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{{Infobox character
{{Infobox character
| name = '''Pee-wee Herman'''
| name = '''Pee-wee Herman'''
| image = [[Image: Pee-Wee Herman (1988).jpg|220px]]
| image = [[Image:Spreizstange (Bondage) Model Dani.jpg|720px]]
| caption = Pee-Wee Herman at the 1988 Academy Awards
| caption = Pee-Wee Herman at the 1988 Academy Awards
| first = [[The Groundlings]] (1977)
| first = [[The Groundlings]] (1977)

Revision as of 00:29, 26 November 2008

Pee-wee Herman
File:Spreizstange (Bondage) Model Dani.jpg
Pee-Wee Herman at the 1988 Academy Awards
First appearanceThe Groundlings (1977)
Created byPaul Reubens
Portrayed byPaul Reubens
In-universe information
GenderMale
OccupationStand-up comedian, Actor
FamilyHerman Herman (father)
Honny Herman (mother)
Hermione Herman (sister)

Pee-wee Herman is a comedic fictional character created and portrayed by American comedian Paul Reubens. He is best known for his two television series and film series during the 1980s. The child-like Pee-wee Herman character developed as a stage act which quickly led to an HBO special in 1981. As the stage performance gained further popularity, Reubens took the character to motion picture with Pee-wee's Big Adventure in 1985, toning down the adult innuendo for the appeal of children. This paved the way for Pee-wee's Playhouse, an Emmy Award winning children's series which ran on CBS from 1986-1991. Another film, Big Top Pee-wee, was also released in 1988.

Reubens's arrest on July 26, 1991 caused a media frenzy over the actor, and his Pee-wee Herman character, once adored by children. This forced Reubens to shelve his alter ego during the 1990s until his gradual resurrection the following decade. It was during this time that Reubens addressed plans to write a new Pee-wee film, Pee-wee's Playhouse: The Movie, which was greenlit in summer of 2006. In June 2007, Reubens appeared as the Pee-wee Herman character, for the first time since 1991, at Spike TV's Guys' Choice Awards. [1]

Origin

In the 1970s, Reubens joined the Los Angeles-based improvisational comedy team The Groundlings and remained a member for six years, working with Bob McClurg, John Paragon, Susan Barnes, and Phil Hartman. Hartman and Reubens became friends, often writing and working on material together. Reubens wrote sketches and developed his improvisational skills. He also forged a significant friendship and working relationship with Hartman, with whom he developed the Pee-wee Herman character.

In 1977 The Groundlings staged a performance in which its members created characters that one might see in a comedy club. Reubens decided to play a guy that everyone immediately knew would never make it as a comic, partly because Reubens couldn't remember jokes in real life - he had trouble remembering punch lines and couldn't properly piece information in sequential order. Saying that Pee-wee Herman was born that night, his distinctive guttural "Ha Ha," followed by a high-pitched "Heh Heh Heh Heh," laugh became the character's catch phrase, as has his insult comeback "I know you are, but what am I?"

Pee-wee Herman's signature grey glen plaid suit was originally a custom-made suit that Reubens had borrowed from the Groundlings director, Gary Austin; the small red bow tie was given to him by an acquaintance. Pee-wee's later checkered clothing and persona were largely lifted from manic 1950s children's TV host Pinky Lee.[2] Also incorporated into the look were short black hair, pale skin with red rouge, and red lipstick.

The inspiration for the name came from a Pee-weiny herman brand miniature harmonica and the surname of an energetic boy Reubens knew from his youth.[3] Reubens thought the name Pee-wee Herman was a name that sounded too real to be made up, and like a real name a parent would give a child that they didn't really care about.

Character background and personality

Throughout his film and television programs, Pee-wee Herman's background has remained relatively ambiguous. During interviews, he has been portrayed as though he is a real life stand-up comedian who expanded his career by playing himself in his films and TV series. This is echoed by the fact that a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame was awarded to Pee-wee Herman rather than Paul Reubens. In both Pee-wee's Big Adventure and Pee-wee's Playhouse, the character surrounds himself with strange inventions and decorations and has no visible means of support, whereas Big Top Pee-wee depicts him as a farmer/inventor. During a June 1984 segment on Late Night with David Letterman, Pee-wee said that he has a sister named Hermione (who was a girl scout), his mother's name is Honny Herman, and his father's name is Herman Herman. He went on to say that everyone in his family has a first name that begins with an "H" except for him.[4] This was again stated during a 1988 special which elaborated that Pee-wee was raised in Florida.[5]

