Seasonal & Holidays
Watch Lost 'Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer' Scene
IMPRESS FRIENDS AND FAMILY with the behind-the-scenes story of this beloved holiday special, as told by the official Rankin/Bass historian.
Little did a pair of animators know that the holiday TV special they created to help General Electric hawk appliances would still be airing 51 years later.
βRudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeerβ has endured as the highest-rated, longest-running special in television history. Its creators, Arthur Rankin Jr. and Jules Bass, would go on to create 16 more holiday-themed Animagic TV specials based on American pop standards.
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Rick Goldschmidt, who lives in a memorabilia-filled home in Oak Lawn, IL, and is considered the worldβs foremost expert on Rankin/Bass, has devoted much of his time to keeping the animatorsβ Animagic legend alive. (He so endeared himself to the animators, that when Arthur Rankin died in 2014, Goldschmidt was invited to speak at his memorial.)
The deleted Yukon Cornelius scene from the 1964 βRudolphβ broadcast.
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βMy parents, especially my mom let us know when the shows were on. I really looked forward to watching them,β Goldschmidt said.
According to Goldschmidt, the special that debuted Dec. 6, 1964, on the General Electric Fantasy Hour isnβt the same as the chopped-up version shown on television today. Scenes and parts of the story became lost due to changes in the original ending.
When βRudolphβ was prepared for a second rebroadcast in 1965, Rankin/Bass created a new ending after parents complained their children were upset over the fates of the misfit toys, left dangling the year before.
The 1964 end credits showed the cast and crewβs names stamped on presents being tossed off Santaβs sleigh by an elf. The next year when Santa flew back to the Island of Misfit Toys, the end credits were switched to defective toys parachuting off Santaβs sleigh with umbrellas. As a result, Billie Mae Richardsββthe actress who voiced Rudolphβhas been misspelled as βBillyβ for decades.
βOn earlier end credits we found her name spelled correctly,β Goldschmidt said.
After Hermey the Elf gets fired for putting teeth in dolls because heβd rather be a dentist than make toys, he meets up with young Rudolph, whoβs also been rejected by Santa and his peers for his non-conforming nose. Before the pair decides to run away to become βindependent,β they sing a defiant βWeβre A Couple of Misfits.β
A General Electric executive named Willard Saloff decided he wanted to replace βMisfitsβ with the more upbeat βFame and Fortune,β which was added in 1965. βFame and Fortuneβ continued to be featured in the annual Rudolph broadcasts until 1998, when it was replaced by βMisfitsβ again.
Goldschmidt says CBS, which took over broadcasting the beloved holiday special from NBC, today shows a badly edited version of the beloved holiday special.
βWhen they sing βWeβre A Couple of Misfits,β theyβre actually using animation from βFame and Fortune,ββ Goldschmidt said. βTheir mouths are out of sync and the video jumps all over the place.β
Other subplots left dangling after the 1965 changes include prospector Yukon Cornelius, seen throughout the adventure tossing his pick ax into the air and licking it, presumably in search of silver and gold.
In the original broadcast, however, when Rudolph leads cranky Santaβs team into a blinding blizzard on Christmas Eve, it is revealed that Yukon has been searching for a peppermint mine all along.
Goldschmidt says he contacted DreamWorks, which now owns Rankin/Bassβs pre-1974 library of animated works, in preparation for Rudolphβs 50th anniversary and a companion Blu-ray edition.
βI think the color version of the end credits is very important and should have been part of the Blu-ray, which could have been much better than what was released,β Goldschmidt said. βDreamWorks and CBS havenβt bothered to put a true version of βRudolphβ out. It appears they care more about the revenue it generates than the actual classic Rankin/Bass TV Special.β
Here are some more fascinating, behind-the-scenes facts of our favorite reindeer:
- Arthur Rankin Jr.βs neighbor, Johnny Marks, a Jewish songwriter who specialized in writing Christmas-themed music, convinced the animators to create an animated special based on a poem written by his brother-in-law, Montgomery Ward copywriter Robert L. May. May penned Rudolph as part of a Christmas promotion for the now defunct department store.
- βRudolphβ went into production in late 1963 with much of videography shot in Japan by Tadahito Mochinaga, considered the father of stop-action animation. The special was produced at Mochinagoβs Top Craft Studio.
- The TV holiday special cost $500,000 to make, $3.8 million in todayβs dollars.
- βRudolphβ debuted on the General Electric Fantasy Hour on Dec. 6, 1964. The special was showcased around the latest GE electrical appliances, many which no longer exist in society today. Most Americans watched the premiere on black-and-white televisions despite the special airing on NBCβs βin living colorβ network.
- Rankin and Bass animated three of the commercials for GE, including an iron, hair dryer, toaster oven and teacup clock featuring Santaβs elves, including Hermieβs mean boss elf.
- Most of the sets for the North Pole covered a tabletop. Goldschmidt says many of the stop-action scenes were shot simultaneously, with Japanese animators in charge of different characters. Rankin stayed in Japan overseeing the production, timing the stop-action scenes with a stopwatch so they could later be synchronized with the voiceovers.
- βRudolphβ was recorded in Toronto using Canadian radio actors because they were more affordable than U.S. actors. Rankin and Bass paid the actors for two yearsβ worth of airings. The Canadian actors never saw a penny of royalties after that because nobody dreamed βRudolphβ would still be airing a half century later.
- The voice of Sam the Snowmanβthe narrator of Rudolphβwas originally voiced by a Canadian radio actor named Larry Mann. Mann was dumped at the last minute when GE decided it needed a star. Actor Burl Ives was a last-minute replacement, who re-recorded Samβs narration weeks before the specialβs debut.
- Rudolphβs red nose was lit from a wire in his back hoof. His hind legs were frequently broken and repaired during production because he was used in almost every scene.
- The puppets were actually quite small. Rudolph was 9 inches tall; Santa was the largest, towering over the rest of the figures at 16 inches. Each figure came with interchangeable eyes and mouths, crafted from paper and tempera paint, that were used to convey speech and emotion.
- Most of the puppets were tossed into the trash after they fulfilled their duty. Rankinβs secretary saved Santa and the young Rudolph with antler nubs. Both were used as Christmas decorations and eventually deteriorated after years of being stored in an attic. Santa and Rudolph were restored in 2006, and are now owned by a collector, who keeps them both locked in a special vault, along with George Reevesβ original Superman costume.
Rick Goldschmidt has penned four lavishly illustrated books about the enchanted world of Rankin and Bass, including his latest tome, βThe Arthur Rankin Jr. Scrapbook.β His books are available on his website, Miser Bros. Press or at Amazon.
Other holiday coverage on Patch:
- Happy New Yearβs From Caltrain: Free Rides, Extra Trains!
- Need New Yearβs Hostess Gifts? 2 Impressive DIY Recipes From Cookbook Author, Winery
- Sour Christmas Gift? Free Replacement on Bad Electronics, Major Appliances
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- Kick Off New Year With Hike Around Majestic Mount Diablo
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- Need Last-Minute Stocking Stuffer? How About βWinter in Wineries Passportβ?
- Mull Over These: 2 Easy Spiced Wine And Punch Recipes For Holidays
- Make Gift Returns Easy at Target, Macyβs, Toys βRβ Us, Others
- Holiday Party Cocktail: How to Make a Crystal Cosmopolitan
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