Mr. Magoo’s Christmas Carol is one of my personal favorite versions. Even though I watch this every year, it’s not always included in the blog. However, I have now included it a few years in a row. Let’s get the well-known basics out of the way. This was made in 1962. It has the distinction of being the first animated U.S. Christmas Special made for television. It is also the first animated version of A Christmas Carol. And of course, it uses the cartoon-short character Mr. Magoo as Ebenezer Scrooge. One more: this is a rehash of the first time I wrote about it.
There was a time it was common for a lot of folks to list this as their favorite version. I don’t think it’s as common but it’s still popular. If I were to judge this solely on the merits of its adaptation from A Christmas Carol, this would probably have a mediocre score. However, I love this version as one of my personal favorites on many levels and criteria beyond it being A Christmas Carol.
Personal Rediscovery
I do not have childhood nostalgic attachments to this version though I’m in the right age range for its first decade-and-a-half. This was despite the fact I really liked Mr. Magoo as child, watching his half-hour show of shorts and I absolutely loved The Famous Adventures of Mr. Magoo show. The animated versions I grew up with and watched regularly as child were the 1969 and 1971 animated versions. I knew of Mr. Magoo’s Christmas Carol and remember seeing it only once as a child (after I had seen 1969’s which was my first ACC).
I didn’t personally “discover” Mr. Magoo’s Christmas Carol (MMCC) until I was in my early teens. By my early teens, I had became a theatre and Broadway musical aficionado. I still remember well when I took notice of MMCC. One weekend, visiting my father, I watched a broadcast of the show through very different eyes from my one childhood; the special hooked me!
It was then I recognized this show served as a kind of template for The Famous Adventures of Mr. Magoo. But there was so much more – especially in what I heard, not viewed: an actual Broadway styled musical with voice talents that I mostly recognized, even as a young teenager.
The biggest hook for me was and remains the talent behind the production. This is why it’s enduring.
Talent Unmatched
Jule Styne and Bob Merrill did the music and lyrics. They did Funny Girl! My theatre geek meter was off the charts. Jule Styne wrote the music for Gypsy, which I had also discovered as a teenager, and it became (and still is) one of my favorite musicals ever. Of course, the songs for MMCC are top-notch and enjoyable. The Styne-Merrill offerings alone are enough to make this entertaining and memorable.
Then there was the voice talent. Obviously there was Jim Backus as Mr. Magoo. But it had Morey Amsterdam, the fantastic Royal Dano, and Les Tremayne. Paul Frees is always recognizable (as a mainstay in Rankin-Bass Christmas specials, it was fascinating to see this was Frees’ first Christmas special and before Rankin-Bass). Finally there was Jack Cassidy. As I had discovered theatre, I discovered Cassidy with it – not much by him, but enough that I liked him. My discovery of MMCC was also in the timeframe of Cassidy’s tragic death. Believe it or not, I knew all these names and talents in my early teens and was in geek-awe. Seeing this version of A Christmas Carol was so cool-as-cool-could-be for a theatre geek.
As I wrote previously, I also recognized this as a template for The Famous Adventures of Mr. Magoo cartoon, which was actually one of my favorite cartoon shows during the 60’s portion of my childhood. There was the distinctive UPA animation style they did for TV that was nostalgic for me (it still is).
Finally, I was always impressed with the fact that the Mr. Magoo character doesn’t play Scrooge as Magoo. This is because of MMCC’s original concept. Mr. Magoo is an actor playing Scrooge. This was innovative as it gave the creators the excuse to use Mr. Magoo without having to fully sacrifice the seriousness of the Scrooge character.
Magoo’s Interpretation
This concept opens the special with Mr. Magoo able to be his usual vision impaired self. He sings the opening musical number about how great it is to back on Broadway as he attempts to get to the theatre in time to play Scrooge. From that point, Magoo and other characters present the story of A Christmas Carol as a musical, performing it on stage. When the play is finished (with a curtain call), Mr. Magoo is back as himself with a few of his vision impaired mishaps winding up the special. What I like is that the play within the show concept doesn’t just bookend it. There are brief moments of “scene changes” when we see shots of the stage as if we are in the audience with other seated audience members in view while we hear applause. These spots were obviously used for TV commercial breaks.
This still gives A Christmas Carol a serious treatment, at least as much as an early 60’s American cartoon could give it. Mr. Magoo isn’t the only established cartoon character in it, either. The cartoon character Gerald McBoing-Boing appears as Tiny Tim. This is a strange turn as the McBoing-Boing character didn’t normally speak except in sound effects; but he spoke normally here as Tiny Tim. Despite two established cartoon characters, this doesn’t give the treatment of “character as a character” like Rich Little’s Christmas Carol or The Muppet Christmas Carol does.
Royal Dano is good voicing the cartoon Marley’s Ghost who they drew with just a tad of creepiness; that was probably all the censors of the time permitted for a cartoon in 1962.
A known “no-no” here is the very noticeable changing of the order of the ghosts. The ghost visits are ordered Present, Past, Future. I’ve often tried to imagine what was the motivation for this change, but who knows what it could have been. Sometimes, I imagine the creators believed it flowed better for their concept and balanced the talent of some of the performers.
Stand-Out Songs
My opinion has always been that character of Belle usually gets the best song in musical versions. In this version she has what I think is the best song: a pretty, slightly melancholy tune called “Winter Was Warm.” However, all the songs are enjoyable; with some it’s easy to find yourself singing or humming them after viewing the cartoon.
The song “We’re Despicable” performed by the charwoman, laundress, undertaker, and Old Joe is not only villainously comical, it could easily be a show stopping number in a live production. It’s a precursor to comedic musical numbers by villains in later shows such as “Master of the House” from Les Miserables.
There are a lot of missing bits from A Christmas Carol that are easy to spot. But when sitting back and just enjoying how marvelous MMCC is on its own, I don’t notice them. Anyone that is not a fan of this version I always encourage to give a try by seeing it beyond its base as an A Christmas Carol adaptation.
My current copy is the DVD release. In the special features you can hear the original overture for the special. In the end, the production didn’t use the overture. An intended soundtrack album had planned its inclusion. Unfortunately, the album never saw the light of day. The DVD release has included it in the extras when comparing original drawings to the finished stills of the special.
Missing
- Scrooge’s nephew, Fred, is nowhere to be seen
- Scrooge’s sister, Fan
- Belle as a married woman
- Ignorance & Want
- Scrooge corpse
- As there is no Fred, there is no visit to Fred’s house on Christmas