Pee-wee is commonly portrayed like an impatient and fun-loving child with dinty, effeminate mannerisms and quirky facial expressions. His age has never been explicitly stated; although, he once proclaimed on The Pee-wee Herman Show, "I'm the luckiest boy in the world." David Letterman once said of the character, "What makes me laugh...is that it has the external structure of a bratty little precocious kid, but you know it's being controlled by the incubus — the manifestation of evil itself."[6] While the character is typically cheerful and flamboyant, Pee-wee has indeed displayed an aggressive side, including his vicious pool battle with Francis in Pee-wee's Big Adventure. He also played vengeful tricks in the aforementioned film and occasionally threw childish tantrums on Pee-wee's Playhose.

1980-1992

The Pee-wee Herman Show

File:The Pee-Wee Herman Show.JPG
DVD cover

Paul Reubens auditioned for Saturday Night Live for the 1980-1981 season but wasn't accepted into the cast. Instead, he started a stage show with the Herman character, which made one of his first appearances in the 1980 film Cheech & Chong's Next Movie. He first plays a rude receptionist in the film, spewing obscenities at police and being arrested. The character is later introduced as Pee-wee Herman, approaching the stage just before disputing with the film's title characters again. Shortly after the film, Reubens took Pee-wee to the real stage. Originally, Reubens imbued Pee-wee with sexuality that was later toned down as the character made the transition from raucous night club to children's television (though innuendo was still apparent, particularly between the Cowboy Curtis and Miss Yvonne characters). The stage show was popularized by HBO when The Pee-wee Herman Show aired in 1981.

The show featured the writing and acting of Groundlings alumni Phil Hartman and John Paragon, who would both reprise their characters on Pee-wee's Playhouse. The Pee-wee Herman Show played for five sellout months at The Roxy Theatre in L.A., whereupon HBO filmed it and aired it as a special on September 11, 1981.

Following the success of The Pee-wee Herman Show, in the early and mid 1980s Reubens made several guest appearances on Late Night with David Letterman as Pee-wee Herman. These performances gave Pee-wee an even bigger following than he had with his HBO special. In 1983, Pee-wee Herman traveled the United States with The Pee-wee Herman Show, making highly publicized stops at the Guthrie Theatre in Minneapolis and Caroline's in New York City.

In 1984 Pee-wee Herman sold out New York City's Carnegie Hall. Reubens went on to say that it was his appearances on David Letterman's show that made Pee-wee a star.

Pee-wee's Big Adventure

While on a Warner Bros. set, Reubens noticed that most of the people rode around on bicycles, and asked when he would get his. Warner Bros. presented him with a refurbished 1940s Schwinn; Reubens then abandoned the Pee-wee Herman script he was writing in favor of one about Herman's love for his bike and his efforts to locate it once it was stolen. Hartman, Reubens and Michael Varhol co-wrote the script for Pee-wee's Big Adventure, and in 1985 the film, directed by Tim Burton and scored by Danny Elfman, was released. Reubens was the originator of the "Pee-wee dance" in the movie, and he had performed it publicly many times prior to the making of the film.

Pee-wee's Playhouse

The following year, Pee-wee (along with Hartman) found a home on the small screen with the Saturday morning children's program, Pee-wee's Playhouse, on the American CBS network for the next five years (Shirley Stoler, Johann Carlo, Gilbert Lewis and Roland Rodriguez only appeared on the show for the first 13 episodes before their characters were dropped from the show). In the case of Lewis, he was fired and a new actor, William Marshall, was hired to play the King of Cartoons. The show starred Pee-wee living in a wild and wacky house, known as the Playhouse, full of talking chairs, animals, robots, and other puppet and human characters. The show became a hit, and during its time on the air, Pee-wee's Playhouse garnered 22 Emmy Awards.

Pee-wee also became the first guest on The Late Show Starring Joan Rivers on its October 9, 1986 premiere.[7] The following year, he made a cameo appearance in the film Back to the Beach. Reubens also filmed an insert for Sesame Street as Pee-wee, reciting his own version of the alphabet. In 1988, a sequel to Pee-wee's Big Adventure was filmed entitled Big Top Pee-wee. That same year "Pee-wee" was awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame and starred in Pee-wee's Playhouse Christmas Special. The program included various celebrity guests, including Oprah Winfrey, Cher, Whoopi Goldberg, Little Richard, and the aforementioned Joan Rivers among others.

