The House Without a Christmas Tree

The House Without a Christmas Tree is a 1972 television movie, novelized into a children's book by Gail Rock in 1974,[1] that centers on the relationship between Adelaide "Addie" Mills (Lisa Lucas), a bright and energetic only child, and her melancholy father, James Addison Mills III (Jason Robards). James had never recovered from the death of his wife Helen (Addie's mother), and is bitterly against ever having a Christmas tree in the house. The videotaped production was seen regularly on CBS during the holiday season between 1972 and 1977.[2]

Plot synopsis

The film takes place in fictional Clear River, Nebraska in 1946. 10-year-old Addie Mills, a lonely girl behind her large horn-rimmed glasses, lives in a plain, ordinary house with her widowed father James and her loving grandmother. Her mother had died shortly after she was born; this builds resentment in her father, who wonders why his beloved wife had to die rather than their tiny and sickly baby (whose first name is taken from her father's middle name). His only interaction with Addie seems to be in frequent corrections of her. Since his wife's death, there has never been a Christmas tree in the Mills "home," although Addie has constantly challenged this omission. Finally she wins her class Christmas tree in a school contest—which she wins using a guessing technique she learned from none other than her father—and brings it home for her first Christmas with a tree. James promptly orders the tree to be removed. His mother speaks up, reminding him that the house belongs to her; he responds by threatening to take Addie and clear out, leaving her alone in the house. In the middle of the night, Addie sneaks out and removes the tree, to deliver it to the only one of her classmates who also goes treeless at Christmas. (This is mainly because her family is more economically-troubled—and larger, teeming with children who would be thrilled to finally have a tree.) At last James rethinks his position and comes home with a tree and several boxes of ornaments—everything but a star. James goes up to the attic and brings down just such a star as he had not brought home, one much more magnificently-made than the one Addie had made for her prize tree, out of tinfoil that "everybody" saved and collected back in his day, such as from chewing-gum wrappers. When Addie admires the star her father shows her, he reveals that her mother had crafted it especially for her much-longed-for first baby's first Christmas. Then he lifts her up and they place her star on the tree. Viewers are led to believe that this begins their improved father-daughter relationship and they will finally start to grow closer. The show ends with the voice of Addie speaking as a grown woman: her dear grandmother has died and she has moved to the big city, but returns every year for Christmas with her father, who always has a Christmas tree ready for her to hang her star.[3]

Characters

Production

Originally shown on CBS on December 3, 1972, this movie was actually a very low-budget film produced on videotape. It was repeated several times in the 1970s, on CBS, during the holiday season. In 1991, it was released on VHS, and then on DVD in 2007.[4]

Each act of the story featured collages that opened and closed it between commercial breaks. The collage artist who assembled these for the story, Norman Sunshine, won an Emmy Award for them. He later assembled other collages for The Thanksgiving Treasure.[5]

It was filmed in Uxbridge, Ontario, mainly at the corner of Peel Street and Victoria Drive, where the house and school still exist. They also shot near the downtown core at Church and Brock Street West.

Awards

Eleanor Perry won a prime time Emmy for "Outstanding Writing Achievement in Drama - Adaptation," and Paul Bogart was nominated for a Director's Guild Award.

Legacy

The Christmas show was so successful,[2] it resulted in three other specials with the same cast, all likewise based on books that Gail Rock had written. In all of them, Lisa Lucas appeared as Addie Mills.

All but the last of these were highly rated and were later released on VHS. However, only The House Without a Christmas Tree was known to have been made available on DVD as of late October 2012. The original Christmas special is often recommended on a variety of lists, for both holiday viewing and such other themes as about single parents.[6]

On November 4, 2014, the DVD "Holiday Family Classics: The Thanksgiving Treasure / The House Without A Christmas Tree" was released by Paramount. The release was credited as a "Two Film Collection" but featured both programs on one DVD (Region 1 only).

References

  1. http://isbn.nu/0394928334
  2. 1 2 Shull, Richard K. (December 11, 1994). "Answerman". Tulsa World.
  3. Franco, Ose (November 23, 2000). "Nothing on TV when you have the time to watch? Rent one of these holiday videos". Herald-Journal.,
  4. Bobbin, Jay (March 6, 2009). "Pipeline". Allegheny Times.
  5. The IMDb trivia page for The Thanksgiving Treasure provides this information.
  6. Roberts, Jerry (January 16, 1987). "'Kramer' just 1 of many cassettes on single parents". Daily Breeze.

External links

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