Mister Magoo's Christmas Carol, a musical adaptation of the
Dickens story, was the first animated holiday special produced
specifically for American network television. Commissioned and sponsored
by Timex, it aired on NBC on December 18, 1962; two years before
Rankin-Bass' Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer, and three years
prior to the generally acknowledged masterpiece of the genre, the Emmy
and Peabody award-winning A Charlie Brown Christmas.
While Rudolph, Charlie Brown, Frosty the Snowman (1969), and How
The Grinch Stole Christmas (1966) have aired annually since their
debuts, Magoo exited network television in the 1980s, popped up
in syndication for the next decade or so, then shuffled off to home
video and the Internet.
While Magoo features the relatively cheap limited animation most
television cartoons employ, it had something the others didn't- a score
written by Broadway heavy hitters Jule Styne and Bob Merrill, whose next
effort would be the hit show Funny Girl.
A remastered Blue-Ray DVD of the show was released this year, and the
soundtrack and show itself are available on Amazon and iTunes (should
the YouTube link above become unavailable).
For a lot of mid-50s boomers, Magoo was our introduction to
Dickens' classic story. And, as the first real Christmas special, it
left a major impression.
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