Albert (

Salim Dau [fr; he; ar]) used to explain to the children in the neighborhood the meaning of different words in Arabic and the show also included different famous Israeli guest stars, such as: the duo "HaDodaim", Haim Moshe, Gidi Gov and Rotem Abuhab [he
].

The opening theme song of the original series was written by Eli Mohar and composed by Yoni Rechter which also performed it together with Gidi Gov, Mazi Cohen [he], Dafna Armoni [he; de] and a group of children from the Tzadikov choir [he].

The series was broadcast repeatedly many times until 1996. Then, these broadcasts were suspended due to expiry of the co-production agreement between the Israeli Educational Television and the

HOP! Channel
".

Following the success of the series many products were marketed to the Israeli public based on the series, including: records of the songs and the sketches from the show, dolls of Kipi Ben Kipod, school supplies, clothing and beddings. A new fashion which started due to the show was the "Kipi shoes" –

slippers
in shades of brown and black, which although existed prior to the show, became much more popular following the show.

The curriculum goals of the show were: Mutual Respect (human diversity, mutual respect); The Child's World (body parts, child's powers, health, reasoning, problem solving); Reading, Mathematics, and Writing (prereading and writing, numbers, geometric forms); and Cognitive Organization (perceptual discrimination, relational concepts, classifying). Although messages about mutual respect were always included in the curriculum of the original US show, it was the first time this area was a major focus of any version of Sesame Street. It was a priority because of the "profound political tension in the region".[3] This production has been viewed as a model for the use of television to convey antisectarian messages.[4]

Shalom Sesame (1989–1996)

The program

Yitzhak Perlman
participated regularly in the series.

The series was produced in 1989 (its first season), 1990 (its second season), and 1991 (its third season), and was broadcast in Israel between the years 1989 and 1990.

The series was first intended for broadcast in the US and was therefore recorded completely in English. Only later it was dubbed in Hebrew for Israeli viewers (although the Shalom Sesame logo still showed up at the beginning). Following the

big wave of immigration from Russia
to Israel in those years, the series was also dubbed in Russian. In 2006 the series came out in the United States in a DVD bundle which included all episodes of the series (without the Hebrew dubbing).

Rechov Sumsum/Shara'a Simsim (1998–2002)

This combined production included both

Israeli-Jews and Israeli-Arabs in order to generate a message of coexistence.[5] Al-Quds University's Institute of Modern Media co-produced the series.[1]
The series premiered on April 1, 1998.

The production included 50 episodes and featured new characters aside from Kipi and Oofnik. A new Israeli Muppet was named Dafi (a purple monster), and two Arab muppets named Hanin (an orange monster)[5] and Kareem (a green rooster)[5] were also introduced as a way to bring diversity into the cast. A new stage was built which included a garden, a promenade, a bookstore and an ice cream store. Moishe Oofnik's old car was "stuck" in the center of the neighborhood. Due to the disintegration of the original muppet of Kipi Ben Kipod and due to rights issues, Kipi's muppet was re-designed with a more "muppet-like" design. The American co-producers requested that Kipi would be played by an actor with a more masculine voice, so Guy Friedman was chosen to voice Kipi.

The opening theme song was replaced with one composed by Shlomo Gronich and included several sentences in Arabic.

The program received mixed criticism. When the co-production dissolved in 2002, it was split and was renamed Sippuray Sumsum (Sesame Stories) and Palestine would later receive their own version of the show.

Sippuray Sumsum (2003-2006)

In 2003, the spin-off series Sippuray Sumsum ("Sesame Stories") was broadcast on the Israeli

HOP! Channel and it featured two new Muppets named Noah and Brosh. The hosts of the show were Tzahi (Dror Keren [he]) and Aibtism (Hind Ayub). This series was largely funded by the European Union
, and its goal was to promote messages of respect and understanding among Israeli and Arab children in the Middle East. Nowadays, this series is occasionally broadcast on Channel 33 with Arabic dubbing.

