About Christmas TV History

Showing posts with label The Cop and the Anthem. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Cop and the Anthem. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

List of O.Henry Adaptations


Even Disney pays tribute to great American literature in Mickey's Once Upon a Christmas.

This past Spring, I've been sharing some of my favorite Christmas movies, specials, and TV episodes that have taken inspiration from American author O.Henry's short stories including The Gift of the Magi and The Cop and The Anthem.  Below is a quick list of links to the series.  Please don't mistake this as an exhaustive list because there are dozens and dozens more Christmas entertainments inspired by O.Henry--this is just a starting place. 

One of my all-time favorite Christmas specials: Emmet Otter's Jug-Band Christmas

Adaptations of The Gift of the Magi:

1952 theatrical release film O.Henry's Full House
1978 TV movie The Gift of Love starring Marie Osmond
a segment within Disney's Mickey's Once Upon a Christmas from 1999
Jim Henson Production's 1977 hit Emmet Otter's Jug-Band Christmas
1996 operatic TV version from Finland entitled The Gift of the Magi
1979 Christmas episode from sitcom Alice starring Linda Lavin
1974 Christmas episode of the family drama Little House on the Prairie
1955 Christmas episode of The Honeymooners
an anti-Gift of the Magi story from the TV sitcom Everybody Loves Raymond from 2000
and, 2010 TV movie Gift of the Magi which debuted on the Hallmark Channel




Alice and Ralph Kramden share a heart-warming gift exchange on The Honeymooners.

Adaptations of The Cop and The Anthem:

1952 theatrical release film O.Henry's Full House
1954 Christmas episode of The Red Skelton Show
1978 animated TV special A Pink Christmas starring the Pink Panther

The characters on TV's Alice make sacrifices a la O.Henry at Christmas in their unique gift swap.

Do you have a favorite Christmas entertainment inspired by a short story written by O.Henry that didn't make my list?  Share the title with us in the comments below and explain why it's one of your favorites.

Monday, June 3, 2013

A Pink Christmas (1978)


How long has it been since you've seen this 1978 animated Christmas special?

For my last post this Spring discussing adaptations of two of O.Henry's Christmas short stories, I'd like to share A Pink Christmas, a half-hour animated TV special that features the character of the Pink Panther.   It should not be confused with the more recent animated TV special A Very Pink Christmas which debuted on the ABCFamily Channel's 25 Days of Christmas marathon in 2011.  Though both specials feature the Pink Panther, the 1978 DePatie-Freleng produced animated special takes inspiration from O.Henry's story "The Cop and The Anthem."  In case you missed them, I've already shared about the 1952 movie O.Henry's Full House which includes a vignette adapted from "The Cop and The Anthem," and the 1954 Christmas episode of the Red Skelton Show.

A Pink Christmas begins with the panther waking up cold and hungry on a park bench in New York City.  Sound familiar?

Just as in most of the earlier cartoon shorts and in the television series, the Pink Panther here is silent, that is, he speaks no dialogue.  In this story, the Pink Panther finds himself cold and hungry on Christmas Eve in Central Park at the turn-of-the-twentieth-century.  He makes several attempts to find food or to earn money to buy food, but each time he fails. 

The Pink Panther tries to earn money by taking on a job working as Santa Claus at a local department store.

 Pink not only tries to earn money by working as a department store Santa Claus but he also tries to earn money by shoveling snow.  Down on his luck, Pink is even hungry enough to steal food--and at one point he even stands in line at a soup kitchen for a hot meal.  But each time, Pink comes up empty handed.

Desperate for something to eat, Pink is caught stealing the carrot from a snowman's nose!


The Pink Panther thinks he's about to receive a free meal in a fancy restaurant.
After pressing his nose up against a restaurant window, the hungry Pink is asked by a wealthy doctor to join him for dinner inside.  Once seated and about to order, Pink's host suddenly leaves to assist in a medical emergency, leaving the poor panther once again hungry and without a meal.

Pink tries to gain access to the jail where he sees others receiving Christmas dinners.

