At ten he made his fir t puppet from the lining of his fatber' old co t, by 12 he wa performing at Baltimore s Inner Harbor, and at 16 he wa starring on local television. ow Kevin Clash, the 29 year­ old puppeteer who delights millions of children-and tbeir parents-with hi Sesame Street characters Elmo and Hoots the Owl ha won the 1990 Emmy Award for Outstanding Performer in a Chi Idren's Series. SPEAKI G FO THE YOUNGEST Clasb's Elmo i a typical t 0 year-old, lov ble and energetic-and ready to play at every opportunity. The bright red puppet was created to represent tbe youngest viewers in the TV audience and his favorite phra e, "Elmo want to play," strikes a chord wi tb pre cbooler nd tbei r parents, too. Sesame Street's re earch department found that Elmo's constant g me pi ying is an effective way to hold young viewer' allen­ tion. FIRST HAND EXPERIE C Cia h, who ha been with the Children's Television Wor hop e ries for pre- choolcr ince 1985. gavc Elmo the manneri m • voice nd per onal�ty that have helped make the two nd a h If ye T-old dynamo a win- R t thin , YORK - Explaining why h u es explicit language . and scxu I reference on his nti-crimc. nil-drug video and Ibum. popul r rap arti '1 lee- T i� if you w nt to rc ch hoodlum' you h v to act like o�. . ""m n intelligent hood­ lum," Ice- T. who used to belong to treet gan,. told PARADE Contributing Editor Lynn Minton. "l tno my rap i not for everybody." he ·aid. "If I nt to rc ch kid in a gang. I know the route I have to go. The arc the kid that'll alk up to you and hoot you in your f ceo ... Wh t l 'rn, dealing ith i an unconventional enemy, and it take unconven­ tional lactic . "Re IIYt • dole cent are an unconvention I enemy. Th y don't go for the re oning that dulls try to use with them. When you're an adult. you can listen to a record and ay, "Oh, th t' terrible. Kid' houldn't he r th 1.' But you're forget .. ting that hen you ere 13, the record you nted were the record your mother definitely did not ant you to have. �. nero The puppeteer feels he wa able to bring Elmo to life because of fir t-hand ex­ perience wi th preschooler gained belping his mother. a d y care provider in Bal­ timore. "1 didn't realize how deep an impression those years made," he says, "but much of Elmo's sweetness, his vulnerability and his posi tive ani tude came from those memories. I could remember the wonderfulness of that age. how excited little kid get when they are learning some­ thing." EARLY SUCCESS Clash discovered early that puppetry might take him far. In school he was once warned that he needed a way to pick up his social studie grades, so he created a Russian puppet with costume changes that in­ cluded a fur hat nd boots: He earned an " A" for hi efforts. Soon. young Kevin was entertaining at children's birthday parties and he was asked to become part of the '"Sunny Sunday" we kend entertainment line-up at the I nner Harbor. "At that stage." he recalls. "I used to be glued to the TV set w tching Ses me Street so I could try to figure out how the puppets� were put together. " IMPORTANT MENTORS Cia h met and impres cd a CI local television personali ty who asked him to become part of a new chtldren's show, "Caboose," on WMAR- TV. By the lime be WI sixteen. he wa building puppets, per­ forming, arid making $200 a wee • a sum he looked on as a fortune. "I know now that what I wa gaining as an oppor­ tunity far more valuable than money," he reflects. "I wa learni ng about tbings I would need to build a career-TV monitors, crip and voices. and I learned tbat teaching children i 95� entertain­ ment, that you have. to grab their at enticn before tha� mo t important five percent, learning, can in in." The talented teenager moved on 10 doing guest spots focu attention explicit Iy�ic nti-dr 9 meSliBCJIBS· Parent don't he r nything but the caring. But are you oing to get hung up on the offensive word', or Ire you going