We all know Charles Dickens' story of Ebenezer Scrooge and
his visits from the three ghosts on Christmas Eve (four if you count the
initial visit from his former partner, Marley).
A story of redemption—a miserly man whose concept of the Christmas
spirit is "Bah, Humbug!" Then
his life is turned around after Marley tells him about his upcoming visits from
the Christmas ghosts. The first one from his past to remind him of what was and
the promise of what could have been, the second from his present to open his
eyes to what he had become and how others felt about him, and the final visit
from the ghost of the future to show him where he was headed if he didn't
change his ways.
From a writer's perspective, it was the first time a story
had been told from the point-of-view of a character within that story rather
than an omniscient point-of-view of an unidentified narrator. Point-of-view—something vital for today's
writer of fiction.
The novella, first published in London on December 9, 1843,
has been a staple of the Christmas season as a movie, television show, or play
for well over a century.
This year, Hallmark's two cable movie channels started
showing non-stop Christmas movies in October.
I wondered how many different versions of Dickens' story there
were. So, I did what I usually do when I
want a quick answer to something…I Googled it.
And the results came as quite a surprise. Things I knew, things I had known but
forgotten, and things I never knew.
Twenty-eight films, twenty-three television productions, plus other miscellaneous
offerings such as staged plays. Live
action, animation, a 3D computer generated images theatrical movie from Disney
in 2009, one television movie version set in America during the Great
Depression of the 1930s, and even a couple where the character of Scrooge was
portrayed as being female.
The first filming of A CHRISTMAS CAROL was a fifteen minute
silent movie made in 1908 followed by two other silent versions made in 1910
and 1913. There have been the dramatic
theatrical films, musical versions, and animated versions with favorite and
very familiar cartoon characters taking on the roles of Dickens' famous
characters. Of the twenty-eight movies,
ten were released under Dickens' exact original title of A CHRISTMAS CAROL as
were six of the twenty-three television productions.
I have noticed over the last few years that several game
shows, especially this time of year, have used this trivia question—How many
ghosts visited Scrooge in Dickens' A Christmas Carol? And most of the
time the contestant got it wrong. They usually answer with the number three
when in reality it's four. They seem to forget about the first ghost being that
of Marley, Scrooge's former business partner who sets the scene for the
appearance of the next three ghosts.
Even though
all the various productions of A CHRISTMAS CAROL tell Dickens' story of Scrooge
and the visits from the Christmas ghosts, many had their own unique twist and
flavor on the original. I think my
favorite is a 1970 theatrical musical version titled SCROOGE which stars Albert
Finney as the miserly Ebenezer Scrooge who learns the lessons of the spirit of
the Christmas season.
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