In a local police station, the Pink Panther sees several men led into jail cells and fed Christmas dinners.  Wanting a dinner for himself, Pink tries to enter the jail but is sent away.  Nothing seems to be going right for the poor hungry cat.  But Pink finally finds promise in a donut he finds rolling down the street--and he sees another poor soul, a hungry puppy, that needs the meal just as much as he does.  The kind-hearted panther does the only thing he feels he can--and gives the puppy his only morsel of food.

Pink gives the puppy his only food.

On this magical Christmas Eve night as the two new friends share a park bench, a Christmas tree and a bountiful feast is delivered to them, courtesy of Santa Claus.

At least Pink has made a new friend.

It turns out Santa witnessed Pink's sacrifice and rewards both of the hungry ones with a little magic.
The soundtrack for this animated program is outstanding.  Though the entire story is told without dialogue, the story unfolds against Henry Mancini's familiar jazz tune "Pink Panther Theme" in several variations.  It is also accompanied by three songs sung by a children's choir which adds the perfect tone for a children's Christmas story.  The songs are "Yule Tide Spirit" with music by Doug Goodwin and lyrics by Johnny Bradford, and "Jolly Holiday" and "Wonderful Wintertime" with music and lyrics by Doug Goodwin.  The choir's songs are performed by The Children of Saint Michaels Day School Choir, from Studio City, California. 

After being chased from his Santa job, Pink tries to escape from the manager by passing himself off as a discounted toy in the store's toy department.

While not a faithful adaptation of O.Henry's "The Cop and The Anthem," this 1978 Christmas story does take inspiration from the original short story.  The Pink Panther, much like Soapy in O.Henry's tale, makes numerous attempts by any means necessary to acquire food for his empty belly.  Several times we see the Pink Panther abandoning his plan for his next meal as he's being pursued by a policeman or another person of authority.  Clearly, the hungry Pink is a good-natured cat that wants to avoid trouble.  When Pink finally wants to get arrested and get sent to jail to receive a decent meal, this is when the cat finds he can't attract the attention of the officers. 

Or, perhaps the twist is found in Pink's generous gesture to offer his only meal to another hungry soul, just like himself.  However, this animated special has a much more uplifting ending when Santa provides both the puppy and the panther with a special Christmas dinner and a beautiful decorated tree as a part of the magic of the season. 



Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Red Skelton Show Christmas (1954)


Another O.Henry classic that takes place at Christmas time.

For the past several weeks I've been discussing noteworthy adaptations of O.Henry's Christmas short story The Gift of the Magi.  O.Henry also wrote another Christmas story, The Cop and the Anthem that has been adapted several times in the movies and for television as well.  Remember the 1952 theatrical release film O.Henry's Full House?  The film consists of four vignettes adapted from O.Henry short stories and includes versions of both The Gift of the Magi and The Cop and the Anthem

The Cop and the Anthem segment from the 1952 movie O.Henry's Full House stars Charles Laughton (left) and David Wayne.

Comedian Red Skelton was a hit in vaudeville and radio before bringing his funny characters to TV audiences.

One of the most heart-warming versions of The Cop and the Anthem was adapted for the 1954 Christmas episode of The Red Skelton Show.  In this half-hour sketch, the role of O.Henry's homeless character Soapy is played by Skelton’s lovable hobo, Freddie the Freeloader.

As it gets closer to Christmas, Freddie wants to find a warmer place to bed down--away from his snow-covered park bench.

Freddie awakens on a park bench on Christmas Eve with the plan to get arrested so he can spend the holiday and the rest of the winter in jail with a roof over his head and three square meals.  At first he tries to get arrested by eating a luxurious meal in an elegant restaurant without paying.  While the other patrons assume he’s an eccentric millionaire, the staff decide to give him the meal for free in the generous spirit of the holiday.

At the restaurant, the glutton Freddie takes the entire dessert tray rather than one piece from it.


Freddie is disappointed that the man with the umbrella is a thief as well!

Freddie tries to steal a gentleman’s umbrella on the street but it turns out he had stolen the umbrella as well and refuses to call a policeman.  Next Freddie throws a brick through a store window but no one believes he broke it because he didn’t flee the scene.  Then Freddie tries to shoplift an expensive bracelet from a jewelry store but he becomes the victim of a pickpocket.  The kind-hearted hobo even tries to be a masher in the park to scare a woman into calling for a policeman but it turns out the lonely spinster likes the attention.

