“BEING ELMO: A PUPPETEER’S JOURNEY” My rating: B (Opening Jan. 6 at the Tivoli)
80 minutes | MPAA rating: PG
Documentaries can be many things, but sweet is not usually one of them.
“Being Elmo,” though, is just that. Sweet.
Sweet in the same way that a child bestowing a kiss upon a beloved grownup friend is disarmingly, heart-grippingly sweet.
The “Elmo” of the title isn’t a person. Not technically, anyway.
Elmo is a puppet of shaggy red felt, one of the Muppet characters who inhabit “Sesame Street” on the PBS network.
Physically he reminds a lot of Grover or Cookie Monster. His personality, though, is uniquely his own. This is due entirely to the man who performs Elmo, Kevin Clash.
Clash is a black man, raised in borderline poverty in a not-so-good Baltimore neighborhood. But as a child he fell in love with puppets he saw on TV, began making his own (probably not the coolest pastime for a young man in the ‘hood) and by the time he was a teenager was a fixture on the Baltimore television scene.
