‘Muppet Show’ Revival Special: Disney+ Debut Date, Trailer & Poster Art First Look

The Muppet Show is making its triumphant return for a special event on Disney+ in 2026 with special guest star Sabrina Carpenter! This covers everything we know about this revival, including a first look at the trailer and poster art, plus why we’re optimistic about the project.
This brand-new installment from The Muppets Studio will feature Kermit the Frog, Miss Piggy, Fozzie Bear, Gonzo, and the gang as they return to the Muppet Theatre to put on a variety show filled with music, comedy, and plenty of chaos.
The special sees the Muppets return to their theater to produce a variety show for the 50th anniversary of their original variety series. The Muppets themselves are older–it’s the titular talk show’s anniversary. As previously rumored, Alex Timbers will direct and executive produce. Albertina Rizzo will serve as writer and executive producer. Carpenter also serves as an executive producer.
Seth Rogen, Evan Goldberg, James Weaver and Alex McAtee will executive produce the special for Point Grey Pictures. David Lightbody, Leigh Slaughter and Michael Steinbach executive produce for The Muppets Studio. The project is also being produced by 20th Television and Disney Branded Television. Albertina Rizzo will write and executive produce.
Let’s start with a first look at the full trailer for “The Muppet Show” special event that Disney just released:
It’s time to raise the curtain on “The Muppet Show,” a highly-anticipated special event featuring special guest star Sabrina Carpenter and Executive Producer and guest star Seth Rogen. Maya Rudolph has also been announced as a guest star.
“The Muppet Show” returns February 4, 2026 for a triumphant special event on Disney+ (12:00 a.m. PST / 3:00 a.m. EST) and ABC (9:00 p.m. EST/PST).
Kermit, Miss Piggy and the beloved Muppets ensemble are back with a brand-new special event. Music, comedy, and a whole lot of chaos are bound to ensue when The Muppets once again take the stage of the original Muppet Theatre with their very special guest, Sabrina Carpenter!
Here are first look images from “The Muppet Show” special event, followed by the previous teaser:
Veteran Muppet performers Bill Barretta, Dave Goelz, Eric Jacobson, Peter Linz, David Rudman and Matt Vogel will perform the majority of the iconic Muppet characters in this production, supported by a talented team of additional performers.
Dave Goelz, who has performed with The Muppets for over 50 years, was one of the performers on the original “The Muppet Show” and originated the characters Gonzo and Dr. Bunsen Honeydew, among many others.
According to multiple Hollywood trades that are reporting the news, the “hope” or “expectation” is that the special will serve as a stealth pilot episode to relaunch The Muppet Show in series format. This comports with rumors from the last couple of weeks that were based on production schedule listings containing almost all of the same information as above.
There have been rumors swirling all year that the The Muppet Show is being rebooted. These rumors began back in the spring that that Kermit the Frog, Miss Piggy, and co. were returning for a reboot of The Muppet Show‘s classic format in 2026, complete with celebrity guests and comedy sketches.
If production listings are accurate, work started on The Muppet Show in September. That summary pitched the show as reintroducing the “beloved ensemble of characters with a fresh twist, blending classic variety-show charm with new comedic sketches…[aiming] to capture the heart and humor that made the original a cultural icon.”
Most notably, The Muppet Show revival is being developed by Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg of Point Grey Pictures. Disney has been attempting to work with Point Grey on numerous projects, with Rogen’s and Goldberg’s production company having been previously attached to a Figment feature film. That was announced back in 2022, but it seems to have been shelved, with Disney CEO Bob Iger more recently remarking about a possible series or short-form videos featuring Figment.
Sabrina Carpenter’s Involvement
I’m really pleased that Sabrina Carpenter is involved. I am not a fan of Sabrina Carpenter.
It’s not that I dislike her. I just don’t have much of an opinion on her one way or the other, which is seemingly uncommon for polarizing popstars. “Espresso” is very catchy; a good summer song. I can also understand her appeal more generally, and with a range of audiences. I was young once, and enjoyed listening to Led Zeppelin and watching Britney Spears music videos.