A policeman arrives to rescue poor Freddie from the clutches of this desperate, lonely woman.

Contemplating his next attempt to be arrested, Freddie hears a boys choir sing as they emerge from a nearby church.

Standing in front of a church, contemplating his next crime, the desperate hobo is inspired to change his life when he hears a boys choir singing “O Come All Ye Faithful.”  One of the boys in the choir talks to Freddie about a job opportunity at his father’s factory and Freddie decides to stop being a freeloader.  It’s just then that a policeman arrives to arrest the hope-filled Freddie for vagrancy, taking him off to prison until Spring.

Freddie finally gets charged with vagrancy--a 90 day sentence that will keep him in jail until Spring.

Much like The Gift of the Magi and many of O.Henry's tales, this story utilizes a twist ending.  It is just as the homeless man is inspired to take a job and be responsible for himself that he is finally arrested and sent to jail--Freddie's goal for the entire day.

Though most of us are familiar with the story The Gift of the Magi, have you ever read or seen an adaptation of The Cop and the Anthem?  Share your comments below.  Check out Part 1:





Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Gift of the Magi (2010)


DVD cover

I continue my discussion of noteworthy adaptations of the short story The Gift of the Magi, a Christmas tale written by the great American author O.Henry.  Out of the dozens of TV and movie versions of O.Henry's account, so far I've shared the 1952 film O.Henry's Full House, the 1978 TV movie The Gift of Love, a segment within 1999's Mickey's Once Upon a Christmas, Jim Henson Production's 1977 hit Emmet Otter's Jug-Band Christmas, the 1996 operatic TV version from Finland entitled The Gift of the Magi, the sitcom Alice from a 1979 episode, the 1974 Christmas episode of the family drama Little House on the Prairie, the 1955 Christmas episode of The Honeymooners, and an anti-Gift of the Magi story from the TV sitcom Everybody Loves Raymond.

Debuting in 2010, this TV movie stars Marla Sokoloff as Della Alexander and Mark Webber as Jim Alexander.

Though O.Henry's short story was originally written and published more than one hundred years ago, adaptations continue to be made.  In 2010, a feature length version debuted on the Hallmark Channel directed by Lisa Mulcahy.  The Christmas story continues to remain a popular one as the movie was re-broadcast on the Hallmark Channel during the holiday season in both 2011 and 2012.  Have you seen this one before?

The story begins with the newlyweds moving in together after their wedding.

Newlyweds Jim and Della Alexander are excited to spend their first Christmas together.  Though money is tight, each has plans to buy a special Christmas present for the other.  After their car is stolen and they have to buy a new one, they promise each other no gifts this year for the holiday.

Jim spends all his free time working to restore a 1955 Chevy Bel Air, a car that reminds him of his father.

Della has already made plans to buy Jim a hard-to-find steering wheel for his vintage automobile he's restoring.  She takes a second job doing laundry for a luxury hotel to earn the extra money for his gift.  Meanwhile, Jim decides to break his promise and arranges to buy a special gift for his wife:  a wide angle lens and a zoom lens for the camera that she loves to take pictures with.

Della's passion is photography.

In the days leading up to Christmas, Jim begins to sense that Della is keeping secrets from him.  Jim also discovers that his wife is lying to him about where she's been.  The Alexanders' love and trust for one other begins to break when Jim accidentally sees his wife entering a local hotel with another man.  When Jim confronts her about it, Della feels betrayed by his accusation of cheating and refuses to explain her actions.  Della also feels hurt that Jim has been spending all his time working on his restoration job and ignoring her requests to decorate the Christmas tree and sit for a Christmas photo.

Della's secret job is working in hospitality services for a luxury hotel.  She hopes Jim never misses her as she will be working this 2nd job while Jim works evenings as a bartender.

Apart and miserable for the holiday, Jim is staying with his best friend Ian while Della is staying with her best friend Reneé.  Both Ian and Reneé know the truth of this misunderstanding and they set out to reunite the foolish young lovers.

Jim and Della see how wrong and foolish they are when they recognize the sacrifices they made for each other.

