Entertainment

Sesame Street apologizes for 'misunderstandings' over stars' status

Sesame Workshop has apologized for what it calls 'misunderstandings around the changing cast roles at Sesame Street.'

'The door was left open for all actors to continue to appear,' says Sesame Workshop CEO

Sesame Workshop CEO Jeffrey D. Dunn acknowledged that producers could have done a better job of communicating future episode plans with three veteran actors who thought they had been let go from the long-running children's series. (Sesame Workshop)

Sesame Workshop has apologized for what it calls "misunderstandings around the changing cast roles at Sesame Street."

A statement issued Tuesday by Sesame Workshop CEO Jeffrey D. Dunn attempted to clarify the status of three veteran actors on the long-running children's series: Emilio Delgado, who plays Luis the handyman; Roscoe Orman, who plays Gordon; and Bob McGrath, part of the original cast in 1969.

Last week, a public uproar erupted from McGrath's assertion that he and his co-stars had been fired months before.

The children's show said that McGrath and Delgado last performed in episodes taped in 2013. Orman filmed new appearances for the current season of the show, which, beginning this year, is airing on HBO as well as on PBS.

Bob McGrath, who has portrayed Bob on Sesame Street since the show's 1969 debut, set off an uproar with his recent comments that he and two other longtime stars of the beloved kids' show were let go. (Robin Marchant/Getty Images for SiriusXM)

Dunn said that in 2014 the producers informed all the cast members that demands on them would be reduced in keeping with the series' new half-hour format. However, "the door was left open for all actors to continue to appear" based on future story lines.

But Dunn acknowledged that producers could have done a better job of communicating future episode plans with the three stars in question.

He said he expected to meet with each of them to discuss "how we best adapt their talents to the current content needs and preschool media landscape, in a way that honours their historic contributions."