I can also see why people dislike Sabrina Carpenter for a variety of reasons. I suspect this is the primary contingent we’re going to hear from in response to The Muppet Show revival news. Those who believe she’s “wrong” for the Muppets, their humor and heart.
Bluntly, this group is wrong. Or at least, missing the point. The Muppets are not popular. Muppet diehards like us, we are a minority–and a dying breed. If you’ve raised your kids right and they are Muppets enjoyers, that’s fantastic. But they’re unicorns. Having this special headlined by a twentysomething popstar is huge. It attracts an entirely new audience, and one that the Muppets desperately need if this actually is going to be a stealth pilot that gets picked up for a series order.
So yeah, I’d personally rather see Christopher Walken or Danny DeVito or Willem Dafoe or some other weirdo (non-derogatory) riff with the Muppets. But that would not expand the audience in any way, shape or form. Even if it were peak cinema, it would fail for one of the same reasons so many other Muppet ventures have in the last couple of decades–failing to attract an audience.
I’d also add that Sabrina Carpenter might be up to the task on the merits. Save for her aforementioned radio hit, my only real exposure to her is via appearances on SNL. She has some comedic chops and has done really well on some of those sketches. Playing off the Muppets will be more difficult, but she has a certain popstar ‘presence’ and that can certainly help. I’m cautiously optimistic about the substance of the show with her as host, and am incredibly bullish on it with her as the marquee draw.
There’s also the chance that Carpenter is a big fan of the Muppets and being an executive producer on the show will be hugely beneficial in attracting talent if it gets a series order. Like so many popstars, she basically got her start with Disney (Girl Meets World and more) and called The Muppet Show gig “career defining.”
Seth Rogen’s Involvement
Of course, Sabrina Carpenter isn’t the only controversial celebrity attached to The Muppet Show revival. Seth Rogen is the other big name who is divisive, albeit one we already covered back when this was a rumor.
Seth Rogen has a “sticky” reputation as a lazy stoner who makes juvenile humor. This image made sense a decade ago when he was producing shock value films like Sausage Party and other crude humor. But that reputation hasn’t matched reality in over a decade.
The output of Rogen and Point Grey in the last few years has grown tremendously and expanded in range. Rogen is one of the hardest working people in Hollywood, capable of making quality shows for a range of audiences–not just potheads.
The 77th Emmy Awards were just held over the weekend, and Seth Rogen’s The Studio was the most awarded show of the night. The Apple TV+ Hollywood satire picked up a total of 13 total wins across the Primetime and Creative Arts Emmys, including best comedy series and best actor in a comedy series for Rogen. If you still think Rogen is incapable of producing sophisticated and sharp content, watch that.
My biggest concern is the revival being able to capture the Muppets’ distinct brand of humor. Disney has missed the mark in capturing that certain je ne sais quoi that makes up the Muppets magic. Their “voice” has been off, for lack of a better explanation. Some of the recent shows have had flashes of this, but they haven’t quite stuck the landing or they got cancelled before getting a chance to find their footing or got buried under an avalanche of other content on streaming.
The closest Disney has gotten to recapturing that magic was with Jason Segel’s The Muppets movie. There have been other smaller projects that “get it” along the way, but that was the biggest and most commercially successful. And it’s no coincidence that Hollywood comedians of a certain age are more inclined to “get” the Muppets, as they were raised on them.
Here’s hoping that’s also true of Rogen, who has worked with the Muppets previously on a couple of smaller projects and seems to be a genuine fan. This strikes me as a passion project for him, just as the movie was for Segel.
To this point, there are a lot of powerful people in Hollywood with an affinity for the Muppets. This is also likely why the Muppets have gotten so many chances despite a slew of flops. Leadership at Disney wants the Muppets to succeed, even if they seem to undermine their own efforts by not nailing the tone and humor.