The fourth series – Rechov Sumsum (2006–present)

Season 1

In 2006, the show transitioned back to the Rechov Sumsum name and debuted on the

HOP! Channel. The new series featured the main Muppets from Sippuray Sumsum – Noah and Brosh, along with the hosts Tzahi (Dror Keren) and Aibtism (Hind Ayub), many other actors, and two new muppets, Avigail and Mahboub. Mahboub became a source of controversy as it was confirmed that he was a muppet of Arab origin.[6]

There were also plans and negotiations to restore the original Muppets of Kipi Ben Kipod and Moishe Oofnik in this series, but eventually due to technical and economical considerations, only Moishe Oofnik was featured in the series. The opening theme is the original theme song of the show which was written by Yoni Rechter and sung by a new band of children called "Sharonit". The show also included a campaign against violence. The fourth series included 40 episodes.

Season 2

In December 2009, a new season for Rechov Sumsum was produced for "Hop! Channel". The new season featured the previous Muppets: Avigail, Brosh, Mahboub and Moishe Oofnik with new neighbors including Sivan, a

Muppet in a wheelchair and Sesame Street's Grover
, or Kruvi in Hebrew.

Season 3

In February 2012, another new season for Rechov Sumsum was produced for "Hop! Channel". The new season featured the previous Muppets: Avigail, Mahboub, Sivan and Moishe Oofnik with new neighbor called Sesame Street's Elmo.

Season 4

In March 2015, another new season for Rechov Sumsum debuted on "Hop! Channel". The new season featured the muppets: Avigail, Mahboub, Sivan and Elmo. The focus for the season is "Learn about science and curiosity." Shani Cohen, Abigail's former Puppeteer, is going back to the show as a new human character called Ayelet, tour guide at the museum.

The fifth series – Shalom Sesame (2009–2011)

Between 2009 and 2011, 12 new Shalom Sesame

direct-to-DVD episodes were produced. This is an Israeli–American co-production which combines various American actors, such as Anneliese van der Pol, Jake Gyllenhaal, Christina Applegate, Greg Kinnear, Debra Messing and Cedric the Entertainer, and is geared at teaching Jewish-American children about the Secular Jewish culture. The series was filmed in the United States and in several places in Israel, including the Western Wall.[7]

The sixth series - Tokhnit He'írvkh Shel Elmo (2022)

In October 2022, Tokhnit He'írvkh Shel Elmo debuted on "Hop! Channel". The new season featured two muppet relationships: Moishe Oofnik & Elmo.

Original
Muppet
characters

Rechov Sumsum (The original series) and Shalom Sesame (The second series)

Rechov Sumsum/Shara'a Simsim (The third series):

Sippurei Sumsum (Spin-off):

  • Noah (Gilles Ben David)
  • Brosh (Avi Yakir)

Rechov Sumsum (The fourth - fifth series):

Tochnit Ha'Eiruach Shel Elmo:

  • Moishe Oofnik (Gilles Ben David) - Moishe lives in a green recycling bin.
  • Elmo (Efrat Gonan) - Elmo is now a late show monster host.

Original American characters

Other languages

Launch rollout timeline
Language Show Title
Arabic
"شارع سمسم"
English "Shalom Sesame"
Russian "Шалом Сезам"

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Ilene, Prusher (4 November 1999). "Big Bird teaches peace to young and old". the Guardian. Retrieved 6 January 2023.
  2. ^ https://www.jta.org/archive/sesame-street-dead-ended-in-israel
  3. .
  4. ^ Cole, p. 174
  5. ^ a b c "The Legacy Of An Israeli-Palestinian 'Sesame Street'". NPR.org. Retrieved 5 January 2023.
  6. ^ Sesame, Sumsum or Simsim : Everyone's Favorite Street Returns to TV, Haaretz
  7. ^ Big-name stars to appear on Shalom Sesame
  8. ^ ""Sesame Street" Returns To Israel". www.cbsnews.com. 30 April 2007. Retrieved 6 January 2023.
  9. ^ Press, Viva Sarah (3 March 2013). "Beit Issie partners with Sesame Workshop". ISRAEL21c. Retrieved 6 January 2023.

External links

Rechov Sumsum on Muppet Wiki