A Charlie Brown Christmas (non-existent "laugh track cut" of Christmas special; 1965): Difference between revisions

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|image=A Charlie Brown Christmas.jpg
|image=A Charlie Brown Christmas.jpg
|imagecaption=Title card for the special.
|imagecaption=Title card for the special.
|status=<span style="color:red;">'''Lost'''</span>
|status=<span style="color:grey;">'''Non-Existent'''</span>
}}
}}
''A Charlie Brown Christmas'' is a Christmas special in the ''Peanuts'' franchise that made its debut on CBS on December 9th, 1965. The special became well-known for its unorthodox methods of production for the time and the comic's creator Charles Schulz' disputes with the network over such elements, such as the use of child voice actors and the use of Biblical quotes.<ref>[https://www.newsweek.com/podcast-how-charlie-brown-christmas-almost-didnt-come-be-1266815 Newsweek article about the Special's development.] Retrieved 13 Oct '19</ref>
''A Charlie Brown Christmas'' is a Christmas special in the ''Peanuts'' franchise that made its debut on CBS on December 9th, 1965. The special became well-known for its unorthodox methods of production for the time and the comic's creator Charles Schulz' disputes with the network over such elements, such as the use of child voice actors and the use of Biblical quotes.<ref>[https://newsweek.com/podcast-how-charlie-brown-christmas-almost-didnt-come-be-1266815 Newsweek article about the Special's development.] Retrieved 13 Oct '19</ref>


At the time of production, it was common for live-action sitcoms on television, as well as animated shows like ''The Flintstones'' and ''The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show'', to use a laugh track. When Schulz refused to let CBS use a laugh track on the special, they feared that audiences would not be able to connect with it and the special would completely fail. '''A version with a laugh track was rumored to have been produced''', likely as a backup for future years if the special didn't perform well in the ratings.
At the time of production, it was common for live-action sitcoms on television, as well as animated shows like ''The Flintstones'' and ''The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show'', to use a laugh track. When Schulz refused to let CBS use a laugh track on the special, they feared that audiences would not be able to connect with it and the special would completely fail. '''A version with a laugh track was rumored to have been produced''', likely as a backup for future years if the special didn't perform well in the ratings.
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However, both CBS and the producers were pleasantly surprised to find that ''A Charlie Brown Christmas'' was a hit in terms of both critical acclaim and ratings as it was, perhaps for being so unique from everything else at the time.
However, both CBS and the producers were pleasantly surprised to find that ''A Charlie Brown Christmas'' was a hit in terms of both critical acclaim and ratings as it was, perhaps for being so unique from everything else at the time.


On November 23, 2023, Lost Media Wiki user dominodeer contacted Sarah Breaux, the archivist of the Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center, about the supposed "laugh track cut" of the special. Sarah then responded that in accordance with Lee Mendelson (who had abided with Schulz' request against the laugh track) that this version does not exist.<ref>https://forums.lostmediawiki.com/thread/13169/information-charlie-brown-christmas-cuts</ref>
On November 23, 2023, Lost Media Wiki user DominoDeer contacted Sarah Breaux, the archivist of the Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center, about the supposed "laugh track cut" of the special. Sarah then responded that in accordance with Lee Mendelson (who had abided with Schulz' request against the laugh track) that this version does not exist.<ref>https://forums.lostmediawiki.com/thread/13169/information-charlie-brown-christmas-cuts</ref>


==External Links==
==External Links==
*[http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0059026/trivia IMDb page for ''A Charlie Brown Christmas''.]
*[http://imdb.com/title/tt0059026/trivia IMDb page for ''A Charlie Brown Christmas''.]
*[http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/ward-anderson/5-facts-about-charlie-brown-christmas_b_4462330.html Huffington Post article on 5 facts ''A Charlie Brown Christmas''.]
*[http://huffingtonpost.ca/ward-anderson/5-facts-about-charlie-brown-christmas_b_4462330.html Huffington Post article on 5 facts ''A Charlie Brown Christmas''.]


==See Also==
==See Also==
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{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}


[[Category:Lost audio|Charlie Brown Christmas]]
[[Category:Non-existence confirmed]]
[[Category:Lost TV|Charlie Brown Christmas]]
[[Category:Completely lost media|Charlie Brown Christmas]]

Latest revision as of 00:59, 28 December 2023

A Charlie Brown Christmas.jpg

Title card for the special.

Status: Non-Existent

A Charlie Brown Christmas is a Christmas special in the Peanuts franchise that made its debut on CBS on December 9th, 1965. The special became well-known for its unorthodox methods of production for the time and the comic's creator Charles Schulz' disputes with the network over such elements, such as the use of child voice actors and the use of Biblical quotes.[1]

At the time of production, it was common for live-action sitcoms on television, as well as animated shows like The Flintstones and The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show, to use a laugh track. When Schulz refused to let CBS use a laugh track on the special, they feared that audiences would not be able to connect with it and the special would completely fail. A version with a laugh track was rumored to have been produced, likely as a backup for future years if the special didn't perform well in the ratings.

However, both CBS and the producers were pleasantly surprised to find that A Charlie Brown Christmas was a hit in terms of both critical acclaim and ratings as it was, perhaps for being so unique from everything else at the time.

On November 23, 2023, Lost Media Wiki user DominoDeer contacted Sarah Breaux, the archivist of the Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center, about the supposed "laugh track cut" of the special. Sarah then responded that in accordance with Lee Mendelson (who had abided with Schulz' request against the laugh track) that this version does not exist.[2]

External Links

See Also

TV

Comics

Video Games

References