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    For the album, see A Charlie Brown Christmas (album).


    A Charlie Brown Christmas (1965) is the first of many prime-time animated TV specials based upon the popular comic strip Peanuts, by Charles M. Schulz. It was produced and directed by former Warner Bros. and UPA animator Bill Melendez.


        A Charlie Brown Christmas
            Synopsis
                Themes
            History
            Versions
            Trivia
                Mistakes
            Influence
            Sequels
    NameA Charlie Brown Christmas
    Imdb Id0059026
    image
    ProducerBill Melendez
    Lee Mendelson
    WriterCharles M. Schulz
    StarringBill Melendez
    Peter Robbins
    Christopher...
    DirectorBill Melendez
    DistributorAmerican Broadcasting Company
    Released1965 in television
    Runtime25 min.
    LanguageEnglish
    MusicVince Guaraldi
    Awards1965 Emmy Award winner

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    Synopsis

    A Charlie Brown Christmas features Charlie Brown's search for meaning in the Christmas holiday. He starts the special seeking to understand why he always ends up depressed around the holidays. On the advice of Lucy, he gets involved in directing a school play about the Nativity. When he loses control of the production, he is given the lesser responsibility of finding a Christmas tree for the play. Instead of buying a "big, shiny, aluminum" artificial tree as he was instructed to do, he chooses a pitiful little twig. This makes him the target of laughter and derision. He cries out in abject desperation, wondering what Christmas is all about. Linus answers him by reciting the story of the birth of Jesus.
    Meanwhile, Snoopy has decorated his doghouse with colorful flashing lights and other baubles, and won 1st Prize in a decorating contest. Charlie Brown takes the decorations and puts a single ornament on his tree, which promptly collapses under the weight. He flees in despair.
    Having heard Linus's explanation, the other kids realise they've been too hard on Charlie Brown, and fix his tree up into a brilliant Christmas display using the rest of Snoopy's decorations. Charlie Brown returns to find the whole gang gathered around his tree. In a rare moment of happiness, he joins the crew in singing the Christmas carol "Hark! The Herald Angels Sing", as the closing credits roll.


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    Themes
    The story touches on the over-commercialization of Christmas, continuing a theme explored by satirists such as Stan Freberg and Tom Lehrer during the 1950s.

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    History
    Bringing the Peanuts characters to television was not an easy task. The strip's creators, with funding from sponsor Coca-Cola, presented the CBS network with an idea for a Christmas television special starring Schulz's characters.

    The production was done on a shoestring budget, resulting in a somewhat choppy animation style and, from a technical standpoint, poorly mixed sound. With the exception of the actors who voiced Charlie and Lucy, Peter Robbins and Tracy Stratford, respectively, none of the children had any experience doing voice work. This was especially challenging for Kathy Steinberg, who voiced Sally: she was too young to read and needed to be cued line by line during the soundtrack recording. The technical issues are in evidence on the show's audio track, which at times is noticeably choppy and poorly enunciated.

    Network executives were not at all keen on several aspects of the show, forcing Schulz and Melendez to wage some serious battles to preserve their vision. The executives did not want to have Linus reciting the story of the birth of Christ from the Gospel of Luke (Lk 2:8-14); the network orthodoxy of the time assumed that viewers would not want to sit through passages of the King James Version of the Bible. Another complaint was the absence of a laugh track, a common element of children's cartoons at the time. Schulz maintained that the audience should be able to enjoy the show at their own pace, without being cued when to laugh. (CBS did create a version of the show with the laugh track added, just in case Schulz changed his mind. This version remains unavailable.) A third complaint was the use of children to do the voice acting, instead of employing adult actors. Finally, the executives thought that the jazz soundtrack by Vince Guaraldi would not work well for a children's program. When executives saw the final product, they were horrified and believed the special would be a complete flop.

    The show first aired on Thursday, December 9, 1965, preempting Gilligan's Island. To the surprise of the executives, it was both a critical and commercial hit. None of the special's technical problems detracted from the show's appeal; to the contrary, it is thought that these quirks, along with several other choices, are what lent the show such an innovative, authentic and sincere feeling. A full 50% of the televisions in the United States were tuned to the broadcast. A Charlie Brown Christmas won an Emmy and a Peabody award, and is now considered a timeless holiday classic. Watching it is an annual tradition for millions of viewers. The success of A Charlie Brown Christmas gave rise to a series of animated Peanuts TV specials, several full-length animated feature films, and a Saturday morning cartoon over the years.

    Linus' reading from Luke, which caused the network executives such worry, produced one of the most widely cherished moments in the special.

    In 2000, the broadcast rights were acquired by ABC, which is where the special currently airs. On September 12, 2000, the special was released to DVD. The show enjoyed its 40th anniversary with its broadcast of Tuesday, December 6, 2005. This broadcast had the highest ratings in its time slot.

    On December 6, 2001, a half-hour documentary on the special entitled The Making of "A Charlie Brown Christmas" (hosted by Whoopi Goldberg) aired on ABC. This documentary was released (along with the special Charlie Brown's Christmas Tales) as a bonus feature with the special I Want a Dog for Christmas, Charlie Brown on October 26, 2004.

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    Versions
    The special has not been seen in its original, uncut form since the first three telecasts in 1965, 1966 and 1967. Much of this is due to the opening and closing credits containing references to Coca-Cola, the show's original sponsor. Specific, acknowledged cuts are:

      The main titles have Linus crashing into a Coca-Cola sign after Snoopy has spun both him and Charlie Brown around with Linus's blanket. In the versions currently available, the viewer never sees where Linus' trajectory lands him.

