


In The Street We Live On, Bert believes he can get out of Elmo's World by making a left at the closet and then "straight on 'til morning", which is part of the directions to Neverland.Peter Pan or Tinkerbell are some of the characters that Bear suggests that the viewer can dress up as for Halloween in " Halloween Bear.".Shneeze, parodies of Captain Hook and his assistant, Mr. Episode 3069 of Sesame Street features two pirate characters named Captain Shnook and Mr.In a Sesame Street sketch with Wanda Falbo (Word Fairy), she demonstrates using a telephone when receiving a call from Tinkerbell.Rizzo is dressed as Tinkerbell in a Walt Disney World exclusive collectible pin.Big Bird as Peter Pan and Little Bird as Tinker Bell, with Rubber Duckie floating in a bag of pixie dust, appear in the October 1991 issue of Sesame Street Magazine.The Muppet Babies episode " Kermit Pan" again features Baby Kermit as the hero, but with Skeeter as Wendy and Piggy as Tink, and Gonzo as Captain Hook.The costumes in the picture recall those used in the Disney version. Muppet Babies' Classic Children's Tales features a brief telling of the story with Baby Kermit as Peter Pan, Baby Piggy as Wendy, Baby Scooter as John, Baby Animal as Michael, and a rat as Tinkerbell flying over the rooftops of London.Kermit and Rowlf play Michael and John, Piggy plays Piggybelle, and Baby Gonzo is Captain Hook Nose. In the Muppet Babies episode " By the Book," Baby Scooter reads Peter Pan and imagines himself and Baby Skeeter as Peter Pan-like twins.Prairie Dawn plays the part of Peter Pan in The Sesame Street Storytime Calendar 1982, with Betty Lou as Wendy, a Twiddlebug as Tinkerbell and Anything Muppets as John and Michael in the children's nursery." Never Smile at a Crocodile," a song scored for the Disney animated feature which later received lyrics for album releases, was performed by Mary Louise on episode 114 of The Muppet Show.The Jim Henson's Creature Shop created many creatures for a live stage adaptation of Peter Pan titled Pan, including the Croc, Sheldon the Snurtle, Fribbits, and a 15 foot tall "Honker". In most stage adaptations of the story, the titular character has been played by an adult woman so as to better capture the prepubescent vocal stylings of a young boy. One of the better known film versions is the 1953 Walt Disney animated feature. The story has been adapted many times, first by Barrie himself as the novel Peter Pan and Wendy in 1911, and subsequently as musicals, feature films, and television series. Barrie in 1904 about a boy who refused to grow up. The Sesame Street Storytime Calendar 1982
