
Age: 62
male
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. David Rudman (born June 1st 1964) is a puppeteer, voice actor and producer, best known as a performer of many Sesame Street Muppet characters. He originated the role of Baby Bear, and has been nominated for two Emmy Awards for his work replacing Frank Oz in the role of Cookie Monster. However, Oz still comes in to record new material with Cookie Monster occasionally. Rudman also took over as Richard Hunt's half of "The Two Headed Monster" after his death. His first production was Rankin/Bass productions such as Rudolph's Shiny New Year. He is currently the executive producer of Jack's Big Music Show on cable TV's Nick Jr. channel, and performs the voice of Jack, the lead character. He is also the executive producer, co-creator, and director of Bunnytown on cable TV's Playhouse Disney. Rudman was the speaker at the 2005 graduation ceremony for the Illinois Institute of Art—Chicago. He attended Highland Park High School and graduated in 1981. He has been a speaker at the school's biennial Focus on the Arts program since 2003. He attended college at the University of Connecticut in Storrs, CT. He continues to reside in Highland Park with his wife and three children. He will also take over two roles once held by Richard Hunt: Scooter and Janice. Description above from the Wikipedia article David Rudman, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia

David Rudman

Beaker
for Beaker in The Muppets Become Influencers
Suggested by disneymaster1901

Nearly a decade after their comeback, the Muppets once again fall from grace and are now trying to stay relevant by appealing to the culture of the Internet. Kermit becomes a gamer, Bunsen and Beaker start a science channel, Fozzie posts cringe, Miss Piggy is on Twitch, Gonzo is a prankster, the list goes on. But an evil CEO wants to shut the Muppets down for not going by their nonsensical guidelines and for refusing to be sponsored by Raid: Shadow Legends, so The Muppets have to band together again to prevent this from happening! Will they find that they are still relevant even without Internet Popularity?
