Christmas TV Party 2015: Joseph Moore at Christmas Wishes Book
1) What Christmas program/movie have you seen more times than any other?
1) What Christmas program/movie have you seen more times than any other?
That
would be a tie between the 1951 version of A Christmas Carol and
Charlie Brown's Christmas. I remember seeing the premier of the latter
when I was 5 years old, my mother reminded me all day and it really
built up the excitement. I was not disappointed.
2) What is your favorite musical Christmas TV special, variety performance, or holiday song in a movie?
Too
many favorites to choose, so I will go with what I feel is the most
underrated: the song "One More Sleep Till Christmas" from the movie The
Muppet Christmas Carol. This Paul Williams tune really should have
become a standard by now.
3) What's your favorite TV or movie adaptation of Dickens' A Christmas Carol?
I
am a connoisseur of all versions of A Christmas Carol, and the best
movie version (IMHO) is still the 1951 version. The most underrated
movie version is the 1935 Seymour Hicks adaptation, which reveals more
of the story's 'ghost story' origins. The TV Movie retelling that I love
best is Karrol's Christmas, which I think was originally an A&E
production, but now sometimes pops up on the Hallmark Channel. The
various Radio Play versions should all be checked out wherever they can
be located.
4) What do you think is the worst Christmas program/movie--or your least favorite, the most disappointing or most overrated?
I
absolutely HATE Bad Santa. I'm not generally against films, books, or
TV programs that make fun of the Holiday Season, but that movie was
just mean-spirited to such a degree that it contained zero redeeming
value.
5) If you were asked to give advice to a TV network executive in charge of holiday programming, what would you suggest?
Please,
please, PLEASE! stop using up all of the Christmas-oriented programming
by the second week of December. Try placing those movies, specials, and
other related programs during the 7 days before December 25th. Load
Christmas Eve up with as much Holiday-themed fare as possible, a la the
fictional network in Scrooged in the hope and belief that families
will want to be together sitting around the TV, trimming the tree and
wrapping gifts and enjoying watching good, so-called "old fashioned"
entertainment, whether it be movies like White Christmas, reruns of
old sitcom Christmas episodes, old variety shows, or better yet new
variety shows inspired by the old ones.