Given all of this, maybe it’s a good thing that Disney is giving a popstar and a comedian a chance to take a shot at The Muppet Show. It’s also reassuring that they’re doing so with the help from veterans of the Muppets Studio and Jim Henson Company, which should help shape the show and add ‘guardrails’ to the production.
This affinity for the Muppets in Hollywood is also precisely why the reboot could be a success. Not only are Seth Rogen and Sabrina Carpenter popular themselves, but they have a lot of famous friends who they could persuade to appear on the show. The more eyeballs on the Muppets, even if they’re primarily there for whoever is appearing alongside them, the better.
All of this is critical to the success of The Muppet Show reboot.
Disney+ already attempted an original talk show by the Jim Henson Company with Earth to Ned. That show had decent star power (Raven-Symoné, RuPaul, Gina Carano, Joel McHale, Taye Diggs, and Olivia Rodrigo were all guests) and garnered good reviews, but it was nevertheless a flop. It was perhaps a bit too out there and coming out at an incredibly crowded time for streaming.
The media landscape is considerably different now, as is the appeal of the Muppets. I’d also add that now might just be the time to flip the script on the late night television format. One is already being cancelled, and others might follow suit (alongside this news, Disney also announced that ABC is indefinitely preempting Jimmy Kimmel Live!). Now might be the perfect time for the Muppets to come along and reinvent the variety show genre. What’s old is new again!
Past Disney Muppets Projects
The Muppets have received no shortage of revival efforts from Disney. The most recent of these was The Muppets Mayhem, featuring Dr. Teeth and the Electric Mayhem. The show was reasonably well-received, but was cancelled after just one season. (This was the original basis for Rock ‘n’ Roller Coaster overlay rumors.)
Other Muppets projects by Disney have included Muppets Haunted Mansion in 2021, a short-lived series in 2020 called Muppets Now, and an ABC television series in 2015-2016 that was also cancelled after a single season. None of these were bad, and even the much-maligned ABC series hit its stride late in its run. They just didn’t quite capture the lightning-in-a-bottle of the Muppets.
The last Muppet feature films were Muppets Most Wanted in 2014, which was a sequel to The Muppets from 2011. As noted above, the latter Jason Segel vehicle was the closest thing the Muppets have seen to success, at least in the mainstream, in the 2000s.
Walt Disney World Implications?
Earlier this summer, MuppetVision 3D and Muppets Courtyard closed to make way for Monstropolis. Walls are up and demolition is underway as Imagineering works to transform the area to the Monsters, Inc. land. Due to MuppetVision 3D’s historical status, Disney and the Jim Henson Company worked to preserve it, with both offering kernels of hope that it’ll live on in some capacity.
When announcing the closure of Muppets Courtyard, Walt Disney World revealed that Kermit the Frog, Miss Piggy and more of their friends will be moving right along to Sunset Boulevard. The Muppets will be taking over Rock ‘n’ Roller Coaster, teaming up with some of music’s biggest stars for a rockin’ music festival.
Most recently, Imagineering pulled back the curtain on the new Rock ‘n’ Roller Coaster Starring the Muppets, revealing that Scooter and the penguin audio engineers in the attraction’s pre-show are Audio Animatronics.
This is a huge win for an attraction that we previously expected to be an efficient and inexpensive project–a “no dough” reimagining that was a passion project for Imagineers, as opposed to a well-funded one. Disney has already teased that there are more reveals in store for RnRC, so we hope that this means even more changes from a show perspective.
Our perspective is that the more ambitious the reimagining of Rock ‘n’ Roller Coaster Starring the Muppets, the more likely it is to stick around for the long haul. And in turn, that increases the likelihood of Muppets Courtyard 2.0 featuring MuppetVision 3D once Villains Unfairly Ever After ends.
Another big thing that could increase the changes of a Muppets Courtyard revival is The Muppet Show being a hit that raises awareness of the Muppets and their appeal among younger generations. If this show finds success and isn’t cancelled after a single season, that could be huge.