to think. about the me - 'age?" Although he personally never did dru or drank Icc- T said he "found out that drugs I re nowhere. from other people" c xpcr ience ," nd that's what he hope to help others avoid. "I'm lucky," he aid. "I got a chance. And what my music is really made of i me expl i n­ in what I thought I want VS. what re lly happened. "I ay that I wanted to go down thi particular ro d. the fast life, be a hustler, make my mone s, he rich and never work. That's the road a lot of minority kid feel they've got to go. Becau the other road h applications and inter­ view tbat we jut omeho never eem to be able to get pa t. There's no appl ic tion down thi road. You ju t go ror what you tno . Bui at the end or that ro d, I found out, there' a big cliff. And all my (riends fell off of tbe cliff." Li eracy Co tl ed fro Pa 5 Win ton-Salem (NC) Chronicle (919)722-8624/28. Ration te lor V or B ck Pre HILTO: HIGHER EDUCATION h s consistent­ ly referred to the columnist • local and national of Pan African new P pc . a� being' adjunct (part-time) f cully to our communitie . A ASIDE: Whcn we wtite of the Pan African community, we are referring to African Americ ns, Afro-Caribbeans. Afro-Latino·. Continental •• e jazz on the "Captain Kangaroo" show nd, after high school, went to New York to work for a new syndicated TV series called "The Great Space Coaster." I In high school Cia h met Kermit Love. who had helped to create Big Bird and other original Se ame Street p'up­ pets. The veteran puppe eer became a mentor, and in 198� Clash joined Sesame Street. "lAMP RTOFMY CHARACTERS" Though he maintains an apartment in New York, home for CI h i still Baltimore, where he pend wee ends with his ife, Gin . A ·handsome ix-footer, CI bays the fact that he remains anonymou behind ICHIGAN CITIZEN PAGE 21 1 his puppets doe n' t bother him at aU. "I'm part of the' characters and I get my pleasure from what they are doing for the kids." he says. "People who a me if it isn't corny doing puppetry for kid don't under tand what it' like to see kid ' reactions to the ch r cters. Once my wife, Gina, who a registered nurse in the oncology depart­ ment at John Hopkin Ho pi­ tal, a ked me to bring Elmo to . see one of her pa tient • seven-year old boy who was o de pendent he wouldn't talk to anyone. When the boy' tried to t Ik to Elmo, it brou ht tear to my eye ., And there's nothing corny about lhal." Africans. etc. In fact, we w uld like to h rc another related concern that we noticed at the NNPA convention; namely that the Afro-Car] bbean comm uni ty wa well represented in the presence of the New York Carib New , yet for the mo t part, the agenda wa. Afri' n American. Thi fact i worth under­ scoring, especially in light of the NNPA" literacy program effort . The entire Pan African community will g 'n (rom re ding and" s pporting .the Arri�an pre. . i t e CI d 00 The po lion paper ci ted twenty guidelincs. Some of the guidel i ncs werc as fo -I low. : .i: Identify choou with large number 0 African Americ n(Pan African) tu­ dents. - Contact Superintendent and explain. the rationale for introducing your new P per in cia room and explai . how it can improve readin interest and skills. Recruit a creativc retired te chcr to wor part­ ti me or vol unteer to coor­ dinate your progr m or suppl the new papers to the school. - Develop a generic ad in your new 'paper regarding "Liter cy and the Blac Pre�s." - Computerize the list of schools in your ci rculation are : send out a one-page description of 'Literacy and the Black Press." H:HE: We s lutc Ruth Love, Ernie Pitt� and the NNPA member- or present­ in' lh � p()�llIun paper. We now aJ 0 otter our services in imple cnung thb plan of ac­ tion. HILTON: HIGHER EDUCATION ; \ d signed to dialogue 'il" .ollege and world read rs. Education IS ongoing and certainly 1I0t limited to school clas rooms. r . Le' 's ''Ilk. (7 U) 899·0650. Support Our t· . . ..