The holiday season is upon us.
Christmas is evident in every town across the country,
at every corner of your hometown lights are twinkling in the night. Joyous
celebrations are getting ready to begin and we all give thanks for a wonderful
year as the new one takes onto new adventures in our lives. I miss downtown Lake Mills, the sounds of
Christmas are heard 24/7 during December.
Christmas Legends:
The
American version of the Santa Claus figure
received its inspiration and its name from the Dutch legend of Sinter Klaas,
brought by settlers to New York in the 17th century.
As
early as 1773 the name appeared in the American press as "St. A
Claus," but it was the popular author Washington Irving who gave Americans
their first detailed information about the Dutch version of Saint Nicholas. In
his History of New York, published in 1809 under the pseudonym Diedrich
Knickerbocker, Irving described the arrival of the saint on horseback
(unaccompanied by Black Peter) each Eve of Saint Nicholas.
This
Dutch-American Saint Nick achieved his fully Americanized form in 1823 in the
poem A Visit From Saint Nicholas more commonly known as The Night Before
Christmas by writer Clement Clarke Moore. Moore included such details as the
names of the reindeer; Santa Claus's laughs, winks, and nods; and the method by
which Saint Nicholas, referred to as an elf, returns up the chimney. (Moore's
phrase "lays his finger aside of his nose" was drawn directly from
Irving's 1809 description.)
Santa Claus Legends:
Christmas Tree Legend:
Celebrating
Christmas without a richly decorated Christmas Tree
would not seem right today. But why do we have a Christmas Tree, and how
did it originate?
Back in the 7th century a monk from Crediton,
Devonshire, traveled to Germany to spread the Word of God. Legend has it
that he used the triangular shape of the Fir Tree to describe the Holy Trinity
of God the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit to the German people. The German
people started to revere the Fir Tree as "God's Tree". In the next 5
centuries, the tree became a symbol of Christianity, and was being hung
upside-down from the ceiling as a sign of Christianity.
More Christmas Tree Legends:
Christmas Legends:
Christmas Recipes/Treats:
Christmas Movies:
- http://www.christmasmovies.us/
- http://www.auburn.edu/~vestmon/christmas_movie.html\
- http://www.santas.net/movies.htm
- http://www.christiananswers.net/christmas/movies-christmas.html
- http://www.mymerrychristmas.com/2006/christmasmovies.php
This semi-remake of Holiday Inn (the first movie in which Irving Berlin's
perennial, Oscar-winning holiday anthem was featured) doesn't have much of a
story, but what it does have is choice: Bing Crosby, Danny Kaye, Rosemary
Clooney, an all-Irving Berlin song score, classy direction by Hollywood vet
Michael Curtiz (Casablanca, The Adventures of Robin Hood),
VistaVision (the very first feature ever shot in that widescreen format), and
ultrafestive Technicolor! Crosby and Kaye are song-and-dance men who hook up,
romantically and professionally, with a "sister" act (Clooney and Vera-Ellen) to
put on a Big Show to benefit the struggling ski-resort lodge run by the beloved
old retired general (Dean Jagger) of their WWII Army outfit. Crosby is cool,
Clooney is warm, Kaye is goofy, and Vera-Ellen is leggy. Songs include:
"Sisters" (Crosby and Kaye do their own drag version, too), "Snow," "We'll
Follow the Old Man," "Mandy," "Count Your Blessings Instead of Sheep," and more.
Christmas would be unthinkable without White Christmas. --Jim
Emerson
Alastair Sim's tour-de-force performance as the ultimate miser, Ebenezer
Scrooge, has almost single-handedly made this beloved version of Charles
Dickens' story into one of the best-loved Christmas films of all time. Some of
Britain's best filmmakers united behind Sim, who was joined by a delightful cast
of accomplished and acclaimed English actors; creating what many today believe
to be the best and most faithful production of Dickens' immortal tale. Cranky
and curmudgeonly Scrooge learns the error of his unkind ways and is taught the
true meaning of the
holidays when he is visited by the ghost of his late business partner and the
spirits of Christmas past, present and future.
A charming and wholesome 1950 holiday film
about a New York family (led by Durante) who are down on their luck at Christmas
time. Shortly before Christmas, they move into a ground floor apartment building where Rupert
the squirrel lives in the attic rafters. Just when it seems that the holiday
will come and go without so much as a Christmas tree , Rupert acts as the family's beneficent
guardian angel - not only saving Christmas, but changing their lives forever.
(Originally titled The Great Rupert, the title has been changed to A Christmas
Wish, which more adequately describes the story and showcases the delightful
holiday theme.)
Alien invaders kidnap everyone's favorite right jolly old elf in this low-budget
mixture of children's comedy and sci-fi adventure. Christmas is not far away,
and countless children are glued to their family's TV sets, watching reports
about Santa Claus (John Call). However, this is happening on Mars, and leaders
of the Red Planet aren't sure what to do for their kids who are pining away for a visit from
the gift-bearing earthling. Martian leader Kimar (Leonard Hicks) dispatches two
of his emissaries, the chronically grumpy Voldar (Vincent Beck) and the
moronically cheerful Dropo (Bill McCutcheon), to Earth to bring Santa back for a
visit. After arriving on Earth, Voldar and Dropo abduct two children, Betty
(Donna Conforti) and Billy (Victor Stiles), and order the kids to show them the
way to Santa's workshop, from which all three are taken to Mars against their
will. As Santa, Betty, and Billy try to find a way back to Earth, Voldar becomes
enraged with the Earth kids, while the children bond more comfortably with the
intellectually-challenged Dropo. Shot on a shoestring budget on Long Island, Santa Claus Conquers
the Martians has developed a rabid cult following over the years, and yes, it's
true, Kimar's daughter Girmar really is played by a ten-year-old Pia Zadora.
--Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
Merry Christmas, Happy Hanukkah and Happy New Year, everyone!
Christmas Tree Photo provided by http://s249.photobucket.com/profile/s8rgurl12
5 comments:
I love that you posted about Christmas Legends! It's a great source for research and super fascinating. Love the topic! Great holiday choice Maxine!
Thanks Lauren. I remembered I had it from an old newsletter I did and thought I'd share it again.
Wow, this is cool, Maxine. Most of those Christmas movies I haven't heard of, it's nice to see new ones. We do the usual, Grinch, Home Alone, Christmas Vacation, Miracle on 34th Street, It's a Wonderful, Life, etc. Now I have some new ones.
Thanks Callie ... we have our standard favorites also, but it's fun to switch it up a little bit. A few of campy but enjoyable.
I love reading any blog that talks about Christmas keep up the good work!
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