The Muppets fanbase is aging. But the same was also true with Lilo & Stitch and Monsters, Inc. (two merchandising powerhouses), and those have found surprise success with younger generations. Now Monstropolis is being built in DHS, and I’d be shocked if Stitch doesn’t have an attraction (again) at Walt Disney World in the next decade.
Millennials are a massive demographic with growing spending power and influence. We spent our childhoods watching the Muppets, and college years watching Seth Rogen’s stuff. All it takes is this cohort introducing The Muppet Show to our kids, and we could witness a bona fide Muppetsaissance. It probably won’t happen, but it certainly could happen. And if it does, there is prime space in Disney’s Hollywood Studios that could be devoted to a miniland!
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YOUR THOUGHTS
What do you think of Seth Rogen and Sabrina Carpenter leading a revival of The Muppet Show along with veterans of the Muppets Studio, Jim Henson Company, and Disney? Think it’s possible this could be just what the Muppets need? Concerned about Rogen’s involvement? Seen the Studio? Do you agree or disagree with our assessments? Any questions we can help you answer? Hearing your feedback–even when you disagree with us–is both interesting to us and helpful to other readers, so please share your thoughts below in the comments!






















I loved the episode, felt nostalgic like the original. Good family entertainment. No politics/agendas or drama, previous remake was disappointing and only lasted one season. People were looking forward to the original variety show with new entertainers but that is not what they got. I grew up on the Muppets and my kids loved and still watch the original episodes. I was so happy to see all the old Muppets in the background, and got to see Honey Dew and Beaker skit and Waldorf/Stadler. I am hoping it does well and they can do skits with the other original Muppets, perform the Rainbow Connection and Manamana . The only thing that could have been a bit better is if Kermit sounded more like old Kermit.
Thanks for the compliment on raising our kids right. They love the Muppets in all forms.
I love your idea of the weirder guest – Jeff Goldblum would be another but guest 1 on revival show must surely Taylor. Unless you can get William and/or Kate, Taylor is the one. Love to see this. Miss them at MK loved that little take on history!
The pandemic run of Muppets Now was very close to the modern version of a variety show, with lots of short skits and a frenetic Muppets pace, with lots of celebrity cameos.
I think Sabrina Carpenter is a great host, like all of the 70s celebrities who guest hosted the original Muppets Show.
I’ll watch anything with the Muppets, but I think it’s becoming obvious that most 20, 30, 40, 50 year old franchises just aren’t the draw they used to be.
Like, even when they’re GOOD, they don’t put up the same numbers they did a few years ago.
I’m just worried that the new Muppets will do everything right, and still not be the breakout hit that Disney wants, because everyone will be talking about whatever random thing Netflix puts out that week.
Everyone likes to think their kids are unicorns, but I guess mine really are. They’ve played the Muppet Movie soundtrack on all our college visit roadtrips this past year and chose Muppet merch as their sole souvenirs in WDW in February. (“Can You Picture That” is #1 on their Rockin’ Roller Coaster fantasy playlist). I haven’t seen much of it, but isn’t John Mulaney’s Netflix show getting a lot of accolades for bringing back the variety show format? If the team behind “Great Moments in History” can be tapped for this show AND the Disney executive consensus machine can be kept out of the room, we may have a quality program here!! Fingers crossed!
My son is a unicorn too then! Muppet movie top car pick and got the kermit magic band plus (also a college student!)
John Mulaney’s Netflix show is also weird and an acquired taste. I’d be shocked if its viewership numbers are strong because it’s just so eclectic (and slow).
My biggest concern with a new version of The Muppet Show as opposed to a new Muppets show is trying to modernize the variety show format. Even if I was a good writer, I’d struggle with what to do when the latest successful prime time show start was … The Tracey Ullman Show in 1989? I guess Muppets 30 Rock makes as much sense as anything, but as someone who was alive when the first episode aired in 1976, I’ll rely on everyone else to tell me what’s currently popular.
