About Bob

As one of the original hosts on Sesame Street and an independent children’s recording artist and performer, Bob has received countless awards and honors over the years. He was inducted into the Silver Circle of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences, received the American Eagle Award by the National Music Council, and was given the Fame Award by the National Association of Music Educators for furthering the cause of music education.

Bob Sings!

Bob’s singing career began at the age of six on the Illinois family farm where his mother discovered that her son could sing!  She encouraged him to sing at local gatherings, and by the age of nine he won first place in a  talent contest at NBC radio in Chicago. It wouldn’t be long before Bob was attending the University of  Michigan School of Music in Ann Arbor. He was President of the Class of  Music ’54 and became the 1st freshman soloist of the University of  Michigan Men’s Glee Club in their over 90-year history.

In 1954, he was drafted into the Army, and  after basic training in Ft. Chaffee, Arkansas, spent time at 7th Army  Headquarters near Stuttgart, Germany, attached to the 7th Army Symphony and Soldier Show Division. He conducted the chapel choir and organized a  male quartet which placed 2nd in the All Army talent contest. The prize was a month-long tour in France to perform for troops on U.S. Army bases. After the Army in 1956, while working on his Master’s degree in voice  at the Manhattan School of Music, the St. David’s School hired him to  teach music appreciation and theory to 2nd through 8th  graders. There, he met his future wife Ann Sperry, the nursery school  teacher. They were married in 1958 and now have five children and eight  grandchildren.

For the next two years, Bob continued working as a freelance artist  in New York City, performing both classical and contemporary works. He  sang everything from Gregorian chants at funerals to symphonic choral  works with Leonard Bernstein and the New York Philharmonic at Carnegie  Hall. He recorded with Igor Stravinsky, was in a quartet at the Pablo  Casals Festival in Puerto Rico, sang with the Robert Shaw Chorale, the  Fred Warring Pennsylvanians, and even with a few rock and roll bands. He  sang jingles for radio and appeared on camera in television commercials  and musical television shows like The Bell Telephone Hour and the Hallmark Hall of Fame opera productions. Later, he would appear on The Tonight Show, What’s My Line, and To Tell the Truth.

Mitch and Japan

In 1960, Bob was invited to be one of the top tenors on NBC’s new weekly television show Sing Along With Mitch. Two  years later, Mitch invited Bob to sing alongside Leslie Uggams as the  featured male soloist. The show ran for four years and was even picked  up in Japan!
After the show was canceled, the group continued to sing together,  and Bob headlined a month of performances in Las Vegas at the Desert Inn  and went to Japan  for a 30-concert tour. Bob sang in English and Japanese and thousands  of Japanese teenagers chanted and screamed, “Bobu…Bobu.” Turned out  there were “Bobu Magulas” (teenage fan clubs) all over Japan. Before  returning home, he landed a few gigs at some of the top night clubs in  Tokyo, as well as television appearances and concerts throughout Japan.  Over the next three years he would return to Japan nine times, perform  in every major city, and record roughly nine LPs and 15 or more singles  in both English and Japanese for Nippon Columbia and later with Sony  CBS.
One of Bob’s most memorable nights in Japan happened when he was  invited to entertain at a small private function for Prime Minister Sato  and his daughter, who was a fan. Joined by Minoru Muraoka, who played  the shakuhachi (bamboo flute), Bob found it hard to believe that a farm  boy from Illinois was singing old Japanese folk songs, in Japanese, to  the Prime Minister of Japan! In an interview with The New York Times, the Prime Minister said that “Bob had formed a bridge of song between the countries.”

Sesame Street

Bob is one of the original cast members of Sesame Street, a PBS children’s show that first aired in 1969. The show is viewed in  over 120 English-speaking countries, and in about 60 countries it is  produced in the native language of the country.
It all started in front of Carnegie Hall in 1969, when Bob had a  chance meeting with Dave Connell, a former friend from the University of  Michigan. Connell had recently left Captain Kangaroo and joined Children’s Television Workshop.  He asked Bob if he might be interested in auditioning for a new  children’s television show. Bob replied, “Not in the least!” He was  hoping to parlay his teenage success in Japan into the American teenage  market and get his own show, similar to Andy Williams or Perry Como.
A few months later, he got a call from the Workshop, wanting  him to take a look at material that had been put together over the past  two years: a few segments by a guy named Jim Henson who had something  called Muppets. Never having heard of Henson, Bob went to the viewing,  was amazed at what he saw, and realized almost immediately that this was  going to be a very different kind of children’s show. He eagerly  auditioned along with many others, and was one of four actors chosen to  film five one-hour pilots. These five shows were tested by hundreds of  kids across the United States. Bob made the cut, and the original cast  of four (Bob, Susan, Gordon, and Mr. Hooper) went on to shoot the first  season (130 one hour episodes). Sesame Street has now aired 4,378 episodes, and by the time you read this, probably more.

Bob Live on Stage

Bob feels strongly that it is important  to expose children to all the arts, and to offer them the experience of  listening and seeing live music and dance. Over the past 45 years,  he has developed a wide variety of family, educational, and holiday concerts featuring  both small bands and full orchestras. He’s appeared with more than 100  symphony orchestras and has invited local children to sing and dance in  his musical productions. Hundreds of thousands of people have attended  his concerts, and anyone who has been to one of his family pops shows  will remember the thrill of singing Rubber Duckie with a full symphony orchestra.

Albums and Books

Bob has recorded eight full albums with his independent recording company, Bob’s Kids Music. Bob’s Favorite Sing Along Songs, won  the 2013 Parents’ Choice Classic Award, the Academics’ Choice Award,  and the Family Choice Award. It received CD of the Year from Creative  Child Magazine and glowing reviews from School Library Journal, Midwest  Book Review, Kidzmusic, and Family Man Online. His other albums have received similar awards and praise. Bob has authored eight books, including his best-selling book about potty training, Uh Oh! Gotta Go!, and a book on manners, Oops! Excuse Me Please! Bob narrated his first app for Sesame Street, Elmo’s Big Birthday Bash, as well as 12 Sesame Street eBooks for Random House. His educational mobile math app, Counting Together, helps children develop their math skills.

Awards

In 2013, Bob was one of three Manhattan School of Music alumni to be recognized as a Distinguished Alumni Award Recipient.
In 2010, during the 150th anniversary of the University of Michigan  Men’s Glee Club, Bob received a Lifetime Achievement Award, Recognition  of Accomplishments in the Fields of Music and Music Education.
As an advocate for children, Bob has participated in telethons  and other fundraising events for over 40 years. He was honored with a  lifetime membership to Variety – The Children’s Charity of British  Columbia, and in 2006 was given the Saskatchewan Centennial Medal for  outstanding contributions to the province of Saskatchewan.
Premier Brad Wall recently presented Bob with the Distinguished  Service Award, Saskatchewan’s highest honor in the province for  non-residents, for 35 years of service.