Bil and Cora Baird (respectively, born Aug. 15, 1904, Grand Island, Neb., U.S.—died March 18, 1987, New York City; born Jan. 26, 1912, New York City—died Dec. 6, 1967, New York City) were puppeteers who led the 20th-century revival of puppet theatre in the United States.
Bil Baird began building and using puppets as a child. After graduating from the State University of Iowa in 1926, he studied stage design at the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts and then worked for five years under the noted American puppeteer Tony Sarg. He traveled on the road giving puppet performances and in the mid-1930s began producing his own independent puppet shows. He married Cora Eisenberg, who had acted under the name of Cora Burlar, in 1937. In the following years, they made their own puppets, built scenery, wrote scripts, and composed the music for their puppet shows.
From the 1940s on the Bairds achieved nationwide attention with their work. Their hand- or wire-operated puppets appeared in several full-length Broadway theatricals and musicals and on the Bairds’ own television shows in the early 1950s. The Bairds opened their own marionette theatre, the Bil Baird Theatre, in New York City in 1966.
A few of their creations became classic puppet figures: Bubbles La Rue, the marionette striptease dancer; the singing frogs; Snarky Parker, the master of ceremonies; and Heathcliff, the talking horse. Bil Baird trained a generation of younger puppeteers, including the creator of the Muppets, Jim Henson, and many of Henson’s associates. He was also the author of The Art of the Puppet (1965), a classic exposition of the field.