The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

TODAY’S TALKER

Lloyd Morrisett, who helped launch ‘Sesame Street,’ dies

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Lloyd Morrisett, the co-creator of the beloved children’s education TV series“sesame Street,”which uses empathy and fuzzy monsters like Abby Cadabby, Elmo and Cookie Monster to charm and teach generation­s around the world, has died. He was 93.

Morrisett’s death was announced Tuesday by Sesame Workshop, the nonprofit he helped establish under the name the Children’s Television Workshop. No cause was given.

Morrisett and Joan Ganz Cooney worked with Harvard University developmen­tal psychologi­st Gerald Lesser to build the show’s unique approach to teaching that now reaches 120 million children. Legendary puppeteer Jim Henson supplied the critters.

“Sesame Street”is shown in more than 150 countries, has won 193 Emmys, 10 Grammys and in 2019 received the Kennedy Center Honor for lifetime artistic achievemen­t, the first time a television program got the award.

Born in 1929 in Oklahoma City, Morrisett initially trained to be a teacher with a background in psychology. He became an experiment­al educator, looking for new ways to educate children from less advantaged background­s. Morrisett received his bachelor’s at Oberlin College, did graduate work in psychology at UCLA and earned his doctorate in experiment­al psychology at Yale University. He was an Oberlin trustee for many years and was chair of the board from 1975 to 1981.

The company said upon the news of his death that Lloyd left “an outsized and indelible legacy among generation­s of children the world over, with ‘Sesame Street’ only the most visible tribute to a lifetime of good work and lasting impact.”

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