Arrest

On July 26, 1991, Paul Reubens was arrested in Sarasota, Florida for masturbating publicly in an adult theater during a screening of Nurse Nancy. The news media went into a frenzy and the scandal marked the near-death of the Pee-wee Herman character, reducing both the actor and the persona to a ubiquitous punchline. Although the series Pee-wee's Playhouse had already ended by that time, CBS reacted by dropping its reruns from their lineup. Reubens made a deal with the Sarasota County court: in exchange for a fine and producing a few public service announcements, he was given a clean record.

At the 1991 MTV Video Music Awards Reubens made his first appearance after his lewd-conduct arrest. Taking the stage in costume as Pee-wee, he received a standing ovation, after which he asked the audience, "Heard any good jokes lately?"[8] Soon after, Reubens drifted from public view. According to a 1991 Rolling Stone article, "Who Killed Pee-wee Herman?," Reubens had indeed become weary of the character and wanted to explore new territory.[9] He used the arrest as a chance to escape Pee-wee and play other roles as Paul Reubens.

1999-present

Appearances and television reruns

During the filming of Mystery Men, Reubens appeared on The Tonight Show With Jay Leno in 1999 in one of his very first interviews not as Pee-wee. It was also on that interview that Reubens first announced plans to start writing a new Pee-wee movie. In a 2004 interview with Entertainment Weekly, Reubens also mentioned his hope that Hollywood has not seen the last Pee-wee. Reubens later stated a strong possibility of a Pee-wee's Playhouse movie on an NPR interview with Terry Gross on December 27, 2004. A third Pee-wee movie was also suggested. Both, said Reubens, are actively being worked on, but no dates or official announcements were made as of this date.

In 1998, Fox Family aired reruns on Pee-wee's Playhouse. On July 10, 2006, Cartoon Network began airing Pee-wee’s Playhouse during its Adult Swim lineup. The show's 45 original episodes were planned to air on the block Monday to Thursday at 11 P.M. ET starting on that date.[10] However, later on in August 2006, Adult Swim started airing Pee-wee's Playhouse at 12:00 A.M. ET.

On July 11, 2006, Reubens made a rare talk show appearance to promote Pee-wee's Playhouse on The Late Show with David Letterman, and made mention that a script was completed for a Pee-wee's Playhouse Movie which would take the characters from the 1980s television show out of the playhouse for the first time and into the real world. In a Time magazine interview, Reubens said production would start early next year for the film.[11]

In late summer 2006, Reubens announced that Pee-wee's Playhouse: The Movie has been greenlit; although, there is no word on what studio greenlighted the project. This film is family oriented, and was planned to head into production around February 2007. In October 2006, Reubens made a rare public appearance at an east-coast fan convention, Chiller Theater, with Pee-wee's Playhouse co-star, Lynne Marie Stewart. There he donned a gray suit with a bold red necktie, and signed autographed pictures and other memorabilia-- along with posing for photographs with fans.[12]

At Spike TV's 2007 Guys' Choice Awards in June, Reubens appeared as the Pee-wee Herman character for the first time since 1992.[1] On August 5, 2007 at a showing of Pee-wee's Big Adventure in the Hollywood Forever Cemetery, Reubens made an appearance on stage before the show, bringing with him almost the entire cast of the film to the uproarious applause and standing ovation. E.G. Daily (Dotty), Judd Omen (Mickey), Diane Salinger (Simone), Daryl Keith Roach (Chuck, the bike shop owner), and Mark Holton (Francis) were all present.

Pee-wee's Playhouse: The Movie

Pee-wee's Playhouse: The Movie is a proposed 2009 film allegedly greenlighted by Paramount Pictures.[13] Reubens' third scripted movie, written at the same time as his adult-oriented Pee-wee script, was announced in late summer 2006. He first announced he had finished the script on the Late Show with David Letterman, and later revealed further details to Time magazine reporter Dennis Van Tine.[14] Filming was expected to start in early 2007. According to IMDb, it is expected for a release in 2009 because of delays.

According to Reubens, the story will focus on the characters from the television show finally leaving the playhouse and venturing off into Puppetland and beyond (the playhouse characters had rarely left the playhouse in the TV series). The characters from the playhouse will be on an epic adventure to look for a missing character from the playhouse. Reubens stated this will be a "road" movie similar to Pee-wee's Big Adventure.

