Two-Headed Monster
Sesame Street Muppet character
title: "Two-Headed Monster" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["sesame-street-muppet-characters", "fictional-monsters", "television-characters-introduced-in-1978", "american-male-characters-in-television"] description: "Sesame Street Muppet character" topic_path: "arts/film" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Two-Headed_Monster" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0
::summary Sesame Street Muppet character ::
::data[format=table title="Infobox character"]
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Two-Headed Monster |
| series | Sesame Street |
| image | Two-Headed Monster.webp |
| first | Mr. Snufflepagus cleans his pajamas (February 27, 1978) |
| creator | Jim Henson |
| lbl1 | Performed by |
| data1 | {{unbulleted list |
| lbl21 | Fur/skin color |
| data21 | Light purple |
| species | Sesame Street Muppet Monster |
| gender | Male |
| nationality | American |
| :: |
::callout[type=note]
::
| name = Two-Headed Monster | series = Sesame Street | image = Two-Headed Monster.webp | caption = | first = Mr. Snufflepagus cleans his pajamas (February 27, 1978) | last = | creator = Jim Henson | lbl1 = Performed by | data1 = {{unbulleted list|Left Head:|Richard Hunt (1978)|Jerry Nelson (1978–1999)|Joey Mazzarino (2001–2016)|Martin P. Robinson (2002)|Eric Jacobson (2016–present)|Stephanie D'Abruzzo (2017)|Right Head:|Peter Friedman (1978)|Richard Hunt (1978–1991)|Adam Hunt (1995)|David Rudman (1998–present)| Joey Mazzarino (2002)}} | voice = | alias = | lbl21 = Fur/skin color | data21 = Light purple | species = Sesame Street Muppet Monster | gender = Male | nationality = American The Two-Headed Monster is a comical, light purple Muppet monster on the television show Sesame Street, first appearing in season 9, 1978.
History
The Two-Headed Monster, as the name implies, is an example of bicephaly. The right-hand head has purple hair and a black beard, with upturned horns, whereas the left-hand head has black hair and a purple beard, with downturned horns. They have slightly different personalities, with the left-hand head seemingly the more rational and sensible of the two, but also slightly grouchier. Speaking in baby-like gibberish except when emphasizing a word, which is usually enough for them to communicate with others, the monster, in typical sketches, would sound out words in front of a brick wall, then push them together to say the full word, or do something else which involves cooperation. They are physically dicephalic parapagus twins, as their mother made an appearance in one sketch when they sounded the word "mom"; she has a single head and speaks normally. They share a single pair of arms and legs.
Inspiration
The creation of this monster was inspired by performers Jerry Nelson and Richard Hunt playing around on the set one day, saying that they were a monster with two heads. While right-handed performers use their right hands to perform the heads of characters and their left to perform left hands, whoever performs the left half of the monster performs the head with the left hand, and the right hand with their right hand.
Performers
The performers for the Two-Headed Monster are listed in order of the history from the Left Head and the Right Head:
- Richard Hunt and Peter Friedman (ca. 1978)
- Jerry Nelson and Richard Hunt (1978–1991)
- Jerry Nelson and Adam Hunt (Let's Make a Word! PC game, 1995)
- Jerry Nelson and David Rudman (1998–1999)
- Joey Mazzarino and David Rudman (2001–2016)
- Martin P. Robinson and Joey Mazzarino (Episode 4024, 2002)
- Matt Vogel and David Rudman (Episode 4030, 2002)
- Eric Jacobson and David Rudman (2016–present)
- Stephanie D'Abruzzo and David Rudman (Episode 4733, 2017)
Design team
The Two-Headed Monster was designed by Jim Henson and built by Caroly Wilcox.
References
References
::callout[type=info title="Wikipedia Source"] This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page. ::