The Spirit of Christmas (1953)

27m
Running Time

December 1, 1953
Release Date

The Spirit of Christmas (1953)

27m
Running Time

December 1, 1953
Release Date

External Links & Social Media

Plot.

This Christmas film, created as a special for television broadcast throughout the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania viewing region, was produced by puppeteer Mabel Beaton and her husband Les for Bell Telephone Company and first aired in 1953. Following a short live-action opening portion, featured are two extended marionette segments, the first dramatizing Clement Moore's "A Visit from St. Nicholas", the second reverently telling the Nativity story; the two stories are staged in classic, traditional style. From 1953 onward, for several years, The Spirit of Christmas was broadcast in the intended region multiple times per holiday season. It was also available as a 16mm film licensed to schools for showings to students. This film often is misstated to have originally been broadcast in 1950.

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Details.

Release Date
December 1, 1953

Status
Released

Running Time
27m

Genres

Wiki.

The Spirit of Christmas is a Christmas television special performed by marionettes. First airing in 1953, it was produced by Mabel and Les Beaton, through their company, Stringtime Productions. Its half-hour showing time is divided into two marionette segments, one dramatizing Clement Clarke Moore's 1823 poem "A Visit from St. Nicholas" and one telling the story of the Nativity. The live-action part of the film features Alexander Scourby, who narrates and also plays Clement Moore in the Visit from St. Nicholas segment. The jacket of the DVD version calls it "The Philadelphia Holiday Classic," referring to the region of the United States where it was originally broadcast. The jacket also describes it as a "50s TV Christmas classic, which has led it to being misdated as first being shown in 1950.Into the 1960s, the special was aired multiple times per Christmas season, without commercial interruptions except for opening and closing remarks by "your telephone company" (Bell Telephone). It was also available as a 16mm film licensed to schools for showings to students. It disappeared from the airwaves for several decades but began airing on public television again in 1998. It was unusual in that it was made in color, despite all television broadcasting at the time being in black-and-white.

The "St. Nicholas" segment includes music from The Nutcracker ballet.

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