The Rankin/Bass stop action animation TV special Rudolph
the Red-Nosed Reindeer which first aired on CBS Television in 55 years ago in 1964 was just the latest iteration of what then seemed
almost like a timeless holiday folk
tale. And it would not be the
last. Rudolph has had more lives than any cat.
Versions of the show have been aired annually ever since making it the
longest running Christmas TV special in
history.
Rudolph first saw light as commercial
come-on. One that proved so wildly popular that he took on a life of his own.
Robert
L. May was the son of wealthy secular Jewish
family from New Rochelle, New York. He graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Dartmouth College in 1926. But
his family’s wealth was wiped out in the Depression. In 1939 he was toiling as a low-paid in-house advertising copywriter at Montgomery Ward headquarters in Chicago.
The stores had been buying and giving away cheap coloring
books as promotions every year at Christmas. But that year someone figured the company
could save money if they produced their own in-house. May was handed the assignment. When May decided to do a narrative poem about an outcast reindeer based on his own
childhood as an awkward misfit the
project took on a special significance
for him.
His wife was dying of cancer. He read his early drafts to her and his four year
old daughter Barbara. Evelyn May died
in July as he was still at work on the project.
He was so grief stricken that
his bosses offered to let him give up
the project. May refused,
determined to complete it. In August he
read the final version to Barbara and his wife’s parents.
Store officials were at first taken aback by the product. They had expected a simple, cheery book featuring some sort of cute animal. What they got was a little morality tale in verse, in in anapestic
tetrameter in case you are interested.
But it was too late to get anything else, so they sent it
to the art department for illustration and ordered copies of a thin magazine-like booklet in a bright red cover.
It turned out they didn’t order enough. From the moment the book hit he stores it was
a huge success. Printing presses had to run day and night to
keep up with demand. In that
first year 2.4 million copies were
distributed. Shoppers who had never set
foot in a Wards store were attracted by word of mouth. They stayed.
They bought. The chain had its best holiday sales in years.
The booklet was re-issued for
the next two years and the appeal hardly
diminished.
War
time paper rationing suspended distribution for the
duration. But in 1946 pent-up demand was
so great that 3.6 million copies were distributed. Children all over the country were interrupting readings by their parents
of The
Night Before Christmas to demand
to know where Rudolph was.
Such success was bound to draw other commercial offers. But May was unable to do anything because
Montgomery Ward owned the copyright. In 1947 Ward’s boss—the notoriously flinty Sewell
Avery most famous for being physically carried out of
his office by National Guard
troops during World War II for defying the National War Labor Board’s order to recognize a union for his employees—uncharacteristically gave May ownership of the copyright to the poem
and character free and clear.
A spoken word recording of the poem was made in 1947 and became a
hit. Several big name commercial publishing houses had passed
on a hardcover edition of the book
believing that all of the free copies had saturated the market.
Maxton Publishers, a small New
York publishing company, took a chance and put out an updated print edition in time for Christmas that year. It became the bestselling children’s book of the year and would remain in print for decades.
In 1948 animation pioneer Max Fleischer made a theatrical cartoon short of the poem, one of his last original productions. Despite being made by a minor studio
without a good distribution deal, exhibitor demand brought it to screens across the
country. It would subsequently be shown
on television.
May was always convinced his
hero needed a theme song. He turned to his brother-in-law, pop composer Johnny
Marks then best known for the song Happy New Year Darling co-written
with Guy Lombardo’s brother Carmine and a handful of novelty numbers. Marks did not just set the original poem to
music—it was too long and complicated.
Instead, he pared down and re-told the story
in the 3 minute format of the popular song and set it to a bouncy, catchy tune easy for a child to remember and sing along with. Despite the commercial success of the other Rudolph ventures
May and Marks had a hard time peddling the tune. They first took
it to Bing Crosby, the reigning king of holiday music but Der Bingle was not interested in a kiddy ditty. A disappointing
parade of other big names also rejected it.
Finally, Gene Autry agreed to
do it.
Autry was then at a low point in his career. After the death of his idol Jimmy Rodgers, he had become the
biggest hillbilly/country singer in
the U.S. during the early 30’s and then established
himself as the greatest of the movie
singing cowboys. His records sold
millions and he had success on radio.
But after he returned from World War II service as a pilot in the Army Air Force flying cargo
Over the Hump in the China/Burma
Theater, he found himself eclipsed
at Republic Pictures by the younger and handsomer Roy Rogers,
the new King of the Cowboys. His record
sales were also off although
his radio show Melody Ranch was still popular.
The song was successful beyond
anyone’s imagination on its release just before Christmas, 1949. It soared
to # 1 on the Billboard pop singles chart the week of Christmas and sold 2.5 million
copies the first year, eventually selling a total of 25 million copies. It was the second best-selling record of all time until the 1980s and still just trails Crosby’s White Christmas in all-time sales of holiday records. Crosby himself saw the light and recorded it
in 1950 and scored a hit with it. Many
artists have followed. But the version
you are likely to hear on your car radio
or piped into shopping malls is
likely to feature Autry’s familiar twang.
The song did boost Autry’s
career. He followed up with a string of
Christmas, holiday, and children’s records that were snapped up by a new young
audience including Frosty the Snowman, his own
composition Here Comes Santa Claus,
Teddy
Bears’ Picnic, and Here Comes Peter Cotton Tail.
It was a life changer for Marks as well who founded St. Nicholas Music, a publisher,
in 1949 and dedicated the rest of his career to composing
Christmas music. His contributions
include haltingly beautiful,
heartbreaking setting for Henry
Wadsworth Longfellow’s poem I Heard
the Bells on Christmas Day, and rock
and roll seasonal standards Run Run Rudolph for Chuck Berry and Brenda Lee’s Rockin’ Around the
Christmas Tree. He was
commissioned by Rankin/Bass to compose and arrange the songs for the 1964 TV
special. That one show produced three
more modern Christmas classics—A Holly Jolly Christmas and Silver
and Gold, both popularized by Burl
Ives who played the snowman/narrator
of the show, and The Most Wonderful Time of the Year,
a huge hit for Andy Williams. May
also composed music for other holiday specials. He joins the likes of Irving Berlin, Mel Torme,
and Sammy Cahn as a Jewish writers of classic Christmas
popular songs.
Rudolph has had many incarnations. Many baby boomers will fondly recall the
1956 Little Golden Book. A lot of folks think it was May’s original
book, but it was a re-telling by Barbara Shook Hazen and illustrated by Richard Scarry which closely followed the version in Max
Fleischer’s cartoon. DC Comics also issued Rudolph comic books every December from 1952 to
1962 with new stories every year.
There was a sequel to the ’56 animated
special, Rudolph’s Shiny New Year, and other spin-offs.
In 1998 Good
Times Entertainment released an entirely new treatment of the story in the
animated film Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer: The Movie with an all-star
vocal cast. But the film veered to far from either the original or the Rankin/Bass version that generations had
grown up to believe was canonical that it failed miserably in
theatrical release. It recouped in home video sales however and was followed up by a GSI computer animated film that
licensed the Rankin/Bass characters.
Cultural
references in other books, movies, and songs are too numerous to mention.
One of many Gene Autry Christmas compilation albums featuring Rudolph.
After all these years, everybody still loves the little reindeer with
the glowing proboscis.
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