      In the "fence" scene, where several of the Peanuts gang are attempting to knock cans off a fence with snowballs, Linus is seen knocking down a can with his blanket. In the original airing, this is a Coke can, but was later replaced with a nondescript can.

      The final end credit originally had text and graphics wishing the viewer a "Merry Christmas from your local Coca-Cola bottler." This is why the "Hark!" chorus sung at the end trails off oddly before the song would normally end, as an announcer originally did a voice over this point in the credits to repeat and reemphasize the local bottler's well wishes to the TV audience.

    Although the FCC eventually imposed sanctions preventing sponsor references in the context of a story (especially children's programming), this had no effect upon the decision to impose these edits. The Coca-Cola product placement elements were removed when the company ceased being the sole sponsor, replaced in 1968 by Dolly Madison snack products, who continued to sponsor the Peanuts specials through the 1980s. While current FCC product placement rules would prevent restoration and broadcast TV airing, the sole reason this footage has not been restored for the DVD or VHS releases has been related to royalties that would have to be paid to The Coca-Cola Company for use of their trademarks.

    Finally, there is some disagreement among those who have studied the various releases of the special about whether or not another edit was made after the initial airing. This is a rather quick - and arguably sloppy - cut that occurs during the "Auditorium" scene, when the gang begins dancing to "Linus and Lucy" right after Charlie Brown gives his "am I right? I said, am I RIGHT??" speech. The moment of the cut occurs as the camera is zooming in on Schroeder, and quickly jumps to Linus dancing with Lucy. The camera proceeds to pan around to the rest of the gang as they go through their own rather unique dance styles. The sloppiness of this cut is exacerbated by the fact that the music makes an audible jump as well, actually skipping a beat forward and sounding rather awkward. No information as to the nature of this cut has been determined, and none of the production staff - including director Bill Melendez - can recall if or why such an edit was done.

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    Trivia

      The actors, all children, learned their lines phonetically, often not knowing what they meant. This led to the now-familiar Peanuts delivery style.

      All of the versions of the show broadcast on CBS between 1968 and 1997, and older pre-DVD video releases were edited to completely delete the scene where the gang throws snowballs at a can on a fence. When ABC acquired the airing rights, they restored this scene, sans the Coca-Cola product placement.

      Just before her remarks about Christmas being a big commercial racket, Lucy refers to Charlie Brown simply as "Charlie". This is the only time she does this in any of the TV specials; every other time it's "Charlie Brown".

      That 70s Show gives a nod to the influence of "A Charlie Brown Christmas" in season 4 in the episode "An Eric Forman Christmas." In this episode, the show's main protagonist is persuaded to direct the church Christmas pageant in an effort to rediscover the true meaning of Christmas.


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    Mistakes
      In the scene where Charlie Brown consults Lucy for psychiatric help, her sign (as read from the front) says, "The Doctor Is Real In". However, when seen from the side angle, the sign simply says, "The Doctor Is In".

      During the final scene, the Peanuts gang gathers around the little tree and begins to sing "Hark the Herald Angels Sing" (singing "Ooo Ooo Ooo"). As everyone takes a breath, Pig-Pen's head disappears briefly and Patty's orange dress (she's behind him) "pops up" to where his head used to be. Older VHS tapes based on the CBS version have the mistake, newer tapes and the remastered DVD based on the ABC remastered version do not.

      Also during the final scene, Shermy - the boy in the yellow on the right side of the screen - disappears after the gang greets Charlie Brown. In Shermy's place is the boy in a blue coat who is still on the right side of the screen. So Shermy disappears and out comes a clone of the blue boy.

      During Linus's speech from Luke 2:8-14 there are several continuity errors. First, he drops his security blanket when he says, "Fear not: for behold..." He continues the rest of his speech with the blanket on the stage next to him. However, in the long shot when he says, "And on earth peace, good will toward men," it is back in his left hand. Immediately after he finishes making his speech, he makes a point of picking his blanket up off the stage. Then, when Linus is making his speech Charlie Brown is behind him and to his left, and he has is not wearing his red coat. When Linus is briefly shown from his right Charlie Brown is in the background wearing his coat. When the shot cuts back to a front view the coat is off again.

      The cels of Lucy in her psychiatry stand are not properly aligned to the background, so that the cutoff line of her body overlaps the edge of the tabletop.

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    Influence





    The musical soundtrack to A Charlie Brown Christmas, by jazz composer Vince Guaraldi, has become as well-known as the story itself, especially the piece entitled "Linus and Lucy," which has come to be regarded as the signature musical theme of the Peanuts specials. A soundtrack album for the special was released by Fantasy Records and remains a perennial best-seller.

    Some religious commentators, who decry what they regard as the secularization of the modern Christmas holiday season, point to this program as a rare exception, due to its straightforward references to the birth of Jesus.

    A Charlie Brown Christmas is often credited with spearheading the popular stigmatization of artificial Christmas trees.


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    Sequels
    Three lesser-known true sequels were produced decades after the 1965 original. All three are 30 minutes in length (with commercials) and aired on CBS Television (as of now, ABC):

    All three avoid the social commentary of the original, placing the emphasis on light-hearted humour. The latter two were made after the death of Charles Schulz and were based on his Peanuts comic strips.

    While not true sequels, two other Charlie Brown holiday season specials were produced and are generally regarded as higher quality than the '90s/'00s shows: 1973's A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving (still aired annually on ABC) and Happy New Year, Charlie Brown! from 1985.
     
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