Añade un argumento en tu idiomaIn 1946 Nebraska, a young girl named Addie desperately craves a Christmas tree, but her bitter widower father refuses because of events from the family's past.In 1946 Nebraska, a young girl named Addie desperately craves a Christmas tree, but her bitter widower father refuses because of events from the family's past.In 1946 Nebraska, a young girl named Addie desperately craves a Christmas tree, but her bitter widower father refuses because of events from the family's past.
- Ganó 1 premio Primetime Emmy
- 1 premio y 1 nominación en total
- Mrs. Cott
- (as Maya Kenin Ryan)
- Billy Wild
- (as Brady MacNamara)
- Classmate
- (sin acreditar)
- Narrator
- (sin acreditar)
- Classmate
- (sin acreditar)
Argumento
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesEach 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.
- PifiasThe miniature Christmas lights that can be seen on the tree in the drugstore, and in with the Christmas decorations that Addie's father brings home, did not exist in 1946. This type of Christmas light was not introduced in America until about 1950, and didn't really become a dominant force in holiday lighting until the 1960s. The light strings that would have been used in 1946 would likely have been 8-bulb sets using c6 bulbs, or 15-bulb sets using c7 bulbs.
- Citas
Addie Mills: ...Why won't you buy me a tree, Dad? I'll settle for a small one.
Jamie Mills: I've already told you no, and no means no!
Addie Mills: What's this all about, money? Because you spend more on cigarettes in a year than one tree costs. I added it up myself!
Jamie Mills: ADDIE! Will you stop pestering me and go to bed!
Addie Mills: Just tell me it looks like Christmas in here. Or feels like it!
Jamie Mills: How would you like me to take a belt to you?
Addie Mills: How would you like me to beg?
Jamie Mills: ...Right, anything's better than that. If you can drink a glass full of water, I'll let you have a tree this year. But you only get one try, and if you blow it, you can't bring the issue up ever again. Deal?
Addie Mills: Deal!
[She fills a glass with water and downs the whole thing. James smiles triumphantly]
Jamie Mills: You blew it, kid.
Addie Mills: What are you talking about? It was full and I drank it...
Jamie Mills: No, the deal was that you had to *drink* it full. You drank it *empty*.
[Flustered, Addie runs from the room in tears]
Grandma Mills: James, that was cruel.
Jamie Mills: Oh, can't you take a joke? Where's that infamous sense of humor I grew up with?
Grandma Mills: You wouldn't play a joke like that on one of your friends. What a thing to do to a child, over something she wants so badly!
Jamie Mills: She has to learn. In this life, you can't have everything you want.
Grandma Mills: James, let her have a tree this year. Why not? It's such a little thing to make her happy. If you give it a chance, you might enjoy it yourself.
Jamie Mills: You're at least two hundred percent wrong about that.
Grandma Mills: You've let your whole life turn sour. You've no right to sour Addie's life as well.
Jamie Mills: I'm exercising my right as her father.
Grandma Mills: Oh, you just don't want anything around to remind you. Well, Addie's around. If you can't look at her without being reminded...
Jamie Mills: I don't have to listen to this!
[He gets up and storms out of the room]
Grandma Mills: [calling after him] For two cents, I'd buy her a tree myself!
Jamie Mills: [returns to room] Don't you dare, Mother! She's *my* daughter, and *I'll* decide what she can and can't have!
[slams the door]
- ConexionesFeatured in The 25th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards (1973)
I have some rather vivid, but pleasant, memories of when I first saw this TV movie. That year, what Christmas presents I do remember receiving included a model car kit (which my father spent most of the day helping me build), three record albums, and a cassette tape recorder (which I wanted most of all). Later that evening, we all gathered around the TV and watched "The House Without a Christmas Tree;" needless to say, it was an excellent story (I also remember the librarian at our elementary school highly recommended this special, as well as encouraging us to also read the book). The following year, my family got their first color console TV (we had only a small 17-inch black-and-white set before that), so we were able to see "The House Without a Christmas Tree" again, in color - and that was the last I ever saw of the movie (which CBS recorded on videotape rather than film) until December 1987, when CBS reran "The House Without a Christmas Tree" for the very last time. Unfortunately, that final airing was the victim of a "hatchet job," as the network had to chop out about 10 minutes in order for the movie to fit the time slot.
After that last airing, I remember writing to CBS/Fox Video (which has since become 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment) and asking them if they would ever release "The House Without a Christmas Tree," uncut, on VHS tape, to which they blithely (and somewhat smugly) replied, "At this time we do not own the rights to distribute it on videocassette." Mercifully, after five years elapsed, Fox finally came to their senses and released the movie on VHS tape; I bought a copy of the tape in December 1992, and now every time I visit my family up in Davison, Michigan for the holidays I've instituted a new tradition - my mother and I watch "The House Without a Christmas Tree" each year, on Christmas night, together. (Unfortunately, my father went to his final reward at the outset of 1992.)
On December 1, 2007, I was shopping at a local Kmart and was perusing through the holiday DVDs when what should I happen to see but a DVD copy of "The House Without a Christmas Tree," and it was the last copy on the shelf! I'm really glad I bought it (the disc having been on sale that week also helped); I wondered when Paramount, which now distributes all of CBS' DVD product, was ever going to release it on disc, and that videotape I had of the show was beginning to deteriorate after 16 years. "The House" looks and sounds as good as the first time I saw it in color in 1973, and now I won't have to worry - at least, for the next decade - about the DVD wearing out soon.
Now if only Paramount would consider putting "The Holiday Treasure" and "Addie and the King of Hearts" (the other two specials in the series) on DVD next, that would really be great!
- Moax429
- 1 ene 2007
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