A young boy's pet dog and a mouse embark on an adventure to deliver his letter to Santa on Christmas eve.A young boy's pet dog and a mouse embark on an adventure to deliver his letter to Santa on Christmas eve.A young boy's pet dog and a mouse embark on an adventure to deliver his letter to Santa on Christmas eve.
Daws Butler
- Gumdrop
- (voice)
Don Messick
- Father
- (voice)
Hal Smith
- Santa Claus
- (voice)
John Stephenson
- Post Man
- (voice)
Walter Tetley
- Timmy
- (voice)
Janet Waldo
- Mother
- (voice)
Paul Winchell
- Goober
- (voice)
- Directors
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
6.0175
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Featured reviews
Christmas Corn
It's Christmas Eve and little Timmy's letter to Santa was somehow forgotten. So his dog and a mouse desperately try to track Santa down and deliver the letter so Timmy will have a good Christmas. A cute Hanna-Barbera Christmas special that seems to be all but forgotten today. It's corny stuff but enjoyable for what it is. Good voice work from Daws Butler and Paul Winchell, among other fine voice actors like Don Messick. The animation is adequate (it was made for TV, after all). It's also from Hanna-Barbera so you know there's a lot of corny jokes and loud sound effects. Thankfully there is no laugh track but you don't have to use your imagination to see the spots where it seems room was left for it. There are a number of songs, some of which were reused for later Hanna-Barbera TV specials. This isn't likely to become a new favorite of yours but if you enjoy old animated Christmas specials, it's certainly worth giving a try.
Happy times
Watched this in the 70s and loved it, as well. Mid 50s now and Christmas memories return through this show and many others. Feel like a happy kid again waiting for the big day.
A Hanna/Barbera Christmas TV special my family and I love
Here is a Hanna-Barbera Christmas TV special that my family and I loved and still do. But of course my parents refer to the title as "Timmy's Letter."
The special is set in a town and era almost like in Disney's Lady and the Tramp, and it was Christmas Eve. In one house, a little boy named Timmy (voiced by Andy Panda's voice actor, Walter Tetley) was read a Christmas story and tucked into bed. The resident mouse, Gumdrop (voiced by animation regular Daws Butler), while admiring the house all decorated for Christmas, noticed Timmy's letter to Santa on the floor. The letter must have fallen off the table and never been mailed. So he and the family dog, Gobber (voiced by Paul Winchell), set out to deliver the letter to Santa and save Christmas for Timmy.
I was very fortunate (and so is my family) to find it on TV and tape it because they don't show it anymore. So all I can say is that I loved this special from beginning to end. And I don't have any particular scene I like because I love this cartoon. I also love the songs in the special; three of them were replayed in later Hanna-Barbera Christmas programs.
The special is set in a town and era almost like in Disney's Lady and the Tramp, and it was Christmas Eve. In one house, a little boy named Timmy (voiced by Andy Panda's voice actor, Walter Tetley) was read a Christmas story and tucked into bed. The resident mouse, Gumdrop (voiced by animation regular Daws Butler), while admiring the house all decorated for Christmas, noticed Timmy's letter to Santa on the floor. The letter must have fallen off the table and never been mailed. So he and the family dog, Gobber (voiced by Paul Winchell), set out to deliver the letter to Santa and save Christmas for Timmy.
I was very fortunate (and so is my family) to find it on TV and tape it because they don't show it anymore. So all I can say is that I loved this special from beginning to end. And I don't have any particular scene I like because I love this cartoon. I also love the songs in the special; three of them were replayed in later Hanna-Barbera Christmas programs.
I actually thought i dreamed this
For a longest time i always had this faint memory of some Christmas related cartoon, that i think i might have seen in sometime in my childhood. It must have only aired once (in my country at least).
But of course the internet saved the day on this upcoming Christmas and i could finally take a look at that almost forgotten flick.
And its just. bleh.
Story: Someone forgot sent poor Timmy's letter to Santa, so its up to a Clever little mouse and his Dog companion bring the letter to Santa, before he goes to Timmy's chimney.
And that's about it.
There's is not much to go for in this Hanna-Barbera flick except their typical cheap looking animation and their typical cheap slapstick. There was this one song that was enjoyable and Dogs voice actor is the one who played Tigger. But still i would not want to sit through this again.
But of course the internet saved the day on this upcoming Christmas and i could finally take a look at that almost forgotten flick.
And its just. bleh.
Story: Someone forgot sent poor Timmy's letter to Santa, so its up to a Clever little mouse and his Dog companion bring the letter to Santa, before he goes to Timmy's chimney.
And that's about it.
There's is not much to go for in this Hanna-Barbera flick except their typical cheap looking animation and their typical cheap slapstick. There was this one song that was enjoyable and Dogs voice actor is the one who played Tigger. But still i would not want to sit through this again.
Corny but cute
A somewhat obscure Hannah-Barbara Christmas special originally aired in December 1972, it was recently aired on TCM as their Wednesday night animated night in December 2025.
I had never seen it before as it was a little before my time on the original air date but I can see how it would have nostalgia appeal to those old enough to remember the original airing. Also, recommended to those with young children who want to show them a "deep cut" as it were for the Christmas specials.
Don't expect much, the jokes are pretty cliche and the animation isn't great, although it's not without a certain charm. The voice actors are pretty good, although a bit cheesy. As a cat person, I always hate seeing cats made out as the bad guys on these old cartoons, although having the cats talk like 1930's gangsters was sort of funny. At 30 minutes it doesn't really wear out it's welcome but unfortunately theTCM outro was cut off on my DVR recording so I'll never know what the guy had to say to Jacquelyn Stewart after the show wrapped up.
I had never seen it before as it was a little before my time on the original air date but I can see how it would have nostalgia appeal to those old enough to remember the original airing. Also, recommended to those with young children who want to show them a "deep cut" as it were for the Christmas specials.
Don't expect much, the jokes are pretty cliche and the animation isn't great, although it's not without a certain charm. The voice actors are pretty good, although a bit cheesy. As a cat person, I always hate seeing cats made out as the bad guys on these old cartoons, although having the cats talk like 1930's gangsters was sort of funny. At 30 minutes it doesn't really wear out it's welcome but unfortunately theTCM outro was cut off on my DVR recording so I'll never know what the guy had to say to Jacquelyn Stewart after the show wrapped up.
Did you know
- Goofs(at around 2 mins) Father reads "A Visit from St. Nicholas" by Clement Moore to Timmy. He reads the finishing line as "But I heard him exclaim as he drove out of sight, 'Merry Christmas to all, and to all a Good Night.'" This is not correct; the actual ending line of the tale is "But I heard him exclaim, ere he drove out of sight, 'Happy Christmas to all, and to all a good night!'"
- SoundtracksWhere Do You Look for Santa?
(uncredited)
Written by Hoyt Curtin
Performed by Daws Butler and Paul Winchell
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Mia hristougenniatiki istoria
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 30m
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content



