When looking up forgotten Thanksgiving specials last year, we looked up a few Christmas specials that we had not known about as well.
That wasn't as impressive. We have kept up on Christmas specials much better, including going back and finding some less popular Rankin Bass specials several years ago.
We did turn up three, and we did watch them.
The Town Santa Forgot (1993)
This one was pretty good. I was in the mission field when it aired, so I would not have seen any publicity. Even if I were around, I might not have been interested at that time.
A Christmas Story (1972)
No, not that one. A dog and a mouse find their family's little boy's letter to Santa on Christmas Eve and try to get it delivered before it is too late. I believe it aired more than once and I might even have seen it, but I have no memories of it.
Casper's First Christmas (1979)
Hanna Barbara characters that we have seen in other specials end up in a haunted house with one nice young ghost and one older, crankier ghost (not Casper's usual three uncles). Pretty cute, and the first use of the song "Comin' Up Christmas Time", used in Yogi Bear's First Christmas one year later, which I do remember.
What all of that really did, though, is make me think about things that I kind of remembered but had only seen once.
The only extra viewing that gave last year was A Chipmunk Christmas (1981). We watched that and a few Christmas episodes of the show.
I made a note of The Little Rascals' Christmas Special (1979), which was the first one I tracked down this year.
It was not great. The basic story is cute, but the jokes they use to stretch it out pretty much all come down to the kids not being very bright. Well, I guess Alfalfa's singing is used humorously. One could wish it had been done a little better, and then maybe it would have aired more.
On the plus side, Spanky and Porky's mother was voiced by Darla Hood, the original Darla, and the butcher she visits was voiced by Matthew "Stymie" Beard. I assume that's the reason that they had Stymie in the gang instead of Buckwheat, whom I believe is better remembered.
One thing that I can see looking at these dates is that if I remember things that my younger sisters don't, well, of course. I was young when these aired, but they were much younger. Of course they know Rudolph and Frosty, but those got played many times over many years.
There were two things that I had only seen once.
One was The House Without a Christmas Tree (1972).
It must have played a few other times, because I am sure I do not remember the 1972 airing. As it was, all I remembered was a girl in long johns dragging a Christmas tree. I thought this was her bringing a Christmas tree into her own house, but in fact she was taking it to a neighbor after her cranky father got mad that she won it. (Then he comes around and brings back a Christmas tree on his own.)
Also, I remembered her as much older, but that was probably because of how young I was then.
The father who is harsh because of his own issues resonates a bit. I did not remember that, nor why there wasn't a tree in the first place.
It's not bad. I'm glad I looked it back up.
The gladdest thing this year is that I finally identified something that had just been a memory of a cartoon Salvation Army band playing "Good King Wenceslas". When I saw it then I couldn't even identify that song. (It was instrumental, so there were no words to help me.)
I felt like it might be associated with Corduroy somehow. Well, there is a bear wandering a department store in The Bear Who Slept Through Christmas (1973).
I can't swear that I don't remember it from 1973. I don't have a lot of memories from when I was almost two, but there are some.
I was trying to find the name for A Christmas Story this year (it is a bit generic of a title, even without the more famous live-action film), and one of the "forgotten Christmas specials" articles came up. I saw a picture from The Bear and knew that was it.
I had looked for it a few times on and off, but I didn't have enough details to go on. Suddenly, there it was.
Also, it was really cute and I made my sisters watch it. While they were not sure about the ending (fair), I knew they would love the stewardess bears dancing on the wing of a plane in the Bear Air commercial. They did.
It is a very sweet show. It does seem to imply that a bear with a college degree who had a job and a roommate is becoming a toy or pet, but I am sure it all works out.
But also, I got an old question answered. It was answered because I keep asking new questions.
It's a little late now, but Merry Christmas!
Related posts:
https://sporkful.blogspot.com/2024/11/thanksgiving-specials.html
https://sporkful.blogspot.com/2025/01/blast-from-past-star-wars-holiday.html