Not an anti-Rogen or an anti-Studio comment, but if anything those first couple of episodes are more nostalgic than most people not liking the Rogen choice would expect. While this may cause a problem, I’m sure he actually knows what the modern equivalent of a variety show is. I think it’s too much to ask a single show to star the Muppets everyone knows, introduce at least a few new characters, be good and popular, and reinvent the variety show format. (Straddling successful iteration and loving lampoon of the existing, popular format was hard enough for the original!)
So excited. And Seth Rogen’s complexity is really, really fascinating. Stuff like his performance in The Fablemans (which he was *great* in) say to me that he’s really putting in the effort to be seen as a full and well-rounded artist and not just as the one trick pony he’d been pigeon holed into being.
(Now can we get Steve Whitmire back?0
I may not be a diehard but I would consider myself a Sabrina Carpenter fan and I think there is a high likelihood that she “gets” the Muppets. Can I back this assertion up based on more than just vibes, as the kids say? Not really! But her signing on not just as the first guest but also executive producer indicates to me this is something she actively cares about. And there’s a general tongue in cheek energy around her entire persona that makes me think she will be game for the Muppets’ specific brand of weirdness and whatever the writers throw at her.
“And there’s a general tongue in cheek energy around her entire persona that makes me think she will be game for the Muppets’ specific brand of weirdness and whatever the writers throw at her.”
This also strikes me as accurate just based on her whole vibe, as they say.
As long as they are returning the the original somewhat out of control variety show format it could be a hit for a new generation and us OG fans alike. They absolutely must have Statler and Waldorf in the balcony heckling the show tormenting poor Fozzie Bear every time he steps on stage. The show was so respected that supposedly celebrities were lining up to be the celebrity guest.
I’m excited about the prospect of a revival of the Muppet Show. As one of those people who is clearly raising their child right, my 7-year-old has been a fan of the original Muppet Show series since she was a toddler, requesting certain episodes on repeat (Joel Grey, Connie Stevens, Alice Cooper, Debbie Harry and the Mummenschanz–talk about “weird” celebrity guests–to name a few). I really hope they get the tone right and capture audiences both old and new with that special Muppet magic.
Manamana
I’m happy.
Really curious why this site’s spam filter felt “Manamana” was something that should be flagged as something potentially harmful, ha.
Becasuse the little ditty will now be stuck in your head for hours! Aaaagh!
My take on Muppets is still that they are best when the focus is on their intergroup interaction, a la The Office, Community, Parks and Rec, etc. When they’re presented as wacky stand alone characters – it’s just not quite the same (side note, very hard to comment today as there is a full screen ad for The Lost Bus popping up about every five seconds that blocks the entire screen.)
I can’t wait for Sabrina Carpenter to blow a kiss to Kermit, he makes an embarrassed face, then cut to a screaming Ms. Piggy.
Totally with you on Sabrina Carpenter’s involvement. She kicked off SNL’s 50th anniversary show – we’re getting a huge name to promote the Muppets here. Between her and Rogen, this really feels like a big deal.
I reckon Seth Rogen could be a winner on this. He was born in 82 so is in his mid 40’s which certainly means he is within the age bracket to be a muppets fan. Also from what I have read about him he tends to involve himself in projects that float his boat personally. Like you say Tom for anyone who hasn’t watched it ‘The Studio’ is genuinely fantastic television and actually demonstrates that Rogen has excellent comedic timing.
Fingers crossed everyone
I’m mostly out of touch with pop culture, so I recognize the names Seth Rogen and Sabrina Carpenter, but that’s it. I have no positive or negative associations with either of them. But I’m happy they are getting well-known (among normal people, not me!) stars attached to the project. I think the 2011 Muppets movie was really good, as was The Muppets Present… Great Moments in American History in Liberty Square. So I think modern productions that capture their tone are still possible.