1968 was a legendary chaotic year in American history.That's when this gentle Christmas special debuted.This thread is about The Little Drummer Boy.There is no official release of this special available uncut but there'll be a link at the end to see it.
This may be the fastest made Rankin/Bass special ever.Arthur Rankin sold the idea to NBC one winter morning and called up Romeo Muller to write it. Romeo got out his Bible and finished it that afternoon. By evening he was reciting his script over the phone to Rankin's secretary.
What Muller wrote was a story that blended Biblical content with Shakespearean prose & the cast added to its stature. (It was Romeo's favorite Rankin/Bass special.) Academy Award winning actress Greer Garson gives this special its regal narration.This is her Gas ad for it.
Jose Ferrer stars as the villain Ben Haramad. In recent years the woke complain this character is "racist" against arabs or jews but Ferrer was most known for playing Cyrano de eBrgerac and he was famous for his large nose hence the caricature.
One of the most brilliant touches of Muller's adaptation of the Nativity story is he chose to make each of the Wisemen represent one of the gentile races much like in some traditions Noah's sons are claimed to be the fathers of each ethnic group.This was VERY innovative for 1968.
This is the song One Star in the Night without the dialog from the film. I've dubbed it over the footage where it goes in the special since it's not available on CD.
Drummer Boy aired on network TV NBC until the early 80's when religious Christmas specials were dropped. It then moved to cable broadcasts but has always been treated as the stepchild of the other Rankin/Bass specials.
In the late 90's Drummer Boy was "restored" from a 16 MM print. The original negative has been missing for years. When the sound was remixed many of the sound effects were "lost." Compare how the emotional drama of the moment is last without the animal sounds in the climax.
Paul Frees' temp narration was mixed in replacing some of Greer Garson's as well.
The latest edit on bluray includes inserted fade outs making room for new commercial breaks and ruin the flow of the special. The best print I've found of it as it originally was is here but it's upscaled, I wish they'd do a correct restoration:
Drummer Boy is just as essential of a Christmas special as Rudolph, Frosty, the Grinch, Charlie Brown, Magoo and all the rest. It needs to be rediscovered and kept alive for what it is.I don't think another family project combined a fictional character with the Nativity as well.
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Exactly a decade after Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer, Rankin/Bass created a cult classic Christmas special, The Year Without a Santa Claus.This 1974 ABC Christmas special is famous for the Miser Bros but there's a bit more to the story than their sibling rivalry. Here we go...
The story was written by Pulitzer Prize winning author Phyllis McGinley & is based on her 1957 book of the same name. She also wrote another Christmas story in 1963, How Mrs Claus Saved Christmas. Both stories inspired the Rankin/Bass special.
Here's an article about Phyllis McGinley if anyone is interested in learning more about who this author was and excerpts some of her other works.
Today we're looking at 1977's beloved special Nestor the Long-Eared Christmas Donkey.What everyone loves about Nestor is this is the Rankin/Bass special that features the fanciful Christmas characters revering baby Jesus in the finale. We'd never see anything like this done today
The song was written by singing Christmas Cowboy Gene Autry.He had been the original artist on the Rudolph song hence the character's inclusion in the lyrics.Autry went on to record dozens of Christmas novelty songs about various characters.Nestor bookends that career.
I've never been able to locate a recording of Autry performing Nestor but these are the two vintage recordings I have found. The left is by Hank Snow. The right is Marty Robbins. Both were country music performers as well.
Today we'll take a look at one of the last perennials of the 20th century,the 1987 CBS special Will Vinton's Claymation Christmas.I may be the only person to have personally interviewed him on it l when the DVD was released in 2003 so some of this is directly from him.
Will Vinton is the creator of the Claymation process & started producing films with Bob Gardiner in 1974 while in college.Together they produced “Closed Mondays”, which won an Academy Award for Best Animated Short Subject.(Below)
Vinton's Oregon based studio blossomed into a leading source of stop motion animation world wide producing short films like Martin the Cobbler & Rip van Winkle as well as the feature film The Adventures of Mark Twain.Everything in a Will Vinton film is clay.
This morning we're going to unpack some of the history behind 1958's three-time Grammy award winning The Chipmunk Song & the road to the once popular perennial Christmas special from Chuck Jones, 1981's A Chipmunk Christmas.This may be a story few today remember or are aware of.
Ross Bagdasarian was a musician/actor down on his luck (he's the piano player in Alfred Hitchcock's Rear Window.)With his last $200 he bought a two reel tape recorder & began experimenting with recording his voice at different speeds. The result was the novelty hit Witch Doctor.
The song was a big hit but Bagdasarian knew he could do better.He wanted to inject personality into these trick voices so he created the Chipmunks named after three record executives Alvin, Simon, & Theodore.He wrote a song where he'd interact with them as David Seville & it was a smash hit.
1970 brought us Santa Claus is Comin' to Town,one of the best Christmas specials ever produced.This story is a Christian parable about religious conscience making it one of the first casualties of PC culture. It pulled from network TV in the early 80's you'll soon understand why.
The special is suggested by the famous song. This is the first time it was ever performed in Aug 1934 as a charity rallying cry with the forgotten verse. Eddie Cantor is the performer who debuted this song.Given how famous he was he's the most forgotten celebrity of all time.
Romeo Muller created this story &,like the others,it contains much of his innocence,humor,& worldview.We forget the context that at the height of the cold war a totalitarian government vs freedom was something that was in pop culture when the Soviet Union controlled East Germany.
1967's Cricket on the Hearth is the 2nd Rankin/Bass Christmas special. It aired as an episode of the Danny Thomas Show.Thomas was a devout catholic and his deep Christian faith is apparent through this special.He also founded St Jude Children's Hospital.
His daughter Marlo co-starred in this special and later appeared in her own Rankin/Bass TV Special, That Girl in Wonderland. She was starring in her own sitcom at the time Cricket aired, That Girl. This may be the only time they appeared together as father & daughter.
The source material is suggested by one of Charles Dickens Christmas novels of which there's 5.He also wrote dozens of Christmas short stories.These are often reprinted as Christmas Books and Christmas Stories. The story is a soap opera with a touch of fantasy.