One of my all-time favorite Christmas movies would have to be "White Christmas," the 1954 musical featuring four of the biggest talents in Hollywood. The movie opens with a scene in December 1944 during World War II, and continues the story line with two of two Army buddies after the war, now in the entertainment business, who meet sisters and become romantically involved with them.
I love this movie ... and Christmas is not complete until I have seen it each year, usually while wrapping gifts in front of the TV. Bing Crosby and Danny Kaye absolutely made this movie work along with Rosemary Clooney and Vera Ellen. It is a light-hearted romance comedy that weaves a Christmas/winter theme into it and is set mostly at the fictional Columbia Inn Ski Lodge in Pine Tree, Vermont, during the holidays.
For this snow/Christmas/winter lover, it does not get much better!
Many songs are unforgettable ... "White Christmas," of course ... but also the "Sisters" tune sung by Clooney and Ellen is something my sisters and I have jokingly done for years ... not to mention the spoof of that number by Crosby and Kaye.
"Snow" is the tune sung in four-part harmony on the train as the four travel from Florida to Vermont.
And there is "Count Your Blessings Instead of Sheep," a simple little Irving Berlin song that hits reality right between the eyes...
When I'm worried and I can't sleepThe basis of the whole story is the two Army buddies (Crosby and Kaye), successful in the music industry, who take their stage show to their WW II General's failing Vermont inn as gratitude to the "old" man.
I count my blessings instead of sheep
And I fall asleep counting my blessings
When my bankroll is getting small
I think of when I had none at all
And I fall asleep counting my blessings
I think about a nursery and I picture curly heads
And one by one I count them as they slumber in their beds
If you're worried and you can't sleep
Just count your blessings instead of sheep
And you'll fall asleep counting your blessings
Crosby's character, looking at the General across the room, observed, "We ate ... and then he ate. We slept ... and then he slept."
To which Kaye's character quipped, "And then he woke up and no one slept for 48 hours!"
The movie is about friendship, gratitude, and love ... it is one of my "must sees" every year, and SWAC Daughter and I are watching it today. It's a classic to be seen over and over.
2 comments:
I love this movie too. The songs are really fun, like 'Snow' sung in the club car and 'What Can You Do with a General?'
'I Wish I was Back in the Army,' 'Choreography,' and the rousing 'We'll Follow the Old Man Wherever He Wants to Go' make this film one I have to see again and again.
A fellow "White Christmas" lover! It's on cable's AMC all today and tonight alternating with "Miracle on 34th Street." It's a family Christmas Eve as we look out at the snow-covered yard making a White Christmas for us in the Shenandoah Valley. Merry Christmas to you and yours!
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