Obituaries

Jane Henson, Wife of Jim Henson and Supporter of Center for Puppetry Arts, Dies

Jane Henson was a supporter of puppetry arts. In lieu of flowers, it's been requested that donations be made in her honor to the Midtown puppetry center.

Jane Nebel Henson, creative partner and former wife of famed puppeteer Jim Henson, has died, according to a statement from the Jim Henson Company released yesterday.

According to the statementHenson, aged 79, passed away at her home in Connecticut yesterday after enduring a lengthly cancer diagnosis. 

Instead of flowers, donations may be sent in Henson's memory to the Center for Puppetry Arts, the Jim Henson Foundation for the Support of Puppetry, or The Puppetry Conference at the Eugene O'Neill Memorial Theatre Centre.

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Vincent Anthony, founder and director of Midtown's Center for Puppetry Arts, released this statement:

Jane Henson's relationship with the Center for Puppetry Arts goes back to our very beginning. She, along with daughter Heather, attended the opening of the Center in 1978 and watched as Kermit the Frog and Jim Henson cut the ceremonial ribbon. For 35 years, Jane remained a supporter and friend of the Center for Puppetry Arts, directly influencing numerous fundraising campaigns and museum exhibitions. Jane ardently supported the Center's mission to touch lives through the art of puppetry and its award-winning educational work. Over the years, both personally and through The Jane Henson Foundation, Jane contributed financially to the Center.

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Beyond her philanthropic support, Jane was known to Center audiences through a lecture tour where she shared her stories and memories of Jim Henson, offering a more intimate look at America's most famous puppeteer.  Sometimes, while on visits to the Center, Jane would surprise and delight museum patrons by giving personal tours of the Jim Henson exhibits.  The Henson family's generous request for memorial donations to be made to the Center for Puppetry Arts in Jane's name truly honors the love Jane had for the Center and it for her. While Jane will be greatly missed, the good works she supported and the lives she touched will always ensure she is never far from our minds and hearts.

 

Jane Henson was born to Jane Anne and Adalbert Nebel on June 16, 1934 in Queens, New York City. Her father provided for the family by working as an astrologer writing under the nom de plume Dal Lee, and produced a Dictionary of Astrology and other texts about astrology and the occult which, though out of print, still circulates among book collectors

Jane was a senior at the time she met Jim Henson, who was only a freshman, while taking a puppetry class at the University of Maryland, according to an interview with Jane Henson recorded at a Henson company event last spring. The two shortly began working for WRC-TV, NBC's affiliate in Washington, DC after being recruited from the class by station management to produce a puppet show for broadcast.

"He didn't have a background in puppetry and, neither did I," said Jane in the interview. "Everybody else in the class was seniors in art education and we all knew each other, and then this freshman came in and he just very slowly took over the class."

That show, Sam and Friends, aired between The Huntley-Brinkley Report and The Tonight Show Starring Steve Allen. While only broadcast locally, the show's reputation spread, and the Muppets were soon making guest appearances on the sets of the era's top variety shows.

In 1959, the two were married in a ceremony in Salisbury officiated by Jim Henson's uncle. The two started their family in Bethesda, where they created a house which had a complete puppetry film studio and workshop. Over the next 10 years, Jane gave birth to five children, Lisa, Cheryl, Brian, John and Heather.

"I really loved having all the kids," said Jane in the interview. "I don't know that I was a very good mother, but they taught me all I know. They were very good kids."

As the Henson name grew in renown, the family moved first to New York City, then to Greenwich, CT, where Jane worked as assistant art teacher at the Mead School for Human Development.

In addition to an official role within the Jim Henson Company, where she recruited, screened and hired many of the troupe's puppeteers, Jane Henson was a tireless promoter of the art of puppetry. She co-founded The National Puppetry Conference at the Eugene O'Neill Theater Center and served on the board of the Jim Henson Foundation which focuses on promoting puppetry. 

She was also associated with the Union Internationale de la Marionette, the Puppetry Guild of Greater New York, the University of Maryland Alumni Association, the Center for Puppetry Arts in Atlanta, the Paley Center in New York, and the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History.

Jim and Jane Henson were legally separated in 1986, but remained on good terms and were involved in each other's lives.

Jane was with Jim the night he suddenly died of complications from a severe case of pneumonia, according to an interview she gave with People Magazine published in June, 1990, republished on Muppetcentral.com.

Following his death, she also created the Jim Henson Legacy in 1992. Later, she created the Jane Henson Foundation in 2001 to expand her philanthropic efforts.

This article originally appeared on College Park Patch.


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