Maria Leaves Sesame Street After 44 Years On The Block
Gordon (played by Roscoe Orman), Maria (played by Sonia
Manzano), and The Count on Sesame Street's 42nd season. Manzano is
closing out a Sesame Street career that began in 1971.
Zach Hyman/Sesame Street
For the last 44 years, you could ask Maria how to get to Sesame
Street, but not any more. Sonia Manzano, the actress who has played the
character since 1971, is retiring and won't be part of the next season. Manzano, 65, announced the news earlier this week at the American Library Association Annual Conference. On
the show, Maria owned the Fix-It shop, repairing all sorts of things,
including a lot of toasters, with her husband Luis, writes the
Associated Press:
"In
confirming Manzano's retirement, Sesame Workshop said 'she will always
be a part of the fabric of our neighborhood. During her 44-year career
as the iconic "Maria," and the first leading Latina woman on television,
she was a role model for young girls and women for generations.' "
The AV Club
writes that she was nominated for an Emmy Award twice as an actress but
didn't win. She did win 15 of the awards as a scriptwriter for the
show. Manzano grew up in a Puerto Rican neighborhood in the
Bronx. She attended Manhattan's High School of Performing Arts and
graduated from Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh. Her acting
career began when she was in the original cast of Godspell, a musical which began as a student production on campus, according to the AP. She talked about Sesame Street at the ALA conference:
"Sesame
Street, as everyone knows, was set in the inner city and there was a
particular reason for that. Our first target audience were the children
in the inner city that were underserved. And we thought that if they
learned their basic cognitive skills, they could start kindergarten on
an even level with their middle-class peers. And it was a very
idealistic time — we thought we'd, like, close the education gap by
doing that. "But the first thing we had do to was make sure
kids in the inner city could relate to us, and what better way to do
that than have the show come to them from a place that was familiar to
them. And the stoop in Harlem was the most familiar to them."
Here's a clip of Maria helping Oscar the Grouch:
How will Sesame Street solve the problem of Maria's absence? The AP says
that Sesame Workshop hasn't explained how that will play out on the
show.
"I have known the joy and pain of friendship. I have served and been served. I have made some good enemies for which I am not a bit sorry. I have loved unselfishly, and I have fondled hatred with the red-hot tongs of Hell. That's living."
— Zora Neale Hurston
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