Adult-Oriented Pee Wee Film

Before working on his Playhouse movie script. Reubens revealed he had written a new script for an adult-oriented film featuring Pee-Wee entitled The Pee-Wee Herman Story. At a Groundlings reunion in 1999, Reubens even joked about the rating of the movie. "it's probably PG-13 or even R rated." The plot of this movie involved Pee-Wee making it big as a singer, traveling to Hollywood to make 1960s beach movies and becomes (as Reubens puts it) a monster, drifting into drugs and alcohol. He called at a "Valley of the Dolls Pee-Wee". It was because of the adult situations of this script that Reubens sat down and starting writing the Playhouse movie script. At first, Reubens was going to do the adult Pee-Wee movie first, but within a few months, Reubens announced that it was very likely that the Playhouse movie was going to be made first.

Honors and pop culture references

The Pee-wee Herman character has received various honors, particularly during his peak fame in the late 1980s. During the original run of Pee-wee's Playhouse, the series garnered 22 Emmy Awards. Pee-wee Herman was also awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1988. Under the category of motion pictures, it can be found at 6562 Hollywood Blvd. The character also appeared on three covers of Rolling Stone, including issue 493 (February 1987), 613 (October 1991) with a cover story of "Who Killed Pee-wee Herman?," and finally 619/620 (December 1991) for the 1991 Yearbook.[15]

In early 2007, Nike SB released a style of sneakers called Grey/Heather Dunk High Pro SB that use a grey and white color scheme with red detail inspired by the colors of Pee-wee's trademark suit and an illustration on the insole suggesting Reubens' theater arrest; although, no explicit reference is made to the inspiration as they are unauthorized. The sneakers are part of a "Fallen Heroes" pack which also features shoes inspired by Milli Vanilli, MC Hammer and Vanilla Ice.[16]

The Pee-wee character has been parodied in television such as an In Living Color sketch starring Jim Carrey. Rapper Eminem also spoofed Pee-wee in his song and video “Just Lose it,” in which he not only dresses like Pee-wee but even shouts like him in the song's chorus. Paul Reubens was widely rumored to have planned on suing Eminem over the parody, but this does not appear to be true. Also, in his song ass like that in one of the verses Eminem sings "And don't treat me like I'm pee wee herman, this movies PG".

In the film Dragnet (1987), Tom Hanks' character imitates his voice in one scene near the end of the film.

References

  1. ^ a b Guy's Choice Awards - Clips - Pee Wee Returns! - SPIKE Powered By IFILM
  2. ^ Terry Gross (29-Nov-2004). "Actor Paul Reubens, 'Pee-wee Herman'". NPR, Fresh Air. Retrieved 2007-02-06. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  3. ^ Bruce Handy (Sep 1999). "The Pee-wee Herman Story". Vanity Fair. Retrieved 2007-02-06.
  4. ^ "Actor Paul Reubens, 'Pee-wee Herman'". Retrieved 2007-02-06.
  5. ^ "Actor Paul Reubens, 'Pee-wee Herman'". Retrieved 2008-08-24.
  6. ^ Peter J. Boyer (Sept 4, 1986). "Pee Wee Readies Playhouse". New York Times. p. C22. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  7. ^ "Actor Paul Reubens, 'Pee-wee Herman'". Retrieved 2008-08-24.
  8. ^ Paul Reubens Discusses Pee-Wee's Big Return - Movie News Story | MTV Movie News
  9. ^ Huskey, Melynda [1] "Pee-wee Herman and the Postmodern Picaresque"
  10. ^ Matthew Williams (05 Jun 2006). ""Pee-wee's Playhouse" Comes To Adult Swim In July". Toonzone. Retrieved 2007-02-06. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  11. ^ Dennis Van Tine (13 Jul 2006). "Pee-wee's Small Adventure". Time. Retrieved 2007-02-06.
  12. ^ "Chiller Theatre Oct 2006:". Chiller Theatre. Oct 2006. Retrieved 2007-02-06.
  13. ^ Peter Hartlaub (24 Jan 2007). "Pee-wee may be heading back to his Playhouse. But for now, he's happy to be Paul Reubens". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 2007-10-17.
  14. ^ Dennis Van Tine (13 Jul 2006). "Pee-wee's Small Adventure". Time. Retrieved 2007-02-06.
  15. ^ Pee-wee Herman Rolling Stone Magazine at Wolfgang's Vault Wolfgag'sVault.com. Retrieved on July 23, 2008.
  16. ^ Pee Wee Herman Dunks SB - NiceKicks.com

External links