It's not until Reneé tricks her friend into returning to her own home does Della realize the 1955 Chevy is missing.  Ian also persuades Jim to return home where he finds his wife calling the police about the missing vintage auto.  Finally Jim confesses that he sold the car to buy Della the camera lenses--and Della confesses she took a second job to earn more money and pawned her camera to buy him an expensive and rare steering wheel for his car.  There's a happy ending for this Christmas TV movie as the Alexanders realize they still love each other after all.

Will Reneé and Ian ever find romance?  Everyone likes a happy ending in Christmas TV movies.

This movie may not satisfy viewers looking for a faithful adaptation of O.Henry's original short story.  Clearly much has been added--its modern day setting, Della's second job, Jim's accusations of adultery, and there's even a substantial romantic side story involving the best friends Ian and Reneé.  However, these extra threads serve to pad or fill out the story, perhaps improving it for some contemporary audiences already familiar with original short story.  The addition of the will-they-or-won't-they romance between Ian and Reneé is typical of most of the Christmas TV movies airing on the Hallmark Channel.  But the essential elements of O.Henry's tale of love and sacrifice remain in this adaptation too.

Who pays to go to the theater to see a recent TV movie?

Have you ever noticed this before?  In the scene where Jim and Della go to the movie theater to see A Christmas Carol, the movie poster is visible in the background.  If I'm not mistaken--that's 2004's TV movie A Christmas Carol: The Musical starring Kelsey Grammer.  When Jim is seated in the theater, you can hear Grammer's recognizable voice speaking Scrooge's dialogue.  Since both movies Gift of the Magi and A Christmas Carol: The Musical are Hallmark Entertainment movies, I can assume this was a matter of licensing.  But really, who pays to go to the movies to watch a 2004 TV movie?

Is this the same poster design or what?

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

O.Henry's Full House (1952)

When you think of great literary works that have inspired Christmas entertainment, Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol is usually the first thing that comes to mind.  But Dickens wasn't the only great author to be inspired to write timeless human tales that capture the Christmas spirit.  Lately I've been thinking about the great American author O.Henry and two of his short stories that continue to endure within Christmas entertainment.  Over the next several weeks, I thought I'd share several of my favorite adaptations of O.Henry's two most popular Christmas stories.




The 1952 black and white, theatrical release film O.Henry's Full House is a convenient place to start.  This film consists of five vignettes, each adapted from a popular O.Henry short story and helmed by a successful Hollywood director.  The five vignettes are The Cop and the Anthem, The Clarion Call, The Last Leaf, The Ransom of Red Chief, and The Gift of the Magi.  It is the first and last segments that I'm most interested in discussing here.


The literary quality of this production is made clear by the participation of author John Steinbeck as the narrator who introduces each segment.

The film's first segment is The Cop And The Anthem which stars Charles Laughton as Soapy and David Wayne as Soapy's friend Horace.  The segment is directed by Henry Koster.  Christmas trivia: director Henry Koster also directed the 1947 Christmas movie The Bishop's Wife starring Cary Grant, Loretta Young, and David Niven.  And, Koster directed 1949's Come to the Stable starring Loretta Young and Celeste Holm--another popular movie at Christmas time because its family-friendly story centers on a pair of nuns looking to establish a children's hospital.

The distinguished hobo Soapy (left) explains to his friend Horace that he feels its time to move indoors.

Are you familiar with the story of The Cop and the Anthem set at the turn-of-the-twentieth-century in New York City?  Soapy, a genteel bum (think: erudite homeless person that values his freedom from having to work for a living) recognizes that his nights spent sleeping in the park are getting colder as winter approaches.  Talking to his friend Horace, Soapy decides to get himself arrested so he can spend the next 90 days in prison--with a free bed and hot meals--to escape the chill of winter.

Soapy after having eaten a very expensive meal at a posh restaurant.

Soapy's first criminal act is stealing a man's umbrella from under his arm.  But the victim refuses to call out to a policeman on the street, revealing he had stolen the umbrella and fearing that Soapy may be the umbrella's original owner.  Shrugging his shoulders, Soapy moves on to commit another crime.  Next, the hobo goes into a fine restaurant and eats a very expensive meal.  When he receives his check and admits he has no intention of paying, the owner looks to avoid any trouble and refuses to call the police.  Moving on, Soapy spots a policeman on the street bending over and he rushes forward to kick the officer!  Once again thwarted, Soapy slips on a banana peel and falls to the ground where the kind officer bends over to help the hobo back on his feet.  Getting more desperate, Soapy picks up a horseshoe in the street and throws it through a store window!  His friend Horace runs down the street to avoid any trouble but the store owner and the policeman run after him despite Soapy's loud insistence that he broke the window!

