From Deseret News archives:

Christmas specials I remember best

Published: Wednesday, Nov. 22, 2006 1:38 p.m. MST
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Others getting mentioned included movies such as "A Christmas Story," "Christmas Eve," "Yes, Virginia," "The House Without a Christmas Tree," "One Magic Christmas" and "One Special Night"; specials such as "Mr. Krueger's Christmas," "A Claymation Christmas," "Christmas Eve on Sesame Street," "B.C.: A Special Christmas," "Opus and a Wish for Wings that Work" and "The 12 Days of Christmas"; and even episodes of regular series such as "the Dec. 22, 1963, episode of 'Bonanza' (when I was 8 years old)."

Not all the shows that elicit strong memories are specials that air year after year.

"I have not seen my favorite Christmas TV special shown on network TV for a long time," wrote Annette Huff. "Fortunately, I found a cheap, and very poor quality video of the animated classic about 20 years ago and bought it. The case is now cracked, the front is broken off and the beginning of the tape is wrinkled, but I continue to watch it every year. It is a version of 'The Night Before Christmas' featuring the Norman Luboff Choir. ... I'm not sure what it is about this show that has caught my heart. Perhaps it is just the memory of watching it as a child, or the thought of a simpler time."

It was much the same for Marian McCann.

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"I would like to make a case for a couple of lesser known and, unfortunately, hard-to-find Christmas specials. Our favorites are the 1966 version of Truman Capote's 'A Christmas Memory' and the 1978 Hallmark Hall of Fame 'Stubby Pringle's Christmas.' I taped them years ago and we watch them often.... The stories are the kind of heart-warming, but not sappy, Christmas tales that are perfect for all members of the family and have lovely and timeless messages of sacrifice and generosity. I have never understood why they aren't played every year as the classics they are."

And it seems like just about every special has its fans — even the critically annihilated "Star Wars Holiday Special" that aired way back in 1978, which one reader (who identified himself — or is that herself? — only as "Monkaya") remembered as "The Wookiee Christmas."

"Thats right. I am talking Chewbacca of 'Star Wars' fame. But he and Han Solo do not arrive until later, after a obnoxious storm trooper invades his family's home and rips apart his son's (bantha?) plushy. ... The family celebrates Christmas in Wookiee fashion together via a community pageant involving something similar to the Star of Bethlehem, as I recall.

"George Lucas likely has this one locked deep in his vault."

Ah, but the memories remain.


E-mail: pierce@desnews.com

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