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For some people, the Christmas season doesn’t officially start until CBS shows A Charlie Brown Christmas.
Who out there doesn’t picture Snoopy dancing joyfully with his nose in
the air whenever they hear the familiar strains of that jazzy piano
music? Interestingly enough, this Christmas staple started out as an
afterthought. (click below to read more)
The Original Dog-umentary
Back in 1963, TV producer Lee Mendelson had the idea to make a documentary film about cartoonist Charles Schulz and his popular Peanuts
comic strip. Schulz agreed, and collaborated with animator Bill
Melendez to create two minutes of the first-ever animated Peanuts
footage. The rest of the special featured “Sparky” Schulz in his studio,
driving his kids to school, and even bowling a few frames. Songwriter
Vince Guaraldi agreed to write some original music for the special, and
the first composition he came up with was an incredibly catchy tune he
called “Linus and Lucy.”

Why Snoopy Gets all the Action Scenes
When it came to actually producing the special, Charlie Brown was
truly a problem child. Unlike most of the other characters, Chuck’s head
was completely round, which made it difficult for the animators to turn
and indicate movement from side to side. Snoopy, on the other hand, was
the easiest character to manipulate, which is why they had fun making
him do everything from the jitterbug to impersonating a vulture.
The Blockheads at CBS Hate It (then change their minds)
When CBS executives previewed A Charlie Brown Christmas,
they were vastly underwhelmed. There was just so much wrong with it.
There was not enough action. It moved too slow. The voices had been done
by real kids, not adult actors. There was no laugh track. And Linus
read from the Gospel of Luke in one scene. (“You can’t read from the
Bible on network television!”) At the end of the meeting, Mendelson was
told: “Well, you gave it a good shot. Believe me, we’re big Peanuts fans, but maybe it’s better suited to the comic page.”

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