Yes, THAT beautiful woman on the street is indeed Marilyn Monroe!

Still hoping to get his 90 days, Soapy spots a beautiful woman on the street and decides to cause a scene.  Breaking the rules of polite society, Soapy approaches the female stranger, compliments her beauty and offers her a drink.  Instead of being accused of being a masher, it turns out the woman is a prostitute and appreciates the friendly offer. 


Soapy wanders down the street and hears music playing in a church.  Inside the church, he reconsiders his day's efforts and decides to rededicate himself to a living a better life.  Inspired to make something of himself, Soapy steps outside the church and begins going through his pockets looking for the business card he knows he has with a man's name who once offered him a job.  It is at this moment that poor Soapy has the attention of a policeman who arrests him for loitering.  In court, the judge takes one look at Soapy and sentences him to 90 days in jail for vagrancy.


Recognize British actor Charles Laughton (Soapy)?  He also played Captain Bligh in the movie Mutiny on the Bounty with Clark Gable.

This sort of twist ending is a story device O.Henry used again and again.   Poor Soapy spends all day trying to get arrested so he can continue to live his care-free life as a bum.  Once he changes his mind and decides to try to be an upstanding citizen and get a job, he's arrested and thrown in jail!  Though the O.Henry's Full House version of the tale doesn't really acknowledge the holidays, the original short story takes place at Christmas time. 

Della and Jim, the poor but happy lovers in The Gift of the Magi.

The fifth vignette in O.Henry's Full House is the holiday classic The Gift of the Magi which stars Farley Granger as Jim and Jeanne Crain as Della. This segment is directed by Henry King.  We're all familiar with the story of The Gift of the Magi, right?  Again, it's the turn-of-the-twentieth-century in New York City, newlyweds Jim and Della have just enough to live on but not enough to afford buying each other Christmas gifts.

If Della sells her hair, she may lose her beauty--will Jim still love her if she's unattractive?

Della can't imagine Christmas time without giving a gift so she sells the only thing she has of any value: her long hair.  With that money, she buys a fancy watch fob for Jim to use with his prized possession, a pocket watch.   When Jim comes home from work on Christmas Eve, he sees how she's cut her hair and he offers his Christmas gift: a set of expensive combs to use in her long hair.  Della offers Jim her gift of the watch fob only to learn that he sold his pocket watch in order to buy the combs.

Jim and Della share a laugh after realizing the result of their gift exchange.

Though this familiar story has been told and re-told dozens of times over the years, we shouldn't forget its meaning.  O.Henry's story embodies the spirit of the adage "it is better to give than to receive."  Their sacrifices, made out of love, cause Jim and Della to laugh from joy--because they each gave as they wanted--and not cry from disappointment because the gifts are now useless and impractical.  The Gift of the Magi is like other O.Henry stories in that it features a twist ending but in this case the twist results in the characters experiencing something emotionally greater than any gift they could have given each other.  


 

Monday, December 7, 2009

Marilyn Monroe in a Christmas movie??

SET YOUR DVRs: Wednesday Dec. 9th at 8am (EST) on the Fox Movie Channel for the feature length movie, O.Henry's Full House.

This is an incredible black-and-white, Hollywood movie with a star-studded cast. Five of O.Henry's most popular short stories are dramatized with legendary writer John Steinbeck appearing on screen to introduce each vignette. The first story is the holiday favorite The Cop and the Anthem which stars actors Charles Laughton, David Wayne and yes, Marilyn Monroe. She appears in a minor role as a woman on the street that encounters Laughton--but she's easy to spot and recognize. This vignette is directed by Henry Koster, a well-respected artist and immigrant that fled Nazi Germany for Hollywood.

Additionally, the last of the five stories is the holiday classic The Gift of the Magi starring Farley Granger and Jeanne Crain, and directed by Henry King. This film is discussed on pg. 25 and 126 while O.Henry's The Cop and the Anthem and its adaptations are discussed on pgs. 125-128.